This was inspired by an Arch Linux provided ARM GCC 5.3.0 bug:
It gave an
"internal compiler error: in expand_expr_addr_expr_1, at expr.c:7736"
with the array version of the desig_get_unique_id.
While I was at it, fixed:
- a potential alignment issue with casting uint8_t* buf to uint32_t*
- a funny static in the string definition that does nothing (given const)
This reverts commit aa5e108553ace3079c6087dec796b9e58fe45fa4.
This commit was not meant to land yet, it should have gone for review, and
doesn't yet include all the parts it should touch.
replace bulky hardcoded wait for set and wait for clear with a single asynch
routine. Leave the blocking routines in for compatibility at this point.
NOUP: should be added to other rcc.c files too.
Helpful if you don't like seeing:
(gdb) vecstate
HardFault: forced due to escalated or disabled configurable fault (see below)
UsageFault due to access to disabled/absent coprocessor
L4 and F3 actually have the same bits to write in the same order, but F3 hides
the name of the deep power down bit. Keep the like that for now, but there's a
standard API for enabling and disabling the regulator.
Now that the big pieces of the adc-v2 common files are in place, start
including l0 in the builds. This includes only the very very basic core v2
peripheral functions, and the very basic definitions.
The adc v2 periph has the same register map, but comes in two flavours, one
supporting injected channels, more watchdogs, per channel sampling times and
so on, and one "simple" version.
Pull up the f3 and f0 portions into the appropriate files, after comparing with
L0 and L4 reference manuals, even if those are not fully landed yet.
The f0, f30x and l0 have a very similar "v2" adc peripheral.
Start extracting out some of the common code, and fix the glaring bug in
adc_power_down that was affecting them both.
This is not intended to be a fully comprehensive extraction, just the first
easy steps.
The adc peripheral on F30x is the same as F0, L0 and L4. In the reference
manuals, the following names are used.
F3: CFGR (no CFGR2)
F0 and L0: CFGR1 and CFGR2
L4: CFGR and CFGR2
Moving to a single consistent name, that's more likely to be inline with future
part numbers makes it much easier to extract common driver code for the
peripheral.
While all bit defines are moved to the CFGR1 style, core register definitions:
ADC_CFGR(adc) and ADCx_CFGR are kept to match the original register name in the
reference manual.
Fixes Github issue #548
All defined bits are rc_w0.
The paranoid version of this would write 0 to the reserved bits (0 is the
"reset value"), but this would require knowing which flags are valid on the
actual platform, and adding the corresponding macros.
Connectivity line devices have more remaps available, and the existing code was
artificially and needlessly preventing those remaps from being set, even if
defined.
While implementing this, the existing code to handle SWJ remap was found to be
inconsistent with the reference manual and has been fixed.
Fixes github issue #369
DESIG_FLASH_SIZE is provided for all stm32 parts in desig.h, correctly defined
as 16bits. Remove the incorrect duplicate definition within the f1 flash
handling code.
Fixes github issues #621
Recent debian testing and ubuntu 15.10 releases contain a
gcc-arm-none-eabi toolchain that returns 0 for the test with -mcpu and
-fsyntax-only, despite not actually supporting cortex-m7. They then
failed hard on actual compilation steps.
Use the --help=target output instead. tested with old g-a-e 4.7 and
newer releases.
As done by esden for the F4, remove typedefs and add prefixes to clock enums
This extends this to all stm32 families.
Let's not hide the fact that these variables are structs/enums.
We are filling up the namespace badly enough, we should be prefixing as
much as we can with the module names at least. As users we already run
often enough in namespace colisions we don't have to make it worse.
* CLOCK_3V3_xxx enums renamed to RCC_CLOCK_3V3_xxx
* clock enums (PLL, HSI, HSE ...) prefixed with RCC_
* scale enum of pwr module prefixed with PWR_
Let's not hide the fact that these variables are structs/enums.
We are filling up the namespace badly enough, we should be prefixing as
much as we can with the module names at least. As users we already run
often enough in namespace colisions we don't have to make it worse.
* CLOCK_3V3_xxx enums renamed to RCC_CLOCK_3V3_xxx
* clock enums (PLL, HSI, HSE ...) prefixed with RCC_
* scale enum of pwr module prefixed with PWR_
These prototypes affect functions defined by application code. Only
the implementations in libopencm3 are supposed to be weak; the
functions in application code should definitely not be. Otherwise,
you'll end up with two weak symbols being linked together, and
it's luck as to which one the linker picks.
Just the basic core common functionality gained for free by being a common
peripheral. Enough for a miniblink.
Fixes some errors in the GPIO memory map. ST's naming of AHB2 vs AHB3 is
confusing.