.. highlight:: cpp .. _compatibility: ============================= Maple-Arduino Compatibility ============================= .. contents:: Contents :local: Overview -------- The biggest difference between the Maple and most Arduino boards is 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`). The bitwidth of the processor means that the Maple can process 32-bit operations (like adding two 32-bit integers) in a single instruction, while an Arduino processor would have to split up large operations into several smaller ones. In a lot of cases 8-bit operations are plenty (integers 0-255, single characters of text, etc.), but if you're dealing with higher resolution data, the speed up could be significant. A trade-off is that code could be larger as well; program instructions and memory locations can be up to 32-bits each, which in the worst case would quadruple program size. In reality, the removal of extra instructions and fancy packing together of simple instructions means that programs aren't much larger (or are even smaller). Header Numbering and Incompatibilities -------------------------------------- The numbering of headers is different; on the Maple each GPIO has a unique number: D0, D1, D2, all the way up to D37 (actually, there are :ref:`a few more `...). On the Arduino, the analog pins are 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 (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 increased capacitance). Alternatively, |i2c| can be bit-banged 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. * 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 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 debugging; it uses :ref:`JTAG `. Software Language/Library Changes --------------------------------- With :ref:`one notable exception `, the entire 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 full 32-bit (4 byte) integer values instead of the regular 16-bit (2 byte) Arduino values. * `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``, ``INPUT_PULLDOWN``. Additionally, the PWM and Analog Input pins can be configured as ``INPUT_ANALOG`` and ``PWM`` respectively. See the :ref:`GPIO documentation ` for more information. .. TODO: reference libmaple docs above when they're done * Serial1 syntax: like the `Arduino Mega `_, the Maple has multiple USART ports. By default, Serial is not mapped to any of them, use ``Serial1`` through ``Serial3`` instead. .. TODO: reference libmaple docs for Serial[n] above when they're done * 16-bit :ref:`PWM `: Arduino boards support 8-bit PWM, which means that calls to `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 means that calls to `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. .. class:: ported-feature I am supported! This should be ordinary .. class:: non-ported-feature I can't do it :( Also ordinary .. class:: partly-ported-feature I sorta work And I am also ordinary Stub. (not finished)