diff options
-rw-r--r-- | LICENSE | 23 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | README | 15 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | notes/i2c | 134 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | notes/pin-mapping.txt (renamed from pin-mapping.txt) | 0 |
4 files changed, 164 insertions, 8 deletions
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ CONTENT OF SUCH FIRMWARE AND/OR THE USE MADE BY CUSTOMERS OF THE CODING INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN IN CONNECTION WITH THEIR PRODUCTS. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -Unless otherwise noted in the header, all code in /libmaple/ are copyright +Unless otherwise noted in the header, all code in /libmaple/ is copyright LeafLabs LLC and are released under the MIT License: Copyright (c) 2009-2010 LeafLabs LLC @@ -36,3 +36,24 @@ THE SOFTWARE. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/MIT/ for more information. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +Some of files in /stm32conf/ were written by 'lanchon' and posted in the +STMicroelectronics forum at: + +https://my.st.com/public/STe2ecommunities/mcu/Lists/ARM%20CortexM3%20STM32/flat.aspx?RootFolder=/public/STe2ecommunities/mcu/Lists/ARM%20CortexM3%20STM32/STM32%20CC%2B%2B%20build%20environment%20using%20CodeSourcery%20Sourcery%20G%2B%2B¤tviews=18152 + +These files are stated to be in the public domain. Other files in /stm32conf/ +are from CodeSourcery, Inc with the following notice: + +Copyright (c) 2006, 2007 CodeSourcery Inc + +The authors hereby grant permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, +and license this software and its documentation for any purpose, provided +that existing copyright notices are retained in all copies and that this +notice is included verbatim in any distributions. No written agreement, +license, or royalty fee is required for any of the authorized uses. +Modifications to this software may be copyrighted by their authors +and need not follow the licensing terms described here, provided that +the new terms are clearly indicated on the first page of each file where +they apply. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- @@ -35,12 +35,13 @@ libmaple Repo Layout Extra wrappers and functionality around the lower level code which is useful for programming in the IDE. -/exapmles/ +/examples/ + What it sounds like. Copy these to /main.cpp to compile them. - -/stm32lib/ - The "standard" library given away by STM; to be removed ASAP. - +/notes/ + Unstructured text notes that may be useful. The 45-maple.rules udev file + can be placed in /etc/udev/rules.d/ on compatible linux machines to allow + non-root access to the Maple USB device for uploading. Instructions to Compile for ARM Targets ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ @@ -62,6 +63,6 @@ You will also need to have dfu-util installed (on Linux) or compiled and placed in a folder "dfu-util/" at the same level as the maple-library folder (macosx and windows). -Write your program using src/main.cpp as the entry point. Then just 'make' and follow the directions! - +Write your program using /main.cpp as the entry point. Then just 'make' and +follow the directions! diff --git a/notes/i2c b/notes/i2c new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c324bb2 --- /dev/null +++ b/notes/i2c @@ -0,0 +1,134 @@ + +Maple ------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +We'll probably want both HardwareI2C and SoftI2C implementations, with the +soft being bitbanged on arbitrary pins (and possibly only master-mode; almost +certainly not multi-master). + +The first simple implementation will support up to 400khz operation, only +7-bit addresses, no clock stretching (on our part), only blocking master +read/write (with timeout), and only master n-write,n-read combined messages. + +A more advanced implementation would be event-driven, support DMA, higher +clock speeds, handle error interrupts, etc. + +Should all of these return a status code? or just fail? or fail silently? + +Ring buffers etc are not needed because the length of the read/write is always +known (or handled by the application code for slave mode). + +// port = {1,2} +i2c_init(port, freq) +i2c_disable(port) + +// blocking/polling +i2c_master_read(port, slave_addr, *data, len) // wrapper around writeread +i2c_master_write(port, slave_addr, *data, len) // wrapper around writeread +i2c_master_writeread(port, slave_addr, *wdata, wlen, *rdata, rlen) + +// callbacks/interrupts +i2c_slave_set_addr(port, addr) // enables callbacks etc if they aren't already; + // set ACK high +i2c_slave_set_rx_callback(port, *function) // takes a byte? +i2c_slave_set_tx_callback(port, *function) // gives a byte? + +How to init: + - setup pins + - setup peripheral input clock: 4MHz for fast mode + - configure clock control registers + - configure rise time register + - configure interrupts + - configure I2C_CR1 to enable the peripheral + - set ACK flag low: won't be a slave until addr is set + +How to master_write: + - START, addr[0:7], W, ACK, DATA[0:7], ACK, DATA[8:15], ..., STOP + - software sets START high, which toggles M/SL to master mode + - when START actually happens, SB is set and interrupt happens; hardware + waits until address is written to DR + - address shifts out and an interrupt is thrown with ADDR high; if LSB of + address was low, in transmitter mode. TRA reflects this + - software writes to the first byte to DR and clears ADDR + - first byte shifts out and when there's an ACK an interrupt is thrown + with TxE high; if no new byte was written to DR since the previous + transmission BTF goes high + - software writes next byte to DR and clears BTF, or sets STOP bit to end + data transmission, or sets START to begin next part of combined session + - after STOP is set, hardware goes back to slave mode + +How to master_read: + - START, addr[0:7], R, ACK, DATA[0:7], ACK, ..., NACK, DATA[-8:-1], STOP + - software sets START high, which toggles M/SL to master mode + - when START actually happens, SB is set and interrupt happens; hardware + waits until address is written to DR + - address shifts out and an interrupt is thrown with ADDR high; if LSB of + address was high, in receiver mode. TRA reflects this. + - software clears ADDR; hardware shifts in first byte from slave and sends ACK + if ACK is set. interrupt is thrown with RxNE high, with BTF set + - if only reading one byte, ACK should be set low and STOP high; hardware will + then NACK and STOP after reading + - software reads from DR and clears BTF bit. next byte is shifted in + - software sets NACK low after second-to-last byte is read by setting ACK low + after reading from DR, and either setting STOP or START high + - after STOP is set, hardware goes back to slave mode + +How to master_writeread: + - [START, addr[0:7], W, ACK, WDATA[0:7], ...], + [START, addr[0:7], R, ACK, RDATA[0:7], ACK, ..., NACK, RDATA[-8:-1]] + STOP + - implement the above read/write but set START high instead of STOP high at + the end + +How to slave tx (master read): + - if address is matched, ACK is send (if ACK flag is high) and ADDR goes high; + event interrupt is triggered if ITEVFEN flag is set. TRA indicates whether + this is a read or write request + - program sets DR degister and clears ADDR flag; hardware will clock stretch + until ADDR is low + - if ITVENFEN and ITBUFEN are set, the TxE interrupt is triggered after the + byte is sent and the master ACKs. now the hardware stretches until BTF is + cleared before sending again. + - after the STOP is sent, hardware sets STOPF, throws an event if ITEVFEN is + high, and waits for a read of SR1 and write CR1 + +How to slave rx (master write): + - if address is matched, ACK is send (if ACK flag is high) and ADDR goes high; + event interrupt is triggered if ITEVFEN flag is set. TRA indicates whether + this is a read or write request + - the hardware shifts in the byte to DR and sends an ACK if ACK flag is high + - if ITEVFEN and ITBUFEN are set, an RxNE interrupt is sent. hardware waits + until the BTF flag is reset + - after the STOP is sent, hardware sets STOPF, throws an event if ITEVFEN is + high, and waits for a read of SR1 and write CR1 + +i2c General Reference --------------------------------------------------------- + +http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I²C + +4 modes/roles for a given device. These designations are transaction specific; +a device can switch roles from one transaction to the next: + master transmit + master receive + slave transmit + slave receive + + +STM32 Specific Reference ------------------------------------------------------ + +see stm32 docs: reference manual (doc 13902 rev10) pg637/1003 + +see STM32F10x_StdPeriph_Lib_V3.2.0/Project/STM32F10x_StdPeriph_Examples/I2C/Interrupt for an example project (reading/writing between the two i2c buses) based on the stm32library + +>100khz is "fast mode", which goes up to 400khz. stm32 supports up to 400khz. + things are different in fast mode: 4mhz input clock + +interrupts see pg652/1003 +registers see pg654/1003 + +PEC = packet error checking. don't think this is i2c standard + +each i2c port has an error and an event interrupt + +the stm32 is in slave mode by default; it enters master only when executing +a request + diff --git a/pin-mapping.txt b/notes/pin-mapping.txt index c1709e8..c1709e8 100644 --- a/pin-mapping.txt +++ b/notes/pin-mapping.txt |