The conditional definitions in project-conf.h depending on
CONTIKI_TARGET_<TARGET_NAME> were ignored at link time, which broke the
linker script if it used these definitions, so the flashed applications
could crash or malfunction.
Signed-off-by: Benoît Thébaudeau <benoit.thebaudeau.dev@gmail.com>
The block that controls the `.upload` target is unnecessarily replicated in multiple sub-board Makefiles. This was originally done because the SmartRF and the Launchpad can be programmed with the c2538-bsl script, whereas the sensortag cannot.
This commit moves the `cc2538-bsl` / `.upload` target logic to the top level cpu Makefile (`cpu/cc26xx-cc13xx/Makefile.cc26xx-cc13xx`). Board makefiles simply set the make variable `BOARD_SUPPORTS_BSL` to 1 to signal that they can be programmed by the BSL script. If `BOARD_SUPPORTS_BSL` is not equal to 1, trying to use the `.upload` target will return an error message.
For example:
```
$ make BOARD=sensortag/cc2650 cc26xx-demo.upload
using saved target 'srf06-cc26xx'
This board cannot be programmed with the ROM bootloader and therefore does not support the .upload target.
```
If the setup of socket 0 to 3 with 4+2+1+1KB is detected then the W5100 is _not_ initialized, otherwise it does set up socket 0 and 1 with 4KB each. Either way socket 0 is used - now with 4KB instead of 8KB as before.
This patch configures Isolated Memory Regions (IMRs) to block DMA to
code and data regions that do not contain any data that needs to be
DMA-accessible.
The Intel Quark X1000 SoC includes support for Isolated Memory Regions
(IMRs), which are specified using range registers and associated
control registers that are accessible via the message bus. This patch
adds a driver for accessing those registers.
The Intel Quark X1000 SoC includes a message bus that is accessible
via PCI configuration registers. It communicates to various SoC
components such as the Isolated Memory Region (IMR) registers and the
Remote Management Unit. This patch adds a driver for accessing the
message bus.
Bug fixes include:
- keep interrupts disabled during lpm_sleep() so that we don't
miss any interrupts we may have been expecting
- check that the pending etimer isn't already expired (and don't sleep
at all if it is)
- check that the about-to-be scheduled rtimer wakeup is neither too
far into the future nor too close into the future (or even in the
past) before actually setting the interrupt (should fix#1509); If
the time is out of bounds we use a default min or max value instead.
- Correctly handle LPM_MODE_MAX_SUPPORTED set to zero (and added a
macro for the zero value) so that sleeping can be disabled altogether
- If no etimer is set, we specify a wakeup time which is reasonably far
into the future instead of setting none at all (this will save on
power consumption whenever no etimers are set).
Also did a bit of refactoring in that some long functions were broken
into multiple functions.
This patch revises the I2C and GPIO initialization code to always be
run during platform boot rather than within each process that requires
it.
This patch also revises the gpio-output example to use a pin that is
set as an output by the default pinmux configuration. Previously, it
used a pin that was set as an output by the pinmux configuration that
is in effect when the OS does not change the pinmux configuration.
This patch permits interrupts to be generated by both the I2C and GPIO
controllers for simultaneously-executing applications. The controllers
share a single interrupt pin, INTC. Prior to this patch,
quarkX1000_gpio_init() routed INTA to PIRQC and IRQ 10 (due to an
incorrect assumption that INTA is connected to the GPIO controller),
and quarkX1000_i2c_init() routed INTC to PIRQC and IRQ 9. The I2C
controller initialization is a prerequisite for GPIO initialization,
so the final configuration was that INTA and INTC were both routed to
PIRQC and IRQ 10. Thus, only the GPIO ISR was being invoked, even if
the I2C controller was actually responsible for the interrupt.
This patch refactors the I2C and GPIO ISR setup and handler code so
that the shared portions are combined in
cpu/x86/drivers/legacy_pc/shared-isr.[ch]. The I2C and GPIO drivers
communicate their interrupt information to the shared component by
placing structures in a specific section of the binary.
When sending a command to the CC13xx/CC25xx RF core, we wait for command completion by checking the LSB of CMDSTA (correctly so). However, in doing so we also zero out the 3 CMDSTA return bytes. For some commands, those bytes contain useful information (e.g. an RSSI value) and are required by the caller.
This problem manifests itself e.g. in PROP mode `channel_clear()`, whereby the caller will always see an RSSI value of 0.
This pull therefore fixes the logic in `rf_core_send_cmd()` to check for command completion by blocking on the CMDSTA result byte without zeroing out the 3 return bytes.
Fixes#1465