1. If CONFIG_ESP32S3_PHY_INIT_DATA_IN_PARTITION and CONFIG_ESP32S3_SUPPORT_MULTIPLE_PHY_INIT_DATA are enabled,
PHY initialization data (PHY initialization data is used for RF calibration) will be loaded from a partition.
2. The corresponding PHY init data type can be automatically switched according to the country code,
China's PHY init data bin is used by default, country code can be modified through the wapi command: wapi country <ifname> <country code>.
Signed-off-by: chenwen@espressif.com <chenwen@espressif.com>
This commit sets the BLE's interrupt as a IRAM-enabled interrupt,
which enables it to run during a SPI flash operation. This enables
us to create a cache to off-load semaphores and message queues
operations and treat them when the SPI flash operation is finished.
By doing that, we avoid packet losses during a SPI flash operation.
This commit provides an interface to register ISRs that run from
IRAM and keeps track of the non-IRAM interrupts. It enables, for
instance, to avoid disabling all the interrupts during a SPI flash
operation: IRAM-enabled ISRs are, then, able to run during these
operations.
It also makes the code look more similar to the ESP32-S3 SPI flash
implementation by creating a common `esp32_spiflash_init` that is
responsible to create the SPI flash operation tasks. The function
intended to initialize the SPI flash partions was, then, renamed to
`board_spiflash_init`.
Whenever we enter/leave a critical section, the interrupt status is
saved and, then, restored. However, for the ESP32's BLE adapter,
entering/leaving a critical section is done on separate functions
that need to be registered as a callback.
The status flag was being saved as a global variable. However,
calling nested enter_critical_section would overwrite this global
variable that was storing the previous flag and, when leaving the
last critical section, the restored status would be different from
the one expected. The proposed solution for this issue is to create
a global array to store the interrupt status flags for nested calls.
When ESP32's BLE is enabled, select the option to pin the HCI TX
thread to a specific core. This is necessary to avoid problems
with the BLE task that runs pinned to the PRO CPU (core 0) while
running with SMP enabled.
The BIT macro is widely used in NuttX,
and to achieve a unified strategy,
we have placed the implementation of the BIT macro
in bits.h to simplify code implementation.
Signed-off-by: hujun5 <hujun5@xiaomi.com>
or long time data transmission.
The spin_lock in the wlan_recvframe() function that receives
RX data packets from the wireless network card and the critical
section lock in the iob_remove_queue() processing are nested,
which causes the interrupt to be disabled for a longer period
of time, resulting in a risk of deadlock.
When we build NuttX on macOS, it shows many `sed` messages (and the build still completes successfully):
```text
$ tools/configure.sh pinephone:nsh
$ make
sed: illegal option -- r
```
This is due to the Makefiles executing `sed -r` which is not a valid option on macOS.
This PR proposes to change `sed -r` to `sed -E` because:
- `sed -E` on macOS is equivalent to `sed -r` on Linux
- `sed -E` and `sed -r` are aliases according to the GNU `sed` Manual
- `sed -E` is already used in nuttx_add_romfs.cmake, nuttx_add_symtab.cmake and process_config.sh
It looks like we do not need to send the 9 clock ticks whenever we reset
the FSM. We are already doing this in i2c_reset function if necessary.
This makes the i2c transfers much faster, for example the i2c(-tool) dev
scan feature.
Whenever we enter/leave a critical section, the interrupt status is
saved and, then, restored. However, for the ESP32-S3's BLE adapter,
entering/leaving a critical section is done on separate functions
that need to be registered as a callback.
The status flag was being saved as a global variable. However,
calling nested enter_critical_section would overwrite this global
variable that was storing the previous flag and, when leaving the
last critical section, the restored status would be different from
the one expected. The proposed solution for this issue is to create
a global array to store the interrupt status flags for nested calls.
This commit sets the BLE's interrupt as a IRAM-enabled interrupt,
which enables it to run during a SPI flash operation. This enables
us to create a cache to off-load semaphores and message queues
operations and treat them when the SPI flash operation is finished.
By doing that, we avoid packet losses during a SPI flash operation.
This commit provides an interface to register ISRs that run from
IRAM and keeps track of the non-IRAM interrupts. It enables, for
instance, to avoid disabling all the interrupts during a SPI flash
operation: IRAM-enabled ISRs are, then, able to run during these
operations.
When allocating a CPU interrupt, make sure to select the correct
CPU core to query for it. Simply checking for the current CPU does
not satisfy this requirement because the CPU allocation thread may
be executed by the other core: it's necessary to stick with the
intended CPU passed as an argument of the `esp32s3_setup_irq`.
The registered `task_create_wrapper` receives the `core_id`, but
the current implementation ignores this parameter while calling
`esp_task_create_pinned_to_core`. This commit fix this.
When allocating a CPU interrupt, make sure to select the correct
CPU core to query for it. Simply checking for the current CPU does
not satisfy this requirement because the CPU allocation thread may
be executed by the other core: it's necessary to stick with the
intended CPU passed as an argument of the `esp32_setup_irq`.