The inclusion of `umachine` in the list of built-in modules is now done
centrally in py/objmodule.c. Enabling MICROPY_PY_MACHINE will include this
module.
As part of this, all ports now have `umachine` as the core module name
(previously some had only `machine` as the name).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This change allows the same heap allocation rules to be used when using
malloc regardless if the board has SPRAM or normal RAM.
Integrating with the esp32-camera for example requires that ESP32 SPRAM be
allocatable using the esp-idf capabilities aware allocation functions. In
the case of esp32-camera it's for the framebuffer.
Detect when CONFIG_SPIRAM_USE_MALLOC is in use and use the standard
automatic configuration of leaving 1/2 of the SPRAM available to other
FreeRTOS tasks.
For example the ESP32-C3 has 2 TX channels and 2 RX channels in total, and
in this case channel 1 must be the default for bitstream.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This commit adds support for the STM32G4 series of MCUs, and a board
definition for NUCLEO_G474RE. This board has the REPL on LPUART1 which is
connected to the on-board ST-link USB-UART.
It's needed at least on F4 because this file overrides the weak function
HAL_RCC_DeInit() from hal_rcc.c.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
PLL3-Q is more reliable than PLL1-Q for the USB clock source when entering
mboot from various reset states (eg power on vs MCU reset). (It was found
that if the main application used PLL3-Q then sometimes the USB clock
source would stay stuck on PLL3-Q and not switch to PLL1-Q after a reset.)
Other related changes:
- SystemCoreClockUpdate() should be called on H7 because the calculation
can be involved in some cases.
- __set_PRIMASK(0) should be called because on H7 the built-in ST DFU
bootloader exits with IRQs disabled.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
H7 MCUs have ECC and writes do not go through to SRAM until 64-bits have
been written (on another location is written). So use 64-bit writes for
the bootloader-state variable so it is committed before the system reset.
As part of this change, the lower byte of the bootloader address in
BL_STATE must now be the magic number 0x5a5 for the state to be valid
(previously this was 0x000 which is not as robust).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The original code used a independent state with regards to the interrupt.
During heavy bus error conditions the internal state could become
out-of-sync with the interrupts.
Further explanation: during the development of an application using CAN
communication, a interrupt-run-away was found in some situations. It was
found that the error interrupt triggered (Warning, Passive or Bus-Off, all
triggered it) the run-away. The only recovery was a reset.
Two problems were found:
- the error interrupt is enabled but not cleared in the interrupt routine;
- an internal variable 'State' that was used to track the message received
state (empty, new, full, overflow) that was not directly related to
interrupt that indicated the state.
In this commit these issues are fixed by adding more values for the
interrupt reason (warning, passive, bus off) and clearing the error
interrupts, and making the internal state directly dependent on the
interrupt state for received messages.
Furthermore, introducing the FIFO1 in the CAN receive stage, another issue
existed. Even if the messages are received into the FIFO1 (by selecting
message filtering for FIFO0 and FIFO1), the interrupt firing was indicating
FIFO0 Rx. The configuration of the interrupts for this is now also fixed.
The CAN peripheral has 2 interrupt lines going into the NVIC controller.
The assignment of the interrupt reasons to these 2 interrupt lines was
missing. Now the reception of FIFO1 messages triggers the second interrupt
line. Other interrupts (Rx FIFO0 and bus error) are assigned to the first
interrupt line.
Tested on a Nucleo-G474, and also checked the HAL function to work with the
H7 family.
The board.json file is intentionally excluded, until the board will be
sold. But including it into the mimxrt series make it easier to keep
the build up-to-date.
- Manufacturer, set by MICROPY_HW_USB_STR_MANUF; default "MicroPython"
- Board name, as set by MICROPY_HW_BOARD_NAME
- Unique-ID, same as returned by machine.unique_id()
- USB Vendor ID, as set by MICROPY_HW_USB_VID; default 0xf055
- USB Product ID, as set by MICROPY_HW_USB_PID; default 0x9802
Using the keyword argument cs=nnn in the constructor. The cs1
pin has to be defined in mpconfigboard.h.
Note: Only a few boards have the CS1 pin exposed to the connectors.
The Pin config setting by IOMUXC_SetPinConfig() is supplied by a
bit pattern. That pattern is specific for a MCU family. In preparation
for supporting the MIMXRT117x family, the constant bit pattern is
replaced by a function call, such that the bit pattern is created
at a single place. The code for this functions was taken from
machine_pin.c.
Note: A working port for the MIMXRT1176 exists already.
This library file has a bug, in that TransferBlocking returns before the
transfer has finished. That is a problem if a write follows immediately
a read.
If in a board's mkconfigboard.mk the following symbol is set:
MICROPY_HW_BOARD_FLASH_FILES = 1
then the files:
($BOARD)_flexspi_flash_config.h and
qspi_nor_flash_config.c and/or
qspi_hyper_flash_config.c
are expected in the board directory. Otherwise the common files from
the hal directory are used.
The keyword "af" has been deprecated for some time and "alt" should be used
instead (but "af" still works).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This follows up on #5489, where we changed the esp32 core pinning to core 0
in order to work around an issue with IDF < 4.2.0. Now that IDF > 4.2.0 is
available, we allow pinning back to core 1, which eliminates some
problematic callback latency with WiFi enabled.
NimBLE is also pinned to core 1 - the same core as MicroPython - when using
IDF >=4.2.
Rework the ADC implementation to follow the improved ADC/ADCBlock API.
This adds support for calibrated voltage readings and the ADC2 block. The
ADC API is backwards compatible with what it was before this change.
Resolves#6219.
The RP2040 I2C hardware can do writes of length 1 and 2, just not of length
0. So only use software I2C for writes of length 0, to improve
performance.
Also increase the software I2C timeout for zero-length writes to
accommodate the behaviour of a wider range of I2C devices.
Fixes issue #8167.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Without these methods a lot of existing "portable" scripts are broken.
This change improves portability by making rp2 machine.UART more compliant
with the documented machine UART interface.
So that a board can access other HAL_RCC functions if it needs them (this
was not possible previously by just adding hal_rcc.c to the src list for a
board because it would clash with the custom HAL_RCC_GetHCLKFreq function).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This adds MBEDTLS_MD_SHA1 to the list of default hashes for TLS 1.2
handshake signatures. Although SHA-1 is weak, this option is turned on in
the default mbedtls configuration file, and allows better compatibility
with older servers. In particular it allows an stm32-mbedtls-based client
to connect to an axtls-based client (eg default unix port and esp8266).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The bit-bang implementation was replaced with the RMT implementation in
599b61c086. This commit brings back that
bit-bang code, and allows it to be selected via the new static method:
esp32.RMT.bitstream_channel(None)
The bit-bang implementation may be useful if the RMT needs to be used for
something else, or if bit-banging is more stable in certain applications.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
MicroPython currently runs on core 0 of the esp32. Calling
rmt_driver_install will mean that the RMT interrupt handler is also
serviced on core 0. This can lead to glitches in the RMT output if
WiFi is enabled (for esp32.RMT and machine.bitstream).
This patch calls rmt_driver_install on core 1, ensuring that the RMT
interrupt handler is serviced on core 1. This prevents glitches.
Fixes issue #8161.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The main Makefile builds the mpy-cross executable automatically if
it doesn't exist since 78718fffb1,
so build it first to make sure it doesn't get needlessly rebuilt.
This board has only 2MiB of flash so the build needs to be reduced in size
to fit. Commit 549448e8bb made all boards
build with -O2 by default (for performance) so this overrides that default.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This is needed because these ports allocate mbedtls data on the MicroPython
heap, and SSL socket objects must be fully cleaned up when they are garbage
collected, to free this memory allocated by mbedtls. As part of this,
gc_sweep_all() will now ensure that the MP_STATE_PORT(mbedtls_memory)
linked-list is fully deallocated on soft reset.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
CONFIG_USB was removed in Zephyr v2.7.0 after some Kconfig rework that
made it sufficient to use CONFIG_USB_DEVICE_STACK only.
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@intel.com>
Updates the Zephyr port to get the UART console device from devicetree
instead of Kconfig. The Kconfig option CONFIG_UART_CONSOLE_ON_DEV_NAME
was removed in Zephyr v2.7.0.
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@intel.com>
The reboot header was moved to a different path in Zephyr v2.6.0. The
old path was deprecated for two releases (v2.6.0 and v2.7.0) and will no
longer be supported after Zephyr v2.7.0.
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@intel.com>
As a prerequisite to upgrading to Zephyr v2.7.0, upgrade the minimum
CMake version required for the Zephyr port to 3.20.0.
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@intel.com>
After changing the bitstream implementation to use the RMT driver in
commit 72d86158121e32bbabaeade08f449d507bf40f9a
("esp32/machine_bitstream.c: Replace with RMT-based driver."), using
multiple `Neopixel` instances shows signal duplication between the
instances (i.e. a `write()` on one instance is written to all instances).
On invocation, the rmt driver configures the GPIO matrix to route the
output signal to the respective GPIO pin. When called for a different
`NeoPixel` instance using a different pin, the new route is established,
but the old route still exists. Now, the RMT output signal is sent to both
pins.
Fix this by setting the standard GPIO output function for the current pin
after uninstalling the RMT driver.
Signed-off-by: Simon Baatz <gmbnomis@gmail.com>
In commit 86ce442607 the '.frozen' entry was
added at the start of sys.path, to allow control over when frozen modules
are searched during import, and retain existing behaviour whereby frozen
was searched before the filesystem.
But Python semantics of sys.path require sys.path[0] to be the directory of
the currently executing script, or ''.
This commit moves the '.frozen' entry to second place in sys.path, so
sys.path[0] retains its correct value (described above).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Save and restore the same duty cycle when the frequency (or frequency
resolution) is changed. This allows a smooth frequency change.
Also update the esp32 PWM quickref to be clearer.
These removed ones are either unused by MicroPython or provided by osapi.h
in the SDK. In particular ets_delay_us() has different signatures for
different versions of the SDK, so best to let it provide the declaration.
Fixes issue #8095.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
If MICROPY_PY_SYS_PATH_ARGV_DEFAULTS is enabled (which it is by default)
then sys.path and sys.argv will be initialised and populated with default
values. This keeps all bare-metal ports aligned.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Frozen modules will be searched preferentially, but gives the user the
ability to override this behavior.
This matches the previous behavior where "" was implicitly the frozen
search path, but the frozen list was checked before the filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This feature is not enabled on any port, it's not in CPython's io module,
and functionality is better suited to the micropython-lib implementation of
pkg_resources.
Default SPI pins are now correctly assigned by machine_hw_spi.c even for S2
and S3. mpconfigboard.h files define defaults with flipped SPI(1) and
SPI(2) to workaround a bug in machine_hw_spi.c - the bug is fixed.
Signed-off-by: Tomas Vanek <vanekt@fbl.cz>
Use IO_MUX pins as defined by ESP IDF in soc/esp32/include/soc/spi_pins.h
ESP32S2 and S3 don't have IO_MUX pins for SPI3, GPIO matrix is always used.
Choose suitable defaults for S2 and S3.
ESP32C3 does not have SPI3 at all. Don't define pin mappings for it.
Signed-off-by: Tomas Vanek <vanekt@fbl.cz>
Use IO_MUX pins as defined by ESP IDF in soc/esp32*/include/soc/spi_pins.h
Alternatively use now deprecated HSPI_IOMUX_PIN_NUM_xxx
(or FSPI_IOMUX_PIN_NUM_xxx for ESP32S2) for compatibility with IDF 4.2
and older.
Signed-off-by: Tomas Vanek <vanekt@fbl.cz>
The index of machine_hw_spi_obj and machine_hw_spi_default_pins arrays is
assigned to 0 for ARG_id==HSPI_HOST and 1 for another SPI. On ESP32S2 and
S3 HSPI_HOST=2 so the first set (idx=0) of default pins is used for
SPI(id=2) aka HSPI/SPI3 and the second set (idx=1) for SPI(id=1) aka
FSPI/SPI2. This makes a misleading mess in MICROPY_HW_SPIxxxx definitions
and it is also in contradiction to the comments around the definitions.
Change the test of ARG_id to fix the order of machine_hw_spi_default_pins.
This change might require adjusting MICROPY_HW_SPIxxxx definitions in
mpconfigboard.h of S2/S3 based boards.
Signed-off-by: Tomas Vanek <vanekt@fbl.cz>
- Move the qspi_xxxx_flash_config.c files to hal.
It turned out that they are less board than flash type specific.
- Change to a common flexspi_flash_config.h header file.
Thanks for the hint, Damien. The DEBUG build got very large recently.
The major difference is, that inline function are now inlined and
not included as a function. That's good and maybe bad. The good thing is,
that the code speed si now close to the final code. It could be worse
in single step debugging. I'll see.
Setting this option caused a new warning and a formatting error
to pop up at different places. Fixed as well.
The ID is read in a single function and used for:
- machine.unique_id()
- Ethernet MAC addresses.
- ...
That facilitates use of other MCU using a different access method for
the ID (e.g. i.MX RT1176).
Just another choice for the PHY interface.
Added: Keyword option phy_clock=LAN.IN or LAN.OUT
to define the source of the 50MHZ clock for the PHY
interface. The RMII clock is not enabled if it
is generated by a PYH board. Constants:
LAN.IN The clock is provided by the PHY board.
LAN.OUT The clock is provided by the MCU board.
The default is LAN.OUT or the value set in mpconfigboard.h, which
is currently set to IN only for the SEEED ARCH MIX board. Usage etc:
lan = LAN(phy_type=LAN.PHY_DP83848, phy_clock=LAN.IN)
The initial problem with a wrong ICMP checksum was caused by
the test code setting a checksum and the HW taking that probably as
the start value and ending up with 0xffff. With a checksum field of 0
set by the test code the HW creates the proper checksum.
Useful for boards without a PHY interface, where that has to be
attached. Like the Seed ARCH MIX board or Vision SOM. Phy drivers
supported so far are:
- KSZ8081
- DP83825
- LAN8720
More to come. Usage e.g.:
lan = LAN(phy_type=LAN.PHY_LAN8720, phy_addr=1)
The default values are those set in mpconfigboard.h.
UART 0 is attached to the Debug USB port. The settings are
115200 Baud, 8N1.
For MIMXRT1010_EVK this is identical to UART1. For the other boards,
this is an additional UART.
The pico-sdk 1.3.0 update in 97a7cc243b
introduced a change that broke RP2 Bluetooth UART, and possibly UART in
general, which stops working right after UART is initialized. The commit
raspberrypi/pico-sdk@2622e9b enables the UART receive timeout (RTIM) IRQ,
which is asserted when the receive FIFO is not empty, and no more
characters are received for a period of time.
This commit makes sure the RTIM IRQ is handled and cleared in
uart_service_interrupt.
The current ST HAL does not support reading the extended CSD so cannot
correctly detect the capacity of high-capacity cards. As a workaround, the
capacity can be forced via the MICROPY_HW_MMCARD_LOG_BLOCK_NBR config
option.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
These were commented correctly by their colour, but in the wrong order with
respect to the PCB silkscreen.
Fixes issue #8054.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
For the coverage build this reduces the binary size to about 1/4 of its
size, and seems to help gcov/lcov coverage analysis so that it doesn't miss
lines.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The methods duty_u16() and duty_ns() are implemented to match the existing
docs. The duty will remain the same when the frequency is changed.
Standard ESP32 as well as S2, S3 and C3 are supported.
Thanks to @kdschlosser for the fix for rounding in resolution calculation.
Documentation is updated and examples expanded for esp32, including the
quickref and tutorial. Additional notes are added to the machine.PWM docs
regarding limitations of hardware PWM.
Instead of board pins, so that pins which have only the CPU specified in
pins.csv can still be used with mp_hal_pin_config_alt_static().
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
A board can now define the following linker symbols to configure its flash
storage layout:
_micropy_hw_internal_flash_storage_start
_micropy_hw_internal_flash_storage_end
_micropy_hw_internal_flash_storage_ram_cache_start
_micropy_hw_internal_flash_storage_ram_cache_end
And optionally have a second flash segment by configuring
MICROPY_HW_ENABLE_INTERNAL_FLASH_STORAGE_SEGMENT2 to 1 and defining:
_micropy_hw_internal_flash_storage2_start
_micropy_hw_internal_flash_storage2_end
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This reduces code size and code duplication, and fixes `pyb.usb_mode()` so
that it now returns the correct string when in multi-VCP mode (before, it
would return None when in one of these modes).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Frequency range 15Hz/18Hz to > 1 MHz, with decreasing resolution of the
duty cycle. The basic API is supported as documentated, except that
keyword parameters are accepted for both the instatiaton and the
PWM.init() call.
Extensions: support PWM for channel pairs. Channel pairs are declared by
supplying 2-element tuples for the pins. The two channels of a pair must
be the A/B channel of a FLEXPWM module. These form than a complementary
pair.
Additional supported keyword arguments:
- center=value Defines the center position of a pulse within the pulse
cycle. The align keyword is actually shortcut for center.
- sync=True|False: If set to True, the channels will be synchronized to a
submodule 0 channel, which has already to be enabled.
- align=PWM.MIDDLE | PMW.BEGIN | PWM.END. It defines, whether synchronized
channels are Center-Aligned or Edge-aligned. The channels must be either
complementary a channel pair or a group of synchronized channels. It may
as well be applied to a single channel, but withiout any benefit.
- invert= 0..3. Controls ouput inversion of the pins. Bit 0 controls the
first pin, bit 1 the second.
- deadtime=time_ns time of complementary channels for delaying the rising
slope.
- xor=0|1|2 xor causes the output of channel A and B to be xored. If
applied to a X channel, it shows the value oif A ^ B. If applied to an A
or B channel, both channel show the xored signal for xor=1. For xor=2,
the xored signal is split between channels A and B. See also the
Reference Manual, chapter about double pulses. The behavior of xor=2 can
also be achieved using the center method for locating a pulse within a
clock period.
The output is enabled for board pins only.
CPU pins may still be used for FLEXPWM, e.g. as sync source, but the signal
will not be routed to the output. That applies only to FLEXPWM pins. The
use of QTMR pins which are not board pins will be rejected.
As part of this commit, the _WFE() statement is removed from
ticks_delay_us64() to prevent PWM glitching during calls to sleep().
This is to make the builds for all nucleo/discovery boards uniform, so they
can be treated the same by the auto build scripts.
The CI script is updated to explicitly enable mboot and packing, to test
these features.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This prevents SPI4/5 from being used if SDIO and CYW43 are enabled, because
the DMA for the SDIO is used on an IRQ and must be exclusivly available for
use by the SDIO peripheral.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Because DMA2 may be in use by other peripherals, eg SPI1.
On PYBD-SF6 it's possible to trigger a bug in the existing code by turning
on WLAN and connecting to an AP, pinging the IP address from a PC and
running the following code on the PYBD:
def spi_test(s):
while 1:
s.write('test')
s.read(4)
spi_test(machine.SPI(1,100000000))
This will eventually fail with `OSError: [Errno 110] ETIMEDOUT` because
DMA2 was turned off by the CYW43 driver during the SPI1 transfer.
This commit fixes the bug by removing the code that explicitly disables
DMA2. Instead DMA2 will be automatically disabled after an inactivity
timeout, see commit a96afae90f
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Quail (https://www.mikroe.com/quail, PID: MIKROE-1793) is based on an
STM32F427VI CPU, featuring 2048 kB of Flash memory and 192 kB of RAM. An
on-board Cypress S25FL164K adds 8 MB of SPI Flash.
Quail has 4 mikroBUS(TM) sockets for Mikroe click(TM) board connectivity,
along with 24 screw terminals for connecting additional electronics and two
USB ports (one for programming, the other for external mass storage).
4 UARTs, 2 SPIs and 1 I2C bus are available for communication.
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Cappelletti <lorenzo.cappelletti@gmail.com>
Was incorrectly added as 7MB for an 8MB SPI flash, but this board has a
16MB chip, not 8MB, so it should be 15MB leaving 1MB for MicroPython.
Thanks to @robert-hh
The rp2.StateMachine.exec errors when supplying a sideset action. This
commit passes the sideset_opt from the StateMachine though to the parser.
It also adds some value validation to the sideset operator.
Additionally, the "word" method is added to the exec to allow any other
unsupported opcodes.
Fixes issue #7924.