427: New nrf PPI api (with DPPI support for nRF91 & nRF53) r=Dirbaio a=diondokter
- Added _ppi and _dppi features to distinguish between the new and the old peripheral.
- Removed ConfigurableChannel and added capacity numbers to the channels
- Replaced the PPI api with a new one using the DPPI terminology (publish & subscribe)
- Updated all tasks and event registers for DPPI
My proposal for the new API.
Tested on my nRF52840 and nRF9160.
Biggest changes for nRF52 is that there's no longer a distinction made between fork task and normal task. You now subscribe tasks to a channel and at runtime it is checked whether or not there's still room for another subscription.
Same for events.
There are differences between the PPI and DPPI though:
- With the PPI you have a limited amount of tasks and events per channel, but a task or event can be used on multiple channels at the same time.
- With the DPPI you have an unlimited amount of tasks and events per channel, but every task or event can only be used on 1 channel.
This is all checked at runtime.
Currently you need to track which tasks and events are assigned to a channel in order to unassign them. For the PPI this data is stored centrally in the registers, so it would be easy to create e.g. `clear_all` and `get_subscribed_tasks` functions. But for the DPPI that data is stored decentrally and so would need some manual tracking.
If there are requests for tracking functionality, then it should be able to be made relatively easy. But for now this API is fine I think.
Co-authored-by: Dion Dokter <dion@tweedegolf.com>
Co-authored-by: Dario Nieuwenhuis <dirbaio@dirbaio.net>
Moving `new_*` to the version-specific mod allows doing the correct
register writes right there in `new`, without needing abstractions
like `enable_all`/`disable_all`.
- Scary pointer math is now contained in the tasks and events
- ppi now sets the tasks and events immediately and the struct is now zero-sized
- StaticToOne is renamed to ZeroToOne
- Used DPPI tasks and events now panic when enabled twice
- Removed ConfigurableChannel and added capacity numbers to the channels
- Replaced the PPI api with a new one using the DPPI terminology (publish & subscribe)
- Updated all tasks and event registers for DPPI
456: Fix L4 clock setup for MSI and PLL to allow RNG operation r=Dirbaio a=lulf
Example is tested on STM32L475VG.
Co-authored-by: Ulf Lilleengen <lulf@redhat.com>
448: Dummy pin implementation for Saadc internal vdd sampling r=Dirbaio a=jacobrosenthal
For instance, for reading the battery input voltage on the nrf
Api ends up looking like
`let channel_config = saadc::ChannelConfig::single_ended(saadc::VddInput::default());`
I ~haven't confirmed a sane reading yet~, but this compiles so is ready for bikeshedding
Update: It looks like Ive got sane readings
Co-authored-by: Jacob Rosenthal <jacobrosenthal@gmail.com>
444: nrf: add NVMC driver. r=lulf a=Dirbaio
I haven't implemented `embassy_traits::Flash` because I want to change it to match embedded_storage, which is much better designed.
Either way, NVMC can't do async anyway, so the best we could do is implementing the async trait in a blocking way...
Co-authored-by: Dario Nieuwenhuis <dirbaio@dirbaio.net>
446: Use upstream version of rust-lorawan r=lulf a=lulf
The async device has been merged, so dependency can be updated to commit on the upstream master branch.
Co-authored-by: Ulf Lilleengen <ulf.lilleengen@gmail.com>
445: Workaround duplicity of DMA channel declaration when the target chip … r=Dirbaio a=matoushybl
…specifies more than one request, by processing only the first declared request for the channel.
Fixes#443 .
Co-authored-by: Matous Hybl <hyblmatous@gmail.com>
439: Prevent overflow in std timer driver r=lulf a=lulf
This prevents the std time driver from overflowing when setting the next
wakeup time. If an overflow occurs, default to sleeping up to 1 second.
Fixes#438
Co-authored-by: Ulf Lilleengen <ulf.lilleengen@gmail.com>
This prevents the std time driver from overflowing when setting the next
wakeup time. If an overflow occurs, default to sleeping up to 1 second.
Fixes#438
440: Add i2c example for L4 r=Dirbaio a=lulf
Tested to work on STM32 IOT01A (STM32L475VG) board.
Co-authored-by: Ulf Lilleengen <ulf.lilleengen@gmail.com>
436: Add support for temperature sensor peripheral r=lulf a=lulf
* Add TEMP peripheral to all nRF52 chips
* Add async HAL for reading temperature values
* Add example application reading temperature values
Co-authored-by: Ulf Lilleengen <lulf@redhat.com>
Co-authored-by: Ulf Lilleengen <ulf.lilleengen@gmail.com>
428: executor: Use critical sections instead of atomic CAS loops r=lulf a=Dirbaio
Optimize executor wakes.
CAS loops (either `fetch_update`, or manual `load + compare_exchange_weak`) generate surprisingly horrible code: https://godbolt.org/z/zhscnM1cb
This switches to using critical sections, which makes it faster. On thumbv6 (Cortex-M0) it should make it even faster, as it is currently using `atomic-polyfill`, which will make many critical sections for each `compare_exchange_weak` anyway.
```
opt-level=3 opt-level=s
atmics: 105 cycles 101 cycles
CS: 76 cycles 72 cycles
CS+inline: 72 cycles 64 cycles
```
Measured in nrf52 with icache disabled, with this code:
```rust
poll_fn(|cx| {
let task = unsafe { task_from_waker(cx.waker()) };
compiler_fence(Ordering::SeqCst);
let a = cortex_m::peripheral::DWT::get_cycle_count();
compiler_fence(Ordering::SeqCst);
unsafe { wake_task(task) }
compiler_fence(Ordering::SeqCst);
let b = cortex_m::peripheral::DWT::get_cycle_count();
compiler_fence(Ordering::SeqCst);
defmt::info!("cycles: {=u32}", b.wrapping_sub(a));
Poll::Ready(())
})
.await;
````
Co-authored-by: Dario Nieuwenhuis <dirbaio@dirbaio.net>
435: Optimises the buffer passing for nRF SAADC r=huntc a=huntc
The buffer will always have been filled and we never explicitly stop the task outside of this code. Thus, we can assume the number of bytes in the slice.
Co-authored-by: huntc <huntchr@gmail.com>
The buffer will always have been filled and we never explicitly stop the task outside of this code. Thus, we can assume the number of bytes in the slice.
425: Implements continuous sampling for the nRF SAADC r=huntc a=huntc
Implements continuous sampling for the nRF SAADC and also renames `OneShot` to `Saadc`. The one-shot behaviour is retained with the `sample` method and a new `run_sampler` method is provided for efficiently (i.e. zero copying) sampler processing. A double buffer is used for continuously sampling, which is swapped appropriately.
A sample frequency is provided and will set the internal timer of the SAADC when there is just one channel being sampled. Otherwise, PPI will be used to hook up the TIMER peripheral to drive the sampling task. Two methods are provided for this: `run_task_sampler` and `run_task_sampler` with the latter available where the compiler sees that just one channel is configured. Note that we set up the PPI and timer behaviour outside of the `Saadc` for maximum flexibility.
A callback is provided to the `run_sampler` method. This is a synchronous callback that should return in a reasonably short space of time. The SAADC could stall if it does not. A reasonable practice is to perform a small amount of processing within the callback to yield a signal, perhaps via `mpsc`. In the case of `mpsc`, the `try_send` method becomes useful.
A new example has been provided to illustrate continuous sampling, along with multiple channels and external timing:
```rust
#[embassy::main]
async fn main(_spawner: Spawner, mut p: Peripherals) {
let config = Config::default();
let channel_1_config = ChannelConfig::single_ended(&mut p.P0_02);
let channel_2_config = ChannelConfig::single_ended(&mut p.P0_03);
let channel_3_config = ChannelConfig::single_ended(&mut p.P0_04);
let mut saadc = Saadc::new(
p.SAADC,
interrupt::take!(SAADC),
config,
[channel_1_config, channel_2_config, channel_3_config],
);
let mut timer = Timer::new(p.TIMER0);
timer.set_frequency(Frequency::F1MHz);
timer.cc(0).write(100); // We want to sample at 10KHz
timer.cc(0).short_compare_clear();
let mut ppi = Ppi::new(p.PPI_CH0);
ppi.set_event(timer.cc(0).event_compare());
ppi.set_task(saadc.task_sample());
ppi.enable();
timer.start();
let mut bufs = [[[0; 3]; 50]; 2];
let mut c = 0;
let mut a: i32 = 0;
saadc
.run_task_sampler(&mut bufs, move |buf| {
for b in buf {
a += b[0] as i32;
}
c += buf.len();
if c > 10000 {
a = a / c as i32;
info!("channel 1: {=i32}", a);
c = 0;
a = 0;
}
SamplerState::Sampled
})
.await;
}
```
Co-authored-by: huntc <huntchr@gmail.com>