Commit Graph

82 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthijs Kooijman 303ebdb0cc Prevent losing bytes in HardwareSerial::end()
end() already waited for the buffer to be empty, but then there could
still be two bytes in the hardware registers that still need to be
transmitted (which were dropped or kept in the buffer, depending on the
exact timing).

This changes the wait loop to a call to the flush() function, which
already takes care of really waiting for all bytes to be transmitted,
meaning it is safe to turn off the transmitter.
2015-07-31 14:06:20 +02:00
chromhelm b7855ab7e1 Saving some bytes in HardwareSerial::write 2015-05-29 18:12:24 +02:00
chromhelm 3e7e138484 Fixed bug with flushing 2015-05-21 21:42:40 +02:00
Cristian Maglie 0f7a0ec4ed Merge branch 'master' into ide-1.5.x
Conflicts:
	hardware/arduino/cores/arduino/HardwareSerial.cpp
	hardware/arduino/cores/robot/Arduino.h
2014-10-21 17:47:59 +02:00
Cristian Maglie 02f5b99958 Revert "Match return value to type in available()"
This reverts commit f40e4713542fa862d5b99b256a642e001a796988.
Added an hint for the buffer sizes.

See #2057
Fixes #2367
2014-10-21 17:18:26 +02:00
PaulStoffregen bcc5488cbc Add availableForWrite() to HardwareSerial 2014-07-18 07:01:26 -07:00
Cristian Maglie 1ee86b6bcb Merge branch 'ide-1.5.x-hwserial-cleanup' of github.com:matthijskooijman/Arduino into matthijskooijman-ide-1.5.x-hwserial-cleanup 2014-05-23 21:16:42 +02:00
Cristian Maglie 2d46a8ef88 Merge remote-tracking branch 'arduino/master' into ide-1.5.x
Conflicts:
	build/shared/examples/01.Basics/Blink/Blink.ino
	build/shared/examples/09.USB/Keyboard/KeyboardReprogram/KeyboardReprogram.ino
	build/shared/examples/10.StarterKit/p02_SpaceshipInterface/p02_SpaceshipInterface.ino
	hardware/arduino/cores/arduino/HardwareSerial.cpp
2014-05-23 21:04:47 +02:00
Zachary J. Fields c16768565b Match return value to type in available() 2014-05-07 17:39:08 -07:00
Matthijs Kooijman 8984e083cf Fix comment typo 2014-05-06 10:19:08 +02:00
Cristian Maglie c3cfe6b368 Merge commit '1ad74' into ide-1.5.x 2014-04-01 17:19:54 +02:00
Matthijs Kooijman 0099416ea4 Fix typo in SerialEvent3 handling
In commit 0e97bcb (Put each HardwareSerial instance in its own .cpp
file), the serial event handling was changed. This was probably a
copy-paste typo.

The effect of this bug was that SerialEvent3 would not run, unless
SerialEvent2 was defined, but also that if SerialEvent2 is defined but
SerialEvent3 is not, this could cause a reset (call to NULL pointer).

This closes #1967, thanks to Peter Olson for finding the bug and fix.
2014-03-27 19:20:54 +01:00
jantje f87e11534a Added support for different size of TX and RX buffer sizes.
Added support for buffer sizes bigger than 256 bytes.
Added possibility to overrule the default size.

Added support for different size of TX and RX buffer sizes.
The default values remain the same. You can however specify a different
value for TX and RX buffer

Added possibility to overrule the default size.
If you want to have different values
define SERIAL_TX_BUFFER_SIZE and SERIAL_RX_BUFFER_SIZE on the command
line


Added support for buffer sizes bigger than 256 bytes.
Because of the possibility to change the size of the buffer sizes longer
than 256 must be supported.
The type of the indexes is decided upon the size of the buffers. So
there is no increase in program/data size when the buffers are smaller
than 257
2014-03-24 21:40:12 +01:00
jantje 699e9c09ce This commit contains 2 changes:
Added support for different size of TX and RX buffer sizes.
Added support for buffer sizes bigger than 256 bytes.

Added support for different size of TX and RX buffer sizes.
The default values remain the same. If you want to have different values
define SERIAL_TX_BUFFER_SIZE and SERIAL_RX_BUFFER_SIZE on the command
line

Added support for buffer sizes bigger than 256 bytes.
The type of the indexes is decided upon the size of the buffers. So
there is no increase in program/data size when the buffers are smaller
than 257
2014-03-23 23:12:00 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman 02a5ae97d4 In HardwareSerial, don't use int for buffer indices
The index attributes have been uint8_t for a while, so there is no point
in using int for local variables. This should allow the compiler to
generate slightly more efficient code, but (at least on gcc 4.8.2) it
also confuses the register allocator, causing this change to increase
code size by 2 bytes instead due to extra push/pop instructions (but
this will probably change in the future if the compiler improves).
2014-02-14 10:25:34 +01:00
Cristian Maglie cd51a0784c Added license for avr/HardwareSerial.
See #1847
2014-02-10 12:55:16 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman c3cd35f197 In HardwareSerial::write, bypass the queue when it's empty
This helps improve the effective datarate on high (>500kbit/s) bitrates,
by skipping the interrupt and associated overhead. At 1 Mbit/s the
implementation previously got up to about 600-700 kbit/s, but now it
actually gets up to the 1Mbit/s (values are rough estimates, though).
2014-01-22 12:06:02 +01:00
Cristian Maglie 49fc2ab8ad Inlined HardwareSerial calls to RX ISR.
Moreover, declaring pointers-to-registers as const and using initializer
list in class constructor allows the compiler to further improve inlining
performance.

This change recovers about 50 bytes of program space on single-UART devices.

See #1711
2014-01-22 11:19:35 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman 1848db3d66 Put each HardwareSerial instance in its own .cpp file
By putting the ISRs and HardwareSerial instance for each instance in a
separate compilation unit, the compile will only consider them for
linking when the instance is actually used. The ISR is always referenced
by the compiler runtime and the Serialx_available() function is always
referenced by SerialEventRun(), but both references are weak and thus do
not cause the compilation to be included in the link by themselves.

The effect of this is that when multiple HardwareSerial ports are
available, but not all are used, buffers are only allocated and ISRs are
only included for the serial ports that are used. On the mega, this
lowers memory usage from 653 bytes to just 182 when only using the first
serial port.

On boards with just a single port, there is no change, since the code
and memory was already left out when no serial port was used at all.

This fixes #1425 and fixes #1259.
2014-01-22 09:39:19 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman 99f7ef7c67 Centrally decide which hardware UARTS are available
Before, this decision was made in few different places, based on
sometimes different register defines.

Now, HardwareSerial.h decides wich UARTS are available, defines
USE_HWSERIALn macros and HardwareSerial.cpp simply checks these macros
(together with some #ifs to decide which registers to use for UART 0).
For consistency, USBAPI.h also defines a HAVE_CDCSERIAL macro when
applicable.

For supported targets, this should change any behaviour. For unsupported
targets, the error messages might subtly change because some checks are
moved or changed.

Additionally, this moves the USBAPI.h include form HardareSerial.h into
Arduino.h and raises an error when both CDC serial and UART0 are
available (previously this would silently use UART0 instead of CDC, but
there is not currently any Atmel chip available for which this would
occur).
2014-01-22 09:38:34 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman f1cd85da7a Disable the UDRE interrupt sooner in HardwareSerial
Before, the interrupt was disabled when it was triggered and it turned
out there was no data to send. However, the interrupt can be disabled
already when the last byte is written to the UART, since write() will
always re-enable the interrupt when it adds new data to the buffer.

Closes: #1008
2014-01-22 09:38:25 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman dbe23685c2 Fix lockup when writing to HardwareSerial with interrupts disabled
When interrupts are disabled, writing to HardwareSerial could cause a
lockup. When the tx buffer is full, a busy-wait loop is used to wait for
the interrupt handler to free up a byte in the buffer. However, when
interrupts are disabled, this will of course never happen and the
Arduino will lock up. This often caused lockups when doing (big) debug
printing from an interrupt handler.

Additionally, calling flush() with interrupts disabled while
transmission was in progress would also cause a lockup.

When interrupts are disabled, the code now actively checks the UDRE
(UART Data Register Empty) and calls the interrupt handler to free up
room if the bit is set.

This can lead to delays in interrupt handlers when the serial buffer is
full, but a delay is of course always preferred to a lockup.

Closes: #672
References: #1147
2014-01-22 09:38:16 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman fa8df58c93 Fix HardwareSerial::flush() when interrupts are kept disabled for a while
It turns out there is an additional corner case. The analysis in the
previous commit wrt to flush() assumes that the data register is always
kept filled by the interrupt handler, so the TXC bit won't get set until
all the queued bytes have been transmitted. But, when interrupts are
disabled for a longer period (for example when an interrupt handler for
another device is running for longer than 1-2 byte times), it could
happen that the UART stops transmitting while there are still more bytes
queued (but these are in the buffer, not in the UDR register, so the
UART can't know about them).

In this case, the TXC bit would get set, but the transmission is not
complete yet. We can easily detect this case by looking at the head and
tail pointers, but it seems easier to instead look at the UDRIE bit
(the TX interrupt is enabled if and only if there are bytes in the
queue). To fix this corner case, this commit:
 - Checks the UDRIE bit and only if it is unset, looks at the TXC bit.
 - Moves the clearing of TXC from write() to the tx interrupt handler.
   This (still) causes the TXC bit to be cleared whenever a byte is
   queued when the buffer is empty (in this case the tx interrupt will
   trigger directly after write() is called). It also causes the TXC bit
   to be cleared whenever transmission is resumed after it halted
   because interrupts have been disabled for too long.

As a side effect, another race condition is prevented. This could occur
at very high bitrates, where the transmission would be completed before
the code got time to clear the TXC0 register, making the clear happen
_after_ the transmission was already complete. With the new code, the
clearing of TXC happens directly after writing to the UDR register,
while interrupts are disabled, and we can be certain the data
transmission needs more time than one instruction to complete. This
fixes #1463 and replaces #1456.
2014-01-22 09:38:04 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman 560295c983 Improve HardwareSerial::flush()
The flush() method blocks until all characters in the serial buffer have
been written to the uart _and_ transmitted. This is checked by waiting
until the "TXC" (TX Complete) bit is set by the UART, signalling
completion. This bit is cleared by write() when adding a new byte to the
buffer and set by the hardware after tranmission ends, so it is always
guaranteed to be zero from the moment the first byte in a sequence is
queued until the moment the last byte is transmitted, and it is one from
the moment the last byte in the buffer is transmitted until the first
byte in the next sequence is queued.

However, the TXC bit is also zero from initialization to the moment the
first byte ever is queued (and then continues to be zero until the first
sequence of bytes completes transmission). Unfortunately we cannot
manually set the TXC bit during initialization, we can only clear it. To
make sure that flush() would not (indefinitely) block when it is called
_before_ anything was written to the serial device, the "transmitting"
variable was introduced.

This variable suggests that it is only true when something is
transmitting, which isn't currently the case (it remains true after
transmission is complete until flush() is called, for example).
Furthermore, there is no need to keep the status of transmission, the
only thing needed is to remember if anything has ever been written, so
the corner case described above can be detected.

This commit improves the code by:
 - Renaming the "transmitting" variable to _written (making it more
   clear and following the leading underscore naming convention).
 - Not resetting the value of _written at the end of flush(), there is
   no point to this.
 - Only checking the "_written" value once in flush(), since it can
   never be toggled off anyway.
 - Initializing the value of _written in both versions of _begin (though
   it probably gets initialized to 0 by default anyway, better to be
   explicit).
2014-01-22 09:37:54 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman bd194db4e3 Use bit_is_clear in HardwareSerial::flush()
This is slightly more clear than the previous explicit comparison.
2014-01-22 09:37:44 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman 80d6af6273 Move interrupt handlers into HardwareSerial class
The actual interrupt vectors are of course defined as before, but they
let new methods in the HardwareSerial class do the actual work. This
greatly reduces code duplication and prepares for one of my next commits
which requires the tx interrupt handler to be called from another
context as well.

The actual content of the interrupts handlers was pretty much identical,
so that remains unchanged (except that store_char was now only needed
once, so it was inlined).

Now all access to the buffers are inside the HardwareSerial class, the
buffer variables can be made private.

One would expect a program size reduction from this change (at least
with multiple UARTs), but due to the fact that the interrupt handlers
now only have indirect access to a few registers (which previously were
just hardcoded in the handlers) and because there is some extra function
call overhead, the code size on the uno actually increases by around
70 bytes. On the mega, which has four UARTs, the code size decreases by
around 70 bytes.
2014-01-16 16:59:06 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman 3babfc2a85 Use constants for register bit positions in HardwareSerial
Previously, the constants to use for the bit positions of the various
UARTs were passed to the HardwareSerial constructor. However, this
meant that whenever these values were used, the had to be indirectly
loaded, resulting in extra code overhead. Additionally, since there is
no instruction to shift a value by a variable amount, the 1 << x
expressions (inside _BV and sbi() / cbi()) would be compiled as a loop
instead of being evaluated at compiletime.

Now, the HardwareSerial class always uses the constants for the bit
positions of UART 0 (and some code is present to make sure these
constants exist, even for targets that only have a single unnumbered
UART or start at UART1).

This was already done for the TXC0 constant, for some reason. For the
actual register addresses, this approach does not work, since these are
of course different between the different UARTs on a single chip.

Of course, always using the UART 0 constants is only correct when the
constants are actually identical for the different UARTs. It has been
verified that this is currently the case for all targets supported by
avr-gcc 4.7.2, and the code contains compile-time checks to verify this
for the current target, in case a new target is added for which this
does not hold. This verification was done using:

for i in TXC RXEN TXEN RXCIE UDRIE U2X UPE; do echo $i; grep --no-filename -r "#define $i[0-9]\? " /usr/lib/avr/include/avr/io* | sed "s/#define $i[0-9]\?\s*\(\S\)\+\s*\(\/\*.*\*\/\)\?$/\1/" | sort | uniq ; done

This command shows that the above constants are identical for all uarts
on all platforms, except for TXC, which is sometimes 6 and sometimes 0.
Further investigation shows that it is always 6, except in io90scr100.h,
but that file defines TXC0 with value 6 for the UART and uses TXC with
value 0 for some USB-related register.

This commit reduces program size on the uno by around 120 bytes.
2014-01-16 16:36:06 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman fc45ef0846 Simplify HardwareSerial::begin()
This simplifies the baud rate calculation, removing the need for a goto
and shortening the code a bit. Other than that, this code should not use
any different settings than before.

Code was suggested by Rob Tillaart on github.

Closes: #1262
2014-01-16 16:04:33 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman d43fd2014c Remove unused variable 2014-01-16 13:52:40 +01:00
Cristian Maglie 0a0cda4f04 Slightly reduce code utilization by inlining HardwareSerail begin(baud) and operator bool() 2014-01-16 13:50:59 +01:00
Matthijs Kooijman 4bc8aa15e3 Remove duplicate code from HardwareSerial::begin() methods.
There are two begin methods, one which accepts just a baud rate and
uses the default bit settings and one which accepts both a baudrate and
a bit config. Previously, both of these contained a complete
implementation, but now the former just calls the latter, explicitely
passing the default 8N1 configuration.

Technically, this causes a small change: Before the UCSRC register was
untouched when calling begin(baud), now it is explicitely initialized
with 8N1. However, since this is the default configuration for at least
the Uno and the Mega (didn't check any others), probably for all avrs,
this shouldn't effectively change anything. Given that the Arduino
documentation also documents this as the default when none is passed,
explicitly setting it is probably a good idea in any case.
2014-01-16 13:20:11 +01:00
Cristian Maglie eb45bb95e0 Fixed HardwareSerial bug introduced in 1.5.3.
Fixes #1568
2013-09-09 13:09:27 +02:00
Matthijs Kooijman 714874dd8c Move buffers into HardwareSerial
This removes the need for doing an extra pointer dereference on every
access to the buffers, shrinking the code by around 100 bytes.

The members for these buffers must be public for now, since the
interrupt handlers also need to access them. These can later be made
private again.

Furthermore, the struct ring_buffer was removed. This allows the all
head and tail pointers to be put into the HardwareSerial struct before
the actual buffers, so the pointers all end up in the first 32 bytes of
the struct that can be accessed using a single instruction (ldd).

References: #947
2013-07-26 12:39:56 +02:00
Matthijs Kooijman a056282246 Use uint8_t for HardwareSerial ringbuffer pointers
Since the buffers aren't bigger than 64 bytes, these values can be
smaller. This saves a few bytes of ram, but also saves around 50 bytes
of program space, since the values can now be loaded using a single
instruction.

To prevent problems when people manually increase the buffer size, a
compile-time check is added.

Closes: #1078
2013-07-26 12:18:56 +02:00
Cristian Maglie f50c307be2 Fix deprecated ISR names for ATmega8.
See #881
2013-03-29 15:17:54 +01:00
Cristian Maglie ab41589c2b Removed deprecated interrupt handlers
Fixes #831 #881 #955 #1123 #1140
2013-03-29 14:41:36 +01:00
David A. Mellis 9d638ca052 Clarifying comment. 2012-11-29 13:55:59 -05:00
David A. Mellis 4a01b84cab Moving TXCO definition into HardwareSerial.cpp from HardwareSerial.h.
Otherwise, you get an error when compiling for processors with no serial port because the header file is always compiled.

See, for an example of the problem: https://github.com/damellis/attiny/issues/8
2012-11-29 13:48:01 -05:00
David A. Mellis 5ca747e312 Changing setting of the UMSELn bits (for UART mode) and serial config values.
Before, the UMSELn1 bit was being to set to 1, putting the UART into a reserved mode. Now, we only set the high (0x80) bit to 1 for the ATmega8, which is needed to access UCSRnC (whose i/o address is shared with UBRRH).

Also, no longer bitwise-or the new config with the existing register value, because we're actually configuring all the settings in the register. (We're not using UCPOL, but it's supposed to be 0 in asynchronous mode.)
2012-08-30 08:47:35 -04:00
David A. Mellis 6542625bc2 Merge pull request #109 from Alarus/master
Serial.begin() parameter to set data bits, parity, stop bits.
2012-08-30 05:08:28 -07:00
David A. Mellis 00ab72619e Serial.flush() waits for last character to be transmitted (michele.mazzucchi)
http://code.google.com/p/arduino/issues/detail?id=871
2012-08-28 08:02:54 -04:00
Alarus af8ff1d1e0 Update hardware/arduino/cores/arduino/HardwareSerial.cpp
New Serial.begin(baud, config);
2012-08-14 19:55:13 +06:00
Alarus b6faa6e254 Update hardware/arduino/cores/arduino/HardwareSerial.cpp
New Serial.begin(baud, config);
2012-08-14 19:50:36 +06:00
Alarus 0c0defa645 Update hardware/arduino/cores/arduino/HardwareSerial.cpp
Adding advanced begin (); with the ability to specify the length of bits, parity, stop bits.
2012-08-12 22:07:42 +06:00
Alarus ed699cf636 Update hardware/arduino/cores/arduino/HardwareSerial.cpp
Adding advanced begin (); with the ability to specify the length of bits, parity, stop bits.
2012-08-12 21:35:48 +06:00
Alarus 1f6dd92313 Update hardware/arduino/cores/arduino/HardwareSerial.cpp
Adding advanced begin (); with the ability to specify the length of bits, parity, stop bits.
2012-08-12 20:57:57 +06:00
Zach Eveland a984b581a8 added Boolean operators to HardwareSerial and CDC to test whether the port is ready to send data.
Mostly useful for Leonardo - simple way to test whether the port is actually opened by an application and ready to receive data.  For Serial objects attached to real UARTs always returns true.
2012-04-01 12:54:35 -04:00
David A. Mellis e1438efb3a Making head and tail unsigned to avoid division in serial ISR.
http://code.google.com/p/arduino/issues/detail?id=776
2012-02-03 17:24:29 -05:00
David A. Mellis 77cdeb5b93 Fixing more warnings (Paul Stoffregen). 2011-10-10 11:28:44 -04:00
Zach Eveland c0ad36ad43 Merge branch 'new-extension' of https://github.com/arduino/Arduino into new-extension
Conflicts:
	build/linux/dist/tools/avrdude.conf
2011-09-08 20:26:47 -04:00