914: (embassy-rp): Add I2C master implementation r=Dirbaio a=MathiasKoch
This PR adds both blocking and DMA based async implementations of I2C master.
Both E-H 0.2 & E-H 1.0 abstractions are implemented as well.
### Questions & concerns:
- Do we need an I2C interrupt handler (for transfer done, abort & error handling?) (async only)
- Do we need to add some automatic attempt at unblocking an I2C bus in case of failures (see ref: 7ebfd553f3/src/i2c_dma.c (L116-L142))
- Should I add `vectored_{read, write}` implementations?
Co-authored-by: Mathias <mk@blackbird.online>
Co-authored-by: Mathias Koch <mk@blackbird.online>
979: usb: make HALs depend only on embassy-usb-driver. r=Dirbaio a=Dirbaio
Follow up to #972
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Dario Nieuwenhuis <dirbaio@dirbaio.net>
934: (embassy-rp): Add Buffered UART implementation r=MathiasKoch a=MathiasKoch
### Questions & concerns:
- ~~Would it make sense to add `RxBufferedUart` and `TxBufferedUart`, for cases where you would want to only buffer one way?~~
- ~~Do I need to be monitoring more interrupt flags than `Receive` & `Receive timeout`?~~
This PR adds working `BufferedUart` implementation, along with `RxBufferedUart` and `TxBufferedUart`. The implementation leaves room for improvement with respect to performance, as it still does not utilize DMA nor the internal UART buffers.
Co-authored-by: Mathias <mk@blackbird.online>
Co-authored-by: Dario Nieuwenhuis <dirbaio@dirbaio.net>
973: Rework STM32 BufferedUart internals so we can split into Rx and Tx like embassy-nrf r=lulf a=guillaume-michel
Context:
On STM32, BufferedUart is not splittable into Rx and Tx part like the non buffered version. On embassy-nrf, a RefCell is used to make BufferedUarte splittable.
Description:
This PR add the possibility to split BufferedUart into Rx and Tx without adding breaking changes.
Hope somebody find it useful
Co-authored-by: Guillaume MICHEL <guillaume@squaremind.io>
977: Use firmware writer in stm32{f7, h7} example app r=lulf a=lulf
The new FirmwareWriter is useful in particular for these architectures due to the large erase sector size.
Co-authored-by: Ulf Lilleengen <ulf.lilleengen@gmail.com>
This commit adds the allow(unused) attribute to functions and constants
that are not currently used. There is one warning remaining but
https://github.com/embassy-rs/cyw43/pull/23 attempts to address that
one. The constants have been moved into a module to allow the attribute
to be applied to the module as a whole.
The motivation for this is that it will hopefully make it easier to
spot new warnings that might be introduced by new, or updated code.
972: Restructure USB crates r=Dirbaio a=Dirbaio
- Split driver from `embassy-usb` to a separate crate. This allows making breaking changes to `embassy-usb` without having to bump all the crates with driver impls, such as HALs.
- Merge classes into `embassy-usb`. Now that breaking changes to `embassy-usb` aren't that bad, having everything in a single crate is much easier.
Co-authored-by: Dario Nieuwenhuis <dirbaio@dirbaio.net>
965: (embassy-rp): add RP2040 ROM functions and intrinsics aliases r=Dirbaio a=MathiasKoch
Add RP2040 ROM functions described in section **2.8.3.1. Bootrom Functions** of https://datasheets.raspberrypi.com/rp2040/rp2040-datasheet.pdf
Make all ROM functions (normal and floating point) provide both a direct
call that does the operation and a module with a ptr() function to get
the function pointer.
Add a feature to enable automatic caching of the result of ROM table
function lookups.
Add a check for a V2 bootrom when using floating point functions that
require it. Panic when it's not present.
Add a standardized macro for intrinsics export and connect the simple
ROM functions to intrinsics.
Direct copy from `rp-hal`! Full credit to those guys for all the heavy lifting.
Co-authored-by: Mathias <mk@blackbird.online>
Co-authored-by: Dario Nieuwenhuis <dirbaio@dirbaio.net>
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>