| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Move libmaple/*.h to (new) libmaple/include/libmaple/. The new
accepted way to include a libmaple header foo.h is with:
#include <libmaple/foo.h>
This is more polite in terms of the include namespace. It also allows
us to e.g. implement the Arduino SPI library at all (which has header
SPI.h; providing it was previously impossible on case-insensitive
filesystems due to libmaple's spi.h).
Similarly for Wirish.
The old include style (#include "header.h") is now deprecated.
libmaple/*.h:
- Change include guard #defines from _FOO_H_ to _LIBMAPLE_FOO_H_.
- Add license headers where they're missing
- Add conditional extern "C" { ... } blocks where they're missing
(they aren't always necessary, but we might was well do it against
the future, while we're at it.).
- Change includes from #include "foo.h" to #include <libmaple/foo.h>.
- Move includes after extern "C".
- Remove extra trailing newlines
Note that this doesn't include the headers under libmaple/usb/ or
libmaple/usb/usb_lib. These will get fixed later.
libmaple/*.c:
- Change includes from #include "foo.h" to #include <libmaple/foo.h>.
Makefile:
- Add I$(LIBMAPLE_PATH)/include/libmaple to GLOBAL_FLAGS. This allows
for users (including Wirish) to migrate their code, but should go
away ASAP, since it slows down compilation.
Wirish:
- Move wirish/**/*.h to (new) wirish/include/wirish/. This ignores
the USB headers, which, as usual, are getting handled after
everything else.
- Similarly generify wirish/boards/ structure. For each supported
board "foo", move wirish/boards/foo.h and wirish/boards/foo.cpp to
wirish/boards/foo/include/board/board.h and
wirish/boards/foo/board.cpp, respectively. Also remove the #ifdef
hacks around the .cpp files.
- wirish/rules.mk: put wirish/boards/foo/include in the include path
(and add wirish/boards/foo/board.cpp to the list of sources to be
compiled). This allows saying:
#include <board/board.h>
instead of the hack currently in place. We can allow the user to
override this setting later to make adding custom board definitions
easier.
- Disable -Werror in libmaple/rules.mk, as the current USB warnings
don't let the olimex_stm32_h103 board compile. We can re-enable
-Werror once we've moved the board-specific bits out of libmaple
proper.
libraries, examples:
- Update includes accordingly.
- Miscellaneous cosmetic fixups.
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <mbolivar@leaflabs.com>
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No longer used.
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <mbolivar@leaflabs.com>
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Add new usb_cdcacm.h, which provides the virtual serial port API.
This file (and new usb_cdcacm.c) consolidate the VCOM support, which
was previously distributed through descriptors.[hc], usb.[hc],
usb_callbacks.[hc], and usb_config.h.
Add usb_init_usblib() to usb.h, as a way of initializing the USB
peripheral in terms of the data structures required by usb_lib. This
is used by the new usb_cdcacm_enable().
Create new usb_lib_globals.h, with declarations for the usb_lib global
state which is most used throughout the rest of the libmaple USB stack.
Remove descriptors.c and usb_callbacks.[hc]; they are no longer
necessary.
Update the USB README accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <mbolivar@leaflabs.com>
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usb_reg_map.h contains the usual register map and register bit
definitions that libmaple convention requires. It also contains a
variety of structs and convenience functions for accessing and
manipulating endpoint registers, BTABLE entries, and PMA buffers.
We'll be moving towards usb_reg_map.h instead of usb_lib/usb_regs.h.
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <mbolivar@leaflabs.com>
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These files contain a lot of duplicated and unused code. Move the
relevant pieces that need to survive into usb.c and usb_callbacks.c.
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <mbolivar@leaflabs.com>
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-Add -Wall, -Werror to libmaple/*
-Fix warnings
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Basic PWM works. Had some problems in testing that might be due to
USART bugs.
HardwareTimer has been removed from the build for now; I will
re-implement it in terms of the new libmaple API, but consider it
deprecated. Let's come up with something better.
Servo is implemented in terms of HardwareTimer, so it also has been
temporarily removed from the build.
pwmWrite() likely got a little bit less inefficient due to
indirection, but the PIN_MAPs shrank by a pointer per PinMapping.
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Conflicts:
examples/test-fsmc.cpp
libmaple/rules.mk
wirish/boards.h
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renamed SysTick_Handler back to SysTickHandler since all of our linker magic/lanchon-stm32 depends on that name. added backup register support in order to test independent watchdog support; it seems to work. next major test target is DMA support.
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Redirect thread-mode execution to a fail routine which throbs the LED to
indicate a hard fault. Because the fail routine runs in thread mode
with interrupts on, USB auto-reset should now work. Test by executing
some bogus instruction (e.g. *(volatile int*)0xf34fdaa = 0;) and check
that the auto-reset continues to work.
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Major build system rewrite. New and exciting:
1. Proper dependency tracking. All source files including header files
should be properly tracked and recompiled as necessary when they are
changed.
2. Build-type tracking. If the target changes from 'ram' to 'flash,'
for example, the build system will force a rebuild rather than
incorrectly link modules to a different address.
3. New targets:
The old 'ram,' 'flash,' and 'jtag' targets have been replaced with
the environment variable MAPLE_TARGET, which controls the link address.
Users can either export it to their environment, or pass MAPLE_TARGET on
the command-line. Once this is set, sketches can be compiled with 'make
sketch,' or simply 'make.'
Note: the default is MAPLE_TARGET='flash.'
The target 'install' now automagically uploads the sketch to the board
using the appropriate method.
The 'run' target has been renamed to 'debug.' It starts an openocd gdb
server.
4. Odds and ends:
-Verbose and 'quiet' modes. Set V=1 for verbose compilation, the default
is quiet.
-Object file sizes and disassembly information is generated and placed
in build/$(BOARD).sizes and build/$(BOARD).disas, respectively.
-Parallel make with -j should speed things up if you have multiple
cores.
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