The exti layer now allows drivers to register interrupt callbacks
during board initialization. All details of the driver using a
particular EXTI pin have been removed from the EXTI layer so it
can now be used on any board without board-specific modification.
This includes some nice refinements provided by Mike Smith during
initial review. His original commits have been squashed into this
one.
Reduced scope of many variables since they were being
exposed unnecessarily.
Renamed pios_usb_hid_prop code to pios_usbhook to reflect
the fact that it implements all of the callout functions
that are hooked into the stm32 usb library.
Tested this heap2 at runtime with CC and new compiler since old one (current) triggers strict alliasing error.
That's ok since strict aliasing is disabled on OP, and CC only use heap1.
heap reamining is low (about 500) but stacks can be ajusted (specially the 200 bytes from system) to give the level close to 1Ko if needed.
Merge branch 'master' into OP-423_Mathieu_Change_Init_To_Reduce_Memory_Footprint
Conflicts:
flight/CopterControl/System/inc/FreeRTOSConfig.h
flight/CopterControl/System/inc/pios_config.h
I managed to test CC with heap2 changes and the init stack claimed back to heap once scheduler starts.
the changes of this commit are OP related (just cleanup on CC side):
Arch specific stuff (in reset vector) to hide this from portable code:
- switch back to MSP stack before starting the scheduler so that the sheduler can use the IRQ stack (when/if needed).
- call the C portable function in heap2 to claim some stack back (the number to claim is taken from linker file).
- start the scheduler from reset vector (I move this here from main because it make sense to not go back to C (so that I don't need to copy the rolled stack in case the sheduler returns). This make it more clean.
- Also I have added the call to the mem manager if sheduler return. that way, we don't reset indefinitely if memory runs out. We will go to this handler and figure things out (right now, it's just looping but at least not rebooting. Probably trap NMI would be better (later improvement).
- switch back to MSP stack before starting the scheduler so that the sheduler can use the IRQ stack (when/if needed).
- call the C portable function in heap1 to claim some stack back (the number to claim is taken from linker file).
- start the scheduler from reset vector (I move this here from main because it make sense to not go back to C (so that I don't need to copy the rolled stack in case the sheduler returns). This make it more clean.
- Also I have added the call to the mem manager if sheduler return. that way, we don't reset indefinitely if memory runs out. We will go to this handler and figure things out (right now, it's just looping but at least not rebooting. Probably trap NMI would be better (later improvement).
The part missing for this part is the weak attribute for the function in heap1.c so that we don't have to update everything with empty stub.
I think the weak atrribute for C function called in assembly is arch dependent so I am not sure if this is possible (will look into it, maybe somebody outthere nows).
Right now, it's heap1 dependent and won't work with heap2. I will clean that up the next couple of days.
I did some test and it looks good.
this is without init code re-organization so we don't free as much as we will be it's good starts.
This compile with sim_posix (since it does not affect portable code) so this is really clean.
I only tested this with CC. I will port it for OP when I will work on heap2.
- use IRQStack for ISRs (at begening of SRAM) (let's call it the irq stack)
- use end of heap for stack needed during initialization (let's call it the init stack).
- the systemStats in GCS indicate the remaining bytes in the IRQ stack (this is realy usefull to monitor our (nested) IRQs.
This is the base ground to provide as much memory as possible available at task creation time.
Next step is to re-organize the initialization in order to move all the init out of the thread's stacks onto the init stack.
This will provide as much memory as possible available at task creation time.
Basically the stack during initialization will be destroyed once the scheduler starts and dynamic alloc are made (since the init stack is at the end of the heap). We will need to make sure we don't clobber the heap during initialization otherwise this will lead to stack corruption.
- only affect flight/PiOS (no change for posix and win32)
- tested on recent master (some runtime on CC with GCS)
- the new timer feature is not compiled-in since we don't use it yet.
- NO TEST FLIGHT
will need to be forward ported (and ideally pushed up stream) for FreeRTOS
updates
git-svn-id: svn://svn.openpilot.org/OpenPilot/trunk@2939 ebee16cc-31ac-478f-84a7-5cbb03baadba
configuration structures are const which keeps them in flash instead of ram.
However the library needs to declare them const for the compiler to work.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.openpilot.org/OpenPilot/trunk@2231 ebee16cc-31ac-478f-84a7-5cbb03baadba
Mark the I2C_InitStruct parameter as const so that we can pass
const data as the initializer.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.openpilot.org/OpenPilot/trunk@1240 ebee16cc-31ac-478f-84a7-5cbb03baadba
Many of the STM32 library functions take a pointer to an
initialization structure. In nearly every case, this struct
is a read-only (ie. const) parameter.
It is advantageous (and good coding practice) to actually declare
read-only data as const so that the compiler can place the const data
in the .rodata section which resides in flash and doesn't consume any
RAM. This has the added bonus advantage that it is impossible for the
running application to corrupt the read-only data.
In order to allow passing pointers to const data into the library
functions, it is essential that the function prototypes also declare
their associated read-only parameters as const. This commit adds
the const attribute to those parameters that are actually read-only.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.openpilot.org/OpenPilot/trunk@758 ebee16cc-31ac-478f-84a7-5cbb03baadba
This commit fixes all existing warnings.
All basic compiler warnings will now be treated as errors.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.openpilot.org/OpenPilot/trunk@658 ebee16cc-31ac-478f-84a7-5cbb03baadba