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+
+SerialUSB Implementation
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+The low-level serial USB implementation (in libmaple, written in C) is always
+non-blocking. A blocking implementation which polls with an optional timeout
+is in wirish (written in C++).
+
+begin() sets mode (and timeout if appropriate)
+end() disables the endpoint and hardware peripheral
+flush() clears the RX and TX buffers
+available() gives # of bytes in RX buffer
+pending() gives # of bytes in TX buffer
+read() gets one byte from RX buffer (or ??? if empty)
+getRTS()/getDTR() return control line status
+write(), print(), println(), see below
+
+there is nothing preventing the implementation of setTimeout(),
+flushTX/flushRX, etc, except for code size.
+
+NONBLOCKING (-1)
+ print() returns immediately with information about how much data was
+ transmitted. 64 bytes is the maximum that can be sent at a time, and
+ possibly less if buffer isn't empty. it's up to usercode to chunk up
+ larger datablocks, see if the buffer is full, etc
+
+ returns pending (max 64) if bytes got put in the TX buffer
+ returns 0 if buffer was full
+
+BLOCKING (0)
+ print() will block INDEFINATELY waiting for an open connection to send
+ an arbitrarily long array of bytes through with up to 64 bytes per packet.
+
+ returns sent (# of bytes added to the TX buffer successfully; all but the
+ last 64 or so will have been fully transmitted)
+
+TIMEOUT (the default, with 10ms. timeout period in ms)
+ print() will behave as in BLOCKING mode, except that it will timeout after
+ a given number of milliseconds. the timeout is not reset after every packet
+ is sent, so the device should be set with a large timeout if many packets
+ are going to be sent in one go, or the transmission will get cut off.
+
+ returns sent (# of bytes added to the TX buffer successfully; all but the
+ last 64 or so will have been fully transmitted)
+ returns 0 if buffer was full
+
+SerialUSB Design Decisions
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+The USB port behaves differently from other serial interfaces, making a clean
+and simple "println()" implementation difficult. Data to be sent to the host is
+written into a small 64byte endpoint buffer, which the host may (or may not!)
+read from at any time. The RTS and DTR control lines /should/ indicate whether
+the host will empty out the endpoint buffer in a reasonable amount of time,
+but this is not reliable.
+
+From the usercode side, we want the println() function to accept strings up to
+hundreds of characters long (longer than the buffer) and get them sent out as
+quickly as possible, returning to code execution as quickly as possible. At the
+same time we don't want want to generate a large buffer because this will
+quickly eat up RAM. When the host device is not connected or not recieving
+bytes, the behavior of println can be undefined; it should return quickly and
+usercode should be able to determine if bytes were queued or not, but it isn't
+important what happens to the bytes. On the other hand, when the device /is/
+connected, we want to guarentee that bytes get sent in the appropriate order
+and none are missed.
+
+