From 3b7f16dba295da3a0071564ac284c25dc56e6b18 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Marti Bolivar Date: Mon, 29 Nov 2010 18:08:04 -0500 Subject: New documentation content is done. Next step is to theme. --- docs/source/compatibility.rst | 187 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 158 insertions(+), 29 deletions(-) (limited to 'docs/source/compatibility.rst') diff --git a/docs/source/compatibility.rst b/docs/source/compatibility.rst index 7eb0a8f..a070b42 100644 --- a/docs/source/compatibility.rst +++ b/docs/source/compatibility.rst @@ -17,10 +17,13 @@ that the Maple uses a 32-bit ARM Cortex-M3 architecture chip while the Arduinos have 8-bit Atmel AVR chips. The different instruction set means that machine code (executable binary programs) is incompatible between the two, and a different compiler (actually just a different -version of `gcc `_) is required. The compiler for -the regular Arduino IDE is the popular :command:`avr-gcc` package; the -compiler for the Maple version of the IDE is CodeSourcery's edition of -gcc for the ARM EABI target (:command:`arm-non-eabi-gcc`). +version of `gcc `_) is required. + +The compiler for the regular Arduino IDE is the popular +:command:`avr-gcc` package; the compiler for the Maple version of the +IDE is CodeSourcery's edition of gcc for the ARM EABI target +(:command:`arm-non-eabi-gcc`). A (preliminary) reference on +:ref:`using arm-none-eabi-gcc ` is available. The bitwidth of the processor means that the Maple can process 32-bit operations (like adding two 32-bit integers) in a single instruction, @@ -45,8 +48,8 @@ numbered separately (A0-A5) from the digital pins (D0\ -D13). The incompatible hardware differences are: -* |i2c| port: on most Arduinos, the |i2c| port is Analog Input - 4 (SDA) and Analog Input 5 (SCL); on the Maple, |i2c| port 1 is D5 +* **I2C port**: on most Arduinos, the |i2c| port is Analog Input 4 + (SDA) and Analog Input 5 (SCL); on the Maple, |i2c| port 1 is D5 (SCL) and D9 (SDA), and |i2c| port 2 is D29 (SCL) and D30 (SDA). It should be possible to skywire, sacrificing signal quality (due to @@ -54,21 +57,22 @@ The incompatible hardware differences are: reasonably well in software. This peripheral could potentially be rerouted internally, but we haven't looked into it. -* :ref:`PWM ` on D10: all the other standard Arduino PWM headers have PWM - functionality on the Maple (D2,D3,D6,D9,D11), but not D10. We did - our best! It may be possible to reroute this peripheral internally - using low level configuration, but we haven't looked in to it. +* :ref:`PWM ` **on D10**: all the other standard Arduino PWM + headers have PWM functionality on the Maple (D2,D3,D6,D9,D11), but + not D10. We did our best! It may be possible to reroute this + peripheral internally using low level configuration, but we haven't + looked in to it. -* No External Voltage Reference: The Arduino has an Aref pin which +* **No External Voltage Reference**: The Arduino has an Aref pin which allows the use of an external ADC voltage reference; the Maple has an extra GPIO pin (14) with PWM capability in this spot, and does not allow an external voltage reference to be configured. -* EEPROM: the Maple does not have any internal EEPROM. This +* **EEPROM**: the Maple does not have any internal EEPROM. This functionality can be emulated with regular persistent flash memory, or with an external EEPROM chip. -* ISP Programming: the Maple does not use an ISP/ICSP bus for +* **ISP Programming**: the Maple does not use an ISP/ICSP bus for debugging; it uses :ref:`JTAG `. @@ -76,14 +80,18 @@ Software Language/Library Changes --------------------------------- With :ref:`a few exceptions `, the entire -Arduino language is supported. However, there are some subtle +Wiring/Arduino language is supported. However, there are some subtle differences, most of which are improvements: -* 32-bit integers: many standard functions either expect or return +* **32-bit integers**: many standard functions either expect or return full 32-bit (4 byte) integer values instead of the regular 16-bit (2 byte) Arduino values. -* :ref:`pinMode() ` types: any :ref:`GPIO ` +* **64-bit doubles**: The :ref:`double ` type is a full + double-precision floating point type on the Maple; it is a + single-precision floating point value on the Arduino. + +* :ref:`pinMode() ` **types**: any :ref:`GPIO ` (including analog pins) can be configured into one of the following modes with a single call to ```pinMode()``: ``OUTPUT``, ``OUTPUT_OPEN_DRAIN``, ``INPUT_FLOATING``, ``INPUT_PULLUP``, @@ -91,41 +99,162 @@ differences, most of which are improvements: be configured as ``INPUT_ANALOG`` and ``PWM`` respectively. See the :ref:`GPIO documentation ` for more information. -* ``Serial1`` syntax: like the `Arduino Mega +* :ref:`Serial port ` **syntax**: like the `Arduino Mega `_, the Maple has multiple :ref:`USART ports `. By default, ``Serial`` is not mapped to any of them, use ``Serial1`` through ``Serial3`` instead. -* 16-bit :ref:`PWM `: Arduino boards support 8-bit PWM, which +* **16-bit** :ref:`PWM `: Arduino boards support 8-bit PWM, which means that calls to :ref:`analogWrite() ` take values between 0 (always off) and 255 (always on). The Maple supports 16-bit PWM, so the corresponding values should be between 0 (always off) and 65535 (always on). -* 12-bit :ref:`ADC `: Arduino boards support 10-bit ADC, which +* **12-bit** :ref:`ADC `: Arduino boards support 10-bit ADC, which means that calls to :ref:`analogRead() ` will return values between 0 and 1023. The Maple supports 12-bit ADC, so the same call will instead return values between 0 and 4095. -Stub (unfinished) +Shield and Device Compatibility +------------------------------- + +.. TODO update for 0.0.9 + +.. list-table:: + :header-rows: 1 + + * - Shield/Device + - Compatible? + - Notes + + * - Ethernet shield + - Yes! + - Tested; no library yet + + * - WiFi Shield + - Yes! + - Tested; no library yet (expected for 0.0.9) + + * - MIDI shield + - Yes! + - Tested; no library yet + + * - XBee shield + - Unknown + - + + * - Bluetooth shield + - Unknown + - + + * - Cellular shield + - Unknown + - + +Library Porting Status +---------------------- + +The state of currently ported Arduino libraries is the +:ref:`libraries`. + +.. TODO update for 0.0.9; update as libraries are ported. + +.. list-table:: + :header-rows: 1 + + * - Library + - Ported? + - Notes + + * - Wire + - Preliminary + - In progress; see :ref:`library reference `. + + * - LiquidCrystal + - **Yes** + - :ref:`Included since IDE 0.0.7 ` + + * - Ethernet + - Not yet + - Planned -.. class:: ported-feature + * - EEPROM + - No + - The Maple doesn't have EEPROM; use flash instead. Perhaps this + library could be emulated? -I am supported! + * - Firmata + - Not yet + - Planned -This should be ordinary + * - Matrix + - Not yet + - Planned -.. class:: non-ported-feature + * - SoftwareSerial + - Not yet + - Planned -I can't do it :( + * - Sprite + - Not yet + - Planned -Also ordinary + * - Stepper + - Not yet + - Planned -.. class:: partly-ported-feature +Sketch and Library Porting HOWTO +-------------------------------- -I sorta work +In addition to the suggestions in this section, you may find many of +the individual :ref:`language reference ` pages useful. As +appropriate, these have "Arduino Compatibility" sections; one good +example is the :ref:`analogWrite() ` +function. -And I am also ordinary +- Check the hardware and header differences above, and see if your + project or shield needs to be modified (eg, add 3.3V level + converters or reroute PWM to header D10). +- Check for ported library functionality. We intend to port all of the + core and popular libraries (like Wire, Ethernet, and the LCD screen + driver), but this task is not yet finished. (Patches are welcome!) +- Check for peripheral conflicts; changing the configuration of timers + and bus speeds for a feature on one header may impact all the + features on that hardware "port". For example, changing the timer + prescaler to do long PWM pulses could impact |i2c| communications on + nearby headers. + +- Rewrite any low-level code. This could potentially be very + difficult, but hopefully you've used the Arduino libraries to + abstract away the registers and other hardware-specific + details. Your sketch probably doesn't have any low-level code; a + library which wraps a particular peripheral very well may. Some + help is available in the :ref:`arm-gcc` reference. + +- Redeclare variable sizes if necessary: generics like ``int`` will + probably work unless you depend on side-effects like rollover. + +- Check every ``pinMode()``: the Maple has more modes for GPIO + pins. For example, make sure to set analog pins to ``INPUT_ANALOG`` + before reading and PWM pins to ``PWM`` before writing. The full set + of pin modes is documented in the :ref:`lang-pinmode` reference. + +- Modify PWM writes: ``pinMode()`` must be set to ``PWM``, the + frequency of the PWM pulse configured, and the duty cycle written + with up to 16-bit resolution. + +- Modify ADC reads: :ref:`lang-analogread` takes the full pin number + (not 0-5) and returns a full 12-bit reading. The ADC pin must have + its ``pinMode()`` set to ``INPUT_ANALOG``. + +- Possibly convert all Serial-over-USB communications to use + :ref:`lang-serialusb` instead of a USART :ref:`serial port + `. The Maple has a dedicated USB port which is not + connected to the USART TX/RX pins in any way. + +- Check timing: Maple clock cycles are just 13.9 nanoseconds, though + the peripheral bus speeds (which limit GPIO output) are clocked + slower. -- cgit v1.2.3