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.
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_
All the macro arguments that are user supplied, or potentially, wrap properly
in () as good practice.
Probably missed one or two, and a lot of them are possibly unnecessary, but
it's straightforward to just do it always.
Fixes github issue #321
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 removes the shift from the defines, and includes them in the helper
function, making the code match the documentation, and following how the
rest of the library commonly operates.
Code using the existing defines will continue to work.
This adds MCO source selection to some targets, and removes and standardizes
the mask/shift usage for all targets. For devices that support MCO2, this
supports only MCO1. No attempt has been made to extract MCO prescaler, which
is not available on all F1 and F3.
Latest versions of all reference manuals refer to the address as SPIx_BASE, and
simply name some of the individual registers as SPI_I2SXXXX. Likewise, the
interrupts are simply SPIx, not SPIx/I2Sx. Rather than hacking more duplicates
into the F0 and L0 parts where this was turning up, remove the pointless _I2S_
from SPI2/SPI3 and make it all consistent
Compile tested only, with the examples collection.
Signed-off-by: Karl Palsson <karlp@tweak.net.au>
Fixes#331Fixes#347
There's more exti lines on many more devices now. F0 and F3 have extras, as did
L1 and L0. There's no real reason not to have higher order EXTI definitions
defined at the top level, and it reduces the number of files to merge together
to find all definitions for the bigger devices.
Signed-off-by: Karl Palsson <karlp@tweak.net.au>
Fixes#338
This commit has been based on kuldeepdhaka's pioneer work, but it was reformatted to apply libopencm3 inclusion tree correctly.
timer_common_all.c now supports new rcc_periph_reset_pulse function for all families.
to remove variations, redundancies, add missing, fix errors. All c files
refer only to the dispatch style headers in /include/stm32. Those headers
#include memorymap.h and cm3/common.h. All references to
these are removed from the family specific headers. Ethernet untouched as
it appears incomplete.
Added dummy spi.c for F0/F3. Fix some doxygen anomalies.
Extension of code for STM32F1 to allow for dual bank series XL.
Small changes to documentation for F2, F4 and L1 to add a parameter reference.
Tested with STM32F103RBT6
(note: tests show that the PG bit must be cleared after programming, otherwise
a subsequent erase attempt fails. This has been added to flash_program_half_word
for F0 and F1 only. A fix for the other families is not included in this PR.)
This unifies stm32f1, l1, and f4 convenience functions for adc. The code
should be useable for f2 and f37x as well, but that needs hardware for testing,
and there was no existing implementation. This is the reason for the
"adc_common_v1.c" name, as trying to put all the different families into the
common file name has become too cumbersome.
All of the deprecated routines have been dropped, they've been marked
deprecated for a very long time now, and porting them seemed unnecessary.
This has been tested on f1, l1 and f4 discovery boards, and is based on some
existing l1/f1 unification code from
https://github.com/karlp/libopencm3/tree/rme_l1_master
This pulls out all the common header definitions for the F1, L1, F4 and F37x
parts. It's verified against the datasheet for F2 as well, but we don't have
any good F2 test boards or any support for that yet. (The F2 header would be
_exactly_ the same as the F4 header, so it's a target for a future round of
unification, not this one)
Tested with f1, f4 and l1 examples from the examples repository.
So that the navigation pane works correctly in browsers.
Some additional doc fixes put in where found (but many more still to go).
Added some dummy .c and .h files to bring the associated docs into line.
makefile changed to allow 'make html' as well as 'make doc' (the latter only does html anyway).
The common code wasn't being included in L1 builds, even though the headers now
included the correct definitions.
This combines the two f0 and f3 spi files, which previously differed only in
the number of spi peripherals defined.
Files were renamed to the full "l1f124" style, not because I like it, but
because it's the convention we have, so it's best to apply it rigourously.
Tested on L1 and F100 boards, compile tested only for others, but the examples
repository all compiles too. (Though the lack of SPI examples for all
platforms was how this broke in the first place)
DFF exists at bit 11 for f1, f2, f4 and l1, but the f0 and f3 have that bit as
CRC len and use CR2 for data size bits instead. The merging of the F3 and F0
and attempts to put common data in common places broke the l1 code.
F3 and F0 SPI headers are still almost completely identical.