Building the Pico-W needs the MICROPY_PY_NETWORK_CYW43 flag to be set in
order to include building the CYW43 Wifi driver. But then mp_hal_get_mac()
handles the MAC assignment for all nics the "CYW43 way", copying the real
MAC provided by the WiFi hardware. This will fail for all other NIC types,
resulting in an invalid MAC address.
The solution in this commit is to add a check for the NIC type parameter
idx and handle the MAC address respectively.
This is a best-effort implementation of write polling. It's difficult to
do correctly because if there are multiple output streams (eg UART and USB
CDC) then some may not be writeable while others are. A full solution
should also have a return value from mp_hal_stdout_tx_strn(), returning the
number of bytes written to the stream(s). That's also hard to define.
The renesas-ra and stm32 ports already implement a similar best-effort
mechanism for write polling.
Fixes issue #11026.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
If USB CDC is connected and the board sends data, but the host does not
receive the data, the device locks up. This is fixed in this commit by
having a timeout of 500ms, after which time the transmission is skipped.
Fixes issue #9634.
This includes:
- Configuration file for the cyw43-driver.
- Integration of cyw43-driver into the build, using lwIP.
- Enhancements to machine.Pin to support extension IO pins provided by the
CYW43xx.
- More mp-hal pin helper functions.
- mp_hal_get_mac_ascii MAC address helper function.
- Addition of rp2.country() function to set the country code.
A board can enable this driver by setting MICROPY_PY_NETWORK_CYW43 in their
cmake snippet.
Work done in collaboration with Graham Sanderson and Peter Harper.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Prior to this commit, the USB CDC OUT endpoint got NACK'd if a character
was received but not consumed by the application, e.g. via
sys.stdin.read(). This meant that USB CDC was blocked and no additional
characters could be sent from the host. In particular a ctrl-C could not
interrupt the application if another character was pending.
To fix the issue, the approach in this commit uses a callback tud_cdc_rx_cb
which is called by the TinyUSB stack on reception of new CDC data. By
consuming the data immediately, the endpoint does not stall anymore. The
previous handler tud_cdc_rx_wanted_cb was made obsolete and removed.
In addition some cleanup was done along the way: by adding interrupt_char.c
and removing the existing code mp_hal_set_interrupt_char(). Also, there is
now only one (stdin) ringbuffer.
Fixes issue #7996.
This commit adds a new port "rp2" which targets the new Raspberry Pi RP2040
microcontroller.
The build system uses pure cmake (with a small Makefile wrapper for
convenience). The USB driver is TinyUSB, and there is a machine module
with most of the standard classes implemented. Some examples are provided
in the examples/rp2/ directory.
Work done in collaboration with Graham Sanderson.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>