This allows to execute a command and communicate with its stdin/stdout
via pipes ("exec") or with command-created pseudo-terminal ("execpty"),
to emulate serial access. Immediate usecase is controlling a QEMU process
which emulates board's serial via normal console, but it could be used
e.g. with helper binaries to access real board over other hadware
protocols, etc.
An example of device specification for these cases is:
--device exec:../zephyr/qemu.sh
--device execpty:../zephyr/qemu2.sh
Where qemu.sh contains long-long qemu startup line, or calls another
command. There's a special support in this patch for running the command
in a new terminal session, to support shell wrappers like that (without
new terminal session, only wrapper script would be terminated, but its
child processes would continue to run).
Without this, if there's a large chunk of data coming from hardware (e.g.
clipboard paste, or fed programmatically from the other side of the console),
there's a behavior of initial mass fill-in of the buffer without any
consumption, which starts much later and doesn't catch up with further
filling, leading to buffer overflow.
MONO_xxx is much easier to read if you're not familiar with the code.
MVLSB is deprecated but kept for backwards compatibility, for the time
being.
This patch also updates the associated docs and tests.
This should be a little more efficient (since we anyway scan the input
packet for the interrupt char), and it should also fix any non-atomic read
issues with the buffer state being changed during an interrupt.
Throughput tests show that RX rate is unchanged by this patch.
The previous timeout value of 150ms could lead to data being lost (ie never
received by the host) in some rare cases, eg when the host is under load.
A value of 500ms is quite conservative and allows the host plenty of time
to read our data.
Hashing of float and complex numbers that are exact (real) integers should
return the same integer hash value as hashing the corresponding integer
value. Eg hash(1), hash(1.0) and hash(1+0j) should all be the same (this
is how Python is specified: if x==y then hash(x)==hash(y)).
This patch implements the simplest way of doing float/complex hashing by
just converting the value to int and returning that value.
Split this setting from MICROPY_CPYTHON_COMPAT. The idea is to be able to
keep MICROPY_CPYTHON_COMPAT disabled, but still pass more of regression
testsuite. In particular, this fixes last failing test in basics/ for
Zephyr port.
The first memmove now copies less bytes in some cases (because len_adj <=
slice_len), and the memcpy is replaced with memmove to support the
possibility that dest and slice regions are overlapping.
The foundation of recv() support is per-socket queue of incoming packets,
implemented using Zephyr FIFO object. This patch implements just recv()
for UDP, because TCP recv() requires much more fine-grained control of
network fragments and handling other issues, like EOF condition, etc.
This follows the pattern of how all other headers are now included, and
makes it explicit where the header file comes from. This patch also
removes -I options from Makefile's that specify the mp-readline/timeutils/
netutils directories, which are no longer needed.
Such constants are MCU specific so shouldn't be specified in the board
config file (else it leads to too much duplication of code).
This patch also adds I2C timing values for the F767/F769 for 100k, 400k
and 1MHz I2C bus frequencies.
By default the SDIO (F4) or SDMMC1 (L4, F7) is used as the SD card
peripheral, but if a board config defines MICROPY_HW_SDMMC2_CK and other
pins then the SD card driver will use SDMMC2.
Build happens in 3 stages:
1. Zephyr config header and make vars are generated from prj.conf.
2. libmicropython is built using them.
3. Zephyr is built and final link happens.
Allows to get event time for a head item in the queue. The usecase
if waiting for the next event *OR* I/O completion. I/O completion may
happen before event triggers, and then wait should continue for the
remaining event time (or I/O completion may schedule another earlier
event altogether).
The new function has a strongly provisional status - it may be converted
to e.g. peek() function returning all of the event fields, not just time.