Previously, PHY addressing was a concern of the `Ethernet` struct
which limited the `PHY` implementations which very often have to manage
multiple PHYs internally and thus possibly need to address many of them.
This change extends `StationManagement` to allow addressing different
PHY addresses via SMI.
This commit allows STM32U5 devices to operate at 160 MHz.
On STM32U5, MSIS can run at 48 MHz and HSE can reach 50 MHz. Faster
clocks require using PLL1's R output, though PLL1 can serve other
functions besides using the R output for the system clock. This commit
extracts a public `PllConfig` struct, primarily to place associated
constructors on that type, but also with an eye towards enabling the P
and Q outputs in a later commit.
STM32U5 PLLs have various frequency requirements on each stage: after
the `m` prescaler, after the `n` multiplier, and after the `r` divider.
This commit implements the associated checks as assertions.
This commit fixes clock calculation and PLL register configuration
errors in PLL initialization.
STM32U5 has a PWR peripheral which can be configured to push Vcore into
different voltage ranges. System clocks exceeding 55 MHz require range
2, and system clocks exceeding 110 MHz require range 1. This commit
adds `voltage_range` to `Config` and configures PWR as directed.
The voltage range implies different performance limits on various clock
signals, including inside a PLL. This commit implements voltage range
<-> frequency range checks as assertions, and extracts the
otherwise-repeated MSIS, HSI16, and HSE initialization into private
methods on `Config`.
STM32U5 frequencies above 55 MHz require using the PWR EPOD booster.
The EPOD booster requires configuring a second `m` term for PLL1,
`mboost`, such that it falls in a particular range. (Recall that >50
MHz cannot be reached without PLL1, so there is no scenario where EPOD
is needed but PLL1 is not.) This commit configures and enables the EPOD
booster automatically as required.
They're heavily spamming logs for HIL tests, and I don't believe
they're valuable now that the thing they helped debug in their young
age is now solid and mature.