Граф коммитов

5 коммитов

Автор SHA1 Сообщение Дата
Ayke van Laethem
c7a23183e8 all: format code according to Go 1.19 rules
Go 1.19 started reformatting code in a way that makes it more obvious
how it will be rendered on pkg.go.dev. It gets it almost right, but not
entirely. Therefore, I had to modify some of the comments so that they
are formatted correctly.
2022-08-04 12:18:32 +02:00
Ayke van Laethem
77ec9b6369 all: update build constraints to Go 1.17
Do it all at once in preparation for Go 1.18 support.

To make this commit, I've simply modified the `fmt-check` Makefile
target to rewrite files instead of listing the differences. So this is a
fully mechanical change, it should not have introduced any errors.
2022-02-04 07:49:46 +01:00
Dmitriy
43efe94041 add support for CPU interrupts for ESP32-C3 2021-10-23 03:31:37 +02:00
Ayke van Laethem
98f84a497d qemu: signal correct exit code to QEMU
There were a few issues that were causing qemu-system-arm and
qemu-system-riscv to give the wrong exit codes. They are in fact capable
of exiting with 0 or 1 signalled from the running application, but this
functionality wasn't used. This commit changes this in the following
ways:

  * It fixes SemiHosting codes, which were incorrectly written in
    decimal while they should have been written in hexadecimal (oops!).
  * It modifies all the baremetal main functions (aka reset handlers) to
    exit with `exit(0)` instead of `abort()`.
  * It changes `syscall.Exit` to call `exit(code)` instead of `abort()`
    on baremetal targets.
  * It adds these new exit functions where necessary, implemented in a
    way that signals the correct exit status if running under QEMU.

All in all, this means that `tinygo test` doesn't have to look at the
output of a test to determine the outcome. It can simply look at the
exit code.
2021-10-06 09:04:06 +02:00
Ayke van Laethem
cb147b9475 esp32c3: add support for this chip
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)
2021-09-16 20:13:04 +02:00