// -*- mode: c++; c-basic-offset: 2; indent-tabs-mode: nil; -*- // Copyright (C) 2013 Henner Zeller // // This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify // it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by // the Free Software Foundation version 2. // // This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, // but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of // MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the // GNU General Public License for more details. // // You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License // along with this program. If not, see #define __STDC_FORMAT_MACROS #include #include "gpio.h" #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include /* * nanosleep() takes longer than requested because of OS jitter. * In about 99.9% of the cases, this is <= 25 microcseconds on * the Raspberry Pi (empirically determined with a Raspbian kernel), so * we substract this value whenever we do nanosleep(); the remaining time * we then busy wait to get a good accurate result. * * You can measure the overhead using DEBUG_SLEEP_JITTER below. * * Note: A higher value here will result in more CPU use because of more busy * waiting inching towards the real value (for all the cases that nanosleep() * actually was better than this overhead). * * This might be interesting to tweak in particular if you have a realtime * kernel with different characteristics. */ #define EMPIRICAL_NANOSLEEP_OVERHEAD_US 12 /* * In case of non-hardware pulse generation, use nanosleep if we want to wait * longer than these given microseconds beyond the general overhead. * Below that, just use busy wait. */ #define MINIMUM_NANOSLEEP_TIME_US 5 /* In order to determine useful values for above, set this to 1 and use the * hardware pin-pulser. * It will output a histogram atexit() of how much how often we were over * the requested time. * (The full histogram will be shifted by the EMPIRICAL_NANOSLEEP_OVERHEAD_US * value above. To get a full histogram of OS overhead, set it to 0 first). */ #define DEBUG_SLEEP_JITTER 0 // Raspberry 1 and 2 have different base addresses for the periphery #define BCM2708_PERI_BASE 0x20000000 #define BCM2709_PERI_BASE 0x3F000000 #define BCM2711_PERI_BASE 0xFE000000 #define GPIO_REGISTER_OFFSET 0x200000 #define COUNTER_1Mhz_REGISTER_OFFSET 0x3000 #define GPIO_PWM_BASE_OFFSET (GPIO_REGISTER_OFFSET + 0xC000) #define GPIO_CLK_BASE_OFFSET 0x101000 #define REGISTER_BLOCK_SIZE (4*1024) #define PWM_CTL (0x00 / 4) #define PWM_STA (0x04 / 4) #define PWM_RNG1 (0x10 / 4) #define PWM_FIFO (0x18 / 4) #define PWM_CTL_CLRF1 (1<<6) // CH1 Clear Fifo (1 Clears FIFO 0 has no effect) #define PWM_CTL_USEF1 (1<<5) // CH1 Use Fifo (0=data reg transmit 1=Fifo used for transmission) #define PWM_CTL_POLA1 (1<<4) // CH1 Polarity (0=(0=low 1=high) 1=(1=low 0=high) #define PWM_CTL_SBIT1 (1<<3) // CH1 Silence Bit (state of output when 0 transmission takes place) #define PWM_CTL_MODE1 (1<<1) // CH1 Mode (0=pwm 1=serialiser mode) #define PWM_CTL_PWEN1 (1<<0) // CH1 Enable (0=disable 1=enable) #define PWM_STA_EMPT1 (1<<1) #define PWM_STA_FULL1 (1<<0) #define CLK_PASSWD (0x5A<<24) #define CLK_CTL_MASH(x)((x)<<9) #define CLK_CTL_BUSY (1 <<7) #define CLK_CTL_KILL (1 <<5) #define CLK_CTL_ENAB (1 <<4) #define CLK_CTL_SRC(x) ((x)<<0) #define CLK_CTL_SRC_PLLD 6 /* 500.0 MHz */ #define CLK_DIV_DIVI(x) ((x)<<12) #define CLK_DIV_DIVF(x) ((x)<< 0) #define CLK_PWMCTL 40 #define CLK_PWMDIV 41 // We want to have the last word in the fifo free #define MAX_PWM_BIT_USE 224 #define PWM_BASE_TIME_NS 2 // GPIO setup macros. Always use INP_GPIO(x) before using OUT_GPIO(x). #define INP_GPIO(g) *(s_GPIO_registers+((g)/10)) &= ~(7ull<<(((g)%10)*3)) #define OUT_GPIO(g) *(s_GPIO_registers+((g)/10)) |= (1ull<<(((g)%10)*3)) #define GPIO_SET *(gpio+7) // sets bits which are 1 ignores bits which are 0 #define GPIO_CLR *(gpio+10) // clears bits which are 1 ignores bits which are 0 // We're pre-mapping all the registers on first call of GPIO::Init(), // so that it is possible to drop privileges afterwards and still have these // usable. static volatile uint32_t *s_GPIO_registers = NULL; static volatile uint32_t *s_Timer1Mhz = NULL; static volatile uint32_t *s_PWM_registers = NULL; static volatile uint32_t *s_CLK_registers = NULL; namespace rgb_matrix { static bool LinuxHasModuleLoaded(const char *name) { FILE *f = fopen("/proc/modules", "r"); if (f == NULL) return false; // don't care. char buf[256]; const size_t namelen = strlen(name); bool found = false; while (fgets(buf, sizeof(buf), f) != NULL) { if (strncmp(buf, name, namelen) == 0) { found = true; break; } } fclose(f); return found; } #define GPIO_BIT(x) (1ull << x) GPIO::GPIO() : output_bits_(0), input_bits_(0), reserved_bits_(0), slowdown_(1) #ifdef ENABLE_WIDE_GPIO_COMPUTE_MODULE , uses_64_bit_(false) #endif { } gpio_bits_t GPIO::InitOutputs(gpio_bits_t outputs, bool adafruit_pwm_transition_hack_needed) { if (s_GPIO_registers == NULL) { fprintf(stderr, "Attempt to init outputs but not yet Init()-ialized.\n"); return 0; } // Hack: for the PWM mod, the user soldered together GPIO 18 (new OE) // with GPIO 4 (old OE). // Since they are connected inside the HAT, want to make extra sure that, // whatever the outside system set as pinmux, the old OE is _not_ also // set as output so that these GPIO outputs don't fight each other. // // So explicitly set both of these pins as input initially, so the user // can switch between the two modes "adafruit-hat" and "adafruit-hat-pwm" // without trouble. if (adafruit_pwm_transition_hack_needed) { INP_GPIO(4); INP_GPIO(18); // Even with PWM enabled, GPIO4 still can not be used, because it is // now connected to the GPIO18 and thus must stay an input. // So reserve this bit if it is not set in outputs. reserved_bits_ = GPIO_BIT(4) & ~outputs; } outputs &= ~(output_bits_ | input_bits_ | reserved_bits_); // We don't know exactly what GPIO pins are occupied by 1-wire (can we // easily do that ?), so let's complain only about the default GPIO. if ((outputs & GPIO_BIT(4)) && LinuxHasModuleLoaded("w1_gpio")) { fprintf(stderr, "This Raspberry Pi has the one-wire protocol enabled.\n" "This will mess with the display if GPIO pins overlap.\n" "Disable 1-wire in raspi-config (Interface Options).\n\n"); } #ifdef ENABLE_WIDE_GPIO_COMPUTE_MODULE const int kMaxAvailableBit = 45; uses_64_bit_ |= (outputs >> 32) != 0; #else const int kMaxAvailableBit = 31; #endif for (int b = 0; b <= kMaxAvailableBit; ++b) { if (outputs & GPIO_BIT(b)) { INP_GPIO(b); // for writing, we first need to set as input. OUT_GPIO(b); } } output_bits_ |= outputs; return outputs; } gpio_bits_t GPIO::RequestInputs(gpio_bits_t inputs) { if (s_GPIO_registers == NULL) { fprintf(stderr, "Attempt to init inputs but not yet Init()-ialized.\n"); return 0; } inputs &= ~(output_bits_ | input_bits_ | reserved_bits_); #ifdef ENABLE_WIDE_GPIO_COMPUTE_MODULE const int kMaxAvailableBit = 45; uses_64_bit_ |= (inputs >> 32) != 0; #else const int kMaxAvailableBit = 31; #endif for (int b = 0; b <= kMaxAvailableBit; ++b) { if (inputs & GPIO_BIT(b)) { INP_GPIO(b); } } input_bits_ |= inputs; return inputs; } // We are not interested in the _exact_ model, just good enough to determine // What to do. enum RaspberryPiModel { PI_MODEL_1, PI_MODEL_2, PI_MODEL_3, PI_MODEL_4 }; static int ReadBinaryFileToBuffer(uint8_t *buffer, size_t size, const char *filename) { const int fd = open(filename, O_RDONLY); if (fd < 0) return -1; const ssize_t r = read(fd, buffer, size); // assume one read enough. close(fd); return r; } // Like ReadBinaryFileToBuffer(), but adds null-termination. static int ReadTextFileToBuffer(char *buffer, size_t size, const char *filename) { int r = ReadBinaryFileToBuffer((uint8_t *)buffer, size - 1, filename); buffer[r >= 0 ? r : 0] = '\0'; return r; } /* * Try to read the revision from /proc/cpuinfo. In case of any errors, or if * /proc/cpuinfo simply contains zero as the revision, this function returns * zero. This is ok because zero was never used as a real revision code. */ static uint32_t ReadRevisionFromProcCpuinfo() { char buffer[4096]; if (ReadTextFileToBuffer(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "/proc/cpuinfo") < 0) { fprintf(stderr, "Reading cpuinfo: Could not determine Pi model\n"); return 0; } static const char RevisionTag[] = "Revision"; const char *revision_key; if ((revision_key = strstr(buffer, RevisionTag)) == NULL) { fprintf(stderr, "non-existent Revision: Could not determine Pi model\n"); return 0; } unsigned int pi_revision; if (sscanf(index(revision_key, ':') + 1, "%x", &pi_revision) != 1) { return 0; } return pi_revision; } // Read a 32-bit big-endian number from a 4-byte buffer. static uint32_t read_be32(const uint8_t *p) { return p[0] << 24 | p[1] << 16 | p[2] << 8 | p[3]; } // Try to read the revision from the devicetree. static uint32_t ReadRevisionFromDeviceTree() { const char *const kDeviceTreeRev = "/proc/device-tree/system/linux,revision"; uint8_t buffer[4]; if (ReadBinaryFileToBuffer(buffer, sizeof(buffer), kDeviceTreeRev) != 4) { fprintf(stderr, "Failed to read revision from %s\n", kDeviceTreeRev); return 0; } return read_be32(buffer); } static RaspberryPiModel DetermineRaspberryModel() { uint32_t pi_revision = ReadRevisionFromProcCpuinfo(); if (pi_revision == 0) { pi_revision = ReadRevisionFromDeviceTree(); if (pi_revision == 0) { fprintf(stderr, "Unknown Revision: Could not determine Pi model\n"); return PI_MODEL_3; // safe guess fallback. } } // https://www.raspberrypi.com/documentation/computers/raspberry-pi.html#raspberry-pi-revision-codes const unsigned pi_type = (pi_revision >> 4) & 0xff; switch (pi_type) { case 0x00: /* A */ case 0x01: /* B, Compute Module 1 */ case 0x02: /* A+ */ case 0x03: /* B+ */ case 0x05: /* Alpha ?*/ case 0x06: /* Compute Module1 */ case 0x09: /* Zero */ case 0x0c: /* Zero W */ return PI_MODEL_1; case 0x04: /* Pi 2 */ case 0x12: /* Zero W 2 (behaves close to Pi 2) */ return PI_MODEL_2; case 0x11: /* Pi 4 */ case 0x13: /* Pi 400 */ case 0x14: /* CM4 */ return PI_MODEL_4; default: /* a bunch of versions representing Pi 3 */ return PI_MODEL_3; } } static RaspberryPiModel GetPiModel() { static RaspberryPiModel pi_model = DetermineRaspberryModel(); return pi_model; } static int GetNumCores() { return GetPiModel() == PI_MODEL_1 ? 1 : 4; } static uint32_t *mmap_bcm_register(off_t register_offset) { off_t base = BCM2709_PERI_BASE; // safe fallback guess. switch (GetPiModel()) { case PI_MODEL_1: base = BCM2708_PERI_BASE; break; case PI_MODEL_2: base = BCM2709_PERI_BASE; break; case PI_MODEL_3: base = BCM2709_PERI_BASE; break; case PI_MODEL_4: base = BCM2711_PERI_BASE; break; } int mem_fd; if ((mem_fd = open("/dev/mem", O_RDWR|O_SYNC) ) < 0) { // Try to fall back to /dev/gpiomem. Unfortunately, that device // is implemented in a way that it _only_ supports GPIO, not the // other registers we need, such as PWM or COUNTER_1Mhz, which means // we only can operate with degraded performance. // // But, instead of failing, mmap() then silently succeeds with the // unsupported offset. So bail out here. if (register_offset != GPIO_REGISTER_OFFSET) return NULL; mem_fd = open("/dev/gpiomem", O_RDWR|O_SYNC); if (mem_fd < 0) return NULL; } uint32_t *result = (uint32_t*) mmap(NULL, // Any adddress in our space will do REGISTER_BLOCK_SIZE, // Map length PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, // Enable r/w on GPIO registers. MAP_SHARED, mem_fd, // File to map base + register_offset // Offset to bcm register ); close(mem_fd); if (result == MAP_FAILED) { perror("mmap error: "); fprintf(stderr, "MMapping from base 0x%lx, offset 0x%lx\n", base, register_offset); return NULL; } return result; } static bool mmap_all_bcm_registers_once() { if (s_GPIO_registers != NULL) return true; // alrady done. // The common GPIO registers. s_GPIO_registers = mmap_bcm_register(GPIO_REGISTER_OFFSET); if (s_GPIO_registers == NULL) { return false; } // Time measurement. Might fail when run as non-root. uint32_t *timereg = mmap_bcm_register(COUNTER_1Mhz_REGISTER_OFFSET); if (timereg != NULL) { s_Timer1Mhz = timereg + 1; } // Hardware pin-pulser. Might fail when run as non-root. s_PWM_registers = mmap_bcm_register(GPIO_PWM_BASE_OFFSET); s_CLK_registers = mmap_bcm_register(GPIO_CLK_BASE_OFFSET); return true; } bool GPIO::Init(int slowdown) { slowdown_ = slowdown; // Pre-mmap all bcm registers we need now and possibly in the future, as to // allow dropping privileges after GPIO::Init() even as some of these // registers might be needed later. if (!mmap_all_bcm_registers_once()) return false; gpio_set_bits_low_ = s_GPIO_registers + (0x1C / sizeof(uint32_t)); gpio_clr_bits_low_ = s_GPIO_registers + (0x28 / sizeof(uint32_t)); gpio_read_bits_low_ = s_GPIO_registers + (0x34 / sizeof(uint32_t)); #ifdef ENABLE_WIDE_GPIO_COMPUTE_MODULE gpio_set_bits_high_ = s_GPIO_registers + (0x20 / sizeof(uint32_t)); gpio_clr_bits_high_ = s_GPIO_registers + (0x2C / sizeof(uint32_t)); gpio_read_bits_high_ = s_GPIO_registers + (0x38 / sizeof(uint32_t)); #endif return true; } bool GPIO::IsPi4() { return GetPiModel() == PI_MODEL_4; } /* * We support also other pinouts that don't have the OE- on the hardware * PWM output pin, so we need to provide (impefect) 'manual' timing as well. * Hence all various busy_wait_nano() implementations depending on the hardware. */ // --- PinPulser. Private implementation parts. namespace { // Manual timers. class Timers { public: static bool Init(); static void sleep_nanos(long t); }; // Simplest of PinPulsers. Uses somewhat jittery and manual timers // to get the timing, but not optimal. class TimerBasedPinPulser : public PinPulser { public: TimerBasedPinPulser(GPIO *io, gpio_bits_t bits, const std::vector &nano_specs) : io_(io), bits_(bits), nano_specs_(nano_specs) { if (!s_Timer1Mhz) { fprintf(stderr, "FYI: not running as root which means we can't properly " "control timing unless this is a real-time kernel. Expect color " "degradation. Consider running as root with sudo.\n"); } } virtual void SendPulse(int time_spec_number) { io_->ClearBits(bits_); Timers::sleep_nanos(nano_specs_[time_spec_number]); io_->SetBits(bits_); } private: GPIO *const io_; const gpio_bits_t bits_; const std::vector nano_specs_; }; // Check that 3 shows up in isolcpus static bool HasIsolCPUs() { char buf[256]; ReadTextFileToBuffer(buf, sizeof(buf), "/sys/devices/system/cpu/isolated"); return index(buf, '3') != NULL; } static void busy_wait_nanos_rpi_1(long nanos); static void busy_wait_nanos_rpi_2(long nanos); static void busy_wait_nanos_rpi_3(long nanos); static void busy_wait_nanos_rpi_4(long nanos); static void (*busy_wait_impl)(long) = busy_wait_nanos_rpi_3; // Best effort write to file. Used to set kernel parameters. static void WriteTo(const char *filename, const char *str) { const int fd = open(filename, O_WRONLY); if (fd < 0) return; (void) write(fd, str, strlen(str)); // Best effort. Ignore return value. close(fd); } // By default, the kernel applies some throtteling for realtime // threads to prevent starvation of non-RT threads. But we // really want all we can get iff the machine has more cores and // our RT-thread is locked onto one of these. // So let's tell it not to do that. static void DisableRealtimeThrottling() { if (GetNumCores() == 1) return; // Not safe if we don't have > 1 core. // We need to leave the kernel a little bit of time, as it does not like // us to hog the kernel solidly. The default of 950000 leaves 50ms that // can generate visible flicker, so we reduce that to 10ms. WriteTo("/proc/sys/kernel/sched_rt_runtime_us", "990000"); } bool Timers::Init() { if (!mmap_all_bcm_registers_once()) return false; // Choose the busy-wait loop that fits our Pi. switch (GetPiModel()) { case PI_MODEL_1: busy_wait_impl = busy_wait_nanos_rpi_1; break; case PI_MODEL_2: busy_wait_impl = busy_wait_nanos_rpi_2; break; case PI_MODEL_3: busy_wait_impl = busy_wait_nanos_rpi_3; break; case PI_MODEL_4: busy_wait_impl = busy_wait_nanos_rpi_4; break; } DisableRealtimeThrottling(); // If we have it, we run the update thread on core3. No perf-compromises: WriteTo("/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu3/cpufreq/scaling_governor", "performance"); if (GetPiModel() != PI_MODEL_1 && !HasIsolCPUs()) { fprintf(stderr, "Suggestion: to slightly improve display update, add\n\tisolcpus=3\n" "at the end of /boot/cmdline.txt and reboot (see README.md)\n"); } return true; } static uint32_t JitterAllowanceMicroseconds() { // If this is a Raspberry Pi with more than one core, we add a bit of // additional overhead measured up to the 99.999%-ile: we can allow to burn // a bit more busy-wait CPU cycles to get the timing accurate as we have // more CPU to spare. switch (GetPiModel()) { case PI_MODEL_1: return EMPIRICAL_NANOSLEEP_OVERHEAD_US; // 99.9%-ile case PI_MODEL_2: case PI_MODEL_3: return EMPIRICAL_NANOSLEEP_OVERHEAD_US + 35; // 99.999%-ile case PI_MODEL_4: return EMPIRICAL_NANOSLEEP_OVERHEAD_US + 10; // this one is fast. } return EMPIRICAL_NANOSLEEP_OVERHEAD_US; } void Timers::sleep_nanos(long nanos) { // For smaller durations, we go straight to busy wait. // For larger duration, we use nanosleep() to give the operating system // a chance to do something else. // However, these timings have a lot of jitter, so if we have the 1Mhz timer // available, we use that to accurately mesure time spent and do the // remaining time with busy wait. If we don't have the timer available // (not running as root), we just use nanosleep() for larger values. if (s_Timer1Mhz) { static long kJitterAllowanceNanos = JitterAllowanceMicroseconds() * 1000; if (nanos > kJitterAllowanceNanos + MINIMUM_NANOSLEEP_TIME_US*1000) { const uint32_t before = *s_Timer1Mhz; struct timespec sleep_time = { 0, nanos - kJitterAllowanceNanos }; nanosleep(&sleep_time, NULL); const uint32_t after = *s_Timer1Mhz; const long nanoseconds_passed = 1000 * (uint32_t)(after - before); if (nanoseconds_passed > nanos) { return; // darn, missed it. } else { nanos -= nanoseconds_passed; // remaining time with busy-loop } } } else { // Not running as root, not having access to 1Mhz timer. Approximate large // durations with nanosleep(); small durations are done with busy wait. if (nanos > (EMPIRICAL_NANOSLEEP_OVERHEAD_US + MINIMUM_NANOSLEEP_TIME_US)*1000) { struct timespec sleep_time = { 0, nanos - EMPIRICAL_NANOSLEEP_OVERHEAD_US*1000 }; nanosleep(&sleep_time, NULL); return; } } busy_wait_impl(nanos); // Use model-specific busy-loop for remaining time. } static void busy_wait_nanos_rpi_1(long nanos) { if (nanos < 70) return; // The following loop is determined empirically on a 700Mhz RPi for (uint32_t i = (nanos - 70) >> 2; i != 0; --i) { asm("nop"); } } static void busy_wait_nanos_rpi_2(long nanos) { if (nanos < 20) return; // The following loop is determined empirically on a 900Mhz RPi 2 for (uint32_t i = (nanos - 20) * 100 / 110; i != 0; --i) { asm(""); } } static void busy_wait_nanos_rpi_3(long nanos) { if (nanos < 20) return; for (uint32_t i = (nanos - 15) * 100 / 73; i != 0; --i) { asm(""); } } static void busy_wait_nanos_rpi_4(long nanos) { if (nanos < 20) return; // Interesting, the Pi4 is _slower_ than the Pi3 ? At least for this busy loop for (uint32_t i = (nanos - 5) * 100 / 132; i != 0; --i) { asm(""); } } #if DEBUG_SLEEP_JITTER static int overshoot_histogram_us[256] = {0}; static void print_overshoot_histogram() { fprintf(stderr, "Overshoot histogram >= empirical overhead of %dus\n" "%6s | %7s | %7s\n", JitterAllowanceMicroseconds(), "usec", "count", "accum"); int total_count = 0; for (int i = 0; i < 256; ++i) total_count += overshoot_histogram_us[i]; int running_count = 0; for (int us = 0; us < 256; ++us) { const int count = overshoot_histogram_us[us]; if (count > 0) { running_count += count; fprintf(stderr, "%s%3dus: %8d %7.3f%%\n", (us == 0) ? "<=" : " +", us, count, 100.0 * running_count / total_count); } } } #endif // A PinPulser that uses the PWM hardware to create accurate pulses. // It only works on GPIO-12 or 18 though. class HardwarePinPulser : public PinPulser { public: static bool CanHandle(gpio_bits_t gpio_mask) { #ifdef DISABLE_HARDWARE_PULSES return false; #else const bool can_handle = gpio_mask==GPIO_BIT(18) || gpio_mask==GPIO_BIT(12); if (can_handle && (s_PWM_registers == NULL || s_CLK_registers == NULL)) { // Instead of silently not using the hardware pin pulser and falling back // to timing based loops, complain loudly and request the user to make // a choice before continuing. fprintf(stderr, "Need root. You are configured to use the hardware pulse " "generator " "for\n\tsmooth color rendering, however the necessary hardware\n" "\tregisters can't be accessed because you probably don't run\n" "\twith root permissions or privileges have been dropped.\n" "\tSo you either have to run as root (e.g. using sudo) or\n" "\tsupply the --led-no-hardware-pulse command-line flag.\n\n" "\tExiting; run as root or with --led-no-hardware-pulse\n\n"); exit(1); } return can_handle; #endif } HardwarePinPulser(gpio_bits_t pins, const std::vector &specs) : triggered_(false) { assert(CanHandle(pins)); assert(s_CLK_registers && s_PWM_registers && s_Timer1Mhz); #if DEBUG_SLEEP_JITTER atexit(print_overshoot_histogram); #endif if (LinuxHasModuleLoaded("snd_bcm2835")) { fprintf(stderr, "\n%s=== snd_bcm2835: found that the Pi sound module is loaded. ===%s\n" "Don't use the built-in sound of the Pi together with this lib; it is known to be\n" "incompatible and cause trouble and hangs (you can still use external USB sound adapters).\n\n" "See Troubleshooting section in README how to disable the sound module.\n" "You can also run with --led-no-hardware-pulse to avoid the incompatibility,\n" "but you will have more flicker.\n" "Exiting; fix the above first or use --led-no-hardware-pulse\n\n", "\033[1;31m", "\033[0m"); exit(1); } for (size_t i = 0; i < specs.size(); ++i) { // Hints how long to nanosleep, already corrected for system overhead. sleep_hints_us_.push_back(specs[i]/1000 - JitterAllowanceMicroseconds()); } const int base = specs[0]; // Get relevant registers fifo_ = s_PWM_registers + PWM_FIFO; if (pins == GPIO_BIT(18)) { // set GPIO 18 to PWM0 mode (Alternative 5) SetGPIOMode(s_GPIO_registers, 18, 2); } else if (pins == GPIO_BIT(12)) { // set GPIO 12 to PWM0 mode (Alternative 0) SetGPIOMode(s_GPIO_registers, 12, 4); } else { assert(false); // should've been caught by CanHandle() } InitPWMDivider((base/2) / PWM_BASE_TIME_NS); for (size_t i = 0; i < specs.size(); ++i) { pwm_range_.push_back(2 * specs[i] / base); } } virtual void SendPulse(int c) { if (pwm_range_[c] < 16) { s_PWM_registers[PWM_RNG1] = pwm_range_[c]; *fifo_ = pwm_range_[c]; } else { // Keep the actual range as short as possible, as we have to // wait for one full period of these in the zero phase. // The hardware can't deal with values < 2, so only do this when // have enough of these. s_PWM_registers[PWM_RNG1] = pwm_range_[c] / 8; *fifo_ = pwm_range_[c] / 8; *fifo_ = pwm_range_[c] / 8; *fifo_ = pwm_range_[c] / 8; *fifo_ = pwm_range_[c] / 8; *fifo_ = pwm_range_[c] / 8; *fifo_ = pwm_range_[c] / 8; *fifo_ = pwm_range_[c] / 8; *fifo_ = pwm_range_[c] / 8; } /* * We need one value at the end to have it go back to * default state (otherwise it just repeats the last * value, so will be constantly 'on'). */ *fifo_ = 0; // sentinel. /* * For some reason, we need a second empty sentinel in the * fifo, otherwise our way to detect the end of the pulse, * which relies on 'is the queue empty' does not work. It is * not entirely clear why that is from the datasheet, * but probably there is some buffering register in which data * elements are kept after the fifo is emptied. */ *fifo_ = 0; sleep_hint_us_ = sleep_hints_us_[c]; start_time_ = *s_Timer1Mhz; triggered_ = true; s_PWM_registers[PWM_CTL] = PWM_CTL_USEF1 | PWM_CTL_PWEN1 | PWM_CTL_POLA1; } virtual void WaitPulseFinished() { if (!triggered_) return; // Determine how long we already spent and sleep to get close to the // actual end-time of our sleep period. // // TODO(hzeller): find if it is possible to get some sort of interrupt from // the hardware once it is done with the pulse. Sounds silly that there is // not (so far, only tested GPIO interrupt with a feedback line, but that // is super-slow with 20μs overhead). if (sleep_hint_us_ > 0) { const uint32_t already_elapsed_usec = *s_Timer1Mhz - start_time_; const int to_sleep_us = sleep_hint_us_ - already_elapsed_usec; if (to_sleep_us > 0) { struct timespec sleep_time = { 0, 1000 * to_sleep_us }; nanosleep(&sleep_time, NULL); #if DEBUG_SLEEP_JITTER { // Record histogram of realtime jitter how much longer we actually // took. const int total_us = *s_Timer1Mhz - start_time_; const int nanoslept_us = total_us - already_elapsed_usec; int overshoot = nanoslept_us - (to_sleep_us + JitterAllowanceMicroseconds()); if (overshoot < 0) overshoot = 0; if (overshoot > 255) overshoot = 255; overshoot_histogram_us[overshoot]++; } #endif } } while ((s_PWM_registers[PWM_STA] & PWM_STA_EMPT1) == 0) { // busy wait until done. } s_PWM_registers[PWM_CTL] = PWM_CTL_USEF1 | PWM_CTL_POLA1 | PWM_CTL_CLRF1; triggered_ = false; } private: void SetGPIOMode(volatile uint32_t *gpioReg, unsigned gpio, unsigned mode) { const int reg = gpio / 10; const int mode_pos = (gpio % 10) * 3; gpioReg[reg] = (gpioReg[reg] & ~(7 << mode_pos)) | (mode << mode_pos); } void InitPWMDivider(uint32_t divider) { assert(divider < (1<<12)); // we only have 12 bits. s_PWM_registers[PWM_CTL] = PWM_CTL_USEF1 | PWM_CTL_POLA1 | PWM_CTL_CLRF1; // reset PWM clock s_CLK_registers[CLK_PWMCTL] = CLK_PASSWD | CLK_CTL_KILL; // set PWM clock source as 500 MHz PLLD s_CLK_registers[CLK_PWMCTL] = CLK_PASSWD | CLK_CTL_SRC(CLK_CTL_SRC_PLLD); // set PWM clock divider s_CLK_registers[CLK_PWMDIV] = CLK_PASSWD | CLK_DIV_DIVI(divider) | CLK_DIV_DIVF(0); // enable PWM clock s_CLK_registers[CLK_PWMCTL] = CLK_PASSWD | CLK_CTL_ENAB | CLK_CTL_SRC(CLK_CTL_SRC_PLLD); } private: std::vector pwm_range_; std::vector sleep_hints_us_; volatile uint32_t *fifo_; uint32_t start_time_; int sleep_hint_us_; bool triggered_; }; } // end anonymous namespace // Public PinPulser factory PinPulser *PinPulser::Create(GPIO *io, gpio_bits_t gpio_mask, bool allow_hardware_pulsing, const std::vector &nano_wait_spec) { if (!Timers::Init()) return NULL; if (allow_hardware_pulsing && HardwarePinPulser::CanHandle(gpio_mask)) { return new HardwarePinPulser(gpio_mask, nano_wait_spec); } else { return new TimerBasedPinPulser(io, gpio_mask, nano_wait_spec); } } // For external use, e.g. in the matrix for extra time. uint32_t GetMicrosecondCounter() { if (s_Timer1Mhz) return *s_Timer1Mhz; // When run as non-root, we can't read the timer. Fall back to slow // operating-system ways. struct timespec ts; clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &ts); const uint64_t micros = ts.tv_nsec / 1000; const uint64_t epoch_usec = (uint64_t)ts.tv_sec * 1000000 + micros; return epoch_usec & 0xFFFFFFFF; } // For external use, e.g. to lessen busy waiting. void SleepMicroseconds(long t) { Timers::sleep_nanos(t * 1000); } } // namespace rgb_matrix