Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
robert-hh 3ab8806c0d mimxrt/machine_rtc: Maintain microsecond offset.
The supplied value for microseconds in datetime() will be treated as a
starting value for the reported microseconds.  Due to internal processing
in setting the time, there is an offset about 1 ms.
2021-06-12 23:20:12 +10:00
robert-hh fd4eec5555 mimxrt/machine_rtc: Change RTC.datetime() tuple to match other ports.
This change moves the datetime tuple format back to the one used by all the
other ports:

    (year, month, day, weekday, hour, minute, second, microsecond)

Weekday is a number between 0 and 6, with 0 assigned to Monday.  It has to
be provided when setting the RTC with datetime(), but will be ignored on
entry and calculated when needed.

The weekday() method was removed, since that is now again a part of the
datetime tuple.

The now() method was updated so it continues to return a tuple that matches
CPython's datetime module.
2021-06-12 23:15:05 +10:00
robert-hh 2f365d234e mimxrt/machine_rtc: Add the RTC class to the machine module.
Initial version, using the LP RTC clock.  It provides setting the date and
time with rtc.init() or rtc.datetime(), and reading the date and time with
rtc.datetime() or rtc.now().  The method weekday() reports the weekday of
the current date.  It starts with 0 for Monday.

The tuple order for datetime() and now() matches the CPython sequence:
(year, month, day, hour, minute, second, microsecond, TZ).  TZ is ignored
and reported as None.  Microsecond is provided at a best effort.

If a battery is not supplied, the default boot date/time is 1970/1/1 0:0:0.
With a battery, the clock continues to run even when the board is not
powered.  The clock is quite precise.  If not, using rtc.calibration() may
help.
2021-06-03 15:24:04 +10:00