- don't require an irq binding for blocking-only adc
- abstract adc pins into an AnyPin like interface, erasing the actual
peripheral type at runtime.
- add pull-up/pull-down functions for adc pins
- add a test (mostly a copy of the example, to be honest)
- configure adc pads according to datasheet
- report conversion errors (although they seem exceedingly rare?)
- drop embedded-hal interfaces. embedded-hal channels can do neither
AnyPin nor pullup/pulldown without encoding both into the type
exposing pac items kind of undermines the unstable-pac feature. directly
exposing register structure is also pretty inconvenient since the clock
switching code takes care of the src/aux difference in behavior, so a
user needn't really be forced to write down decomposed register values.
1458: rp: remove take!, add bind_interrupts! r=Dirbaio a=pennae
both of the uart interrupts now check a flag that only the dma rx path ever sets (and now unsets again on drop) to return early if it's not as they expect. this is ... not our preferred solution, but if bind_interrupts *must* allow mutiple handlers to be specified then this is the only way we can think of that doesn't break uarts.
Co-authored-by: pennae <github@quasiparticle.net>
It was intended to allow changing baudrate on shared spi/i2c. There's no
advantage in using it for PWM or PIO, and makes it less usable because you have to
have `embassy-embedded-hal` as a dep to use it.
execution wraps around after the end of instruction memory and wrapping
works with this, so we may as well allow program loading across this
boundary. could be useful for reusing chunks of instruction memory.
the many individual sets aren't very efficient, and almost no checks
were done to ensure that the configuration written to the hardware was
actually valid. this adresses both of these.
programs contain information we could pull from them directly and use to
validate other configuration of the state machine instead of asking the
user to pull them out and hand them to us bit by bit. unfortunately
programs do not specify how many in or out bits they use, so we can only
handle side-set and wrapping jumps like this. it's still something though.
it's only any good for PioPin because there it follows a pattern of gpio
pin alternate functions being named like that, everything else can just
as well be referred to as `pio::Thing`
this *finally* allows sound implementions of bidirectional transfers
without blocking. the futures previously allowed only a single direction
to be active at any given time, and the dma transfers didn't take a
mutable reference and were thus unsound.
we can only have one active waiter for any given irq at any given time.
allowing waits for irqs on state machines bypasses this limitation and
causes lost events for all but the latest waiter for a given irq.
splitting this out also allows us to signal from state machines to other
parts of the application without monopolizing state machine access for
the irq wait, as would be necessary to make irq waiting sound.