Rename guhRF platform to osd-merkur-256, previous osd-merkur platform is
now osd-merkur-128. Also check that everything is consistent.
Add both platforms to the regression tests.
Move redundant files in platform dev directory of both platforms to
cpu/avr/dev. Note that this probably needs some rework. Already
discovered some inconsistency in io definitions of both devices in the
avr/io.h includes. Added a workaround in the obvious cases.
The platform makefiles now set correct parameters for bootloader and for
reading mac-address from flash memory.
Factor the flash programming into cpu/avr and platform/osd-merkur* and
rework *all* osd example makefiles to use the new settings. Also update
all the flash.sh and run.sh to use the new settings.
The suli ledstrip modules (and osd example) have also been removed.
This commit fixes nearly all of the reported doxygen warnings.
I tried to not clutter the log with removed trailing spaces.
Removed whitespace and converted tab/spaces for all files affected by this commit
are in a separate branch.
and should be removed. In the meantime we change those needed
to upload flash and eeprom to depend on the default contiki rule
to make the .$(TARGET) executable."
Hardware init function profit a great deal from being inlined if the
given parameters are constant -- which is the common use-case, we could
probably call this for all timers and still have less overhead. The
hwtimer_pwm_ini (which calls hwtimer_ini) gets completely computed at
compile-time resulting only in the register settings of hwtimer_ini.
This is now possible because we get rid of static storage for the
max_ticks and instead compute this in hwtimer_pwm_max_ticks from the
timer register settings.
Some platforms are missing timer channels, this is now left to the
(missing) preprocessor definitions on those platforms, no
platform-specific defines needed anymore.
Also fix usage of timer counter register 3 (hardcoded) in
cpu/avr/dev/clock.c -- this code isn't used on many platforms as it
requires a very special quartz clock frequency but this now also uses
the platform timer specification.
We can now directly compile arduino sketches (.pde) files.
Arduino compatible analogWrite works now.
But there is still a long way to go, serial I/O and timer stuff (delay,
millis etc) currently don't work (not tested but I don't expect this to
work).
It can be used in an arduino sketch or in a normal contiki program.
We get a PWM frequency of 490.2 Hz (a period of 2.040 ms), that's
Arduino compatible. If you need different frequencies see native timer
usage in examples/osd/pwm-example
In a contiki program you have to call arduino_pwm_timer_init to
initialize the timer before pwm works. The arduino sketch wrapper
already does this.
For running a sketch, see examples/osd/arduino-sketch