ChibiOS/os/ports/GCC/MSP430/port.dox

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/*
ChibiOS/RT - Copyright (C) 2006,2007,2008,2009,2010 Giovanni Di Sirio.
This file is part of ChibiOS/RT.
ChibiOS/RT is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
ChibiOS/RT is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
/**
* @defgroup MSP430 MSP430
* @details MSP430 port for the GCC compiler.
*
* @section MSP430_STATES Mapping of the System States in the MSP430 port
* The ChibiOS/RT logical @ref system_states are mapped as follow in the MSP430
* port:
* - <b>Init</b>. This state is represented by the startup code and the
* initialization code before @p chSysInit() is executed. It has not a
* special hardware state associated.
* - <b>Normal</b>. This is the state the system has after executing
* @p chSysInit(). Interrupts are enabled.
* - <b>Suspended</b>. Interrupts are disabled.
* - <b>Disabled</b>. Interrupts are enabled. This state is equivalent to the
* Suspended state because there are no fast interrupts in this architecture.
* - <b>Sleep</b>. Not yet implemented.
* - <b>S-Locked</b>. Interrupts are disabled.
* - <b>I-Locked</b>. This state is equivalent to the SRI state, the
* @p chSysLockI() and @p chSysUnlockI() APIs do nothing (still use them in
* order to formally change state because this may change).
* - <b>Serving Regular Interrupt</b>. Normal interrupt service code.
* - <b>Serving Fast Interrupt</b>. Not present in this architecture.
* - <b>Serving Non-Maskable Interrupt</b>. The MSP430 has several non
* maskable interrupt sources that can be associated to this state.
* - <b>Halted</b>. Implemented as an infinite loop with interrupts disabled.
* .
* @section MSP430_NOTES The MSP430 port notes
* - The MSP430 does not have a dedicated interrupt stack, make sure to reserve
* enough stack space for interrupts in each thread stack. This can be done
* by modifying the @p INT_REQUIRED_STACK macro into
* <b>./ports/MSP430/chcore.h</b>.
* - The state of the hardware multiplier is not saved in the thread context,
* make sure to use it in <b>Suspended</b> state (interrupts masked).
* - The port code does not define the switch to a low power mode for the
* idle thread because the MSP430 has several low power modes. You can
* select the proper low power mode for you application by defining the
* macro @p port_wait_for_interrupt().
* .
* @ingroup gcc
*/
/**
* @defgroup MSP430_CONF Configuration Options
* @brief MSP430 Configuration Options.
* @details The MSP430 port allows some architecture-specific configurations
* settings that can be overridden by redefining them in @p chconf.h.
* Usually there is no need to change the default values.
* - @p INT_REQUIRED_STACK, this value represent the amount of stack space
* used by the interrupt handlers.<br>
* The default for this value is @p 32, this space is allocated for each
* thread so be careful in order to not waste precious RAM space.<br>
* The default value is set into <b>./os/ports/GCC/MSP430/chcore.h</b>.
* - @p IDLE_THREAD_STACK_SIZE, stack area size to be assigned to the IDLE
* thread. Usually there is no need to change this value unless inserting
* code in the IDLE thread hook macro.
* .
* @ingroup MSP430
*/
/**
* @defgroup MSP430_CORE Core Port Implementation
* @brief MSP430 specific port code, structures and macros.
*
* @ingroup MSP430
* @file MSP430/chtypes.h Port types.
* @file MSP430/chcore.h Port related structures and macros.
* @file MSP430/chcore.c Port related code.
*/