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/*
* This file is part of the MicroPython project, http://micropython.org/
*
* The MIT License (MIT)
*
* Copyright (c) 2017 "Eric Poulsen" <eric@zyxod.com>
* Copyright (c) 2017 "Tom Manning" <tom@manningetal.com>
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
* of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
* in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
* to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
* copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
* furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
* all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
* AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
* LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
* OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
* THE SOFTWARE.
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include "driver/gpio.h"
#include "py/nlr.h"
#include "py/obj.h"
#include "py/runtime.h"
#include "py/mphal.h"
#include "extmod/modmachine.h"
#include "shared/timeutils/timeutils.h"
#include "machine_rtc.h"
typedef struct _machine_rtc_obj_t {
mp_obj_base_t base;
} machine_rtc_obj_t;
/* There is 8K of rtc_slow_memory, but some is used by the system software
If the MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX is set too high, the following compile error will happen:
region `rtc_slow_seg' overflowed by N bytes
The current system software allows almost 4096 to be used.
To avoid running into issues if the system software uses more, 2048 was picked as a max length
You can also change this max length at compile time by defining MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX
either on your make line, or in your board config.
If MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX is set to 0, the RTC.memory() functionality will be not
be compiled which frees some extra flash and RTC memory.
*/
#ifndef MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX
#define MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX 2048
#endif
// A board can enable MICROPY_HW_RTC_MEM_INIT_ALWAYS to always clear out RTC memory on boot.
// Defaults to RTC_NOINIT_ATTR so the user memory survives WDT resets and the like.
#if MICROPY_HW_RTC_MEM_INIT_ALWAYS
#define _USER_MEM_ATTR RTC_DATA_ATTR
#else
#define _USER_MEM_ATTR RTC_NOINIT_ATTR
#endif
// Optionally compile user memory functionality if the size of memory is greater than 0
#if MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX > 0
#define MEM_MAGIC 0x75507921
_USER_MEM_ATTR uint32_t rtc_user_mem_magic;
_USER_MEM_ATTR uint16_t rtc_user_mem_len;
_USER_MEM_ATTR uint8_t rtc_user_mem_data[MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX];
#endif
#undef _USER_MEM_ATTR
// singleton RTC object
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static const machine_rtc_obj_t machine_rtc_obj = {{&machine_rtc_type}};
machine_rtc_config_t machine_rtc_config = {
.ext1_pins = 0,
.ext0_pin = -1
};
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t machine_rtc_make_new(const mp_obj_type_t *type, size_t n_args, size_t n_kw, const mp_obj_t *args) {
// check arguments
mp_arg_check_num(n_args, n_kw, 0, 0, false);
#if MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX > 0
if (rtc_user_mem_magic != MEM_MAGIC) {
rtc_user_mem_magic = MEM_MAGIC;
rtc_user_mem_len = 0;
}
#endif
// return constant object
return (mp_obj_t)&machine_rtc_obj;
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t machine_rtc_datetime_helper(mp_uint_t n_args, const mp_obj_t *args) {
if (n_args == 1) {
// Get time
struct timeval tv;
gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);
timeutils_struct_time_t tm;
timeutils_seconds_since_epoch_to_struct_time(tv.tv_sec, &tm);
mp_obj_t tuple[8] = {
mp_obj_new_int(tm.tm_year),
mp_obj_new_int(tm.tm_mon),
mp_obj_new_int(tm.tm_mday),
mp_obj_new_int(tm.tm_wday),
mp_obj_new_int(tm.tm_hour),
mp_obj_new_int(tm.tm_min),
mp_obj_new_int(tm.tm_sec),
mp_obj_new_int(tv.tv_usec)
};
return mp_obj_new_tuple(8, tuple);
} else {
// Set time
mp_obj_t *items;
mp_obj_get_array_fixed_n(args[1], 8, &items);
struct timeval tv = {0};
tv.tv_sec = timeutils_seconds_since_epoch(mp_obj_get_int(items[0]), mp_obj_get_int(items[1]), mp_obj_get_int(items[2]), mp_obj_get_int(items[4]), mp_obj_get_int(items[5]), mp_obj_get_int(items[6]));
tv.tv_usec = mp_obj_get_int(items[7]);
settimeofday(&tv, NULL);
return mp_const_none;
}
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t machine_rtc_datetime(size_t n_args, const mp_obj_t *args) {
return machine_rtc_datetime_helper(n_args, args);
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_VAR_BETWEEN(machine_rtc_datetime_obj, 1, 2, machine_rtc_datetime);
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t machine_rtc_init(mp_obj_t self_in, mp_obj_t date) {
mp_obj_t args[2] = {self_in, date};
machine_rtc_datetime_helper(2, args);
return mp_const_none;
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_2(machine_rtc_init_obj, machine_rtc_init);
#if MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX > 0
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t machine_rtc_memory(size_t n_args, const mp_obj_t *args) {
if (n_args == 1) {
// read RTC memory
uint8_t rtcram[MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX];
memcpy((char *)rtcram, (char *)rtc_user_mem_data, rtc_user_mem_len);
return mp_obj_new_bytes(rtcram, rtc_user_mem_len);
} else {
// write RTC memory
mp_buffer_info_t bufinfo;
mp_get_buffer_raise(args[1], &bufinfo, MP_BUFFER_READ);
if (bufinfo.len > MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX) {
mp_raise_ValueError(MP_ERROR_TEXT("buffer too long"));
}
memcpy((char *)rtc_user_mem_data, (char *)bufinfo.buf, bufinfo.len);
rtc_user_mem_len = bufinfo.len;
return mp_const_none;
}
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_VAR_BETWEEN(machine_rtc_memory_obj, 1, 2, machine_rtc_memory);
#endif
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static const mp_rom_map_elem_t machine_rtc_locals_dict_table[] = {
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_init), MP_ROM_PTR(&machine_rtc_init_obj) },
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_datetime), MP_ROM_PTR(&machine_rtc_datetime_obj) },
#if MICROPY_HW_RTC_USER_MEM_MAX > 0
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_memory), MP_ROM_PTR(&machine_rtc_memory_obj) },
#endif
};
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_DICT(machine_rtc_locals_dict, machine_rtc_locals_dict_table);
MP_DEFINE_CONST_OBJ_TYPE(
machine_rtc_type,
MP_QSTR_RTC,
MP_TYPE_FLAG_NONE,
make_new, machine_rtc_make_new,
locals_dict, &machine_rtc_locals_dict
);