This change allows to use SSD1306 based displays to be used on the
SPI bus as well.
Adding SPI shield.
Tested on SSD1306 and SSD1309 based displays using I2C.
Tested on SSD1309 based display using SPI.
Signed-off-by: Marco Peter <marco@peter-net.ch>
This change removes the interleaving control
frames.
Additionally all I2C accesses are centralized in
one single function.
Signed-off-by: Marco Peter <marco@peter-net.ch>
Remove Adafruit/Seeed TFT hardcoded settings. Note that undocumented
ILI9340/1 settings have been removed (maybe Seeed is using another ILI
variant?).
Signed-off-by: Gerard Marull-Paretas <gerard@teslabs.com>
Move pixel format setting (RGB565/RGB888) to DeviceTree. Add support for
changing pixel format at runtime.
Signed-off-by: Gerard Marull-Paretas <gerard@teslabs.com>
Multiple enhancements towards better code readability and consistency:
- sorted headers
- define and reference magic constants
- adjust some names
- add U suffix to unsigned constants
- move hw reset to a function
- remove non-needed initialization code from seeed tft
Signed-off-by: Gerard Marull-Paretas <gerard@teslabs.com>
Now that device_api attribute is unmodified at runtime, as well as all
the other attributes, it is possible to switch all device driver
instance to be constant.
A coccinelle rule is used for this:
@r_const_dev_1
disable optional_qualifier
@
@@
-struct device *
+const struct device *
@r_const_dev_2
disable optional_qualifier
@
@@
-struct device * const
+const struct device *
Fixes#27399
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Bursztyka <tomasz.bursztyka@linux.intel.com>
Added extra asserts to write function of SDL display driver to check if
write is within bounds.
Signed-off-by: Jan Van Winkel <jan.van_winkel@dxplore.eu>
The gd7965 driver still called ksleep with unsigned integers.
Use the K_MSEC makro instead.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Schaffner <tobiasschaffner87@outlook.com>
Appropriate WS can be loaded automatically if
the display controller has integrated temperature
sensor or an external sensor is connected.
Signed-off-by: Johann Fischer <j.fischer@phytec.de>
The driver-specific config_info structure referenced from the device
structure is marked const. Some drivers fail to preserve that
qualifier when casting the pointer to the driver-specific structure,
violating MISRA 11.8.
Changes produced by scripts/coccinelle/const_config_info.cocci.
Some changes proposed by the script are not included because they
reveal mutation of state through the const pointer, though the
code works as long as the driver-specific object is defined without
the const qualifier.
Signed-off-by: Peter Bigot <peter.bigot@nordicsemi.no>
Revise how the unusable memory area is treated.
Do not use SPI interface directly but ssd16xx_write_cmd().
This will allow a common SPI interface to be implemented
in the future.
Signed-off-by: Johann Fischer <j.fischer@phytec.de>
The PORCTRL setting command is in 'bank2' and so might not be changed on
the controller unless bank2 is enabled first.
Signed-off-by: Marc Reilly <marc@cpdesign.com.au>
Add a k_timeout_t type, and use it everywhere that kernel API
functions were accepting a millisecond timeout argument. Instead of
forcing milliseconds everywhere (which are often not integrally
representable as system ticks), do the conversion to ticks at the
point where the timeout is created. This avoids an extra unit
conversion in some application code, and allows us to express the
timeout in units other than milliseconds to achieve greater precision.
The existing K_MSEC() et. al. macros now return initializers for a
k_timeout_t.
The K_NO_WAIT and K_FOREVER constants have now become k_timeout_t
values, which means they cannot be operated on as integers.
Applications which have their own APIs that need to inspect these
vs. user-provided timeouts can now use a K_TIMEOUT_EQ() predicate to
test for equality.
Timer drivers, which receive an integer tick count in ther
z_clock_set_timeout() functions, now use the integer-valued
K_TICKS_FOREVER constant instead of K_FOREVER.
For the initial release, to preserve source compatibility, a
CONFIG_LEGACY_TIMEOUT_API kconfig is provided. When true, the
k_timeout_t will remain a compatible 32 bit value that will work with
any legacy Zephyr application.
Some subsystems present timeout (or timeout-like) values to their own
users as APIs that would re-use the kernel's own constants and
conventions. These will require some minor design work to adapt to
the new scheme (in most cases just using k_timeout_t directly in their
own API), and they have not been changed in this patch, instead
selecting CONFIG_LEGACY_TIMEOUT_API via kconfig. These subsystems
include: CAN Bus, the Microbit display driver, I2S, LoRa modem
drivers, the UART Async API, Video hardware drivers, the console
subsystem, and the network buffer abstraction.
k_sleep() now takes a k_timeout_t argument, with a k_msleep() variant
provided that works identically to the original API.
Most of the changes here are just type/configuration management and
documentation, but there are logic changes in mempool, where a loop
that used a timeout numerically has been reworked using a new
z_timeout_end_calc() predicate. Also in queue.c, a (when POLL was
enabled) a similar loop was needlessly used to try to retry the
k_poll() call after a spurious failure. But k_poll() does not fail
spuriously, so the loop was removed.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
Kernel timeouts have always been a 32 bit integer despite the
existence of generation macros, and existing code has been
inconsistent about using them. Upcoming commits are going to make the
timeout arguments opaque, so fix things up to be rigorously correct.
Changes include:
+ Adding a K_TIMEOUT_EQ() macro for code that needs to compare timeout
values for equality (e.g. with K_FOREVER or K_NO_WAIT).
+ Adding a k_msleep() synonym for k_sleep() which can continue to take
integral arguments as k_sleep() moves away to timeout arguments.
+ Pervasively using the K_MSEC(), K_SECONDS(), et. al. macros to
generate timeout arguments.
+ Removing the usage of K_NO_WAIT as the final argument to
K_THREAD_DEFINE(). This is just a count of milliseconds and we need
to use a zero.
This patch include no logic changes and should not affect generated
code at all.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
I think people might be reading differences into 'if' and 'depends on'
that aren't there, like maybe 'if' being needed to "hide" a symbol,
while 'depends on' just adds a dependency.
There are no differences between 'if' and 'depends on'. 'if' is just a
shorthand for 'depends on'. They work the same when it comes to creating
implicit menus too.
The way symbols get "hidden" is through their dependencies not being
satisfied ('if'/'depends on' get copied up as a dependency on the
prompt).
Since 'if' and 'depends on' are the same, an 'if' with just a single
symbol in it can be replaced with a 'depends on'. IMO, it's best to
avoid 'if' there as a style choice too, because it confuses people into
thinking there's deep Kconfig magic going on that requires 'if'.
Going for 'depends on' can also remove some nested 'if's, which
generates nicer symbol information and docs, because nested 'if's really
are so simple/dumb that they just add the dependencies from both 'if's
to all symbols within.
Replace a bunch of single-symbol 'if's with 'depends on' to despam the
Kconfig files a bit and make it clearer how things work. Also do some
other minor related dependency refactoring.
The replacement isn't complete. Will fix up the rest later. Splitting it
a bit to make it more manageable.
(Everything above is true for choices, menus, and comments as well.)
Detected by tweaking the Kconfiglib parsing code. It's impossible to
detect after parsing, because 'if' turns into 'depends on'.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>