This adds an adapted version of the adler32 algorithm from tinf/zlib
which will be necessary to support ZLIB deflate streams in the future.
Change-Id: Ie60e15acb288acf56a2d44e3d3e912e1b3eb2216
The funny thing is that the memset() for the field in question was
redundant, as the overall inquiry structure was memset(0) already.
Change-Id: I8bec0c93c9317823ff39cf7133535e3bf58fb987
What works:
- LCD: 16-bit RGB565
- all buttons, including scrollwheel
- SD Card
- Battery level and charging/not charging status
- USB
- audio
- sample rate switching
- HP / LO detect, with "safe" fixed LO volume -
LO volume will only be put to user-defined max volume
if headphones are not present.
- rtc
- Plugins build, tried a couple and they seem OK
- Bootloader, installable to nand via usbboot
What doesn't work:
- Dual Boot
- power on/off has intermittent, low volume audio click
(sometimes it's completely silent, sometimes there's
a click)
- Audio uses 16-bit volume scaling, so clicking/popping
is pretty bad at lower volumes - need 32 bit volume
scaling, 24 bit I2S data
- USB HID keys not yet defined
- no jztool support
Unknowns:
- Stereo Switch pins: Direction select, AC_DC
(probably not even hooked up)
- What is the actual purpose of the Stereo Swtich?
- How does the bluetooth module connect?
"Someday" stuff:
- get LCD working at higher bit depth
- Bluetooth
Change-Id: I70dda8fc092c6e3f4352f2245e4164193f803c33
This relies on a macro, CRC32R_FAST, to select which version to
compile with. In tests the fast version is 2x faster at the expense
of requiring 960 more bytes for the lookup table. For now the default
is the space optimized version but in the future I would like to enable
this for ports where we can afford the extra storage and/or memory
requirements.
Change-Id: I25397dadedc3187bb02b2444f8b8ded77c2509b6
I'm not happy with the proliferation of filter-roll-off options
but I don't have a less ugly solution.
Change-Id: I740fca006fa0c3443a467acfea55b6574d48346b
- Audio playback works
- Touchscreen and buttons work
- Bootloader works and is capable of dual boot
- Plugins are working
- Cabbiev2 theme has been ported
- Stable for general usage
Thanks to Marc Aarts for porting Cabbiev2 and plugin bitmaps.
There's a few minor known issues:
- Bootloader must be installed manually using 'usbboot' as there is
no support in jztool yet.
- Keymaps may be lacking, need further testing and feedback.
- Some plugins may not be fully adapted to the screen size and could
benefit from further tweaking.
- LCD shows abnormal effects under some circumstances: for example,
after viewing a mostly black screen an afterimage appears briefly
when going back to a brightly-lit screen. Sudden power-off without
proper shutdown of the backlight causes a "dissolving" effect.
- CW2015 battery reporting driver is buggy, and disabled for now.
Battery reporting is currently voltage-based using the AXP192.
Change-Id: I635e83f02a880192c5a82cb0861ad3a61c137c3a
Debounce logic now handles both removal and insertion and verifies
the detection is stable for 100ms before taking any action.
This solves the bootloader "file not found" issue on the Shanling Q1.
It seems a false removal event was generated, causing the filesystem
to be automatically unmounted. Probably this is due to some transient
noise at boot. Delays didn't solve the problem, probably because the
bogus hotplug event was queued, and normal mdelay() would simply delay
event delivery.
Change-Id: I8b03fb3550309f5a7ab4be0be7465a3dab2d3450
This relies on a macro, CRC32_FAST, to select which version to compile
with. In tests the fast version is 2x faster at the expense of requiring
960 more bytes for the lookup table. For now the default is the speed
optimized version but in the future I would like to enable this for ports
where we can afford the extra storage and/or memory requirements.
Change-Id: I8c7fde6b6ff130f0fdc7c8e472825e25bcdba022
This adds code sufficient to extract files to available storage given a
suitable root directory to extract to. It works on an already open zip
handle and also supports chain-loading a secondary callback in the event
that integration into the process is desired.
Change-Id: Id200d8f20d84a0cbd22906470de8bbd21d4525ef
Atmel AT88SC6416C CryptoMemory is almost I2C compatible. The device
is connected to bitbanged I2C bus shared with compliant I2C devices.
Change-Id: Iec54702db1bdfb93c01291eef18ec60391c63b16
Do not introduce any change for M:Robe 500 as it uses the two LCD frames
in non-obvious way.
Sansa Connect and Creative ZVM use only single front framebuffer.
Place TTB at DRAM end to minimize memory loss due to alignment.
Reserve as little as possible memory for the LCD frames.
On Sansa Connect this change extends audio buffer by 858 KiB.
Change-Id: I21bdeec4cfba86d71803a39acd651a87e73767e6
This eliminates the dependence on a special struct since we were only
using the modtime anyway. But it no longer fits any known standard APIs
so I have converted it to our own extension instead. This can still be
adapted to existing hosted APIs if the need arises.
Change-Id: Ic8800698ddfd3a1a48b7cf921c0d0f865302d034
This streamlines the boot code a bit and reduces target specific
boilerplate. The clock init hack used by the bootloader has been
"standardized" and works for the main Rockbox binary now, so you
can boot rockbox.bin over USB without special hacks.
Change-Id: I7c1fac37df5a45873583ce6818eaedb9f71a782b
This emulates the traditional utime function from UNIX clones to allow
for manual updates of the modification timestamp on files and directories.
This should only prove useful for non-native targets as those usually
have a libc version of utime.
Change-Id: Iea8a1d328e78b92c400d3354ee80689c7cf53af8
This does the opposite of dostime_mktime, converting time_t back to
the two dos date time values. We use gmtime_r for native because that
is what is available and acts the same as localtime_r on other platforms
with a regular libc available.
Change-Id: If79469d0aae2d7c5dcdd905fbf04963669aa1138
Reducing number of fake RX buffers saves a bit more than 127 KiB RAM.
Fix compilation with CPPI logging enabled.
Change-Id: If1ad3a6fc251e284caaac78c2406a58f3d6547bb
AVR interrupt signal can remain active if the state has changed during
state read. In such case, there won't be intterupt and the interface
would appear unresponsive until AVR thread received event (e.g. USB
connection/disconnect). Solve the issue by not waiting for event if AVR
interrupt signal is active prior to event wait.
Change-Id: I86e388c7cd6da76e3abe7bf7114940f331e4c308
Make it possible for target to provide voltage, percentage and time to
empty values. The voltage measurement is nice to have in debug menu even
if the actions are taken only based on percentage. Perform battery level
estimation based on voltage only if percentage is not available.
Use time to empty based on actual power consumption. This makes the
estimated runtime displayed in Rockbox Info to react to backlight
setting. The bq27000 updates time to empty estimate every 5.12 seconds
so it is possible to see the estimate with backlight off on the screen
if user enters Rockbox Info, activates hold switch, waits 11 seconds and
releases the hold switch.
Change-Id: Iafe3fa0fb334e3428e3a0ad05b2c020d208dc934
This provides rudimentary support for parsing the contents of a ZIP
file. For now this just supports uncompressed file entries but DEFLATE
support is planned. This also only implements a low level public API
so more work will be needed to make it usable by application code.
Change-Id: Ia68b3078e5276666a0e5023f4bc7a9f94272738a
Prevent startup screen flash by properly using AVR LCM functions. Power
off LCD when not needed to improve battery runtime.
Change-Id: I76e3c5c0208774f189fbc6f7d7b3c9e22c062285
Queue power off requests because power_off() can be called within tick
context that must not acquire mutex.
Change-Id: I6f1a8f81d15518876cd03556118fc9eb37b8175f
Import non-free firmware image from linux-firmware package.
Firmware loading works but is disabled at compile time because just
loading firmware without configuring device results in higher power
consumption without any benefit to end user.
Change-Id: I8fd252c49385ede1ea4e0f9b1e29adeb331ab8ae
This moves the time conversion function to timefuncs since it has
uses on ports that don't use the FAT driver. This function has no
dependency on the FAT driver as it is so this should not cause any
issues. To reflect this separation the function was renamed to
dostime_mktime since it is really for DOS timestamps. The places
where it was used have also been updated.
Change-Id: Id98b1448d5c6fcda286846e1d2c736db682bfb52
This new design saves on binary size and stack usage. The API is
also block- and page-based, requiring awareness of the chip layout
to use properly. Out-of-band areas are also exposed for reading
and writing.
The byte-oriented routines are kept for compatibility with the
existing installer and SPL.
Change-Id: Iaacc694d2f651ab74d45330e0434ee778a0d91bc
Waiting 10 us between selecting slave and transmitting data on SPI
resolves spurious startup glitches.
Cache last read monotime value as it can differ from the first one.
Change-Id: Ia6ac5696f6ee2bc3c6a8be27e33aaddd9ff4ce2a
Read monotime twice in a row and only accept the value if it matches or
the two reads are 1 second apart.
Change-Id: Ibd289103a20404dd1b2bbd131fdfa8905852c788
AVR requires bigger delays between retries. Read state instead of
version for synchronization purposes as it shifts more bytes.
Change-Id: Ib7fa980496d3bc7744a086b45e1865861ef58b88
If the commands repeatedly fail it is likely that the AVR is not
programmed. In such case simply continue normal operation. This is
especially important in bootloader as it makes it possible to load new
rockbox build using bootloader USB mode. Otherwise, the only recovery
option would be to use I2C serial.
Change-Id: I4b0999833e9a906ec6353bdfdd5b68211f07ac81
Use 32-bit monotime AVR counter for time tracking. Set the time by
adding fixed offset to the counter value. Store the offset in rockbox
directory to make it persistent between reboots.
Do not implement alarm functionality as wakeup is only possible from
sleep and not from complete power off.
Change-Id: I615c7eb4df8ab0619dcbfcff107bc7051a15aace
Keep Slave Select active during command transmission. This relaxes
timing requirements on the AVR side.
Change-Id: Ia1a6cf45aba3c11f6aeaa7441c6793807ca827f0
Add defines for all commands handled by AVR, including the unknown
opcodes (0xC5, 0xD3, 0xD4, 0xD5, 0xD6).
Properly synchronize with AVR and keep repeating command until it looks
like AVR has accepted it.
Change-Id: I3d42e973f135e33092c71c9887421906a900ab58
This uses an equivalent algorithm but with a different initial value
than we normally use (all bits off vs all bits on). Use the new crc_32r
to replace the original MI4 crc32 implementation.
This frees up some extra space on mi4 targets which gives us more
room on a few very space constrained targets (sansa c200/e200, etc).
Change-Id: Iaaac3ae353b30566156b1404cbf31ca32926203d
This uses the reverse of the polynomial used by the current crc_32
function. The code for this was derived from the implementation used
by tinf. This version is space optimized and should be a good way to
reduce code duplication in other parts of rockbox that use the same
crc32 algorithm. This is mainly of use in areas where DEFLATE is in
use.
Change-Id: I918da5b4ea4dc441c0e7e6b5007abcc2da463bcb
Consider battery level down to 0 as safe as OF continues to operate
normally even when at level 0.
Change-Id: Ie3889e5662b9fa6588e20ad02d8953f29e28800c
Needed for g#3415, and if the comment is to be believed, this needed
updating for recent MIPS targets anyway.
Just blanket enable everything for all targets with >= 8 MiB of RAM.
The only targets with less than this are the Sansa Clip, c200v2, and
m200v4, which all have 2 MB of RAM.
The added code size is around 4 KiB to 7 KiB, depending on the target.
Change-Id: I5773482a13543dabb1f93f713a21f1382a9c5a22
Wait on semaphore until DMA finishes instead of busy waiting. This
allows the CPU to be used by other tasks during transfers.
Increase peripheral clock frequency, divide AHB by 2 instead of 3.
Function clock frequency is AHB divided by MMC divider + 1.
Change-Id: Ic890634da7e3541962ea3501eae8fa2ca2db606a
- Missing mutex unlock in nand_open()
- SET_FEATURE command incorrectly issued as a read operation
- Inverted protection bits, not sure how that happened...
- Block erase skipped ahead by a wrong amount, causing erases
spanning multiple blocks to erase the wrong blocks
This code was buggy as hell... it's in need of a major overhaul.
It's not very flexible or reliable, and access to the flash is
useful during development of a new port, even if not useful once
the port is complete.
Change-Id: Ib85ee7453beab9657e3d19798ebaa09174b3649e
On devices that can assign interrupt IN, bulk IN and bulk OUT endpoints
this change results in the serial interface working out of the box on
Linux and Windows. On Linux it is registered as ttyACM device and on
Windows it is assigned a COM port number.
On devices that cannot assign the interrupt IN this change won't have
any effect.
Implement minimum required interface control requests. Respond with
whatever line coding was set to make terminal programs happy.
Change-Id: Id7d3899d8546e45d7cb4ecc3fe464908cb59e810
Disabling double buffering results in expected CPPI TX behaviour. With
the double buffering enabled, sending single ZLP resulted in two ZLPs
being available. The two ZLPs is problematic because this causes Windows
to reset USB device after failed SCSI command.
The problematic sequence on Windows 10 was as follows:
* Host sends SCSI Mode Sense(6) Informational Exceptions Control(0x1C)
* Device sends ZLP
* Device sends command failed response
With endpoint double buffering enabled the ZLP was read twice by host.
As host was expecting command response on the second read (and got ZLP
instead), host attempts recovery by resetting USB device and retrying.
Change-Id: I64e95998f429ffb7b14143d956b1f29d20218d14
Allows for the i2c boilerplate to be shared between the M3K and
Shanling Q1 ports. M3K-specific quirks remain in button-fiiom3k.
Change-Id: I8879b603cefc16416bb200f1c484ca916d935c6a
Acknowledge SYS_USB_CONNECTED in all queues so USB task can gain
exclusive access to the storage.
Reduce CPPI requeue timeout to speed up disk access.
Change-Id: I322aae4cac679696bb8186ccacf838a18f0715e9
Correctly set endpoint maximum packet size so host will not consider
end of transfer after receiving first packet when transfer is larger
than 64 bytes (at High Speed the endpoint max packet size was set to
64 but according to descriptor it is 512).
Split DMA transfers up to CPPI_MAX_FRAG so we get single interrupt
after each call to tnetv_cppi_send().
Change-Id: I385b66bc5d71975a4e3e9167efac0b1334bd3ffc
Return complete R2 response to caller. Due to incorrect bitfield
handling only bits [127-96] were ever returned to caller.
Change-Id: I83726af35fb24a8051fcca8b8d019ad89d17500e
I had hoped this would fix FS#13297, but no luck. Might as well
do this change anyway, because it's the "right" thing to do.
Change-Id: I55819c881d2141dd565e1c1f21460578c9114ff6
Avoids having to #define the names of GPIO pin interrupt handlers,
as they can now be set at runtime instead.
Change-Id: Ib5da1bdb475ff7b64280fe7cdd00adab63389152
The GPIO API was pretty clunky and pin settings were decentralized,
making it hard to see what was happening and making GPIO stuff look
like a mess, frankly.
Instead of passing clunky (port, pin) pairs everywhere, GPIOs are now
identified with a single int. The extra overhead should be minimal as
GPIO configuration is generally not on a performance-critical path.
Pin assignments are now mostly consolidated in gpio-target.h and put
in various tables so gpio_init() can assign most pins at boot time.
Most drivers no longer need to touch GPIOs and basic pin I/O stuff
can happen without config since pins are put into the right state.
IRQ pins still need to be configured manually before use.
Change-Id: Ic5326284b0b2a2f613e9e76a41cb50e24af3aa47
Port USB driver from Sansa Connect Linux kernel sources. The device
successfully enumerates and responds to SCSI commands but actual disk
access does not work. The SCSI response sent to host mentions that both
internal storage and microsd card are not present.
Change-Id: Ic6c07da12382c15c0b069f23a75f7df9765b7525
Modify count, buffer and start address only after successful transfer.
This makes the retry operation to use the same address and buffer as the
just failed transfer.
Change-Id: I4f49bbdc861d634e33ea5e939a9693474411d24d
- Use unsigned bitfields in 'lcd_tgt_config'
- Set DTIMES when using an 8-bit bus width
- Allow using DMA big-endian mode
- Provide an #ifdef to avoid stopping DMA in the middle of a frame
- Correctly #ifdef LCD sleep code when target does not implement it
Change-Id: I327c6b05223638b876d5ab62cb6e48f82e6d5fa5
- Change busy loop to wait on the timer flag instead of hoping to
catch the timer at exactly the right moment... unsurprisingly,
that did not work well with higher frequency PWM outputs.
- Put GPIO data into a dedicated const array.
Change-Id: I2a920ed265c192da197a18c7242f3205d11636d3
The old name was a bit misleading. AXP173 is sort of the lowest common
denominator of a series of related chips. The M3K uses an AXP192 which
has a few extra features vs. the AXP173.
New voltage regulator stuff was added for the sake of the Shanling Q1
native port (that player also uses an AXP192).
Change-Id: Id0c162c23094bb03d13fae2d6c332e3047968d6e
- Drop obsolete NAND patch script (it's simpler to use 'dd' directly)
- Remove an outdated comment
- Fix missing 'void' in a function definition
- Reset the poweroff timer when we poke the backlight
Change-Id: I752624386f30ac95f41a731d2b6be837e12275a9
Some audiohw API calls are shared between playback and recording,
eg. frequency settings. Implementing these in the DAC driver won't
work for the M3K, as it uses a separate codec for microphone input.
Change-Id: Ieb0a267f8a81b9e2bbf0bbca951c5778f8dcd203
I think this covers everything now, although some fields are missing
enum values. Those can be added in if and when they are needed.
Change-Id: Ib1a94ba9c9a5949b6a038f8c1a49786823fae58f
- Add support for skip and seek while the player is locked.
(Thanks to @bahus for the suggestion)
- Fix touch zones because the down button zone ended up being
a lot smaller than expected due to the touchpad's wonkiness.
Also added a visual display of the touchpad to its debug menu.
- Fixes the pictureflow keymap because it was mostly unusable.
Change-Id: Ic0da4f8df3613ff7828ce1cb940ed9e77ada3281
Clearing recoverzap parameter exists the Recovery Mode. This makes it
possible to run Rockbox on Sansa Connect without relying on original
Linux firmware.
Enable write-through cache on flash memory as write-back complicates
handling without any real benefits. The flash memory accepts commands
as series of writes at predefined addresses, so it is important that
the cache does not interfere with the writes.
Change-Id: I219f962f20953d84df43012cf16bbb16d673add8
Motivation: turns out the DMA in the M3K's MSC controller is buggy,
and can't handle unaligned addresses properly despite the HW docs
claiming otherwise.
Extending the FAT driver bounce buffering code is the easiest way
to work around the problem (but probably not the most efficient).
Change-Id: I1b59b0eb4bbc881d317ff10c64ecadb1f9041236
Also bump max battery capacity to 7300mAh, to accomodate
oversized aftermarket units that require case mods.
Change-Id: I743e550b0c0843ab17529e70b5d592ea0e9a79d8
- Move WPS Stop to Power (Hold)
- Add WPS Hotkey to Wheel scroll Fwd/Back
- Add WPS Quickscreen to Play (Hold)
- Add Tree Hotkey to Play (Hold)
Change-Id: Id74622138353521f736c0de1009a354307b108eb
SPL and UCL-compressed bootloader are now packed into one output,
bootloader.m3k, eliminating the separate SPL build phase.
The Rockbox bootloader now has a recovery menu, accessible by
holding VOL+ when booting, that lets you back up, restore, and
update the bootloader from the device.
Change-Id: I642c6e5fb83587a013ab2fbfd1adab439561ced2
- Removed unnecessary layers of generic code
- Software ECC is gone since we don't need it now (and maybe not ever)
- Removed bounce buffering, so callers must now align buffers
Change-Id: I33fbac9d9d12a4657980b8618c7d62bfa91e2ea0
'Bugfix' mono_bitmap_part reads ahead in the buffer,
if the height is <= char bit pixels other memory gets read
found with [Address Sanitizer]
also g#3332 since this is clearly a problem across the code
instead place the check for height < 8 in the lcd_mono_bitmap_part function
Change-Id: I917cbbd568fd5474b76a98c8919467e2538e0f0c
This overwrote the first 2 instructions of crt0 in the bootloader!
I'm really not sure how this *didn't* cause a fatal exception.
This address isn't special as far as I know, so just move it to the
TCSM by making it a static variable.
Change-Id: I58e1486804aeb2b68325e8de2aa1874c97abef19
The abiflags data is only used to communicate ABI information to a
program loader -- you can see what info is stored with readelf -A.
Dropping it shaves 24 bytes off of every binary (including plugins).
Change-Id: Iae78eeffe5c840ff67717707fb94821d24aac8ec
It never worked, and hasn't compiled in something like a decade, Given
the HW capabilities (limited onboard flash, no expandability) there's
really no point in trying to fix/complete it.
Change-Id: I7d175089840396f8891645bd10010d730dd5bfdc
They were never finished, never saw any release ever, and haven't
compiled for the better part of a decade. Given their HW capabilities [1],
they are not worth trying to fix.
[1] 1-2MB RAM, ~256MB onboard flash, no expandability
Change-Id: I7b2a5806d687114c22156bb0458d4a10a9734190
There's absolutely no way for gpio_config() to get called from two
different threads due to the co-operative threading model, and it
is unsafe to call from IRQ context no matter what we do.
Change-Id: I58f7d1f68c7a414610bb020e26b774cb1015a3b0
Using a macro to put each function in its own .icode-based section
allows us to put the functions in IRAM _and_ have linker GC. This
removes a troublesome #ifdef BOOTLOADER_SPL on the X1000 target.
Change-Id: Ia7b59778f5c36b7970dee4280547e434a1f4fc5a
After continued reports of corruption using iFlash adapters, I went
digging for more clues, and this combination of changes seemed to
solve data corruption with the iFlash adapters on the ipod video:
1) Instead of SLEEP, use STANDBY_IMMEDIATE when we detect drive
as an SSD or CFA-compliant device. The latter is technically higher
power than the former, but what this means in practice is unclear.
2) Don't check ATA powermanagement flag prior to issuing powermgmt
commands. This reverts the previous "workaround" for the FC1307A --
and PM is a mandatory part of the ATA spec for any CFA device.
3) Prior to issuing SLEEP/STANDBY_IMMEDIATE, issue FLUSH CACHE. The
ATA spec says this is redundant for the latter, but says nothing
about the former. Either way it is always safe to call first.
4) Delete all other FC1307A_WORKAROUND code related to powermgmt flags.
Change-Id: I492d06664c097d9bbd5cccfb9f5b516da165b1ee
Although data transfer is reliable with DMA, it seems to cause hangs
and lockups during the early stages of connection and it's not clear
what the cause might be.
Change-Id: I9a83089c31d28309f0534dcdedf3c8c8348e6e3d
This only required a minor patch to the usb-designware driver due
to DMA requiring physical addresses -- on the X1000, these differ
from virtual addresses so we have to do the usual conversion.
Both the mass storage and HID drivers work, but there are a few
issues so this can't be considered 100% stable yet.
- Mass storage might not be detected properly on insertion,
and USB has to be replugged before it shows up
- HID driver may occasionally panic or hang the machine
Change-Id: Ia3ce7591d5928ec7cbca7953abfef01bdbd873ef
- Added register names to reduce usage of magic numbers
- Added function to control max charging current, needed for USB
- Corrected comment about axp173, since FiiO M3K has an axp192
Change-Id: I6604ce8d44e5a2ee84061cf042d17ccc4734ac57
After conducting some simplistic tests, I found that the power usage
did not appear to be affected by the CPU frequency.
I tested by playing back a 44.1 KHz FLAC file on single track repeat,
and measured current with the AXP173's battery discharge current ADC.
The button and LCD backlights were set to always on. Headphones were
unplugged and the volume was muted to eliminate any influence from
the headphone amp.
On average the current usage was between 78-81 mA at 1008 MHz, 252 MHz,
and 112 MHz. If anything, 1008 MHz drew _less_ current than the lower
frequencies, by about 1-3 mA.
A possible explanation for this, assuming it's not just a bias of the
test, is that the CPU idle state saves so much power that it's better
to maximize the real time that the CPU spends idling. More systematic
testing is needed to confirm this.
Change-Id: I527473e8c4c12bc1e94f8d4e849fecc108022abe
There's no point including this in normal builds: the stats are not
used for anything, they are not really of interest to anyone except
developers, and add a small overhead to the kernel tick.
Change-Id: I1b4f67cc62d11d634a8cec279dca513dd10eea96
Initializing the clocks in the SPL brings Rockbox in line with
how the FiiO M3K's original SPL works. It's likely other X1000
devices do this too.
There was a logic error in the previous setup: the code falsely
assumed that DDR memory would always be running from MPLL, but
it would be switched to APLL by the bootloader. Rockbox would
then try to re-init APLL, albeit with the same parameters. Maybe
this was the cause of the boot hang on some units.
Change-Id: I64064585e491bbdf1e95fe9428c91a9314f2a917
What we really want is to avoid any interrupts being generated
before the drivers which handle them are properly initialized.
Intead of trashing all GPIOs, search for the problem pins and
fix them, leaving the others alone.
This fixes the M3K's button light flickering on boot and should
stop the M3K from entering a potentially confusing "dead" state
where all the lights are off but the CPU is still on.
Change-Id: I13a6da0f0950190396bff5d6e8c343c668e8fea1
SPL is now designed so core X1000 code is in control of the boot,
under the reasonable assumption that the device boots from flash.
It should not be too hard to adapt to other X1000 ports.
The biggest functional change is that the SPL can now read/write
the flash, under the control of a host computer. The SPL relies
on the boot ROM for USB communication, so the host has to execute
the SPL multiple times following a protocol.
Change-Id: I3ffaa00e4bf191e043c9df0e2e64d15193ff42c9
'Bugfix' mono_bitmap_part reads ahead in the buffer,
if the height is <= char bit pixels other memory gets read
Change-Id: I6e0d7a9017e1f9c371ffbd56af149ac20cb82341
Tested on eros q, everything measured from line out,
open circuit.
- volume steps were approximately double the dB they
were labelled as, so "-2 dB" would result in a change
of about -4 dB from maximum (0, +6.2dBV)
- maximum volume defining the line out volume only
changed every 10 values, and then was not close
to correct- "-10 dB" resulted in -2.5 dB from maximum
This gets the volume dB approximately correct, and
maximum volume correctly sets the line out volume.
I was unable to get odd values in the max volume
to work, so set the step size to 2 instead of one.
For "consumer level" (-10dBV), set to -16.
For "Pro level" (+4dBu -> ~1.8dBV), set to -4.
Change-Id: I898b85d768153579a893b23551019af88f865d21
It was just being used as a proxy "yeah, we called hw_init()" so
just use a flag for that directly.
affects rocker, erosq, xduoo x3ii/x20, and fiiom3klinux
Change-Id: I14bd9f8d91f1d6cc8de0982a7426e2a103c6bfce
Detection at startup is proving to be unreliable. Even if card is not
present at startup, upon insertion it will sort itself out properly.
Change-Id: I9ee90b724c90c530a39264f698c200a48aa72b1d
Including direct use of the external SD card mount
Known issue: If SD card is inserted at startup, it must be
ejected and reinserted to be registered.
Change-Id: I5f420160bda32135cbb088c1e8b04b6e3a73018e
(Don't include rbpaths.h in settings.h, or string-extra.h in rbpaths.h)
Build-tested on rocker, erosq, mini2g, nano2g,
xduoox3, clipzip, dx50, and uisim
Change-Id: If32e9c9910f5c8247a655cb64522b84d6d7ccbb5
The X3's line out is a bit hot, at ~4.3Vpp, so allow it to be backed off.
(On my X3, backing it off to -6dB brings Vpp down to ~3.4V)
Change-Id: Iea38ef1c6a1b183d0f8fb4eaf2bf9ed6b350a532
There is already a sound_numdecimals() function, according to Git
it's been around since 2005. No need to add another one :).
This reverts commit 92a0ab8789.
Change-Id: I533ebf1763dd7a27346842982493d4550f05ad7c
It turns out #include "settings.h" pulls in rbpaths.h which ends up
remapping open() to the path-mangling rockbox open().
By defining RB_FILESYSTEM_OS we prevent the remap. My mistake for not
testing this before committing!
Change-Id: I2978eb7b413693c4cb887b7ac7b2457780db7d25
With a full-scale 440Hz tone, the line out voltage
measured approx. 5.8Vpp at the 0 setting. WAY too hot!
(9 dBV, in fact)
For 0.894Vpp (-10 dBV - consumer devices), -18 appears to be
about right for line level signals, but for "pro" equipment
a different level may be desired.
Therefore, the user to cap the line out level by re-using the global
volume limit setting.
Change-Id: I0d1d6482ea95537e9a2d00884eaee2713771c614
Inline assembly in RoLO and the FiiO M3K bootloader used 'jr' to
jump to a newly loaded Rockbox binary, but incorrectly left the
branch delay slot open. That gives GCC an opening to place illegal
instrutions, etc, which might cause an unhandled exception.
Change-Id: Ia7a561fe530e94a41189d25f18a767c448177960
- Proper error codes are now returned from all functions. These codes will
be used by a host-side flash tool for error reporting.
- nand_erase_block() was replaced by nand_erase_bytes(). The caller can't
know how big an eraseblock is with the current API, so next best thing
is to verify the correct alignment inside the call and reject the erase
if it isn't properly aligned.
- Fixed typo in nandcmd_block_erase() which would cause an SFC error to be
interpreted as success. Yikes.
Change-Id: Id4ac9b44fa7fc2fcb81ff19ba730df78457c0383
Ensure the default setting reflects what the service manual says the
official battery capacity is. Change the ranges to reflect what
replacement batteries are actually available.
This range is actually much shorter in reality due to these units
requiring the rarer 3 pin battery type that uses a thermistor. As such
there's only one real replacement battery for each.
So the HDD1630 caps out around 700 mah while the HDD6330 caps out around
680 mah.
Change-Id: I2dbbba83ad2cd6e1d84e3481c4af84a06c45e16b
headphone ADC thread stack was slightly too small. Bump it up a bit.
(it was _perfectly_ sized for the prior older toolchain+optimization flags...)
Change-Id: I2ca67c2b85c54f879892a31e281d7696f893389c
Use of IF_COP_CORE was mistakenly introduced as part of 89acde6af2,
effectively short-circuiting multiple tests resulting in the code
paths always being executed, on both cores.
Use the correct macro, so per-CPU paths are handled properly.
Change-Id: Id346cf759fc1b06b7d56694d7af1f469caf785a4
This appears to finally fix the issue
turns out the status register we were writing was only for the CPU
COP cache flush wiped out the CPU cache
--
Added some defines to cut down on the magic numbers
Added some comments explaining such
Set the address to full 20 bit address
0x1FFFFF which is then left shifted 11 internally -- somewhere around 4GB?
Link explains the cache status bits
https://daniel.haxx.se/sansa/memory_controller.txt
Change-Id: I57b7187c2f71a5b54ce145bf3a21ed492a8993cb
Enable its use in the jz47xx MIPS targets.
(accidently committed g#3249 before making these changes)
Change-Id: I1791946f632901f0c7a94b04b009671aa0d71717