Refactors all of the EEPROM drivers to use a shared driver class
initialization priority configuration, CONFIG_EEPROM_INIT_PRIORITY, to
allow configuring EEPROM drivers separately from other devices. This is
similar to other driver classes like I2C and SPI.
The default is set to CONFIG_KERNEL_INIT_PRIORITY_DEVICE to preserve the
existing default initialization priority for most drivers. The
exceptions are at2x and emul drivers which have dependencies on SPI,
I2C, or flash drivers and must therefore initialize later than the
default device priority.
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@intel.com>
Convert the at2x eeprom driver to `spi_dt_spec` and `i2c_dt_spec`.
I2C functions are not fully converted due to the non-standard addressing
scheme.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Yates <jordan.yates@data61.csiro.au>
In the eeprom read operation, when rambuf was available
mutex was not unlocked after the read. Consequence of that is
that device was blocked after that read for incoming operations.
This commit fixes the issue
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Puzdrowski <andrzej.puzdrowski@nordicsemi.no>
Simplify the the AT2x EEPROM instance initialization macro a bit by
converting it to use the new DT helper macros for SPI and GPIO.
This also saves a few bytes when only AT24 support is enabled.
Signed-off-by: Henrik Brix Andersen <hebad@vestas.com>
Modified eeprom shell fill command to be able to fill the complete
eeprom. The code of the fill command is now similar the new eeprom
read command.
Signed-off-by: Christian Taedcke <christian.taedcke@lemonbeat.com>
Modified eeprom shell read command to be able to read out the complete
eeprom. The code of the read command is now very similar the flash
read command.
Signed-off-by: Christian Taedcke <christian.taedcke@lemonbeat.com>
This patch removes scenario which was testing deprecated
API behaviors. Needed as As flash_write_protection_set() was
deprecated and became no-operation.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Puzdrowski <andrzej.puzdrowski@nordicsemi.no>
Modifications to incorporate latest write to new flash area
Modification to avoid writing garbage to new flash area when compactor
is called during init.
Modifications to allow erase at partition size instead of eeprom
pagesize.
Modifications to better separate rambuf usage from flash usage.
Corrected some errors in compactor
Signed-off-by: Laczen JMS <laczenjms@gmail.com>
This driver emulates a EEPROM device in flash.
Reworked implementation with modified flash layout.
The emulation represents the EEPROM in flash as a region that is a
direct map of the eeprom data followed by a region where changes to
the eeprom data is stored. Changes are written as address-data
combinations. The size of such a combination is determined by the
flash write block size and the size of the eeprom (required address
space), with a minimum of 4 byte.
The eeprom page needs to be a multiple of the flash page. Multiple
eeprom pages is also so supported and increases the number of writes
that can be performed.
The eeprom size, pagesize and the flash partition used for the eeprom
are defined in the dts. The flash partition should allow at least two
eeprom pages. For fast read access a rambuffer can be enabled for the
eeprom (by setting the option rambuf in the dts).
Signed-off-by: Laczen JMS <laczenjms@gmail.com>
Those devices can use several I2C address in order to address more
than 256 Bytes using 8bit addressing. Also several physical component
can be used as a contiguous memory.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Lager <guillaume.lager@gmail.com>
HAS_DTS_I2C is now selected by I2C and
always used as I2C && HAS_DTS_I2C.
It could then be purely removed.
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
The default priority for I2C controller initialization is POST_KERNEL
60 (SPI 70), while the default priority for device configuration is
POST_KERNEL 50. Thus the EEPROM is being initialized before its
controller. While for this driver that wouldn't be an issue recent
changes mean the device lookup returns NULL before the device is
initialized.
Change the AT2X priority to 75 so it falls between the I2C and SPI
drivers and the default ethernet priority (80), since some ethernet
controllers may store the MAC address in EEPROM.
Signed-off-by: Peter Bigot <peter.bigot@nordicsemi.no>
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>
-Wimplicit-fallthrough=2 requires a fallthrough comment or a compiler
to tells gcc that this happens intentionally.
Signed-off-by: Flavio Ceolin <flavio.ceolin@intel.com>
This patch adds adds an EEPROM driver supporting the on-chip EEPROM
found on NXP LPC11U6X MCUs. Note that this driver is only a wrapper
relying entirely on the IAP (In-Application Programming) EEPROM
commands.
Signed-off-by: Simon Guinot <simon.guinot@seagate.com>
Make sure to retry at least once after the timeout elapses. Sample the
current time before starting the i2c transaction, and only give up if
the polling occurred after the timeout.
The timeout exists to allow the eeprom time to complete a write, during
which time it will nack transactions (at24) or the status register will
report busy (at25). If a transaction fails legitimately, but the 1ms
sleep overshoots the timeout expiration, we will not try again, which
fails to give the part the full grace period before declaring failure.
This is likely to happen in the last 1ms interval but also possible if
the eeprom thread is preempted. It is possible to only try once and give
up if the sleep lasts longer than the timeout, which fails to give the
part an adequate period to complete the write.
Waiting until the current time is after (not equal to) the timeout is
also important because we don't want to round up partial milliseconds if
the start time was sampled near the end of a millisecond boundary. The
timeouts of eeproms can be ~5ms.
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hall <tylerwhall@gmail.com>
If shell is enabled then enable all sub-shells if their dependencies are
satisfied. This was done for some modules and subsystems but was not
consistent.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Usually, we want to operate only on "available" device
nodes ("available" means "status is okay and a matching binding is
found"), but that's not true in all cases.
Sometimes we want to operate on special nodes without matching
bindings, such as those describing memory.
To handle the distinction, change various additional devicetree APIs
making it clear that they operate only on available device nodes,
adjusting gen_defines and devicetree.h implementation details
accordingly:
- emit macros for all existing nodes in gen_defines.py, regardless
of status or matching binding
- rename DT_NUM_INST to DT_NUM_INST_STATUS_OKAY
- rename DT_NODE_HAS_COMPAT to DT_NODE_HAS_COMPAT_STATUS_OKAY
- rename DT_INST_FOREACH to DT_INST_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY
- rename DT_ANY_INST_ON_BUS to DT_ANY_INST_ON_BUS_STATUS_OKAY
- rewrite DT_HAS_NODE_STATUS_OKAY in terms of a new DT_NODE_HAS_STATUS
- resurrect DT_HAS_NODE in the form of DT_NODE_EXISTS
- remove DT_COMPAT_ON_BUS as a public API
- use the new default_prop_types edtlib parameter
Signed-off-by: Martí Bolívar <marti.bolivar@nordicsemi.no>
We want to limit DT_ prefix to macros from devicetree.h and generation.
So rename DT_INST_AT2X* to just INST_DT_AT2X*.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
DT_CALL_WITH_ARG() is an internal implementation detail that should
not be used outside of devicetree.h.
Signed-off-by: Martí Bolívar <marti.bolivar@nordicsemi.no>
Replace all occurences of BUILD_ASSERT_MSG() with BUILD_ASSERT()
as a result of merging BUILD_ASSERT() and BUILD_ASSERT_MSG().
Signed-off-by: Oleg Zhurakivskyy <oleg.zhurakivskyy@intel.com>
Convert older DT_INST_ macro use in STM32 drivers to the new
include/devicetree.h DT_INST macro APIs.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
This reverts commit 8739517107.
Pull Request #23437 was merged by mistake with an invalid manifest.
Signed-off-by: Carles Cufi <carles.cufi@nordicsemi.no>
Replace all occurences of BUILD_ASSERT_MSG() with BUILD_ASSERT()
as a result of merging BUILD_ASSERT() and BUILD_ASSERT_MSG().
Signed-off-by: Oleg Zhurakivskyy <oleg.zhurakivskyy@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>
Document and assign write-protect signal as active low, and use the
active-sensitive API to control it.
Signed-off-by: Peter Bigot <peter.bigot@nordicsemi.no>
EEPROM simulator and native_posix have been unified to one solution,
the old eeprom,native_posix is removed.
Signed-off-by: Laczen JMS <laczenjms@gmail.com>
Add support for a eeprom simulator. The PR limits the addition to
qemu_x86 but it can easily be added to other devices by defining the
eeprom simulator in the dts and setting 'CONFIG_EEPROM_SIMULATOR=y'
Signed-off-by: Laczen JMS <laczenjms@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Same deal as in commit 41713244b3 ("kconfig: Remove '# Hidden' comments
on promptless symbols"). I forgot to do a case-insensitive search.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
Setting EEPROM_STM32 with `default y` under `if SOC_FAMILY_STM32`
overrides `depends on SOC_SERIES_STM32L1X` in EEPROM_STM32
definition.
Then, if ever EEPROM is set in any file (as in
tests/drivers/build_all`), EEPROM_STM32 will be indeed set,
with potential issues on series where driver is not yet correctly
handled.
Fix this by removing EEPROM_STM32 definition in STM32 generic
file and set `default y` along with the `depends on` to keep
it effective.
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
Add driver for emulating an EEPROM device using the native POSIX
board. The EEPROM is backed by a binary file in the host file system.
Signed-off-by: Henrik Brix Andersen <hebad@vestas.com>