* Update ChibiOS-Contrib for USB suspend fixes
* Remove S3 wakup workaround
ChibiOS OTGv1 driver has a remote wakeup bug that prevents the device to
resume it's operation. 02516cbc24
introduced a hotfix that forcefully restarted the usb driver as a workaround.
This workaround broke multiple boards which do not use this driver /
peripheral. With the update of ChibiOS this hotfix is now obsolete.
* Remove restart_usb_driver overrides
they are no longer necessary as the workaround is not needed anymore
for stm32f4
* Remove unused RP_USB_USE_SOF_INTR defines
The SOF interrupt is enabled dynamically by the RP2040 usb driver
The `adc_read()` code for STM32F0xx expects to get the 0-based channel
number in `mux.input`, but the `pinToMux()` code for STM32F0xx was
attempting to pass the CHSELR bit mask in that field, which resulted in
selecting a wrong channel, therefore `analogReadPin()` did not work
properly for the STM32F0xx chips. Fix `pinToMux()` to put the channel
number in that field (this matches the behavior for other supported
chips and also allows selection of channels 16...18, which can be used
to access the builtin temperature, reference voltage and VBAT sensors).
* Rename `eeprom_stm32` to `eeprom_legacy_emulated_flash`.
* Rename `flash_stm32` to `legacy_flash_ops`.
* Rename `eeprom_teensy` to `eeprom_kinetis_flexram`.
* Set up Bonsai C4 as a platform board file
* corrections and improvements based on testing and feedback
* Added VBUS sensing as default capability for improved split support using Bonsai C4
* Update clock divisor for SPI flash
Co-authored-by: Nick Brassel <nick@tzarc.org>
Co-authored-by: Nick Brassel <nick@tzarc.org>
...by moving the actually timing critical `enter_rx_state()` and
`leave_rx_state()` functions to RAM in order to not be affected by XIP
cache spikes. This commit also reverts the hacky USB interrupt disabling
that was done in 293c53d774
* Add ARRAY_SIZE and CEILING utility macros
* Apply a coccinelle patch to use ARRAY_SIZE
* fix up some straggling items
* Fix 'make test:secure'
* Enhance ARRAY_SIZE macro to reject acting on pointers
The previous definition would not produce a diagnostic for
```
int *p;
size_t num_elem = ARRAY_SIZE(p)
```
but the new one will.
* explicitly get definition of ARRAY_SIZE
* Convert to ARRAY_SIZE when const is involved
The following spatch finds additional instances where the array is
const and the division is by the size of the type, not the size of
the first element:
```
@ rule5a using "empty.iso" @
type T;
const T[] E;
@@
- (sizeof(E)/sizeof(T))
+ ARRAY_SIZE(E)
@ rule6a using "empty.iso" @
type T;
const T[] E;
@@
- sizeof(E)/sizeof(T)
+ ARRAY_SIZE(E)
```
* New instances of ARRAY_SIZE added since initial spatch run
* Use `ARRAY_SIZE` in docs (found by grep)
* Manually use ARRAY_SIZE
hs_set is expected to be the same size as uint16_t, though it's made
of two 8-bit integers
* Just like char, sizeof(uint8_t) is guaranteed to be 1
This is at least true on any plausible system where qmk is actually used.
Per my understanding it's universally true, assuming that uint8_t exists:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48655310/can-i-assume-that-sizeofuint8-t-1
* Run qmk-format on core C files touched in this branch
Co-authored-by: Stefan Kerkmann <karlk90@pm.me>
Unfortunately, the crippled versions of “Bluepill” boards with
STM32F103C6xx chips instead of STM32F103C8xx are now sold all over the
place, sometimes advertised in a confusing way to make the difference
not noticeable until too late. Add minimal support for these MCUs in
the common “Bluepill with stm32duino” configuration, so that it could be
possible to make something useful from those boards (although fitting
QMK into the available 24 KiB of flash may be rather hard).
(In fact, I'm not sure whether the “STM32” part of the chip name is
actually correct for those boards of uncertain origin, so the onekey
board name is `bluepill_f103c6`; another reason for that name is to
match the existing `blackpill_f401` and `blackpill_f411`.)
The EEPROM emulation support is not included on purpose, because
enabling it without having a working firmware size check would be
irresponsible with such flash size (the chance that someone would build
a firmware where the EEPROM backing store ends up overlapping some
firmware code is really high). Other than that, enabling the EEPROM
emulation code is mostly trivial (the `wear_leveling` driver with the
`embedded_flash` backing store even works without any custom
configuration, although its code is significantly larger than the
`vendor` driver, which may also be important for such flash size).
From the ChibiOS HAL I2C driver pages:
After a timeout the driver must be stopped and restarted because the bus is in
an uncertain state.
This commit does that stopping explicitly on any error that occurred, not only
timeouts. As all the i2c functions restart the peripheral if necessary it is
safe to do so.
Co-authored-by: Dasky <32983009+daskygit@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Dasky <32983009+daskygit@users.noreply.github.com>
* Use polled waiting on platforms that support it
Due to context switching overhead waiting a very short amount of time on
a sleeping thread is often not accurate and in fact not usable for timing
critical usage i.e. in a driver. Thus we use polled waiting for ranges
in the us range on platforms that support it instead. The fallback is
the thread sleeping mechanism.
This includes:
* ARM platforms with CYCCNT register (ARMv7, ARMv8) this is
incremented at CPU clock frequency
* GD32VF103 RISC-V port with CSR_MCYCLE register this is incremented at
CPU clock frequency
* RP2040 ARMv6 port which uses the integrated timer peripheral which is
incremented with a fixed 1MHz frequency
* Use wait_us() instead of chSysPolledDelayX
...as it is powered by busy waiting now.
* Add chibios waiting methods test bench