* xduoo x3ii/x20: Better line out support
* less granular volume settings (too many steps before)
* Better handling of swiching sample rates
* Log actual sample rate in debug menu
Most credit goes to Roman Stolyarov
Additional integration [re]work by myself
Change-Id: I63af3740678cf2ed3170f61534e1029c81826bb6
* Kill LCD when turning off the backlight
* Fix logic errors in lcd_enable() calls
* Use ioctls instead of sysfs to twiddle lcd enable
Change-Id: I6864ff63d87b747ac48719b0f4ba2de00333a1d3
Note: I left behind lcd_bitmap in features.txt, because removing it
would require considerable work in the manual and the translations.
Change-Id: Ia8ca7761f610d9332a0d22a7d189775fb15ec88a
'swcodec' is now always set (and recording_swcodec for recording-capable
units) in feature.txt so the manual and language strings don't need to
all be fixed up.
Change-Id: Ib2c9d5d157af8d33653e2d4b4a12881b9aa6ddb0
HAVE_LCD_BITMAP is now redundant.
lcd_bitmap is always-on in features.txt so manual and lang strings
don't have to change
Change-Id: I08eeb20de48099ffc2dc23782711af368c2ec794
Linux offers the high-level i2c-dev driver to directly access the
i2c bus(ses) on the system. This system device is used to get rid
of the (rather silly) radio chip kernel module for ypr0 target and
correctly enables radio access also for the ypr1 target.
fm-radio chip is located on i2c-0 bus on the ypr0 target while it
is located on i2c-1 bus on the ypr1 target.
Power-up (RST) pin is also handled for both targets, which is wired
to another GPIO of the i.MX 37 platform.
Additionally, this patch simplifies the RDS low-level handling by
exploiting the Si4709 debug interface which comes with a mutex
protection as free bonus.
Change-Id: I839282bec4a27ad0ad8403c5a8dd86963b77e1bf
Only AGPTeck Rocker is enabled for now, and it doesn't work properly:
* No generic way to determine wakeup reason under Linux
* No generic way to be asynchronously notified if the alarm is
triggered when we're already awake
* Shutting down may clobber RTC wakeup (driver/etc dependent)
And finally:
* AGPTek kernel's RTC driver has some 24h clock and
some timezone-related issues.
So, the infrastructure is arguably useful, but the only applicable
hardware I have is pathologically brain-dead.
Change-Id: Iac6a26a9b6e4efec5d0b3030b87f456eb23fc01d
Once some missing power optimization stuff was added to the X3ii code,
they were completely identical.
Change-Id: I68e4db5e270e8ff22f91e521616a054bd7baa95d
Provided by Roman Stolyarov
Integration, Refactoring, and Upstreaming by Solomon Peachy
X3II confirmed working by forum tester, X20 is nearly identical.
This includes bootloader, main firmware, and the flash image patcher.
Eventual Todo:
* Further refactor AGPTek Rocker & xduoo hiby bootloaders
* Further refactor AGPTek Rocker & xduoo hosted platform code
Change-Id: I34a674051d368efcc75d1d18c725971fe46c3eee
on timer_unregister callbacks are not removed
It seems (at least on the Rocker) timers continue to fire (for a bit??)
Now we store the registered callback in the sigev structure and check
that the callback matches the one registered when the timer is created.
This should stop the possible case of a new timer getting spurious callbacks
We also now NULL the callbacks on un-register which should stop the segfaults
Added some notes to timer.c and timer.h
Change-Id: Ia155c3a4e4af89f474d55ed845560ccc1fab85aa
Addition of rtc support for AGPtEK ROCKER broke building the UI Simulator
for Windows. This patch removes the rtc support if building UI Simulator for
Windows.
This is one of those fancy gold-plated devices. Of course it breaks my scripts
that were nicely expecting every device to start with NW.
Change-Id: I161320f620f65f4f92c2650d192b26a9831eeb9d
This patch simulates the three possible states of a transflective
LCD: backlight on (bright screen as usual), backlight off (dimmed
screen) and LCD off (black screen).
Makes use of already defined 'BACKLIGHT_OFF_ALPHA'.
Change-Id: I9b0fc79b8d50c29e024ba1e6d9c2501119a7e0e0
Cleaned up, rebased, and forward-ported from the xvortex fork.
(original credit to vsoftster@gmail.com)
Change-Id: Ibcc023a0271ea81e901450a88317708c2683236d
Signed-off-by: Solomon Peachy <pizza@shaftnet.org>
Rocker is configured with CST (China Standard Time) timezone
which is UTC+8. Time in RTC is stored in UTC.
Change-Id: Ib9c03e0f0a1d3ea3a69f238cb083809ea9386e2a
Add define in config file to enable RTC support in rockbox,
Fix time_menu.c to include radio.h only when tuner is present
Implement time setting function on linux (was empty stub)
Not tested.
Change-Id: I40e6c4a6c1b66ada9cf4e698e502e221d0fc44df
Actual / of underlying linux OS should not be available to user.
I am still not sure if implementation is correct. It doesn't
perform any relative path sandboxing for example.
Change-Id: Ic577a10f3947f6e950e2c4d03173f9f207395eb7
None of the Sony up to A15 seem to support RDS (they use either Si4702 or Si4708),
thus I did not add any code to support RDS.
Change-Id: I64838993b9705b36b94665f8470c7a89c772c961
We don't really know what those are supposed to do. They seem to change the
volume curve but it is not very clear what is the intended purpose.
Change-Id: I65f5d18aba139844c23df092277ba17ee8518f96
sonynwz: quirk for cpufreq broken driver
There was some redundancy between frequency_linux(cpu, true) and
current_scaling_frequency(), also I see no reason to compile the cpuinfo stuff
unconditionally and the scaling info only on DX since it was already printed
some partial scaling info anyway. Thus compile all the code unconditionally
and simplify the logic in the debug menu. Also avoid putting buffers of size
PATH_MAX on stack since it can be quite big and we only requires 64 bytes
for those paths.
On Sony NWZ, the cpu driver reports frequency in MHz instead of kHz thus we need
to make the cpuinfo code aware of that bug.
Change-Id: I61af45ab5f179ecc909b4841b9137a915a60193a
We still miss the model IDS for those device so scsitool won't be able to
recognize them automatically.
Change-Id: I17ae0f0d95c011cea8e289def63c7673b6c4b667
Always compile in pcm_alsa_set_digital_volume, the linker will optimize it
away on targets that don't use it.
Change-Id: Ia21c3eaa8a64b75761ab5d056361e7ed1fcf949a
This requires a few changes unrelated to the A860 because configure unsets
APPLICATION but the NWZ is an application!
Change-Id: Id91aa23193383ac95886b281653da5286edd9caf
SUPPORTED SERIES:
- NWZ-E450
- NWZ-E460
- NWZ-E470
- NWZ-E580
- NWZ-A10
NOTES:
- bootloader makefile convert an extra font to be installed alongside the bootloader
since sysfont is way too small
- the toolsicon bitmap comes from the Oxygen iconset
- touchscreen driver is untested
TODO:
- implement audio routing driver (pcm is handled by pcm-alsa)
- fix playback: it crashes on illegal instruction in DEBUG builds
- find out why the browser starts at / instead of /contents
- implement radio support
- implement return to OF for usb handling
- calibrate battery curve (NB: of can report a battery level on a 0-5 scale but
probabl don't want to use that ?)
- implement simulator build (we need a nice image of the player)
- figure out if we can detect jack removal
POTENTIAL TODOS:
- try to build a usb serial gadget and gdbserver
Change-Id: Ic77d71e0651355d47cc4e423a40fb64a60c69a80
si4700_rds_process() should only be called on the rising edge of
RDSR since it now rejects segments out of sequence. Receiving the
same segment multiple times due to rapid polling is of course out
of sequence so do no more processing until RDSR bit cycles to
avoid repeatedly sending the same data instance.
I don't have the tools installed to test compile so there could be
typos. However, I tested on gigabeat-s with YPR0 setup copied over
and it fixed the issue with PS and RT.
Change-Id: Iab511bef64030de8c07d4d22dcf338c8720e2ae2
* Remove unused bits like the radio event and simplify basic
radio interface. It can be more self-contained with rds.h only
required by radio and tuner code.
* Add post-processing to text a-la Silicon Labs AN243. The chip's
error correction can only do so much; additional checks are highly
recommended. Simply testing for two identical messages in a row
is extremely effective and I've never seen corrupted text since
doing that, even with mediocre reception.
Groups segments must arrive in order, not randomly; logic change
only accepts them in order, starting at 0.
Time readout was made a bit better but really we'd need to use
verbose mode and ensure that no errors were seen during receiving
of time and more checks would be need to have a stable PI. The
text is the important bit anyway.
* Time out of stale text.
* Text is no longer updated until a complete group has been
received, as is specified in the standard. Perhaps go back to
scrolling text lines in the radio screen?
* Add proper character conversion to UTF-8. Only the default G0
table for the moment. The other two could be added in.
* Add variants "RDS_CFG_PROCESS" and "RDS_CFG_PUSH" to allow
the option for processed RDS data to be pushed to the driver and
still do proper post-processing (only text conversion for now for
the latter).
Change-Id: I4d83f8b2e89a209a5096d15ec266477318c66925
On Windows 64-bit, the size of long is 32-bit, thus any pointer to long cast is
not valid. In any case, one should use intptr_t and ptrdiff_t when casting
to integers. This commit attempts to fix all instances reported by GCC.
When relevant, I replaced code by the macros PTR_ADD, ALIGN_UP from system.h
Change-Id: I2273b0e8465d3c4689824717ed5afa5ed238a2dc
The kernel on this device reports nonexistent key presses, in particular it
reports right presses when pressing the left button... Since when it happens,
the right press comes after the left one, the new code simply ignores any
right press when the left button in pressed.
Change-Id: Ib6ced02682d9cecf4c7f6c58834907a667419cd7
This patch enables "Settings -> Sound Settings -> DAC's filter roll-off" for the
iBasso DX50.
Confirmed working on iBasso DX50, firmware 1.6.
Change-Id: I901615541d8fa4f6550c5156cf8c6069f5bdf9d0
Depends on http://gerrit.rockbox.org/r/#/c/1043/.
This patch adds a new setting in Settings -> General -> System: USB Mode.
Usable in Quickscreen and Shortcuts.
Possible settings are:
- Mass Storage: The default, on USB connect export the internal and external
drives as usual. Rockbox will exit gracefully in this case, since the internal
drive (/mnt/sdcard) is exported as mass storage device and Android prevents
Rockbox from continued execution.
- Charge Only: USB charge only, do not export the internal and external drives.
This will not close Rockbox.
- ADB: Enable the Android Debug Bridge. This will not close Rockbox.
Charge only and ADB are actually the same, since it is not yet established if
charge only is doable without adb and major hooks into Android.
German translation provided.
This may be genric for Android based devices but is only enabled
for iBasso Devices. Other maintainers may choose do adopt this.
Change-Id: I616247c29946c6595ebcf8f0c14b2410c9f0498b
Depends on http://gerrit.rockbox.org/r/#/c/1043/.
This patch adds a new setting in Settings -> General
-> System: Freq Scaling Governor
Usable in Quickscreen and Shortcuts.
Possible settings are:
- Conservative: Slow frequency switching.
- Ondemand or Interactive: Fast frequency switching.
- Powersave: Allways lowest frequency.
- Performance: Allways highest frequency.
German translation provided.
This may be genric for Android kernel based devices but is only enabled
for iBasso Devices. Other maintainers may choose do adopt this.
Change-Id: I10296f5be9586ad3a409105db0cd03682a30e9c1
Reorganization
- Separated iBasso devices from PLATFORM_ANDROID. These are now standlone
hosted targets. Most device specific code is in the
firmware/target/hosted/ibasso directory.
- No dependency on Android SDK, only the Android NDK is needed.
32 bit Android NDK and Android API Level 16.
- Separate implementation for each device where feasible.
Code cleanup
- Rewrite of existing code, from simple reformat to complete reimplementation.
- New backlight interface, seperating backlight from touchscreen.
- Rewrite of device button handler, removing unneeded code and fixing memory
leaks.
- New Debug messages interface logging to Android adb logcat (DEBUGF, panicf,
logf).
- Rewrite of lcd device handler, removing unneeded code and fixing memory leaks.
- Rewrite of audiohw device handler/pcm interface, removing unneeded code and
fixing memory leaks, enabling 44.1/48kHz pthreaded playback.
- Rewrite of power and powermng, proper shutdown, using batterylog results
(see http://gerrit.rockbox.org/r/#/c/1047/).
- Rewrite of configure (Android NDK) and device specific config.
- Rewrite of the Android NDK specific Makefile.
Misc
- All plugins/games/demos activated.
- Update tinyalsa to latest from https://github.com/tinyalsa/tinyalsa.
Includes
- http://gerrit.rockbox.org/r/#/c/993/
- http://gerrit.rockbox.org/r/#/c/1010/
- http://gerrit.rockbox.org/r/#/c/1035/
Does not include http://gerrit.rockbox.org/r/#/c/1007/ due to new backlight
interface and new option for hold switch, touchscreen, physical button
interaction.
Rockbox needs the iBasso DX50/DX90 loader for startup, see
http://gerrit.rockbox.org/r/#/c/1099/
The loader expects Rockbox to be installed in /mnt/sdcard/.rockbox/. If
/mnt/sdcard/ is accessed as USB mass storage device, Rockbox will exit
gracefully and the loader will restart Rockbox on USB disconnect.
Tested on iBasso DX50.
Compiled (not tested) for iBasso DX90.
Compiled (not tested) for PLATFORM_ANDROID.
Change-Id: I5f5e22e68f5b4cf29c28e2b40b2c265f2beb7ab7
System -> Debug (Keep Out) -> View CPU stats
Will now show the current cpufreq scaling governor, minimum, current and
maximum cpufreq scaling frequency for each CPU.
This may be genric for Android kernel based devices but is only enabled
for iBasso Devices. Other maintainers may choose do adopt this.
Change-Id: I53e212f8707bf2abaa557e297293fb559ac37058
The GPIO APIs for ypr0 and ypr1 targets was messy, requiring a
direct communication via several ioctls calls.
Since it is planned to add support to other devices, more GPIO are
going to be used. For that reason the functions shall be clear and
easy to use.
Change-Id: Ia2304335e1fed1305cc2c4320bd4c097e13079be
Some people reported strange charging times and
strange battery life.
Charging by OF: 25 hours; RB: 18 hours
It has been found that there are at least two issues here:
1) the way of getting battery charging status wasn't
really accurate. This attempts to fix that issue.
This patch also simplifies some code (opening a
device is no more needed, for example).
To technically explain, battery charging implies first a constant
current mode (where the voltage increases) and then a constant
voltage mode (where, obviously, the voltage reads more or less
the same). The old way the End Of Charge was detected was based solely
on the voltage, while now it is based on chip's EOC interrupt,
which should be more accurate.
2) OF explicitly sets a constant current 350 mA, while we usually had
55 mA (by as3543 default).
This wasn't discovered before since there is a caching problem
("an accurate guess") in the Samsung power mgmt Linux module,
thus its debugging dumper wasn't really working, reporting a 55 mA current.
Strangely this option should have been set by the bootloader
but apparently it does not.
Some testing is still needed, but I confirm that with this patch
I could run a benchmark for 25 hours (vs. 18 hours), by charging
within Rockbox of course.
Change-Id: I3bd921e86b9018d1cc3c720d15cc46896e8490b3
The refactoring of the audio thread in this commit
-----------------------------------------------
commit 5857c44017
Author: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Date: Fri May 31 02:41:02 2013 -0400
Refactor audio thread to run both recording and playback.
-----------------------------------------------
moved pcm_init() next to dsp_init() in apps/main.c:init().
Before that pcm_init() was called by audio_init().
Unfortunately the maemo init code didn't properly
wait until the maemo thread was fully initialized,
leading to dangling pointers when the code called
by pcm_init() tried to access maemo's variables.
Fix it by refactoring the "very fast shutdown" semaphore
to wait until maemo is initialized in any case.
This should also fix very rare rockbox crashes
on startup that I got once a year or so.
The new code has been tested by a script that
starts and kills rockbox after one second.
Change-Id: I464efce5f2b71ca869c72a5bc578555b8022e459
7d1a47cf13 introduced a regression that broke it completely so that
it couldn't boot into the main menu anymore. It had a faulty call to
get_volume_name() which made handle_special_links() act up. This broke
every open() and opendir() (and friends) library calls.
Change-Id: I399960ca8fb6e3bcc1f25c9b4a3c19a6d28b77bd
This changes iBasso DX50/DX90 config from CHARGING_SIMPLE (Simple, hardware
controlled charging (CPU cannot read charger state but may read when power is
plugged-in) to CHARGING_MONITOR (Hardware controlled charging with monitoring
(CPU is able to read HW charging state and when power is plugged-in)).
Not really usefull at the moment, since USB connection (charging) is not (yet)
gracefully handled for iBasso devices.
Change-Id: I55da81b10637d4de88d713ea5eba08eb59bc629f
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/1010
Reviewed-by: Michael Giacomelli <giac2000@hotmail.com>
The port to for this two targets has been entirely developped by Ilia Sergachev (alias Il or xzcc). His source
can be found at https://bitbucket.org/isergachev/rockbox . The few necesary modifications for the DX90 port
was done by headwhacker form head-fi.org. Unfortunately i could not try out the final state of the DX90 port.
The port is hosted on android (without java) as standalone app. The official Firmware is required to run this port.
Ilia did modify the source files for the "android" target in the rockbox source to make the DX port work. The work I did
was to separate the code for DX50 (&DX90) from the android target.
On this Target Ilia used source from tinyalsa from AOSP. I did not touch that part of the code because I do not understand it.
What else I changed from Ilias sources besides the separation from the target "android":
* removed a dirty hack to keep backlight off
* changed value battery meter to voltage battery meter
* made all plugins compile (named target as "standalone") and added keymaps
* i added the graphics for the manual but did not do anything else for the manual yet
* minor optimizations
known bugs:
* timers are slowed donw when playback is active (tinyalsa related?)
* some minor bugs
Things to do:
* The main prolem will be how to install the app correctly. A guy called DOC2008 added a CWM (by androtab.info) to the
official firmware and Ilia made a CWM installation script and a dualboot selector (rbutils/ibassoboot, build with
ndk-build). We will have to find a way to install rockbox in a proper way without breaking any copyrights.
Maybe ADB is an option but it is not enable with OF by default. Patching the OF is probably the way to go.
* All the wiki and manual
to build:
needed: android ndk installed, android sdk installed with additional build-tools 19.1.0 installed
./tools/configure
select iBasso DX50 or iBasso DX90
make -j apk
the content of rockbox.zip/.rockbox needs to be copied to /system/rockbox/app_rockbox/rockbox/ (rockbox app not needed)
the content of libs/armeabi to /system/rockbox/lib/ (rockbox app needed)
The boot selector is needed as /system/bin/MangoPlayer and the iBasso app as /system/bin/MangoPlayer_original. There
is also the "vold" file. The one from OF does not work with DX50 rockbox (DX90 works!?), the one from Ilia is necessary.
Until we have found a proper way to install it, it can only be installed following the instructions of Ilia on his
bitbucket page, using the CWM-OF and his installation script package.
Change-Id: Ic4faaf84824c162aabcc08e492cee6e0068719d0
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/941
Tested: Chiwen Chang <rock1104.tw@yahoo.com.tw>
Reviewed-by: Michael Giacomelli <giac2000@hotmail.com>
This patch redoes the filesystem code from the FAT driver up to the
clipboard code in onplay.c.
Not every aspect of this is finished therefore it is still "WIP". I
don't wish to do too much at once (haha!). What is left to do is get
dircache back in the sim and find an implementation for the dircache
indicies in the tagcache and playlist code or do something else that
has the same benefit. Leaving these out for now does not make anything
unusable. All the basics are done.
Phone app code should probably get vetted (and app path handling
just plain rewritten as environment expansions); the SDL app and
Android run well.
Main things addressed:
1) Thread safety: There is none right now in the trunk code. Most of
what currently works is luck when multiple threads are involved or
multiple descriptors to the same file are open.
2) POSIX compliance: Many of the functions behave nothing like their
counterparts on a host system. This leads to inconsistent code or very
different behavior from native to hosted. One huge offender was
rename(). Going point by point would fill a book.
3) Actual running RAM usage: Many targets will use less RAM and less
stack space (some more RAM because I upped the number of cache buffers
for large memory). There's very little memory lying fallow in rarely-used
areas (see 'Key core changes' below). Also, all targets may open the same
number of directory streams whereas before those with less than 8MB RAM
were limited to 8, not 12 implying those targets will save slightly
less.
4) Performance: The test_disk plugin shows markedly improved performance,
particularly in the area of (uncached) directory scanning, due partly to
more optimal directory reading and to a better sector cache algorithm.
Uncached times tend to be better while there is a bit of a slowdown in
dircache due to it being a bit heavier of an implementation. It's not
noticeable by a human as far as I can say.
Key core changes:
1) Files and directories share core code and data structures.
2) The filesystem code knows which descriptors refer to same file.
This ensures that changes from one stream are appropriately reflected
in every open descriptor for that file (fileobj_mgr.c).
3) File and directory cache buffers are borrowed from the main sector
cache. This means that when they are not in use by a file, they are not
wasted, but used for the cache. Most of the time, only a few of them
are needed. It also means that adding more file and directory handles
is less expensive. All one must do in ensure a large enough cache to
borrow from.
4) Relative path components are supported and the namespace is unified.
It does not support full relative paths to an implied current directory;
what is does support is use of "." and "..". Adding the former would
not be very difficult. The namespace is unified in the sense that
volumes may be specified several times along with relative parts, e.g.:
"/<0>/foo/../../<1>/bar" :<=> "/<1>/bar".
5) Stack usage is down due to sharing of data, static allocation and
less duplication of strings on the stack. This requires more
serialization than I would like but since the number of threads is
limited to a low number, the tradoff in favor of the stack seems
reasonable.
6) Separates and heirarchicalizes (sic) the SIM and APP filesystem
code. SIM path and volume handling is just like the target. Some
aspects of the APP file code get more straightforward (e.g. no path
hashing is needed).
Dircache:
Deserves its own section. Dircache is new but pays homage to the old.
The old one was not compatible and so it, since it got redone, does
all the stuff it always should have done such as:
1) It may be update and used at any time during the build process.
No longer has one to wait for it to finish building to do basic file
management (create, remove, rename, etc.).
2) It does not need to be either fully scanned or completely disabled;
it can be incomplete (i.e. overfilled, missing paths), still be
of benefit and be correct.
3) Handles mounting and dismounting of individual volumes which means
a full rebuild is not needed just because you pop a new SD card in the
slot. Now, because it reuses its freed entry data, may rebuild only
that volume.
4) Much more fundamental to the file code. When it is built, it is
the keeper of the master file list whether enabled or not ("disabled"
is just a state of the cache). Its must always to ready to be started
and bind all streams opened prior to being enabled.
5) Maintains any short filenames in OEM format which means that it does
not need to be rebuilt when changing the default codepage.
Miscellaneous Compatibility:
1) Update any other code that would otherwise not work such as the
hotswap mounting code in various card drivers.
2) File management: Clipboard needed updating because of the behavioral
changes. Still needs a little more work on some finer points.
3) Remove now-obsolete functionality such as the mutex's "no preempt"
flag (which was only for the prior FAT driver).
4) struct dirinfo uses time_t rather than raw FAT directory entry
time fields. I plan to follow up on genericizing everything there
(i.e. no FAT attributes).
5) unicode.c needed some redoing so that the file code does not try
try to load codepages during a scan, which is actually a problem with
the current code. The default codepage, if any is required, is now
kept in RAM separarately (bufalloced) from codepages specified to
iso_decode() (which must not be bufalloced because the conversion
may be done by playback threads).
Brings with it some additional reusable core code:
1) Revised file functions: Reusable code that does things such as
safe path concatenation and parsing without buffer limitations or
data duplication. Variants that copy or alter the input path may be
based off these.
To do:
1) Put dircache functionality back in the sim. Treating it internally
as a different kind of file system seems the best approach at this
time.
2) Restore use of dircache indexes in the playlist and database or
something effectively the same. Since the cache doesn't have to be
complete in order to be used, not getting a hit on the cache doesn't
unambiguously say if the path exists or not.
Change-Id: Ia30f3082a136253e3a0eae0784e3091d138915c8
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/566
Reviewed-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Tested: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Abstracts threading from itself a bit, changes the way its queues are
handled and does type hiding for that as well.
Do alot here due to already required major brain surgery.
Threads may now be on a run queue and a wait queue simultaneously so
that the expired timer only has to wake the thread but not remove it
from the wait queue which simplifies the implicit wake handling.
List formats change for wait queues-- doubly-linked, not circular.
Timeout queue is now singly-linked. The run queue is still circular
as before.
Adds a better thread slot allocator that may keep the slot marked as
used regardless of the thread state. Assists in dumping special tasks
that switch_thread was tasked to perform (blocking tasks).
Deletes alot of code yet surprisingly, gets larger than expected.
Well, I'm not not minding that for the time being-- omlettes and break
a few eggs and all that.
Change-Id: I0834d7bb16b2aecb2f63b58886eeda6ae4f29d59
* Seal away private thread and kernel definitions and declarations
into the internal headers in order to better hide internal structure.
* Add a thread-common.c file that keeps shared functions together.
List functions aren't messed with since that's about to be changed to
different ones.
* It is necessary to modify some ARM/PP stuff since GCC was complaining
about constant pool distance and I would rather not force dump it. Just
bl the cache calls in the startup and exit code and let it use veneers
if it must.
* Clean up redundant #includes in relevant areas and reorganize them.
* Expunge useless and dangerous stuff like remove_thread().
Change-Id: I6e22932fad61a9fac30fd1363c071074ee7ab382
thread_queue_wake() doesn't need the 2nd parameter. The original purpose
for it never came to be.
Non priority version mrsw_writer_wakeup_readers was left improperly
finished. Get that back into line.
Change-Id: Ic613a2479f3cc14dc7c761517670eb15178da9f5
Any number of readers may be in the critical section at a time and writers
are mutually exclusive to all other threads. They are a better choice when
data is rarely modified but often read and multiple threads can safely
access it for reading.
Priority inheritance is fully implemented along with other changes to the
kernel to fully support it on multiowner objects.
This also cleans up priority code in the kernel and updates some associated
structures in existing objects to the cleaner form.
Currently doesn't add the mrsw_lock.[ch] files since they're not yet
needed by anything but the supporting improvements are still useful.
This includes a typed bitarray API (bitarray.h) which is pretty basic
for now.
Change-Id: Idbe43dcd9170358e06d48d00f1c69728ff45b0e3
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/801
Reviewed-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Tested: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
With LCD driver all calculation will be performed on RGB888 and the hardware/OS
can display from our 24bit framebuffer.
It is not yet as performance optimized as the existing drivers but should be
good enough.The vast number of small changes is due to the fact that
fb_data can be a struct type now, while most of the code expected a scalar type.
lcd-as-memframe ASM code does not work with 24bit currently so the with 24bit
it enforces the generic C code.
All plugins are ported over. Except for rockpaint. It uses so much memory that
it wouldnt fit into the 512k plugin buffer anymore (patches welcome).
Change-Id: Ibb1964545028ce0d8ff9833ccc3ab66be3ee0754
Defining HAVE_BUTTON_DATA without simultaneously defining HAVE_TOUCHSCREEN
caused compile errors. (I need them separated for a scrollstrip driver.)
Change-Id: I945d3437d840035ccc0c147f8155029b403c6ec2
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/771
Reviewed-by: Amaury Pouly <amaury.pouly@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Martitz <kugel@rockbox.org>
The build system needed fixes because the tools paths changed and one tool that
we used (apkbuilder) was removed entirely. Recent NDKs don't ship gcc 4.4.3
anymore, therefore switch to 4.6. The code itself needed a fix for a jni
reference bug that was uncovered by KitKat.
The port now builds with latest sdk (r22) and ndk (r9d).
Change-Id: Id74fa54ba93bbb0ee30373fbe79e92c5ff03201d
No code changed, just shuffling stuff around. This should make it easier to
build only select parts kernel and use different implementations.
Change-Id: Ie1f00f93008833ce38419d760afd70062c5e22b5
A thread polls the appropriate GPIO pin for sd card presence and mounts
using the mount system call.
Change-Id: I31ab41c4120f4af64eb6998b7e7b6f9051585efb
Part of this change is to align sdlapp builds to other application targets
in that the sim_* wrappers are not used anymore (except for sim_read/write).
Path mangling is now done in rbpaths.c as well.
Change-Id: I9726da73b50a83d9e1a1840288de16ec01ea029d
The virtual external storage can be inserted/extracted with the e key. This
has little effect because there is no way to access the storage (yet, a later
commit will change this). Except on ondio where the mmc needs to be
extracted before entering USB (like on real target).
Change-Id: I523402832f3b4ae71e0603b281aba4fb8592a897
CONFIG_STORAGE & STORAGE_HOSTFS allows to use parts of the storage_* API to be
compiled for application targets without compiling storage.c or performing
actually raw storage access. This is primarily to enable application targets to
implement HAVE_MULTIVOMULE/HAVE_HOTSWAP (in a later commit).
SIMULATOR uses the same mechanism without explicitely defining STORAGE_HOSTFS
(how to add a bit to an existing preprocessor token?).
Change-Id: Ib3f8ee0d5231e2ed21ff00842d51e32bc4fc7292
This patch includes some refactoring:
- renaming according to Rockbox guidelines
- GPIO code merging, still with target defines
- some simplification in firmware/SOURCES
Change-Id: I7fd95aece53f40efdf8caac22348376615795431
This is the basic port to the new target Samsung
YP-R1, which runs on a similar platform as YP-R0.
Port is usable, although there are still
some optimizations that have to be done.
Change-Id: If83a8e386369e413581753780c159026d9e41f04
This should catch the case of buffer misuse which results
in corrupted cookie of next allocation. The check is performed
on move_block() so it may be a bit late.
There is buflib_check_valid() provided which checks the
integrity of all cookies for given context.
On DEBUG build with --sdl-thread this check is carried out
for core_ctx on every context switch to catch problems earlier.
Change-Id: I999d4576084592394e3dbd3bdf0f32935ff5f601
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/711
Reviewed-by: Thomas Martitz <kugel@rockbox.org>
Enable simulator for the target ypr0 to
be built and used.
Change-Id: I1b080f07ab90f5c4856881d08ad70e1053bbb0c0
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/618
Reviewed-by: Frank Gevaerts <frank@gevaerts.be>
Target that have a touchpad/touchscreen should disable it while
being locked (In order to avoid LCD to drain battery power due to
"key locked" constant reporting messages. If they a have a keylock
button this was already handled at driver level. If not (e.g. fuze+),
they will have to implement a switch at driver level that action.c
can operate on softlock.
This patch does the following for any target having a touchpad
or a touchscreen and no HAS_BUTTON_HOLD (ie any softlock target)
1) it implements the code to call button_enable_touch(bool en) in
action.c.
2) button_enable_touch is implemented in button.c and call
either touchpad_enable or touchscreen_enable
3) those two function are implemented respectively in touchscreen.c
and a new touchpad.c file. They provide a generic way to silents touch's
device and call a function at driver level where target specific code
can be implemented if possible/needed (for power saving for instance).
Those function name are touchpad_enable_device and touchscreen_enable_device
4) we implement an empty function at driver level of targets that need it
to have them still being able to compiled.
Change-Id: I9ead78a25bd33466a8533f5b9f259b395cb5ce49
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/569
Reviewed-by: Thomas Martitz <kugel@rockbox.org>
Reviewed-by: Amaury Pouly <amaury.pouly@gmail.com>
HAVE_SW_VOLUME_CONTROL is required and at this time only affects the
SDL targets using pcm-sdl.c.
Enables balance control in SDL targets, unless mono volume is in use.
Compiles software volume control as unbuffered when
PCM_SW_VOLUME_UNBUFFERED is defined. This avoids the overhead and
extra latency introduced by the double buffer when it is not needed.
Use this config when the target's PCM driver is buffered and sufficient
latency exists to perform safely the volume scaling.
Simulated targets that are double-buffered when made as native targets
remain so in the sim in order to run the same code.
Change-Id: Ifa77d2d3ae7376c65afecdfc785a084478cb5ffb
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/457
Reviewed-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Tested-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
* SOUND_x enum can be generated by audiohw_settings.h along with settings
entries and sound_val2phys.
* VOLUME_MIN and VOLUME_MAX are no longer necessary within sound.c. If
you need them, they are for target-defined purposes.
* Fix up SDL volume implementation in sdl.c. Move sim volume calculation
code to pcm-sdl.c.
* Min trigger tresholds were based upon VOLUME_MIN for some reason.
These setting have nothing to do with playback volume. Since it is no
longer present, set these at -89dB which is the minimum peak meter
sensitivity setting.
* Fix an oversight in wm8758.c. I forgot to add the dB->register
conversion to audiohw_set_volume.
Change-Id: Ie1df33f1793eee75e6793f16bc7bddd16edb7f75
Onda VX747 sim was missing a limits #define; #include limits.h in
pcm_sw_volume.h.
Simply use the software volume control for the SIM volume control
rather than the SDL volume control when the target would have it
natively.
Change-Id: I8e924a2ff1b410f602452d2ea9b691efb82c931e
The old way actually mis-used the API (I misunderstood the docs) because
it specified the marker position as a "low buffer watermark" but instead of a
future playback head position.
The replacement is a simple thread that writes the data regardless of the
filling level of the buffer (write() will just block) and polls the playback
state periodically.
Change-Id: If29237cee4ce78dc42f5a8320878bab0cafe78f7
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/422
Tested-by: Dominik Riebeling <Dominik.Riebeling@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Martitz <kugel@rockbox.org>
This patch adds to YP-R0 (and other future targets using Linux
framebuffer) the ability to use LCD_ENABLE to save some CPU cycles
while display is powered off.
This patch also changes the way to toggle LCD power: now using
a proper ioctl call, slightly more efficient.
Change-Id: I544de77f5abd4ac1c13d3fe3a6e40a30f7c0bece
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/410
Reviewed-by: Thomas Martitz <kugel@rockbox.org>
The GPIO device file wasn't closed due to this. This wasn't a big deal
because the device powers off shorty afterwards anyway.
Change-Id: I9a6b4d57d32627157323b4883e47b8812f5dcb4d