* Add FlashProvider and FlashConfig traits to define flash
characteristics
* Use traits in bootloader to retrieve flash handles and for
copying data between flash instances
* Add convenience implementations for using a single flash instance.
* Adds implementations of embedded-storage and embedded-storage-async
for QSPI
* Add blocking implementations of QSPI
* Use blocking implementation in new() and embedded-storage impls
* Use async implementation in embedded-storage-async impls
* Add FLASH_SIZE const generic parameter
* Own IRQ in Qspi to disable it on drop
- Renamed structs to HidReaderWriter, HidReader, HidWriter.
- Removed unused const generics on `State`.
- Simplified generics on `HidReaderWriter`.
The class type previously was `HidClass<D, Driver<'d, USBD>, ReportReader<'d, Driver<'d, USBD>, OUT_N>, IN_N>`
It's now `HidClass<D, Driver<'d, USBD>, IN_N, OUT_N>`. Note that the driver type `Driver<'d, USBD>` is no longer repeated.
- Constructors are now: `HidWriter::new()` for IN-only, `HidReaderWriter::new()` for IN+OUT. No complicated bounds.
- HidReaderWriter has all the methods from HidReader, HidWriter.
711: Add DeviceStateHandler, DeviceCommand channel, and remote wakeup support r=Dirbaio a=alexmoon
Apologies for the size of this PR. Once I started getting into the Vbus power management side of my device I found a couple of areas of functionality missing from embassy-usb. Specifically, I need the application to be able to respond to changes in the USB device state in order to properly control the amount of power I'm drawing from Vbus. I also wanted to enable remote wakeup support for my device.
In order to enable device state monitoring, I've created a `DeviceStateHandler` trait and made it possible to pass in an optional reference a handler implementing that trait when creating the `UsbDeviceBuilder`.
Remote wakeup required a way to send commands to the bus which is exclusively owned by the `UsbDevice::run` method. This is the same problem we were discussing for enabling/disabling the device on Vbus power events. My solution is to allow an optional `Channel` to be provided to the `UsbDeviceBuilder` (via `UsbDeviceBuilder::new_with_channel`), allowing the application to send commands into the `run` method. Right now it supports enable, disable and remote wakeup commands.
Since there's now a way to dynamically enable and disable the device, I also added `Config::start_enabled` to control whether or not the `UsbDevice` should start in the enabled state. That also allowed me to make `UsbDeviceBuilder::build` sync again and move enabling the bus into `UsbDevice::run`.
This led to a few driver changes:
1. `Driver::enable` became `Driver::into_bus`
2. `Bus::enable`, `Bus::disable`, and `Bus::remote_wakeup` were added
3. I removed `Bus::reset`, `Bus::suspend`, and `Bus::resume` because they were only ever called based on the result of `Bus::poll`. It made more sense to me to have `Bus::poll` handle the driver-specific state management itself.
I've updated the `usb_hid_keyboard` example to take advantage of all these additional features.
Let me know what you think.
Thanks!
Co-authored-by: alexmoon <alex.r.moon@gmail.com>
714: add more clock options for l4 and l5 r=Dirbaio a=ant32
- added an assert so it panics if pll48div is not 48Mhz
- added MSI as a clock source for PLL
- removed hsi48 option for MCUs mentioned in l4 rcc presentation
- copied some code from l4 to l5, but don't have a way of testing it.
Co-authored-by: Philip A Reimer <antreimer@gmail.com>
657: Async usb stack r=Dirbaio a=Dirbaio
TODO
- [x] Make it work on nRF
- [x] Add a way for classes to handle their own EP0 control requests - thanks `@alexmoon!`
- [x] Handle CONTROL OUT requests with data.
- [ ] Impl AsyncRead/AsyncWrite for CDC ACM -- will do later, it's not trivial
- [x] Cleanup unwraps/asserts/panics
- [x] Cleanup logs (make everything trace/debug, not info)
- [ ] Port synopsys-usb-otg
- [ ] Port stm32-usbd
- [ ] Add more classes? HID, MSD?
Co-authored-by: Dario Nieuwenhuis <dirbaio@dirbaio.net>
Co-authored-by: alexmoon <alex.r.moon@gmail.com>
696: Add async Mutex. r=Dirbaio a=Dirbaio
What it says on the tin :)
It allows sharing data between tasks when you want to `.await` stuff while holding it locked.
Co-authored-by: Dario Nieuwenhuis <dirbaio@dirbaio.net>