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
This driver will subsume the old button-lradc driver and support far more
options. It can sense LRADC channels, PSWITCH, GPIOs and it handles special
"buttons" like headphone insertion and hold detection. It also provides a
more natural description of the buttons using a target-defined table with some
macros to make it easy to read and write. It uniformely handles debouncing on
LRADC channels and PSWITCH.
Change-Id: Ie61d1f593fdcf3bd456ba1d53a1fd784286834ce
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
The port uses the imx233 soc, it's a STMP3650 based Samsung player
Change-Id: I50b6d7e77fd292fab5ed26de87853cd5aaf9eaa4
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/490
Reviewed-by: Amaury Pouly <amaury.pouly@gmail.com>
Choices are limited for those: i2c is either generic software or imx233
hardware and power is either none or with a gpio. So factor ever possible
combination in a single common file and use fmradio-target.h to supply the
required parameters. This will remove a bunch of duplicate code.
Change-Id: If12faeb2e371631cd39cc18a4c1d859812007934
The old code allowed each target to specify its adc targets but this proved
useless since the target rely directly on imx233/lradc for input method and
generic adc is mostly used for battery and debug. Remove all target specific
files and provide a generic implemenation. The targets can still specify a
battery temperature channel in powermgmt-target.h
Change-Id: I68cf2e3e46379d174ac6d774ffb237bb15a19ae3
HiFi E.T. MA8 is almost the same as MA9 except
another DAC(pcm1792 in ma8, df1704 in ma9).
MA8 has ILI9342 lcd, MA8C has ILI9342C lcd.
Change-Id: If2ac04f5a3382590b2a392c46286559f54b2ed6a
The only difference between this target and HiFi E.T. MA9
is display driver (ILI9342 in MA9 and ILI9342c in MA9C)
Change-Id: Icc3d2490f850902a653175360f12283f3708bbb7
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>
The idea is to share loading code between bootloaders and rolo().
Change-Id: I1656ed91946d7a05cb7c9fa7a16793c3c862a5cd
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/190
Reviewed-by: Marcin Bukat <marcin.bukat@gmail.com>
The driver is current unused and very minimal. It can used on
targets which have an accessible UART port and it will be used on
some creative targets as backlight control.
Change-Id: Id710d63574aadb0a2d7327b03187506b469470b1
Based on FS#9920 by Ryan Press with changes to selection logic so
that it works on my iPod Photo. Should also work on iPod Color/4G
and Mini2G. Moved all target specific code from
firmware/drivers/serial.c into new file
firmware/target/arm/pp/uart-pp.c in the same manner as other
target specific uart code.
Update to fix build error on ipodmini2g by adding defines in config file.
Removed unwanted whitespace
Tested on iPod Photo.
Change-Id: Ia5539563966198e06372d70b5adf2ef78882f863
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/455
Reviewed-by: andypotter <liveboxandy@gmail.com>
Tested-by: andypotter <liveboxandy@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Marcin Bukat <marcin.bukat@gmail.com>
This is going right in since it's long overdue. If anything is goofed,
drop me a line or just tweak it yourself if you know what's wrong. :-)
Make HW/SW codec interface more uniform when emulating HW functionality
on SWCODEC for functions such as "audiohw_set_pitch". The firmware-to-
DSP plumbing is in firmware/drivers/audiohw-swcodec.c. "sound_XXX"
APIs are all in sound.c with none in DSP code any longer.
Reduce number of settings definitions needed by each codec by providing
defaults for common ones like balance, channels and SW tone controls.
Remove need for separate SIM code and tables and add virtual codec header
for hosted targets.
Change-Id: I3f23702bca054fc9bda40f49824ce681bb7f777b
Implements double-buffered volume, balance and prescaling control in
the main PCM driver when HAVE_SW_VOLUME_CONTROL is defined ensuring
that all PCM is volume controlled and level changes are low in latency.
Supports -73 to +6 dB using a 15-bit factor so that no large-integer
math is needed.
Low-level hardware drivers do not have to implement it themselves but
parameters can be changed (currently defined in pcm-internal.h) to work
best with a particular SoC or to provide different volume ranges.
Volume and prescale calls should be made in the codec driver. It should
appear as a normal hardware interface. PCM volume calls expect .1 dB
units.
Change-Id: Idf6316a64ef4fb8abcede10707e1e6c6d01d57db
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/423
Reviewed-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Tested-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
As per title this patch aims at splitting common target
code and specific target code in a better way to
support future ports within the same environment
(e.g. Samsung YP-R1 where the Linux and the SoC
are the same, with differences in hardware devices
handling)
Change-Id: I67b4918c46403b184d3d8f42ab5aae7d01037fd0
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/409
Reviewed-by: Thomas Martitz <kugel@rockbox.org>
Tested-by: Thomas Martitz <kugel@rockbox.org>
CPU frequency scaling is basically useless without scaling the
memory frequency. On the i.MX233, the EMI (external memory
interface) and DRAM blocks are responsable for the DDR settings.
This commits implements emi frequency scaling. Only some settings
are implemented and the timings values only apply to mDDR
(extracted from Sigmatel linux port) and have been checked to
work on the Fuze+ and Zen X-Fi2/3. This feature is still disabled
by default but I expected some battery life savings by boosting
higher to 454MHz and unboosting lower to 64MHz.
Note that changing the emi frequency is particularly tricky and
to avoid writing it entirely in assembly we rely on the compiler
to not use the stack except in the prolog and epilog (because
it's in dram which is disabled when doing the change) and to put
constant pools in iram which should always be true if the
compiler isn't completely dumb and since the code itself is put
in iram. If this proves to be insufficient, one can always switch
the stack to the irq stack since interrupts are disabled during
the change.
Change-Id: If6ef5357f7ff091130ca1063e48536c6028f23ba
Merge sd and mmc drivers into a single sdmmc driver. This allows
some factoring of the code and simplify bug fixing. Also fix the
dma/cache related issue by doing all transfers via a correctly
aligned buffer. The current code is not smart enough to take
advantage of large user buffers currently but at least it is safe!
Change-Id: Ib0fd16dc7d52ef7bfe99fd586e03ecf08691edcd
Logs information, errors, etc to disk using the register_storage_idle_func
mechanism to write to the disk when available. Currently, this is disabled
in normal builds, but can be enabled by adding ROCKBOX_HAS_LOGDISKF to the
config file. By default, it uses a 2KB buffer and drops text if the buffer
overflows.
The system includes a simple warning level mechanism that can be used to by
default exclude non-serious errors from logging on release builds.
Change-Id: I0a3d186a93625c7c93dae37b993a0d37e5a3a925
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/288
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Gordon <rockbox@jdgordon.info>
Tested-by: Michael Giacomelli <mgiacomelli@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Giacomelli <mgiacomelli@gmail.com>
Basically it uses the default SI4700 radio chip driver, the only thing that's different is the I2C access,
written specifically to interact with my kernel module.
Next things to add are:
- RDS support!
Change-Id: I0ed125641e00f93124d7a34f90dd508e7f1db5a4
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Miori <memorys60@gmail.com>
Refactor native/hosted implementation seperation while at it
(no wrappers starting with _ anymore).
Change-Id: If68ae89700443bb3be483c1cace3d6739409560a
The freescale firmware partitions has a lots of quirks that
need to be dealt with, so do it the proper way.
Change-Id: I8a5bd3fb462a4df143bc6c931057f3ffedd4b3d3