Make the names match the reference manuals properly, and add missing
names. Still a long way to go to unify across all families, but this is
at least closer.
While on all current chips, exticr gpio port mux selection is coded on 4 bits,
stm32g0 EXTI_EXTICR register uses 8 bits. Align all exti header to reference
that value (was previously defined for f0 as SYCFG_EXTICR_SKIP)
I2C3 is on many parts, but wasn't properly supported with the register
definitions. Declare them centrally, just depending on the memorymap
defining them. On some parts, the rcc bits were defined, but not the
base registers.
Fixes: https://github.com/libopencm3/libopencm3/issues/820
Turns out, there's lots of common code for flash. Pull up prefetch
on/off to start with, as there's only a single bit name different.
Pull up the definitions of common API functions too, starting with
flash_set_ws. Even if the implementations are different, things that
meant to be the same, should be defined centrally.
Only applied to STM32 doc trees at present.
Instead of declaring a group for "STM32blah" in the doc-blah.h files,
and then trying to put all the common+specific peripheral code into
those groups, (which is what led to the stub doxygen holder empty .c
files) Just use a standard name like "Peripheral APIS" and place
everything into that.
Demonstrated by converting ADC and USART peripherals, which is
definitely not complete, but it shows how to make things less magical,
and less prone to copy/paste errors. Now, you can copy/paste and it
will do the right thing, because everyone uses the same group names.
This is also how to unify the mix of "STM32blah->Periphblah" and _also_
the dangling "periph_file" modules in doxygen, it merges them together
properly, as they're intended to be really.
STM32L0 uses the same DMA peripheral as STM32F0, F1, L1 and others
with some differences. Those are mostly in the number of supported
controllers and channels.
This patch enables the basic support with no attempt to only expose
the available controllers / channels.
For more information see the ST Application Note AN2548.
Signed-off-by: Martin Sivak <mars@montik.net>
split spi stuff in three part:
- v1 : basic spi peripheral
- v1_frf : v1 spi with frf mode additional bit in spi_cr2 / spi_sr
- v2 : spi with variable datasize, fifo and other fancy stuff.
v1 maps to f1 chips
v1_frf to f2, f4 and l0,l1
v2 to f0, f3 and l4
This breaks spi_master_init API for v2 devices : function prototype from
common spi header used to be abused, with DFF bit reused for CRCL bit.
New v2 spi_master_init does not handle anymore CRCL bits, as it does not
usually mess with other crc configuration.
rcc_osc_bypass_enable and rcc_osc_bypass_disable have been copy/pasted
around for the last time! There's a compile bit to check for L0/L1, but
otherwise this is just code duplication for no gain.
Originally suggested in https://github.com/libopencm3/libopencm3/pull/399
At least provide macros for each family that allows easy masking of the
full set of reset reason flags. Trying to provide a function that
provides these in random upper bits seems unclear at best.
Early revisions of the reference manuals used different names for the
touch sense controller and firewall bits. These have now been changed
to be more in line with other families, and as these parts and bits were
new in this library, simply move forward to the current naming
convention.
According to reference manuals both l0 and l4 have "v2" i2c peripheral.
This patch adds i2c support to l0 and l4 using previously unified "v2" i2c
headers and implementation.
No real hardware has been tested so far. Only compilation tests for both
libopencm3 and libopencm3-examples for all stm32 families.
Signed-off-by: Sergey Matyukevich <geomatsi@gmail.com>
Some parts used HSICLK, some used HSI. Most used NOCLK, f3 used
DISABLED. Try and move all to the shorter, simpler forms, instead of
having mixed defines for different targets for the same thing. Just
because the bits themselves are different doesn't mean we should make it
more difficult for users to port code.
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.
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
More could probably be found, but this makes some of the basic RCC defines for
the L0 much more inline with other platforms, and much less verbose. This
helps us have more identical code for library users across different targets.
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.
Rename rcc_ppre1_frequency and rcc_ppre2_frequency to rcc_apb1_frequency and rcc_apb2_frequency
Also add rcc_ahb_frequency (although it is not set correctly in all cases) which will be fixed by
the rcc commits later. Also fixup the only use in the library of these variables, the USART code.
And fix the typos that resulted
Make l1 generic too
Tested with a miniblink example on the l053 discovery board.
Only register definitions at this stage, no helpers.
Register definitions from RM0367r2, hopefully the biggest
superset of L0 parts.
Signed-off-by: Karl Palsson <karlp@tweak.net.au>