If the TimerGroup 0 clock is disabled and then reenabled, the watchdog
registers (Flashboot protection included) will be re-enabled, and some
seconds later, will trigger an unintended reset.
Signed-off-by: Gustavo Henrique Nihei <gustavo.nihei@espressif.com>
1. Remove RTC_CLOCK_BBPLL_POWER_ON_WITH_USB Kconfig option
During sleep, BBPLL clock always gets disabled
esp_restart does not disable BBPLL clock, so that first stage bootloader log can be printed
2. Add a new Kconfig option PM_NO_AUTO_LS_ON_USJ_CONNECTED
When this option is selected, IDF will constantly monitor USB CDC port connection status.
As long as it gets connected to a HOST, automatic light-sleep will not happen.
Closes https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/issues/8507
Spinlocks themselves do not constitute critical sections as after a spinlock is acquired, interrupts
can remain enabled. However, there are some places where spinlocks are used direclty instead of using
the portMUX_TYPE and portENTER_CRITICAL_...() APIs. This commit fixes those calls.
This commit marks all functions in interrupt_controller_hal.h, cpu_ll.h and cpu_hal.h as deprecated.
Users should use functions from esp_cpu.h instead.
1. Rename MACROs SYSTEM_WIFI_RST_EN register bit fields to be more recognizable
2. reset Bluetooth baseband and clock bits to fix the issue of task watchdog triggered during controller initialization due to invalid hardware state
This commit makes changes to cpu_ll.h, cpu_hal.h, and interrupt_controller_hal.h:
- Moved to esp_hw_support in order to be deprecated in the future
- HAL/LL API now route their calls to esp_cpu.h functions instead
Also updated soc_hal.h as follows:
- Removed __SOC_HAL_..._OTHER_CORES() macros as they dependend on cpu_hal.h
- Made soc_hal.h and soc_ll.h interfaces always inline, and removed soc_hal.c.
This commit also updates the XCHAL_ERRATUM_572 workaround by
- Removing it's HAL function and invoking the workaround it directly the bootloader
- Added missing workaround for the ESP32-S3
Moved the following kconfig options out of the target component:
* CONFIG_ESP*_DEFAULT_CPU_FREQ* -> esp_system
* ESP*_REV_MIN -> esp_hw_support
* ESP*_TIME_SYSCALL -> newlib
* ESP*_RTC_* -> esp_hw_support
Where applicable these target specific konfig names were merged into
a single common config, e.g;
CONFIG_ESP*_DEFAULT_CPU_FREQ -> CONFIG_ESP_DEFAULT_CPU_FREQ_MHZ
This commit updates the visibility of various header files and cleans up
some unnecessary inclusions. Also, this commit removes certain header
include paths which were maintained for backward compatibility.
If a windowoverflow8 happened after changing the SP, the exception handler would look for
the extra save area by looking at the previous frame's SP. This SP would be a garbage value
and could cause the windowoverflow exception to write to invalid memory ares.
Moved the following kconfig options out of the target component:
* ESP32_X_BROWNOUT_* -> esp_system
* ESP32_X_DEBUG_OCDAWARE -> esp_system
* APP_NO_BLOBS -> build type (main kconfig)
Upstream xtensa exception handling will save PS, PC, and a0 registers
together when saving a minimal context. This commit ppdates the xtensa
exception handling to match upstream behavior.
The following files were deleted:
- components/esp_hw_support/include/soc/cpu.h
- components/soc/esp32s3/include/soc/cpu.h
The following functions are deprecated:
- get_sp()
The following functions declared in soc/cpu.h are now moved to esp_cpu.h:
- esp_cpu_configure_region_protection()
The following functions declared in soc/cpu.h are now moved to components/xtensa/include/esp_cpu_utils.h:
- esp_cpu_process_stack_pc()
All files with soc/cpu.h inclusion are updated to include esp_cpu.h instead.
Signed-off-by: Sudeep Mohanty <sudeep.mohanty@espressif.com>
peripheral enable/disable usually should be managed by driver itself,
so make it as espressif private APIs, not recommended for user to use it
in application code.
However, if user want to re-write the driver or ports to other platform,
this is still possible by including the header in this way:
"esp_private/peripheral_ctrl.h"
As branches/jumps on Xtensa have a maximum range for the destination, it is
unsafe to refer to a label to another compilation unit in a branch/jump instruction.
The labels have been replaced by absolute addresses.