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PED, PEA are never enabled in the interrupt enable code in peripheral.rs; no need to process the flags here |
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README.md |
Embassy STM32 HAL
The embassy-stm32 HAL aims to provide a safe, idiomatic hardware abstraction layer for all STM32 families. The HAL implements both blocking and async APIs for many peripherals. Where appropriate, traits from both blocking and asynchronous versions of embedded-hal v0.2 and v1.0 are implemented, as well as serial traits from embedded-io[-async].
- embassy-stm32 on crates.io
- Documentation (Important: use docs.embassy.dev rather than docs.rs to see the specific docs for the chip you’re using!)
- Source
- Examples
embassy-stm32 supports all STM32 chip families
STM32 microcontrollers come in many families and flavors, and supporting all of them is a big undertaking. Embassy takes advantage of the fact that the STM32 peripheral versions are shared across chip families. For example, instead of re-implementing the SPI peripheral for every STM32 chip family, embassy has a single SPI implementation that depends on code-generated register types that are identical for STM32 families with the same version of a given peripheral.
In practice, this works as follows:
- You tell the compiler which chip you’re using with a feature flag
- The stm32-metapac module generates register types for that chip at compile time, based on data from the stm32-data module
- The embassy-stm32 HAL picks the correct implementation each peripheral based on automatically-generated feature flags, and applies any other tweaks which are required for the HAL to work on that chip
Be aware that, while embassy-stm32 strives to consistently support all peripherals across all chips, this approach can lead to slightly different APIs and capabilities being available on different families. Check the documentation for the specific chip you’re using to confirm exactly what’s available.
Embedded-hal
The embassy-stm32
HAL implements the traits from embedded-hal (v0.2 and 1.0) and embedded-hal-async, as well as embedded-io and embedded-io-async.
embassy-time
time driver
If a time-driver-*
feature is enabled, embassy-stm32 provides a time driver for use with embassy-time. You can pick which hardware timer is used for this internally via the time-driver-tim*
features, or let embassy pick with time-driver-any
.
embassy-time has a default tick rate of 1MHz, which is fast enough to cause problems with the 16-bit timers currently supported by the embassy-stm32 time driver (specifically, if a critical section delays an IRQ by more than 32ms). To avoid this, it’s recommended to pick a lower tick rate. 32.768kHz is a reasonable default for many purposes.
Interoperability
This crate can run on any executor.
Optionally, some features requiring embassy-time
can be activated with the time
feature. If you enable it,
you must link an embassy-time
driver in your project.
The low-power
feature integrates specifically with embassy-executor
, it can't be ued on other executors for now.