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
- 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 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.
The initial closure is not actually called in the interrupt, so this is
illegally sending non-Send futures to the interrupt.
Remove the closure, and return a SendSpawner instead.
Includes the addition of a `dbgmcu!(...)` macro table which currently takes
the form of
(cr, $fn_name:ident)
where `$fn_name` is something like `set_dbgsleep_d1` etc.
The method is unsafe, since it's performing unsafe PAC operations.
Two examples modified to demonstrate its usage.