- Up to now the web browser used several fixed size arrays to hold the various types attribute data of the web page. This turned out to be way to inflexible for any non-trivial web page. Therefore now all attribute data is stored in a single buffer one after the other as they arrive from the parser only occupying the memory actually needed. This allows for pages with many links with rather short URLs as well as pages with few link with long URLs as well as pages with several simple forms as well as pages with one form with many form inputs.
- Using the actual web page buffer to hold the text buffers of text entry fields was in general a cool idea but in reality it is often necessary to enter text longer than the size of the text entry field. Therefore the text buffer is now stored in the new unified attribute data buffer.
- Splitting up the process of canonicalizing a link URL and actually navigating to the resulting URL allowed to get rid of the 'tmpurl' buffer used during form submit. Now the form action is canonicalized like a usual link, then the form input name/value pairs are written right into the 'url' buffer and afterwards the navigation is triggered.
- Support for the 'render states' was completely removed. The only actually supported render state was centered output. The new unified attribute buffer would have complicated enumerating all widgets added to the page in order to adjust their position. Therefore I decided to drop the whole feature as the <center> tag is barely used anymore and newer center attributes are to hard to parse.
Both the source code and the cc65 compiler have changed. So it made sense to review which object files are to be compiled for placement in the Language Card.
Relevant cc65 changes...
General:
- The compiler generates "extended" dependency info (like gcc) so there's no need for postprocessing whatsoever :-)
- The linker is very pernickety regarding the ordering of cmdline options so a custom linker rule is necessary :-(
Apple2:
- The various memory usage scenarios aren't specified anymore via separate linker configs but via defines overriding default values in the builtin linker config.
Atari:
- The builtin linker config allows to override the start addr so there no more need for a custom linker config.
- The C library comes with POSIX directory access. So there's no more need for for a custom coding.
CBM:
- The C library comes with POSIX directory access. So there's no more need for for a custom coding.
This is a major change to how the main tick interrupt is handled on
the mc1322x platforms. Instead of using two timer resources, TMR0 and
RTC, this patch unifies all the timers to use the RTC. This is enabled by
implementing etimers as scheduled rtimers. The main advantage (aside
from freeing TMR0 for general use) is have the Contiki timebase come
from the same source that will be used for sleeping and wakeup.
declarations of functions for setting and getting a node ID number, a
functionality that exists on many platforms. Since this functionality
was not considered part of the Contiki core, each platform defined its
own node-id.h file. This commit attempts to clean this up by
collecting the node-id.h into a core/sys/node-id.h file that replaces
the old node-id.h files from the platform directories.
configuration system.
(also deprecate TARGET=redbee-econotag)
- mc13224v now automatically probes hardware config for buck converter
and 32kHz crystal as well as automatically monitors battery voltage
and manages the buck accordingly.
- new flashed based config system for mc13224v parameters such has
radio modes (demod, autoack), nvmtype, mac address, channel and
power.
- considerably cleaned up econotag platform code (suffered from severe
case of bit-rot)
Copied this file to the platform directories and
changed it to use putstring(), puthex() etc so
that we can print addresses without linking in
printf
See Pull Request #20
This is based on a usb-test example by Philippe Retornaz. It has
been moved to platform and modified accordingly. With this in place:
- putchar() can work over USB. So we can use things like
printf, slip output
- USB input can be redirected to slip or serial input
The example itself is no longer needed in the source tree
See Pull Request #18
The P2 Interrupt is shared across many periferal (I2C, USB, GPIO).
This adds a generic interrupt handler on which the differents drivers
can register a handler.
See Pull Request #18
r is now uint8_t, allocated to registers
len is uint16_t for more efficent arithmetic
(Changes replicated from the 253x port, originally
contributed by Philippe Retornaz - EPFL)
- Moved to their own file
(so we can later copy the entire thing over to cc2430)
- Renamed the functions
(for naming convention reasons)
- The entire thing can be enabled/disabled
- Added a couple more macros
- Hooked into main()