This uses the core/dev/spi.h header and implements the spi_init()
function and the various macros for SPI operation. ssi.h contains all of
the register locations and information.
This implementation is not very versatile, mostly because I don't how to
make it flexible in the contiki system. It supports pin muxing for the
four spi pins, but other than that picks sensible defaults.
The SPI macros (like SPI_READ()) are defined in
cpu/cc2538/spi-arch.h. In order to use the SPI driver, add the following
includes to your project:
#include "spi-arch.h
#include "dev/spi.h"
- Speed: The primary byte copy loops are reduzed to the bare minimum by adjusting the base pointer 'ptr' and loop register 'y' in such a way that the 'y' overflow matches the low byte of the loop size.
- Introduced a loop for setting the MAC address.
Additional minor fix:
- Properly start self modification with first location.
- Speed: The primary byte copy loops are reduzed to the bare minimum by adjusting the base pointer 'ptr' and loop register 'y' in such a way that the 'y' overflow matches the low byte of the loop size.
- Size: Factored out all repeated code into subroutines. Introduced a loop for setting the MAC address.
Additional minor changes:
- Activate frame reception as last step of initialization after CS8900A configuration.
- Properly set internal address bits used by the CS8900A.
Those two warnings are optimisation-related
* 110 warns that an always-false if branch has been optimised out
* 126 warns about unreachable code which also gets optimised out
In disabling those warnings, we make the build less cluttered
This was used in the past because sdld was
very verbose when linking banked hex files. New
sdld versions do not exhibit this level of
verbosity and therefore the redirect can be
stopped
The CC2531 USB stick now identifies itself as a
'Texas Instruments CC2531 USB Dongle' and uses a
TI-assigmed VID:PID. The VID:PID is now configurable
in contiki- or project-conf.h
The sensinode platform does not support .upload and .serialdump
Their presence in the makefile has confused in the past confused
some users. This commit removes them
The commit also removes the $(OBJECTDIR)/%.rel: %.cS recipe which
is not used by either 8051 platform and is probably broken anyway,
since it has been unmaintained for years
Historically $(OBJECTDIR) was created when Makefile.include is read. A
consequence is that combining "clean" with "all" (or any other build
target) results in an error because the clean removes the object
directory that is required to exist when building dependencies.
Creating $(OBJECTDIR) on-demand ensures it is present when needed.
Removed creation of $(OBJECTDIR) on initial read, and added an order-only
dependency forcing its creation all Makefile* rules where the target is
explicitly or implicitly in $(OBJECTDIR).
The boot loader now knows when to go into bootstrap mode by
looking for a specific EEPROM value. Also updated code style
to match Contiki code style guidelines.
This patch removes a defunct EEPROM implementation from the native
platform and provides a new EEPROM implementation for the native cpu.
The previous implementation appears to be vestigal.
This is useful for testing code which uses the EEPROM without running
the code on the actual hardware.
By default the code will create a new temporary file as the EEPROM
backing, reinitializing each time. If you would like to preserve the
EEPROM contents or specify a specific EEPROM file to use, you can set the
`CONTIKI_EEPROM` environment variable to the name of the EEPROM file you
wish to use instead. If it already exists, its contents will be used.
If it does not already exist, it will be created and initialized by
filling it with `0xFF`---just like a real EEPROM.
A new example is also included, which was used to verify the correctness
of the implementation. It can easily be used to verify the EEPROM
implementations of other targets.