960: Add non blocking Bxcan constructor r=Dirbaio a=andyblarblar
This PR adds a non-blocking constructor to the Bxcan Can wrapper struct. This allows for the creation of the Can periferal without blocking for a sync with the Can bus.
Co-authored-by: Andrew Ealovega <Andrew@Ealovega.dev>
839: Misc LoRaWAN improvements r=lulf a=timokroeger
Trying too get `embassy-lora` running on a [LoRa-E5 Dev Board](https://wiki.seeedstudio.com/LoRa_E5_Dev_Board/).
I can see the join message arriving in the The Things Network console but the device does not receive the accept message yet.
Opening this PR anyway because I think there are some nice things to decouple the lora crate from the nucleo board.
`@lulf` Could you test if this PR breaks your LoRa setup? Marking as draft for the time being.
Co-authored-by: Timo Kröger <timokroeger93@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ulf Lilleengen <lulf@redhat.com>
Old code used `cfg_if!` because rustc still parses code inside disabled cfg's, and Rust stable at that time couldn't parse the new GAT where-clause location. This is not the case anymore.
* `MSIRGSEL = 1` was required for MSI accept the updated MSI range
* Reorder enable and clock switching to properly handle the jump from
the default 4MHz MSI to a higher MSI freuquency
876: Add defmt support to embassy-embedded-hal errors r=Dirbaio a=matoushybl
`defmt::unwrap!()` should now work with shared buses. I tested it only with I2C as I don't have SPI in the target project.
Co-authored-by: Matous Hybl <hyblmatous@gmail.com>
550da471be previously refactored the STM32
PWM logic in such a way to preclude use of non-contiguous channels (e.g.
channel 2 but not channel 1). Refactor it yet again to yet again allow
this sort of usage.
866: F4 flash fixes r=Dirbaio a=chemicstry
This discontinuous flash sector layout is too cursed and I left some mistakes in last PR. Erasing last sector did not work and it wasn't possible to erase between memory banks for 1MB dual-bank devices. So I changed the erase function to iterate over memory addresses (which is continuous) instead of sector numbers.
It should also be possible to implement erase across memory banks for H7, but it requires special handling for write too. I don't have an H7 to test now so left it as is.
I wasn't sure how to add tests to `embassy-stm32` and it seems that there are none, except for `subghz`, but no test runner? Anyway, I tested the `get_sector` on playground: https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=13b59339fe6c70a3249e6183e81f869e
Also fixed erase alignment requirements on `Flash::blocking_erase()`, as it previously only checked alignment on size, but not on offsets.
P.S. the diff is a bit messed up, I recommend looking at files directly
Co-authored-by: chemicstry <chemicstry@gmail.com>
858: embassy-stm32: Simplify time r=Dirbaio a=GrantM11235
- Remove unused `MilliSeconds`, `MicroSeconds`, and `NanoSeconds` types
- Remove `Bps`, `KiloHertz`, and `MegaHertz` types that were only used
for converting to `Hertz`
- Replace all instances of `impl Into<Hertz>` with `Hertz`
- Add `hz`, `khz`, and `mhz` methods to `Hertz`, as well as
free function shortcuts
- Remove `U32Ext` extension trait
Co-authored-by: Grant Miller <GrantM11235@gmail.com>
- Remove unused `MilliSeconds`, `MicroSeconds`, and `NanoSeconds` types
- Remove `Bps`, `KiloHertz`, and `MegaHertz` types that were only used
for converting to `Hertz`
- Replace all instances of `impl Into<Hertz>` with `Hertz`
- Add `hz`, `khz`, and `mhz` methods to `Hertz`, as well as
free function shortcuts
- Remove `U32Ext` extension trait
810: Takes care of power for nRF USB devices r=Dirbaio a=huntc
Modifies the usb-serial example to illustrate how to setup USB for situations where the USB power can be detected and removed.
Gaps:
~~* No support for the nrf-softdevices as yet, although this should be possible via another constructor.~~
* No support for the nrf5340, although this should be possible via USBREG.
The change is tested and appears to work. Some notes:
* There's an existing field named self_powered as a UsbDevice field. It doesn't ever appear to get set. I'm wondering if this field is intended to signal that a device has the nRF VBUS power situation or not. I'm not presently using it.
* The new PowerDetected event is generated on the bus initially in situations where just new is used i.e. without power management, including on STM. We can therefore rely on this event always being generated.
Old description:
~~EnabledUsbDevice is a wrapper around the `UsbDevice` where its enablement is also subject to external events, such as `POWER` events for nRF. It is introduced generically to support other platforms should they also require external signaling for enablement.~~
Co-authored-by: huntc <huntchr@gmail.com>
854: Implement IWDG timeout calculation r=Dirbaio a=chemicstry
Allow specifying `IndependentWatchdog` timeout as `Duration` instead of prescaler value.
Since IWDG is clocked from LSI, which differs between families, I standardized HSI/LSI definitions in RCC and used that.
Co-authored-by: chemicstry <chemicstry@gmail.com>
851: Gpio dynamic flex r=Dirbaio a=AntoineMugnier
Add Flex GPIO type for embassy-stm32 as it is the case for embassy-nrf.
Co-authored-by: amugniere@gmail.com <antoine.mugnier@depixus.com>
It currently contains whoever was first to write some code for the crate,
even if many more people have contributed to it later.
The field is "sort of" deprecated, it was made optional recently:
https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3052-optional-authors-field.html
Due the the reasons listed there I believe removing it is better than
setting it to generic fluff like "The Embassy contributors".
- Move Interrupt and InterruptExecutor from `embassy` to `embassy-cortex-m`.
- Move Unborrow from `embassy` to `embassy-hal-common` (nothing in `embassy` requires it anymore)
- Move PeripheralMutex from `embassy-hal-common` to `embassy-cortex-m`.
Following the project's decision that "leak unsafe" APIs are not marked as "unsafe",
update PeripheralMutex to accept non-'static state without unsafe.
Fixes#801
The stm32 time drivers support arbitrary tick rates but the associated
Cargo features do not. Enabling any time driver presently enables
`embassy/time-tick-32768hz`; instead, enable only `embassy/time`.
This is a breaking change: users must now choose a tick rate. The
previous behavior is available by enabling the
`embassy/time-tick-32768hz` feature, but now users may also choose
`embassy/time-tick-1000hz` or `embassy/time-tick-1mhz` instead.
781: embassy-net v2 r=Dirbaio a=Dirbaio
- No more `dyn`
- It's no longer a global singleton, you can create muliple net stacks at once.
- You can't tear them down though, the Device it still has to be `'static` due to restrictions with smoltcp's "fake GAT" in the Device trait. :(
- Removed `_embassy_rand` hack, random seed is passed on creation.
785: stm32: g0: add PLL clock source r=Dirbaio a=willglynn
STM32G0 SYSCLK can be sourced from PLLRCLK. Given that the HSI runs at 16 MHz and the HSE range is 4-48 MHz, the PLL is the only way to reach 64 MHz. This commit adds `ClockSrc::PLL`.
The PLL sources from either HSI16 or HSE, divides it by `m`, and locks its VCO to multiple `n`. It then divides the VCO by `r`, `p`, and `q` to produce up to three associated clock signals:
* PLLRCLK is one of the inputs on the SYSCLK mux. This is the main reason the user will configure the PLL, so `r` is mandatory and the output is enabled unconditionally.
* PLLPCLK is available as a clock source for the ADC and I2S peripherals, so `p` is optional and the output is conditional.
* PLLQCLK exists only on STM32G0B0xx, and exists only to feed the MCO and MCO2 peripherals, so `q` is optional and the output is conditional.
When the user specifies `ClockSrc::PLL(PllConfig)`, `rcc::init()` calls `PllConfig::init()` which initializes the PLL per [RM0454]. It disables the PLL, waits for it to stop, enables the source oscillator, configures the PLL, waits for it to lock, and then enables the appropriate outputs. `rcc::init()` then switches the clock source to PLLRCLK.
`rcc::init()` is now also resonsible for calculating and setting flash wait states. SYSCLCK < 24 MHz is fine in the reset state, but 24-48 MHz requires waiting 1 cycle and 48-64 MHz requires waiting 2 cycles. (This was likely a blocker for anyone using HSE >= 24 MHz, with or without the PLL.) Flash accesses are now automatically slowed down as needed before changing the clock source, and sped up as permitted after changing the clock source. The number of flash wait states also determines if flash prefetching will be profitable, so that is now handled automatically too.
[RM0454]: https://www.st.com/resource/en/reference_manual/rm0454-stm32g0x0-advanced-armbased-32bit-mcus-stmicroelectronics.pdf
Co-authored-by: Dario Nieuwenhuis <dirbaio@dirbaio.net>
Co-authored-by: Will Glynn <will@willglynn.com>
STM32G0 SYSCLK can be sourced from PLLRCLK. Given that the HSI runs at
16 MHz and the HSE range is 4-48 MHz, the PLL is the only way to reach
64 MHz. This commit adds `ClockSrc::PLL`.
The PLL sources from either HSI16 or HSE, divides it by `m`, and locks
its VCO to multiple `n`. It then divides the VCO by `r`, `p`, and `q`
to produce up to three associated clock signals:
* PLLRCLK is one of the inputs on the SYSCLK mux. This is the main
reason the user will configure the PLL, so `r` is mandatory and
the output is enabled unconditionally.
* PLLPCLK is available as a clock source for the ADC and I2S
peripherals, so `p` is optional and the output is conditional.
* PLLQCLK exists only on STM32G0B0xx, and exists only to feed the
MCO and MCO2 peripherals, so `q` is optional and the output is
conditional.
When the user specifies `ClockSrc::PLL(PllConfig)`, `rcc::init()`
calls `PllConfig::init()` which initializes the PLL per [RM0454]. It
disables the PLL, waits for it to stop, enables the source
oscillator, configures the PLL, waits for it to lock, and then
enables the appropriate outputs. `rcc::init()` then switches the
clock source to PLLRCLK.
`rcc::init()` is now also resonsible for calculating and setting flash
wait states. SYSCLCK < 24 MHz is fine in the reset state, but 24-48 MHz
requires waiting 1 cycle and 48-64 MHz requires waiting 2 cycles. (This
was likely a blocker for anyone using HSE >= 24 MHz, with or without
the PLL.) Flash accesses are now automatically slowed down as needed
before changing the clock source, and sped up as permitted after
changing the clock source. The number of flash wait states also
determines if flash prefetching will be profitable, so that is now
handled automatically too.
[RM0454]: https://www.st.com/resource/en/reference_manual/rm0454-stm32g0x0-advanced-armbased-32bit-mcus-stmicroelectronics.pdf
776: Automatically set ADC clock prescaler on v2 ADC to respect max frequency r=Dirbaio a=matoushybl
Co-authored-by: Matous Hybl <hyblmatous@gmail.com>
PLL settings remained intact because these bits are not writable when PLL is enabled,
but prescaler settings were overwritten by selecting PLL as sysclk (CFGR.SW[1:0]).
The replacement is `embassy-usb`. There's a WIP driver for stm32 USBD in #709,
there's no WIP driver for stm32 USB_OTG. This means we're left without
USB_OTG support for now.
Reason for removing is I'm going to soon remove `embassy::io`, and
USB uses it. I don't want to spend time maintaining "dead" code
that is going to be removed. Volunteers welcome, either to update
old USB to the new IO, or write a USB_OTG driver fo the new USB.
743: Add PLL config support for F2 r=Dirbaio a=Gekkio
- minor changes to make the F2 RCC API a bit more flexible
- low-level PLL config with assertions based on datasheet specs. It shouldn't be very difficult to later add a "reverse API" where you pass the clocks you want to a function and it generates a `PLLConfig` struct for you
- PLL API tested on my custom board with 12 MHz HSE as source for PLL to generate max clocks for SYSCLK/AHB/APB/APB1/PLL48
- the example *should* work but is untested since I don't have the Nucleo board 😞
Co-authored-by: Joonas Javanainen <joonas.javanainen@gmail.com>
SMI Ethernet PHYs all share a common base set of registers that can do
90% of all tasks. The LAN8742 driver used some vendor-specific
registers to check link negotiation status, but the need for that was
debatable, so I migrated it to a generic driver instead, anybody who
wants extra functionality can copy it and impl their own on top of it.
This makes the configuration more flexible and closer to the underlying
configuration register structure. For example, we could use HSI for the
system clock, but use HSE to output a clock with MCO.