This uses the core/dev/spi.h header and implements the spi_init()
function and the various macros for SPI operation. ssi.h contains all of
the register locations and information.
This implementation is not very versatile, mostly because I don't how to
make it flexible in the contiki system. It supports pin muxing for the
four spi pins, but other than that picks sensible defaults.
The SPI macros (like SPI_READ()) are defined in
cpu/cc2538/spi-arch.h. In order to use the SPI driver, add the following
includes to your project:
#include "spi-arch.h
#include "dev/spi.h"
Since introduction of mDNS (f145c17039)
the resolver process initialization depends on the tcpip process
already being initialized (because of the call to udp_new()).
The CC2531 USB stick now identifies itself as a
'Texas Instruments CC2531 USB Dongle' and uses a
TI-assigmed VID:PID. The VID:PID is now configurable
in contiki- or project-conf.h
The sensinode platform does not support .upload and .serialdump
Their presence in the makefile has confused in the past confused
some users. This commit removes them
The commit also removes the $(OBJECTDIR)/%.rel: %.cS recipe which
is not used by either 8051 platform and is probably broken anyway,
since it has been unmaintained for years
Historically $(OBJECTDIR) was created when Makefile.include is read. A
consequence is that combining "clean" with "all" (or any other build
target) results in an error because the clean removes the object
directory that is required to exist when building dependencies.
Creating $(OBJECTDIR) on-demand ensures it is present when needed.
Removed creation of $(OBJECTDIR) on initial read, and added an order-only
dependency forcing its creation all Makefile* rules where the target is
explicitly or implicitly in $(OBJECTDIR).
The new Atari XL target allows cc65 programs to make use of
the shadow RAM. This allows to turn aon all features of the
web browser - and will allow for additional improvements to
come :-)
Don't be afraid, I'm not trying to have more retro platforms than "real" platforms ;-)
The platform 'atarixl' will replace the platform 'atari'. However I need both for some
transition period.
I wrote:
> Moved from last cc65 release (2.13.3) to recent cc65 snapshot (2.13.9).
> [...]
> Atari:
> - The builtin linker config allows to override the start addr so there no more need for a custom linker config.
> [...]
However I didn't actually remove the custom linker config not needed anymore.
The boot loader now knows when to go into bootstrap mode by
looking for a specific EEPROM value. Also updated code style
to match Contiki code style guidelines.
This patch removes a defunct EEPROM implementation from the native
platform and provides a new EEPROM implementation for the native cpu.
The previous implementation appears to be vestigal.
This is useful for testing code which uses the EEPROM without running
the code on the actual hardware.
By default the code will create a new temporary file as the EEPROM
backing, reinitializing each time. If you would like to preserve the
EEPROM contents or specify a specific EEPROM file to use, you can set the
`CONTIKI_EEPROM` environment variable to the name of the EEPROM file you
wish to use instead. If it already exists, its contents will be used.
If it does not already exist, it will be created and initialized by
filling it with `0xFF`---just like a real EEPROM.
A new example is also included, which was used to verify the correctness
of the implementation. It can easily be used to verify the EEPROM
implementations of other targets.
- For the CC2538, simplify handling of USB_CDC_ACM_LINE_STATE
events. Ignore the Carrier Control (RTS) bit when receiving
a SET_CONTROL_LINE _STATE request, we are a full duplex device.
- Improve behaviour of the CC2531 USB stick when there is no
process on the host to read IN data. Basically, we adopt the
CC2538 approach and we only send data when a DTE is present
Since ncurses also defines COLOR_BLACK and friends, and we want
to avoid including curses.h in contiki-conf.h, define CTK_COLOR_*
constants and map them to curses colors in ctk-curses.c.
It seems TARGET_LIBFILES is used at the end of the link command,
unlike LDFLAGS, which should help when only a static curses lib is
available, like on Haiku.
It was added to avoid getting garbage keyboard input in some cases,
however it seems not to happen very often and might be the cause
of hang in OSX. If garbage input happens again we can always try
to pump a single event each time instead of looping anyway.
This commit moves the Settings Manager from the AVR codebase
into the Contiki core library. Any platform that implements
the Contiki EEPROM API can now use the Settings Manager's
key-value store for storing their persistent configuration info.
The Settings Manager is a EEPROM-based key-value store. Keys
are 16-bit integers and values may be up to 16,383 bytes long.
It is intended to be used to store configuration-related information,
like network settings, radio channels, etc.
* Robust data format which requires no initialization.
* Supports multiple values with the same key.
* Data can be appended without erasing EEPROM.
* Max size of settings data can be easily increased in the future,
as long as it doesn't overlap with application data.
The format was inspired by the [OLPC manufacturing data format][].
Since the beginning of EEPROM often contains application-specific
information, the best place to store settings is at the end of EEPROM
(the "top"). Because we are starting at the end of EEPROM, it makes
sense to grow the list of key-value pairs downward, toward the start of
EEPROM.
Each key-value pair is stored in memory in the following format:
Order | Size | Name | Description
--------:|---------:|--------------|-------------------------------
0 | 2 | `key` | 16-bit key
-2 | 1 | `size_check` | One's-complement of next byte
-3 | 1 or 2 | `size` | The size of `value`, in bytes
-4 or -5 | variable | `value` | Value associated with `key`
The end of the key-value pairs is denoted by the first invalid entry.
An invalid entry has any of the following attributes:
* The `size_check` byte doesn't match the one's compliment of the
`size` byte (or `size_low` byte).
* The key has a value of 0x0000.
[OLPC manufacturing data format]: http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Manufacturing_data