This is part one of several changes to add more methods to the bitarray api
so that it can be used for broader usecases, specifically LoRaWAN forward
error correction.
Signed-off-by: Lucas Romero <luqasn@gmail.com>
We are currently reporting the wrong mismatching bits in in-between
bundles. Fix this and extend the test to cover the wrong case.
Signed-off-by: Carlo Caione <ccaione@baylibre.com>
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>
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>
Not all arch has native support for __builtin_popcount() on
hardware and GCC falls back in using software only implementation.
However, with GCC 11, this is no longer included automatically
and requires linking explicitly with libgcc.a. This is not
trivial as it requires changes some linker magic and a sizable
change to most linker scripts. So opt for an easy solution
by implementing our own popcount in the test.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>
Kernel objects that contain embedded synchronization structures like
spinlocks can't be palced in the (cached/incoherent) stack memory on
coherence platforms like intel_adsp.
The normal fix in a test case is just to make the offending data
static, but that's painful here because SYS_BITARRAY_DEFINE declares
two objects (i.e. you can't put a "static" in front of it as with
similar macros) and it happens to be used in this case to define local
variables with collliding names, so I'd have to go in and rename
everything.
And there's little value anyway. Bitarrays are nearly-pure data
structures and extremely unlikely to show up platform-dependent
behavior.
Fixes#35242
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
This adds some tests to make sure sys_bitarray_*() are
working correctly.
Signed-off-by: Lauren Murphy <lauren.murphy@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>