This change adds support for the ESP32-C3, a new chip from Espressif. It
is a RISC-V core so porting was comparatively easy.
Most peripherals are shared with the (original) ESP32 chip, but with
subtle differences. Also, the SVD file I've used gives some
peripherals/registers a different name which makes sharing code harder.
Eventually, when an official SVD file for the ESP32 is released, I
expect that a lot of code can be shared between the two chips.
More information: https://www.espressif.com/en/products/socs/esp32-c3
TODO:
- stack scheduler
- interrupts
- most peripherals (SPI, I2C, PWM, etc)
Right now this requires setting the -port parameter, but other than that
it totally works (if esptool.py is installed). It works by converting
the ELF file to the custom ESP32 image format and flashing that using
esptool.py.