If a port defines MICROPY_SOFT_TIMER_TICKS_MS then soft_timer assumes a
SysTick back end, and provides a soft_timer_next variable that sets when
the next call to soft_timer_handler() should occur.
Otherwise, a port should provide soft_timer_get_ms() and
soft_timer_schedule_at_ms() with appropriate semantics (see comments).
Existing users of soft_timer should continue to work as they did.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This allows e.g. a board (or make command line) to set
MICROPY_MANIFEST_MY_VARIABLE = path/to/somewhere
set(MICROPY_MANIFEST_MY_VARIABLE path/to/somewhere)
and then in the manifest.py they can query this, e.g. via
include("$(MY_VARIABLE)/path/manifest.py")
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Commit 7ea06a3e26 moved the
`rmt_write_items()` call to fix RMT looping for ESP32-S3, but broke it for
the other ESP32s. This commit conditionally compiles the location of that
call.
Signed-off-by: Mark Blakeney <mark.blakeney@bullet-systems.net>
Prior to this change, after calling connect() the status() method for the
STA interface would either return STAT_GOT_IP or STAT_CONNECTION. The
latter would be returned because wifi_sta_connect_requested==true and
conf_wifi_sta_reconnects==0 by default. As such there was no way to know
anything about errors when attempting to connect, such as a bad password.
Now, status() can return STAT_NO_AP_FOUND and STAT_WRONG_PASSWORD when
those conditions are met.
Fixes issue #12930.
Signed-off-by: IhorNehrutsa <Ihor.Nehrutsa@gmail.com>
In ESP-IDF, enabling SPIRAM in menuconfig sets some Kconfig options:
- "Wi-Fi Cache TX Buffers" enabled. By default this tries to allocate 32 of
these when Wi-Fi is initialised, which requires 54,400 bytes of free heap.
- Switches "Type of WiFi TX buffers" from Dynamic to Static. This
pre-allocates all of the Wi-Fi transmit buffers.
Not a problem if PSRAM is initialised, but it's quite a lot of RAM if PSRAM
failed to initialise! As we use the same config for PSRAM & no-PSRAM builds
now, this either causes Wi-Fi to fail to initialise (seen on S2) or will
eat quite a lot of RAM.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
In commit 7c929d44 the console UART was changed to use the UART HAL.
Starting the UART HAL will change the UART clock from whatever it was
already configured at to UART_SCLK_DEFAULT. There is no "initialize at
existing settings" option.
This clock doesn't work with DFS.
The ESP-IDF code already takes this into account, and when DFS is enabled
it will configure the console UART to use the correct platform-specific
clock that will work with DFS.
The UART HAL init undoes this and sets it back to default.
This change will query the clock before the HAL init, then use the HAL
function to restore it back. Thus keeping the clock at the "correct"
value, which depends on platform, DFS status, and so on.
The clock frequency will be found using the UART driver function ESP-IDF
code uses for this. The existing code hard-coded a path that worked if the
clock was the APB clock and would fail otherwise.
The UART_NUM_0 define is removed because driver/uart.h already provides
this same macro.
Signed-off-by: Trent Piepho <tpiepho@gmail.com>
The behaviour described in the docs was not correct for either port.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
At some point the config changed such that no messages above Error level
were compiled into the final binary.
Fixes issue #12815.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Otherwise passing in a non-integer can lead to an invalid memory access.
Thanks to Junwha Hong and Wonil Jang @S2Lab, UNIST for finding the issue.
Fixes issue #13007.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
If the hard socket limit (default 16) is reached then it's possible that
socket allocation fails but garbage collection would allow it to succeed.
Perform a GC pass and try again before giving up, similar to the logic
elsewhere in MicroPython that tries a GC pass before raising MemoryError.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
LWIP doesn't implement a timeout for blocking connect(), and such a timeout
is not required by POSIX. However, CPython will use the socket timeout for
blocking connect on most platforms. The "principle of least surprise"
suggests we should support it on ESP32 as well (not to mention it's
useful!).
This provides the additional improvement that external exceptions (like
KeyboardInterrupt) are now handled immediately if they happen during
connect(). Previously Ctrl-C would not terminate a blocking connect until
connect() returned, but now it will.
Fixes issue #8326.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
This commit changes the Arduino board identifiers to correspond to their
official names. This helps to identify boards at runtime. At the moment
the Arduino Portenta H7 is reported as PORTENTA which is unfortunate as now
there is another Portenta board (Portenta C33) supported in MicroPython.
Also made the other identifiers for flash and network name consistent,
removed the incorrectly used MICROPY_PY_SYS_PLATFORM identifiers, and added
missing MICROPY_PY_NETWORK_HOSTNAME_DEFAULT identifiers.
Boards affected:
- stm32: ARDUINO_PORTENTA_H7, ARDUINO_GIGA, ARDUINO_NICLA_VISION
- renesas-ra: ARDUINO_PORTENTA_C33
- esp32: ARDUINO_NANO_ESP32
- rp2: ARDUINO_NANO_RP2040_CONNECT
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Romero <s.romero@arduino.cc>
Configuration:
- Clock is HSE, CPU runs at 250MHz.
- REPL on USB and UART connected to the ST-Link interface.
- Storage is configured for internal flash memory.
- Three LEDs and one user button.
- Ethernet is enabled.
Signed-off-by: Rene Straub <rene@see5.ch>
Replaces the previous all-zeroes "TODO" serial number.
Requires refactoring the low-level unique_id routine out from modmachine.c.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Change the rp2 and renesas-ra ports to use the helper function.
Saves copy-pasta, at the small cost of one more function call in the
firmware (if not using LTO).
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Functionality and code size don't really change, but removes port-specific
code in favour of shared code.
(The MSC implemented in shared/tinyusb depends on some functions in the
pico-sdk, so this change doesn't make this available for samd.)
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
See the commit a00c9d56db for a detailed description of the problem, a
regression introduced in 26d503298.
Same approach here as the linked fix for rp2 (applied unconditionally here
as this port only supports USB-CDC for stdin/stdout).
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
The recent change in bcbdee2357 means that
TinyUSB can no longer be run from within a soft (or hard) IRQ handler, ie
when the scheduler is locked. That means that Python code that calls
`print(...)` from within a scheduled function may block indefinitely if the
USB CDC buffers are full.
This commit fixes that problem by explicitly running the TinyUSB stack when
waiting within stdio tx/rx functions.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Fixes undefined behavior when calling vfs_posix_file_ioctl with
MP_STREAM_CLOSE as request because that casts away the constness and
assigns -1 to the object's fd member.
Fixes issue #12670.
Signed-off-by: stijn <stijn@ignitron.net>
Similar to 3883f29485 where this change was
implemented for threads: when the Bluetooth IRQ handler is called the
thread state is not not zero-initialized and thus we need to manually set
this to NULL.
Fixes issue #12239.
Signed-off-by: Daniël van de Giessen <daniel@dvdgiessen.nl>
This adds the sync version of the LoRa driver (and the base WL55 driver).
Adds +13.6kiB (212.6 -> 226.2). Limit for this board is 232kiB.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
If you have a variable frequency and pulse width, and you want to optimize
pulse resolution, then you must do a calculation beforehand to ensure you
normalize the array to keep all list values within bound. That calculation
requires RMT.source_freq(), RMT.clock_div(), and this 32767 constant.
Signed-off-by: Mark Blakeney <mark.blakeney@bullet-systems.net>
To create an esp32.RMT() instance with an optimum (i.e. highest resolution)
clock_div is currently awkward because you need to know the source clock
frequency to calculate the best clock_div, but unfortunately that is only
currently available as an source_freq() method on the instance after you
have already created it. So RMT.source_freq() should really be a class
method, not an instance method. This change is backwards compatible for
existing code because you can still reference that function from an
instance, or now also, from the class.
Signed-off-by: Mark Blakeney <mark.blakeney@bullet-systems.net>
Previously the TinyUSB task was run in the ISR immediately after the
interrupt handler. This approach gives very similar performance (no change
in CDC throughput tests) but reduces the amount of time spent in the ISR,
and allows TinyUSB callbacks to run in thread mode.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
This change:
- Has a small code size reduction.
- Should slightly improve overall performance. The old hook code
seemed to use between 0.1% and 1.6% of the total CPU time doing no-op
calls even when no USB work was required.
- USB performance is mostly the same, there is a small increase in
latency for some workloads that seems to because sometimes the hook
usbd_task() is called at the right time to line up with the next USB host
request. This only happened semi-randomly due to the timing of the hook.
Improving the wakeup latency by switching rp2 to tickless WFE allows the
usbd_task() to run in time for the next USB host request almost always,
improving performance and more than offsetting this impact.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
dcd_event_handler() is called from the IRQ when a new DCD event is queued
for processing by the TinyUSB thread mode task. This lets us queue the
handler to run immediately when MicroPython resumes.
Currently this relies on a linker --wrap hack to work, but a PR has been
submitted to TinyUSB to allow the function to be called inline from
dcd_event_handler() itself.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Speeds up importing files from mounted filesystem.
Also fix the return code for invalid / unsupported ioctl requests.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Leech <andrew.leech@planetinnovation.com.au>
Add a .ico file with common icon image size, created from
vector-logo-2.png, and embed it into the resulting executable.
Signed-off-by: stijn <stijn@ignitron.net>
This is a code factoring to have the Python bindings in one location, and
all the ports use those same bindings. At this stage only esp32 implements
this class, so the code for the bindings comes from that port.
The documentation is also updated to reflect the esp32's behaviour of
ADCBlock.connect().
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>