Prior to this commit, Pin(Pin.OPEN_DRAIN, value=0) would not set the
initial value of the open-drain pin to low, instead it would be high.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This commit adds support for generating named pin mappings for all pins
including CPU, board-defined, LED and externally controlled pins. CPU pins
are mapped to `pin_GPIO<n>`, externally-controlled pins are mapped to
`pin_EXT_GPIO<n>`, and defined conditionally (up to 10 pins, and can be
expanded in the future), and they are non-const to allow `machine-pin.c` to
write the pin object fields. Both CPU and externally controlled pins are
generated even if there's no board CSV file; if one exists it will just be
added to board pins.
Handle externally controlled GPIO pins more generically, by removing all
CYW43-specific code from `machine_pin.c`, and adding hooks to initialise,
configure, read and write external pins. This allows any driver for an
on-board module which controls GPIO pins (such as CYW43 or NINA), to
provide its own implementation of those hooks and work seamlessly with
`machine_pin.c`.
Instead of being an explicit field, it's now a slot like all the other
methods.
This is a marginal code size improvement because most types have a make_new
(100/138 on PYBV11), however it improves consistency in how types are
declared, removing the special case for make_new.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This includes:
- Configuration file for the cyw43-driver.
- Integration of cyw43-driver into the build, using lwIP.
- Enhancements to machine.Pin to support extension IO pins provided by the
CYW43xx.
- More mp-hal pin helper functions.
- mp_hal_get_mac_ascii MAC address helper function.
- Addition of rp2.country() function to set the country code.
A board can enable this driver by setting MICROPY_PY_NETWORK_CYW43 in their
cmake snippet.
Work done in collaboration with Graham Sanderson and Peter Harper.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This commit adds a new port "rp2" which targets the new Raspberry Pi RP2040
microcontroller.
The build system uses pure cmake (with a small Makefile wrapper for
convenience). The USB driver is TinyUSB, and there is a machine module
with most of the standard classes implemented. Some examples are provided
in the examples/rp2/ directory.
Work done in collaboration with Graham Sanderson.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>