The stm32fx07 is common DesignWare IP, used in both STM32 and EFM32 chips.
Rename the files to make this more clear, and easier to use in other
targets.
It's not used anywhere, and if this sort of api becomes needed, it can be
designed cleanly and finished.
Signed-off-by: Karl Palsson <karlp@tweak.net.au>
Based on previous work, add a new driver for the v2 usb peripheral found on
stm32f0 and l0 devices.
Correspondingly, add a usb gadget zero test suite for the f0. L0 device level
code isn't yet ready, but will add the test case when it moves in.
Work by Frantisek Burian, Kuldeep
Singh Dhaka, Robin Kreis, fenugrec and zyp on irc, and all those forgotten.
The breaking changes here changes in header location, and changes in driver
name passed down to the usb stack.
Changes affect: stm32f102/f103, stm32l1, and some f3 parts
* instead of the confusingly generic "usb" use the name "st_usbfs" for the USB
Full speed peripheral ST provides in a variety of their stm32 products.
Include directives should change as:
#include <libopencm3/stm32/usb.h> => <libopencm3/stm32/st_usbfs.h>
* instead of the confusingly specific "f103" name for the driver, use
"st_usbfs_v1" [BREAKING_CHANGE]
Instead of:
usbd_init(&stm32f103_usb_driver, .....) ==>
usbd_init(&st_usbfs_v1_usb_driver, .....) ==>
The purpose of these changes is to reduce some confusion around naming, but
primarily to prepare for the "v2" peripheral available on stm32f0/l0 and some
f3 devices.
Work by Frantisek Burian, Kuldeep Singh Dhaka, Robin Kreis, fenugrec and zyp
on irc, and all those forgotten.
This makes it easier to read for most people, and makes it substantially
easier to review changes in the function signatures themselves at a
later date.
This commit implements the support for one interface to have multiple
altsettings. It also adds hook that user can use to perform actions
when the alsetting switch is performed by host.
Changes:
* For backward compatibility, placed a pointer instead of allocating memory for whole interface struct.
* Always execute callback (even if the current interface alternate-settings matches).
* Multiple configuration support.
Signed-off-by: Kuldeep Singh Dhaka <kuldeepdhaka9@gmail.com>
Provides all of the config descriptors for MIDI class devices together
with a sub-set of the audio class sufficient to put together a full
fledged MIDI device.
Extends struct usb_endpoint_descriptor to make it possible to provide
the USB host with class-specific extensions to endpoint descriptors.
The approach taken, based on extra and extralen and removing the sizeof()
from USB_DT_ENDPOINT_SIZE, is identical to the approach used to add
class-specific extensions to interface descriptors. All libopencm3-examples
use the USB_DT_ENDPOINT_SIZE (rather than directly using sizeof) so there
should be no compatibility problems resulting from this change.
We should not add compiler extensions, it is not our job. We are not a
selfcontained project as kernel is so we should not introduce things
like this.
If we need to add some abstraction for this in the future to support
compilers doing these things differently then we will do that the same
way we dealt with the depricated attribute.
Added --terse and --mailback options to the make stylecheck target. It
also does continue even if it enounters a possible error.
We decided on two exceptions from the linux kernel coding standard:
- Empty wait while loops may end with ; on the same line.
- All blocks after while, if, for have to be in brackets even if they
only contain one statement. Otherwise it is easy to introduce an
error.
Checkpatch needs to be adapted to reflect those changes.
Current way of having a globally, but weakly defined static buffer has
several shortcomings:
- It forces user to have a certain "magic" byte array variable if
they want to have a control buffer of different size.
- Having a globally defined static array and a separate function to
tell USB core about its size is error prone.
- Its inner workings are not easily understandable form cursory look
at API and one needs to go and look at the implementation code to
connect all the pieces into a solid picture of how it works
This commit adds two parameters to 'usbd_init' call that allow user to
specify the pointer to the area of memory and a size of that memory
which would be used by the USB core to store the data received during
DATA stage of control requests. This approach, while further
complicating the prototype of 'usbd_init', provides user with more
flexibility allowing for any custom area of memory of any size to be
used as control buffer. It also forces user to provide both address
and memory size at the same time thus avoiding the possibility of user
redefining 'usbd_control_buffer', but not calling
'usbd_set_control_buffer_size' after that.
This commit refactors USB string code, making it, hopefully, less
buggy and more easier to understand. It also removes "magic" bit
manipulation and "magic" numbers;
This commits adds a new error code that can be return from a
registered control callback: USBD_REQ_NEXT_CALLBACK. This return code
signifies that the callback is done processing the data successfully,
but user would like to have all matching callbacks down the callback
chain to be executed too.
This change allows for example to intercept standard requests like
GET_DESCRIPTOR, do some small action upon receiving of one, but still
have the standard callback executed and do it's job. This way user
doesn't have to re-implement standard GET_DESCRIPTOR functionality if
they want to intercept that request to do some small thing.
This commit add an extra field to the _usbd_device, that allows to
keep track of the number of USB strings which allows simplify
boundaries checking code in usb_standard_get_descriptor.
This commit also changes the index base for strings in
usb_standard_get_descriptor which allows to get rid of necessity to
have a dummy one-character string in a strings array.
All #includes now explicitly use the "<libopencm3/stm32/rcc.h>" format.
If you want to get rid of the "libopencm3" prefix in your local project you
can add a respective -I entry in your Makefile (not recommended though).
All .ld files and .a libs are installed in $(TOOLCHAIN_DIR)/lib
directly (as before), but are now renamed to avoid potential
conflicts now or in the future. Examples:
libopencm3_lpc13xx.a
libopencm3_lpc13xx.ld
libopencm3_stm32.a
libopencm3_stm32.ld