In order to bring consistency in-tree, migrate all samples to the use
the new prefix <zephyr/...>. Note that the conversion has been scripted:
```python
from pathlib import Path
import re
EXTENSIONS = ("c", "h", "cpp", "rst")
for p in Path(".").glob("samples/**/*"):
if not p.is_file() or p.suffix and p.suffix[1:] not in EXTENSIONS:
continue
content = ""
with open(p) as f:
for line in f:
m = re.match(r"^(.*)#include <(.*)>(.*)$", line)
if (m and
not m.group(2).startswith("zephyr/") and
(Path(".") / "include" / "zephyr" / m.group(2)).exists()):
content += (
m.group(1) +
"#include <zephyr/" + m.group(2) +">" +
m.group(3) + "\n"
)
else:
content += line
with open(p, "w") as f:
f.write(content)
```
Signed-off-by: Gerard Marull-Paretas <gerard.marull@nordicsemi.no>
|
||
|---|---|---|
| .. | ||
| src | ||
| CMakeLists.txt | ||
| prj.conf | ||
| README.rst | ||
| sample.yaml | ||
.. _synchronization_sample: Synchronization Sample ###################### Overview ******** A simple application that demonstrates basic sanity of the kernel. Two threads (A and B) take turns printing a greeting message to the console, and use sleep requests and semaphores to control the rate at which messages are generated. This demonstrates that kernel scheduling, communication, and timing are operating correctly. Building and Running ******************** This project outputs to the console. It can be built and executed on QEMU as follows: .. zephyr-app-commands:: :zephyr-app: samples/synchronization :host-os: unix :board: qemu_x86 :goals: run :compact: Sample Output ============= .. code-block:: console threadA: Hello World! threadB: Hello World! threadA: Hello World! threadB: Hello World! threadA: Hello World! threadB: Hello World! threadA: Hello World! threadB: Hello World! threadA: Hello World! threadB: Hello World! <repeats endlessly> Exit QEMU by pressing :kbd:`CTRL+A` :kbd:`x`.