Replace the timer-based sleep with the standard win32 call since the former
has no benefits: even though it allows specifying the time in 100uSec
chunks, the actual resolution is still limited by the OS and is never
better than 1mSec.
For clarity move all of this next to the mp_hal_delay_ms definition so all
related functions are in one place.
This introduces a new macro to get the main thread and uses it to ensure
that asynchronous exceptions such as KeyboardInterrupt (CTRL+C) are only
scheduled on the main thread. This is more deterministic than being
scheduled on a random thread and is more in line with CPython that only
allow signal handlers to run on the main thread.
Fixes issue #7026.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This moves mp_pending_exception from mp_state_vm_t to mp_state_thread_t.
This allows exceptions to be scheduled on a specific thread.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
Note: the uncrustify configuration is explicitly set to 'add' instead of
'force' in order not to alter the comments which use extra spaces after //
as a means of indenting text for clarity.
The mp_keyboard_interrupt() function does exactly what is needed here, and
using it gets ctrl-C working when MICROPY_ENABLE_SCHEDULER is enabled on
these ports (and MICROPY_ASYNC_KBD_INTR is disabled).
Translate common Ctrl-Left/Right/Delete/Backspace to the EMACS-style
sequences (i.e. Alt key based) for forward-word, backward-word, forwad-kill
and backward-kill. Requires MICROPY_REPL_EMACS_WORDS_MOVE to be defined so
the readline implementation interprets these.
This enables going back to previous wrapped lines using backspace or left
arrow: instead of just sticking to the beginning of a line, the cursor will
move a line up.
This is to keep the top-level directory clean, to make it clear what is
core and what is a port, and to allow the repository to grow with new ports
in a sustainable way.