embassy/embassy-hal-common/src/peripheral.rs

142 lines
4.3 KiB
Rust
Raw Normal View History

use core::marker::PhantomData;
use core::ops::{Deref, DerefMut};
/// An exclusive reference to a peripheral.
///
/// This is functionally the same as a `&'a mut T`. The reason for having a
/// dedicated struct is memory efficiency:
///
/// Peripheral singletons are typically either zero-sized (for concrete peripehrals
/// like `PA9` or `Spi4`) or very small (for example `AnyPin` which is 1 byte).
/// However `&mut T` is always 4 bytes for 32-bit targets, even if T is zero-sized.
/// PeripheralRef stores a copy of `T` instead, so it's the same size.
///
/// but it is the size of `T` not the size
/// of a pointer. This is useful if T is a zero sized type.
pub struct PeripheralRef<'a, T> {
inner: T,
_lifetime: PhantomData<&'a mut T>,
}
impl<'a, T> PeripheralRef<'a, T> {
#[inline]
pub fn new(inner: T) -> Self {
Self {
inner,
_lifetime: PhantomData,
}
}
#[inline]
pub fn map_into<U>(self) -> PeripheralRef<'a, U>
where
T: Into<U>,
{
PeripheralRef {
inner: self.inner.into(),
_lifetime: PhantomData,
}
}
pub unsafe fn into_inner(self) -> T {
self.inner
}
}
impl<'a, T> Deref for PeripheralRef<'a, T> {
type Target = T;
#[inline]
fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
&self.inner
}
}
impl<'a, T> DerefMut for PeripheralRef<'a, T> {
#[inline]
fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut Self::Target {
&mut self.inner
}
}
/// Trait for any type that can be used as a peripheral of type `P`.
///
/// This is used in driver constructors, to allow passing either owned peripherals (e.g. `TWISPI0`),
/// or borrowed peripherals (e.g. `&mut TWISPI0`).
///
/// For example, if you have a driver with a constructor like this:
///
/// ```ignore
/// impl<'d, T: Instance> Twim<'d, T> {
/// pub fn new(
/// twim: impl Peripheral<P = T> + 'd,
/// irq: impl Peripheral<P = T::Interrupt> + 'd,
/// sda: impl Peripheral<P = impl GpioPin> + 'd,
/// scl: impl Peripheral<P = impl GpioPin> + 'd,
/// config: Config,
/// ) -> Self { .. }
/// }
/// ```
///
/// You may call it with owned peripherals, which yields an instance that can live forever (`'static`):
///
/// ```ignore
/// let mut twi: Twim<'static, ...> = Twim::new(p.TWISPI0, irq, p.P0_03, p.P0_04, config);
/// ```
///
/// Or you may call it with borrowed peripherals, which yields an instance that can only live for as long
/// as the borrows last:
///
/// ```ignore
/// let mut twi: Twim<'_, ...> = Twim::new(&mut p.TWISPI0, &mut irq, &mut p.P0_03, &mut p.P0_04, config);
/// ```
///
/// # Implementation details, for HAL authors
///
/// When writing a HAL, the intended way to use this trait is to take `impl Peripheral<P = ..>` in
/// the HAL's public API (such as driver constructors), calling `.into_ref()` to obtain a `PeripheralRef`,
/// and storing that in the driver struct.
///
/// `.into_ref()` on an owned `T` yields a `PeripheralRef<'static, T>`.
/// `.into_ref()` on an `&'a mut T` yields a `PeripheralRef<'a, T>`.
pub trait Peripheral: Sized {
/// Peripheral singleton type
type P;
/// Unsafely clone (duplicate) a peripheral singleton.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// This returns an owned clone of the peripheral. You must manually ensure
/// only one copy of the peripheral is in use at a time. For example, don't
/// create two SPI drivers on `SPI1`, because they will "fight" each other.
///
/// You should strongly prefer using `into_ref()` instead. It returns a
/// `PeripheralRef`, which allows the borrow checker to enforce this at compile time.
unsafe fn clone_unchecked(&mut self) -> Self::P;
/// Convert a value into a `PeripheralRef`.
///
/// When called on an owned `T`, yields a `PeripheralRef<'static, T>`.
/// When called on an `&'a mut T`, yields a `PeripheralRef<'a, T>`.
#[inline]
fn into_ref<'a>(mut self) -> PeripheralRef<'a, Self::P>
where
Self: 'a,
{
PeripheralRef::new(unsafe { self.clone_unchecked() })
}
}
impl<'b, T: DerefMut> Peripheral for T
where
T::Target: Peripheral,
{
type P = <T::Target as Peripheral>::P;
#[inline]
unsafe fn clone_unchecked(&mut self) -> Self::P {
self.deref_mut().clone_unchecked()
}
}