Same as for write operation, some errors are reported only via CMD13.
Without the R1b response support in sdspi driver, this check would
fail. Now that R1b support is implemented, erase command response is
zero (success) on all cards under test.
Also remove the now-unnecessary card reset after erase in the test
case.
During write operation (CMD24 or CMD25), the card can report some of
the errors in the 1-byte response tokens. Other types of errors are
not reported, the host has to get them by issuing CMD13.
This commit adds CMD13 request at the end of write operations and
reports error to the user if the card status isn't zero.
Numerical value of MMC_SEND_STATUS is the same as SD_APP_SD_STATUS,
so there is no functional change. Just making this consistent with the
sdmmc_send_app_cmd call later on.
options.
Erase command (38) for SD cards allows option for erase/dicard/fule
operation at block level and for MMC cards supports option for
discard/trim at block level. When Sanitize is executed only the
portion of data that was unmapped by a Discard command shall be
removed by the Sanitize command.
Unit test cases added to verify ERASE feature in SD/SDSPI mode.
TRIM/DISCARD/SANITIZE tests for eMMC devices.
Closes https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/pull/7635
Closes https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/issues/7623
FATFS provides a disk status and disk initialize callback which were not
implemented. Implementation has very low impact on SD/MMC speed and
fixes issues, when trying to open file when SD card was removed from
slot and not deinited.
If disk_status returns STA_NOINIT, it will always continue with
disk_initialize. If that returns 0, it will continue like everything is
working normally. So there has to be the same check as in disk_status.
Return of disk_initialize is always checked like this for STA_NOINIT or
STA_PROTECT so if command fails, we return the STA_NOINIT.
stat = disk_initialize(pdrv);
if (stat & STA_NOINIT) return FR_NOT_READY;
if (stat & STA_PROTECT) return FR_WRITE_PROTECTED;
Closes IDF-4125
* changing dependencies from unity->cmock
* added component.mk and Makefile.projbuild
* ignore test dir in gen_esp_err_to_name.py
* added some brief introduction of CMock in IDF
SD cards don't support CMD7 (select_card) in SPI mode. Highspeed probe
of sdspi will fail in this step and stop working in highspeed mode.
Remove the CMD7 in enable_hs_mode_and_check to fix this issue.
Please note that, on ESP32, you have to use the IOMUX pins to use sdspi
in 40MHz, otherwise the initialization process will report reading issue
and fail.
DISABLED_FOR_TARGETS macros are used
Partly revert "ci: disable unavailable tests for esp32s2beta"
This partly reverts commit 76a3a5fb48.
Partly revert "ci: disable UTs for esp32s2beta without runners"
This partly reverts commit eb158e9a22.
Partly revert "fix unit test and examples for s2beta"
This partly reverts commit 9baa7826be.
Partly revert "efuse: Add support for esp32s2beta"
This partly reverts commit db84ba868c.
esp_common/esp_compiler: renamed esp_macros file to a more specific one
esp_common/esp_compiler: removed CONTAINER_OF macro, it was a duplicate
components/freertos: placed likely macros around port and critical sections
component/freertos: placed likely macros on lists module
components/freertos: placed unlikely macros inside of assertion points, they likely wont fail
components/freertos: added likely macros on queue modules
FreeRTOS queues are one of most hot code path, because to queues itself tend to
be used a lot by the applications, besides that, queues are the basic primitive
to form both mutexes and semaphores, The focus here is to place likely
macros inside lowest level send and receive routines, since they're common
from all kobjects: semaphores, queues, mutexes and FR internals (like timer queue)
components/lwip: placed likely/unlikey on net-interfaces code
components/fatfs: added unlikely macros on disk drivers code
components/spiffs: added unlikely macros on low level fs driver
components/freertos: added likely/unlikely macros on timers and ticker
freertos/event_group: placed likely/unlikely macros on hot event group code paths
components/sdmmc: placed likely / unlikely macros on lower level path of sdmmc
components/bt: placed unlikely macros around bt HCI functions calling
components/lwip: added likely/unlikely macros on OS port code section
components/freertos: fix code style on tick handler
Using xxx_periph.h in whole IDF instead of xxx_reg.h, xxx_struct.h, xxx_channel.h ... .
Cleaned up header files from unnecessary headers (releated to soc/... headers).
This MR removes the common dependency from every IDF components to the SOC component.
Currently, in the ``idf_functions.cmake`` script, we include the header path of SOC component by default for all components.
But for better code organization (or maybe also benifits to the compiling speed), we may remove the dependency to SOC components for most components except the driver and kernel related components.
In CMAKE, we have two kinds of header visibilities (set by include path visibility):
(Assume component A --(depends on)--> B, B is the current component)
1. public (``COMPONENT_ADD_INCLUDEDIRS``): means this path is visible to other depending components (A) (visible to A and B)
2. private (``COMPONENT_PRIV_INCLUDEDIRS``): means this path is only visible to source files inside the component (visible to B only)
and we have two kinds of depending ways:
(Assume component A --(depends on)--> B --(depends on)--> C, B is the current component)
1. public (```COMPONENT_REQUIRES```): means B can access to public include path of C. All other components rely on you (A) will also be available for the public headers. (visible to A, B)
2. private (``COMPONENT_PRIV_REQUIRES``): means B can access to public include path of C, but don't propagate this relation to other components (A). (visible to B)
1. remove the common requirement in ``idf_functions.cmake``, this makes the SOC components invisible to all other components by default.
2. if a component (for example, DRIVER) really needs the dependency to SOC, add a private dependency to SOC for it.
3. some other components that don't really depends on the SOC may still meet some errors saying "can't find header soc/...", this is because it's depended component (DRIVER) incorrectly include the header of SOC in its public headers. Moving all this kind of #include into source files, or private headers
4. Fix the include requirements for some file which miss sufficient #include directives. (Previously they include some headers by the long long long header include link)
This is a breaking change. Previous code may depends on the long include chain.
You may need to include the following headers for some files after this commit:
- soc/soc.h
- soc/soc_memory_layout.h
- driver/gpio.h
- esp_sleep.h
The major broken include chain includes:
1. esp_system.h no longer includes esp_sleep.h. The latter includes driver/gpio.h and driver/touch_pad.h.
2. ets_sys.h no longer includes soc/soc.h
3. freertos/portmacro.h no longer includes soc/soc_memory_layout.h
some peripheral headers no longer includes their hw related headers, e.g. rom/gpio.h no longer includes soc/gpio_pins.h and soc/gpio_reg.h
BREAKING CHANGE
1. New tests for SD card on slot 0. Currently frequency for 4-bit mode
has to be reduced in the test.
2. Change pin for CD/WP tests, re-enable CD tests.
Works for 3.3V eMMC in 4 line mode.
Not implemented:
- DDR mode for SD cards (UHS-I) also need voltage to be switched to 1.8V.
- 8-line DDR mode for eMMC to be implemented later.
CMD53 in byte mode supports transfers of any number of bytes between 1
and 512. This change removes limitation that the number of bytes must
be divisible by 4. Host quirk, that such transfers must be split into
two commands (one for the aligned part and the other one for
unaligned) is taken into account.
* Philosophical: "explicit is better than implicit".
* Practical: Allows useful errors if invalid directories given in components as the defaults aren't
always used. Also trims the -I path from a number of components that have no actual include
directory.
* Simplifies knowing which components will be header-only and which won't
- In SPI mode, the card will respond to the initial SDIO reset (done
using CMD52) with “invalid command” error. Handle this correctly.
- sdmmc_card_init had a hack where GO_IDLE_STATE (CMD0) command was
sent twice. Add explanation why this is done, and don’t expect
correct response from the card on first CMD0.
- improve logs printed at debug level by adding CMD index
- Add SDIO support at protocol layer (probing, data transfer, interrupts)
- Add SDIO interrupts support in SDMMC host
- Add test (communicate with ESP32 in SDIO download mode)
SET_BUS_WIDTH is not a data transfer command. Extensive search in the
host datasheet and SD card spec did not reveal the origin of this hack
or 'feature'. Further testing showed that removing this does not lead to
regressions.
Previously the timeout was set to the same value (1000ms) for all kinds
of commands. In some cases, such as with slow cards, write commands
failed to complete in time.
This change makes command timeouts configurable via sdmmc_host_t
structure, and also makes default timeouts different for ordinary
commands and write commands.
Closes https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/issues/1093
Ref TW15774.
By default SD cards are initialized in default speed (DS) mode. Enabling
HS mode requires SWITCH_FUNC command to be sent twice: first time to
query if the card supports switching to HS mode, second time to perform
the switch.
This change implements SWITCH_FUNC command and adds the procedure to
switch to HS mode.
In some cases the card needs to be returned to standby mode from data
transfer mode. This is done using CMD7 command, which does not receive
any response in this case.
MMC_RSP_BITS helper function had a hack that it flipped word order in
the response, assuming that response size is 4 words. This hack does not
work for responses which are not 4 words long (such as the SWITCH_FUNC
response, which is 64 words long).
This change removes the hack and the matching word order reversal code
in sdmmc driver.
SDMMC hardware treats all buffers as aligned, and ignores 2 LSBs of
addresses written into DMA descriptors. Previously SDMMC host driver
assumed that data buffers passed from SDDMC command layer would be
aligned. However alignment checks were never implemented in the command
layer, as were the checks that the buffer coming from the application
would be in DMA capable memory. Most of the time this was indeed true.
However in some cases FATFS library can pass buffers offset by 2 bytes
from word boundary. “DMA capable” restriction may be broken if pSRAM
support is used.
This change adds buffer checks to the SDMMC host driver (alignment and
DMA capability), so that the host layer will error out for incompatible
buffers. In SDMMC command layer, a check is added to read and write
functions. If an incompatible buffer is passed from the application, new
buffer (512 bytes size) is allocated, and the transfer is performed
using {READ,WRITE}_SINGLE_BLOCK commands.