185 lines
9.2 KiB
Markdown
185 lines
9.2 KiB
Markdown
libmraa Internals {#internals}
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=================
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For building see @ref building. This will describe the general internal build
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of libmraa and will be useful to developers who'd like to understand more of
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how libmraa works or who'd like to add additional platforms. The internals will
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deal with the C API as that is the low level API which libmraa is built around.
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Note that C++ is simply a header only wrapper of the C API.
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libmraa has the philosophy that the board mapping is what we typically use in
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the API with the execption of i2c/spi bus numbering as they are typically not
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labelled on boards and so we use the kernel numbering scheme. Whilst this can
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confuse some, it's typically not an issue as platforms rarely expose more than
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one of these for user use and so when this is the case, libmraa will always use
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the bus in the pinmapper. For example edison uses i2c #6 but since there is
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only one, libmraa will try to be helpful and everything is treated as 6 when
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doing a mraa_i2c_init(). The _raw functions will override the pinmapper and can
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be accessed without a valid board configuration. This can be helpful either in
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development of platform configurations for mraa or when modifying kernels
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etc... Internally the mechanism is used heavily.
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In libmraa, all code is split into 7 modules, src/{i2c, spi, gpio, uart, pwm,
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aio and common}. These should be fairly self explanatory in goals/purpose but a
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few work in different ways. Public APIs are stored in api/ and internal headers
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are in include/
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### Logging ###
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Logging is now done purely in syslog(). Note that on platforms running systemd
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journald will intercept syslog(3) calls and log to the journal instead. You can
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set the log mask by using mraa_set_log_level(). Doing a DEBUG build of libmraa
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will also cause the DEBUG macro to be defined which will cause the syslog mask
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to be unset.
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### Contexts ###
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libmraa uses contexts to store all information, this context cannot be accessed
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by the user and so it's layout can and may be changed without warning to users.
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If an init() function fails it will return NULL and further calls with this
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context will lead to undefined behaviour.
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### Pinmapper ###
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The mraa_board_t is defined in mraa/common.h. It's a mostly static structure
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initialised during mraa_init(). The pinmap file in
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src/{arch}/{manufacturer}_{boardname}_{revision}.c then fills this array. It's
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also where platform hooks can be defined, functions that will be run at various
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'hook' points in the code.
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The mraa_pininfo_t structure needs to be set for the board pincount (set in a
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macro in the platform configuration header. Every pin will have a
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mraa_pincapabilities_t which will define what it can do. The doxygen
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documentation explains how this works but it's essentially a bitfield which
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needs to be set for every capability the pin can have. Gpios can have multiple
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muxes which will be set at the gpio init before it can be toggled.
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### i2c ###
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I2c from userspace in GNU/Linux is handled by character devices handled by the
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kernel driver i2c-dev. For more details the i2c/dev-interface documentation
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file in the kernel is the place to go.
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In libmraa, we re-use part of a library - libi2c from RoadNarrows -
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i2c/smbus.c. This library simply makes it easier for us to handle the error
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conditions that can arrise when writing on i2c buses. Essentially the API is
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fairly simple consisting of writes & reads.
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Careful - on alot of platforms i2cdetect will often crash. To findi your i2c
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addresses please look at your sensor's datasheet! If using i2cdetect most
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platforms do not support SMBus quick write so use the '-r' flag.
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### spi ###
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Mraa deals exclusively with spidev, so when we say bus we really mean bus +
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chip select from spidev. Spi(0) could lead to spidev5.1 and Spi(1) to
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spidev5.2. Typically on a micro using a random gpio as a chip select works
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well, and on some platforms if one is careful with threads this can work well
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with mraa. However when a kernel module shares the same bus as spidev (but on a
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different CS) this behaviour is *very* dangerous. Platforms such as Galileo
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Gen2 & Edison + Arduino breakout board work this way. Mraa will not help you in
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using a non hardware chip select, do so at your own peril!
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### gpio ###
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GPIO is probably the most complicated and odd module in libmraa. It is based on
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the gpiolib kernel driver framework which uses sysfs. There is a lot of good
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documentation in gpio/sysfs.txt in the kernel docs.
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The main issue is that gpios on hobbyist boards typically come with a number of
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muxers or level shifters and are often mapped in crazy ways. libmraa's goal is
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to make the label on your board match the API :) We hope that pleases you.
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Because boards are very different we use alot of platform hooks (@ref hooks) to
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make the initialisation work on all platforms. The hope is that simple
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platforms with no level shifters or expanders will work with just the pinmap
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definition.
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GPIOs are typically interfaced via sysfs because that's easier for us but we
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can also work with fast gpio. This is typically preffered to do mmap gpio
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access. This is however trickier and typically relies on lots of platform
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hooks. By default we support hitting /dev/mem or another device at specific
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addresses to toggle gpios which is how mmap access works on some boards.
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Note that in Linux gpios are numbered from ARCH_NR_GPIOS down. This means that
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if ARCH_NR_GPIOS is changed, the gpio numbering will change. In 3.18+ the
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default changed from 256 to 512, sadly the value cannot be viewed from
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userspace so we rely on the kernel version to extrapolate the likely value.
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### uart ###
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libmraa does not support UART/serial as there are many good libraries that do
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this already. In the future we may wrap or use one. However the class exists to
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set the pinmapper correctly for uart to work on some platforms.
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### pwm ###
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Internally everything with PWM in mraa is in microseconds because that's what
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the linux kernel uses and is probably all the granularity we'll ever
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need/achieve with the kind of hardware we're targetting. Board configuration
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pwm max/min values are always set in microseconds.
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### aio ###
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AIO pins are numbered after GPIO pins. This means that on Arduino style boards
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pin 14 is A0. Typically mraa will only support an ADC if a platform ships with
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one and has a good kernel module for it. Extra i2c/spi ADCs can be supported
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via something like UPM but are unlikely to receive support in mraa at the moment.
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Note that giving mraa_aio_init(0) will literally query the pinmapper for
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board->gpio_count + 0 so you must place your aio pins after gpio_count. This is
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the default behaviour but can of course be overriden by advance function
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pointers. Whilst maybe not the sanest of defaults, most of the hobbyist boards
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we deal with follow a naming pattern similar to Arduino or have no ADC so for
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now we have considered this sensible.
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### Initialisation ###
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mraa_init() needs to be called in order to initialise the platform files or
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'pinmap'. Because calling this is tedious libmraa uses a C constructor to run
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mraa_init on library load. This means that it is not possible to stop this
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running and all function calls like mraa_set_log_level() will not work during
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mraa_init(). This feature is supported by most sane compilers and libcs but you
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can turn off CTORS in uclibc, though I've yet to find a configuration with
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someone doing that. mraa_init() can be called multiple times if you feel like
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being 'safe'.
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In the SWIG modules mraa_init() is called during the %init stage of the module
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loading. This is simply to avoid mraa_init() running 'too' early, though I've
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never seen an issue in running it in a CTOR.
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### SWIG ###
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At the time when libmraa was created (still the case?) the only - working -
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API/wrapper generation tool that supported nodejs was SWIG. For more general
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information on SWIG please see the SWIG documentation.
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The src/{javascript, python} & src/mraa.i folders contain all the files for the
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SWIG generation. The C++ headers in api/mraa/ are given as input sources to
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SWIG. SWIG modules do not link to libmraa (although maybe that would be a good
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idea...)
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Typemaps are used heavily to map uint8_t* pointers to bytearrays and
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node_buffers. These are native python & node.js types that represent uint8_t
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data the best and are very well supported in both languages. Argument
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conversions and memory allocations are performed so the performance of using
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these functions compared to the C/C++ equivalent will likely be a little lower,
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however it is much more natural than using carrays.i typemap library.
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Note that node v7.x.x is not yet supported in SWIG, however this is a patchset
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in SWIG that enables this and does enable mraa to compile and work against a
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newer nodejs version.
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### NPM ###
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mraa is published on NPM, there is a target to prebuild a mraa src tarball that
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can be built with node-gyp. The way this works is to use the mraa_LIB_SRCS
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array to generate a binding.gyp file from the skeleton binding.gyp.cmake in
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src/javascript. Because we don't expect most NPM users to have SWIG we
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precompile the src/mraajsJAVASCRIPT_wrap.cxx. The src/version.c is already
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known since this is a static tarball so we write that too. These files are
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placed not in a build/ directory but in the main mraa directory. You can then
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tar the directory up and send it to NPM. This is done automatically on every
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commit by our automated build system.
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