* initial clueboard_60 support
* LED lighting support
* fix the clueboard->clueboard_66 rename
* Add layout support to clueboard_60
* Fix the 60_iso layout so it's actually iso
* add a default keymap for AEK layout
* fix clueboard_17
* Fixup the ISO layouts
* Fix the `wait_ms()/wait_us()` definitions for chibios
* Fix up the wait_ms/wait_us hack. Reduce stack size.
* Add a missing #include "wait.h"
* commit files that should have already been comitted
Refactored Bluetooth support to make adding new Bluetooth modules
easier in the future.
* Remove `OUT_BLE` key from QMK's keymap. `OUT_BT` is all we need now
as there's no difference anymore.
* Made BLUETOOTH_ENABLE build option legacy as not to break existing
keymaps (Falls back to existing EZ Key support if on)
* Removed `ADAFRUIT_BLE_ENABLE` build option
* Created new build option `BLUETOOTH` with module option (Currently
`AdafruitEZKey` & `AdafruitBLE`)
* Moved all LUFA bluetooth key/mouse events under `BLUETOOTH_ENABLE`
ifdef with selected modules output.
Fix memory leaks by using stack instead of malloc
Reduce memory usage by having less temporary bufffers
Remove warnings by adding includes
Decrease code size by 608 bytes (mostly due to not linking malloc)
More robust handling of buffer overflows
There are a lot of PS/2 commands, some are vendor/device specific, so we
provide a weak ps2_mouse_init_user() to be implemented in each keyboard
that need it.
There are now 3 potential locations to send HID reports:
1. USB
2. The bluefruit easy key
3. Adafruit BLE
Generally speaking, if USB is connected then we should prefer to
send the reports there; it is generally the best channel for this.
The bluefruit module has no feedback about bluetooth connectivity
so the code must speculatively send reports over both USB and bluetooth.
The BLE module has connectivity feedback. In general we want to
prefer to send HID reports over USB while connected there, even
if BLE is connected. Except that it is convenient to force them
over BLE while testing the implementation.
This policy has been extracted out into a where_to_send function
which returns a bitmask of which of the channels should be used.
This implements some helper functions that allow sending key reports
to an SPI based Bluetooth Low Energy module, such as the Adafruit
Feather 32u4 Bluefruit LE.
There is some plumbing required in lufa.c to enable this; that
is in a follow-on commit.