Removes duplicate code and inconsistencies in the naming of the
cc13xx_cc26xx devicetree and RTC driver hierarchy and alignes it with
the actual TI product series naming hierarchy.
Signed-off-by: Florian Grandel <fgrandel@code-for-humans.de>
A new Z_SPIN_DELAY() macro has been added which
can be used to reduce a bit the amount of noise
due to the POSIX arch need to break busy loops with
k_busy_wait().
Use it.
Signed-off-by: Alberto Escolar Piedras <alberto.escolar.piedras@nordicsemi.no>
As of today <zephyr/zephyr.h> is 100% equivalent to <zephyr/kernel.h>.
This patch proposes to then include <zephyr/kernel.h> instead of
<zephyr/zephyr.h> since it is more clear that you are including the
Kernel APIs and (probably) nothing else. <zephyr/zephyr.h> sounds like a
catch-all header that may be confusing. Most applications need to
include a bunch of other things to compile, e.g. driver headers or
subsystem headers like BT, logging, etc.
The idea of a catch-all header in Zephyr is probably not feasible
anyway. Reason is that Zephyr is not a library, like it could be for
example `libpython`. Zephyr provides many utilities nowadays: a kernel,
drivers, subsystems, etc and things will likely grow. A catch-all header
would be massive, difficult to keep up-to-date. It is also likely that
an application will only build a small subset. Note that subsystem-level
headers may use a catch-all approach to make things easier, though.
NOTE: This patch is **NOT** removing the header, just removing its usage
in-tree. I'd advocate for its deprecation (add a #warning on it), but I
understand many people will have concerns.
Signed-off-by: Gerard Marull-Paretas <gerard.marull@nordicsemi.no>
Add a bunch of missing "zephyr/" prefixes to #include statements in
various test and test framework files.
Signed-off-by: Fabio Baltieri <fabiobaltieri@google.com>
This commit sets an initial value of 0 for the `elapsed_ms` variable,
which may be used uninitialised when the while loop below does not
execute.
This fixes the "‘elapsed_ms’ may be used uninitialized" warning
generated by the GCC 12.
Signed-off-by: Stephanos Ioannidis <root@stephanos.io>
In order to bring consistency in-tree, migrate all tests to the new
prefix <zephyr/...>. Note that the conversion has been scripted, refer
to #45388 for more details.
Signed-off-by: Gerard Marull-Paretas <gerard.marull@nordicsemi.no>
nRF51 MCUs are Cortex-M0 running with a 16 MHz clock. The overhead of
work done in k_usleep() requires adding three more ticks (92 us) to the
expected loop iteration time. (Two ticks is enough on most boards, but
some require a little more time.)
Signed-off-by: Peter Bigot <peter.bigot@nordicsemi.no>
Move to using PRIu64/PRId64 instead of %llu/%lld since on
native_posix_64 the uint64_t/int64_t type is defined in terms of 'long
int' and not 'long long int'.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Add a k_timeout_t type, and use it everywhere that kernel API
functions were accepting a millisecond timeout argument. Instead of
forcing milliseconds everywhere (which are often not integrally
representable as system ticks), do the conversion to ticks at the
point where the timeout is created. This avoids an extra unit
conversion in some application code, and allows us to express the
timeout in units other than milliseconds to achieve greater precision.
The existing K_MSEC() et. al. macros now return initializers for a
k_timeout_t.
The K_NO_WAIT and K_FOREVER constants have now become k_timeout_t
values, which means they cannot be operated on as integers.
Applications which have their own APIs that need to inspect these
vs. user-provided timeouts can now use a K_TIMEOUT_EQ() predicate to
test for equality.
Timer drivers, which receive an integer tick count in ther
z_clock_set_timeout() functions, now use the integer-valued
K_TICKS_FOREVER constant instead of K_FOREVER.
For the initial release, to preserve source compatibility, a
CONFIG_LEGACY_TIMEOUT_API kconfig is provided. When true, the
k_timeout_t will remain a compatible 32 bit value that will work with
any legacy Zephyr application.
Some subsystems present timeout (or timeout-like) values to their own
users as APIs that would re-use the kernel's own constants and
conventions. These will require some minor design work to adapt to
the new scheme (in most cases just using k_timeout_t directly in their
own API), and they have not been changed in this patch, instead
selecting CONFIG_LEGACY_TIMEOUT_API via kconfig. These subsystems
include: CAN Bus, the Microbit display driver, I2S, LoRa modem
drivers, the UART Async API, Video hardware drivers, the console
subsystem, and the network buffer abstraction.
k_sleep() now takes a k_timeout_t argument, with a k_msleep() variant
provided that works identically to the original API.
Most of the changes here are just type/configuration management and
documentation, but there are logic changes in mempool, where a loop
that used a timeout numerically has been reworked using a new
z_timeout_end_calc() predicate. Also in queue.c, a (when POLL was
enabled) a similar loop was needlessly used to try to retry the
k_poll() call after a spurious failure. But k_poll() does not fail
spuriously, so the loop was removed.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
Kernel timeouts have always been a 32 bit integer despite the
existence of generation macros, and existing code has been
inconsistent about using them. Upcoming commits are going to make the
timeout arguments opaque, so fix things up to be rigorously correct.
Changes include:
+ Adding a K_TIMEOUT_EQ() macro for code that needs to compare timeout
values for equality (e.g. with K_FOREVER or K_NO_WAIT).
+ Adding a k_msleep() synonym for k_sleep() which can continue to take
integral arguments as k_sleep() moves away to timeout arguments.
+ Pervasively using the K_MSEC(), K_SECONDS(), et. al. macros to
generate timeout arguments.
+ Removing the usage of K_NO_WAIT as the final argument to
K_THREAD_DEFINE(). This is just a count of milliseconds and we need
to use a zero.
This patch include no logic changes and should not affect generated
code at all.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
The Xilinx QEMU, used to emulate the Xilinx ZynqMP platform, is
particularly unstable in terms of timing.
This commit increases the tick margin for the Xilinx ZynqMP platform
from 1 to 5 in order to allow the sleep test to pass with a reasonable
repeatability.
Signed-off-by: Stephanos Ioannidis <root@stephanos.io>
This commit introduces the common tick margin definition that can be
used to specify the maximum allowable deviation from the expected
number of ticks.
Signed-off-by: Stephanos Ioannidis <root@stephanos.io>
Previously, passing K_FOREVER to k_sleep() would return
immediately.
Forever is a long time. Even if woken up at some point,
we still had forever to sleep, so return K_FOREVER in this
case.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Mark the old time conversion APIs deprecated, leave compatibility
macros in place, and replace all usage with the new API.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
Re-run with updated script to convert integer literal delay arguments
to k_thread_create and K_THREAD_DEFINE to use the standard timeout
macros.
Signed-off-by: Peter Bigot <peter.bigot@nordicsemi.no>
Disabling SMP mode for certain tests was a one-release thing, done to
avoid having to triage every test independently (MANY are not
SMP-safe), and with the knowledge that it was probably hiding bugs in
the kernel.
Turn it on pervasively. Tests are treated with a combination of
flagging specific cases as "1cpu" where we have short-running tests
that can be independently run in an otherwise SMP environment, and via
setting CONFIG_MP_NUM_CPUS=1 where that's not possible (which still
runs the full SMP kernel config, but with only one CPU available).
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
The RTC on TI CC13X2/CC26X2 is a 32 KHz clock for which the minimum
compare delay is 3 ticks. When using it as the system clock, we need
to relax the upper bound to ensure the test succeeds.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Wan <vincent.wan@linaro.org>
Nordic platforms measure ticks in cycles of a 32 KiHz clock for which
the minimum compare delay is 2 ticks. The test assumed an upper bound
of four ticks delay per loop iteration, resulting from alignment at
various layers. This delay is met on Nordic for tick rates at or below
16384, but is too short for the default 32768 Hz tick rate.
Instrumentation confirms that the usleep test loop body on Nordic at 32
KiHz ticks takes 3 ticks as the optimum delay, only when a debug probe
is active. In other circumstances it can take either 5 or 6 ticks,
depending on timer alignment and stability.
Relax the upper bound for platforms using this system timer at the
highest rate.
Closes#17965.
Signed-off-by: Peter Bigot <peter.bigot@nordicsemi.no>
The logic about minimal sleep sizes due to "tick" aliasing was
correct, but drivers also have similar behavior with "cycle" aliasing
too. When cycles are 3-4 orders of magnitude faster than ticks, it's
undetectable noise. But now on nRF they're exactly the same and we
need to correct for that, essentially doubling the number of ticks a
usleep() might wait for.
The logic here was simply too strict, basically. Fast tick rates
can't guarantee what the test promised.
Note that this relaxes the test bounds on the other side of the
equation too: it's no longer an error to usleep() for only one tick
(i.e. an improved sleep/timeout implementation no longer gets detected
as a test failure).
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
No test was exercising the k_usleep() system call, run
the test case as a user thread to fix code coverage.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
move misc/util.h to sys/util.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Test that k_usleep() allows sleep durations near the limit of what
the platform's tick rate will allow.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
Update reserved function names starting with one underscore, replacing
them as follows:
'_k_' with 'z_'
'_K_' with 'Z_'
'_handler_' with 'z_handl_'
'_Cstart' with 'z_cstart'
'_Swap' with 'z_swap'
This renaming is done on both global and those static function names
in kernel/include and include/. Other static function names in kernel/
are renamed by removing the leading underscore. Other function names
not starting with any prefix listed above are renamed starting with
a 'z_' or 'Z_' prefix.
Function names starting with two or three leading underscores are not
automatcally renamed since these names will collide with the variants
with two or three leading underscores.
Various generator scripts have also been updated as well as perf,
linker and usb files. These are
drivers/serial/uart_handlers.c
include/linker/kobject-text.ld
kernel/include/syscall_handler.h
scripts/gen_kobject_list.py
scripts/gen_syscall_header.py
Signed-off-by: Patrik Flykt <patrik.flykt@intel.com>
In the POSIX architecture, with the inf_clock "SOC", time does
not pass while the CPU is running. Tests that require time to pass
while busy waiting should call k_busy_wait() or in some other way
set the CPU to idle. This test was setting the CPU to idle while
waiting for the next time slice. This is ok if the system tick
(timer) is active and awaking the CPU every system tick period.
But when configured in tickless mode that is not the case, and the
CPU was set to sleep for an indefinite amount of time.
This commit fixes it by using k_busy_wait(a few microseconds) inside
that busy wait loop instead.
Signed-off-by: Alberto Escolar Piedras <alpi@oticon.com>
This commit replaces _TICK_ALIGN correction in the test (which was based
on simple division), by more precise estimation using __ticks_to_ms()
and _ms_to_ticks() functions.
This commit fixes#8899.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Zięcik <piotr.ziecik@nordicsemi.no>
These tests had very small stacks, and the rbtree scheduler on
qemu_x86 (which does need a little extra stack room, though not much)
is bumping up against the limit. Increase by ~128 bytes in most
cases. In the case of the mbox_api test, there are other platforms
(which don't use the tree) which are right against the limit already
and will fail to link with a larger stack, so bump it for qemu_x86
only.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
This patch do following things :
- fix checkpatch warnings
- replace conditions with ztest apis wherever necessary
Signed-off-by: Punit Vara <punit.vara@intel.com>