LP core was unable to boot when system was in deepsleep.
This was due to lp uart init in LP rom using XTAL as clk source,
which is normally powered down during sleep.
This would cause lp uart to get stuck while printing ROM output,
and the app would never boot.
Also fixed wrong wakeup cause used by HP core for ULP wake up
Currently when process is started through asyncio Runner and it is termited
e.g. with SIGINT(ctrl+c) a traceback is printed instead of gracefully
exit.
Exception ignored in: <function BaseSubprocessTransport.__del__ at 0x7fe980970900>
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/lib64/python3.12/asyncio/base_subprocess.py", line 129, in __del__
self.close()
File "/usr/lib64/python3.12/asyncio/base_subprocess.py", line 107, in close
proto.pipe.close()
File "/usr/lib64/python3.12/asyncio/unix_events.py", line 568, in close
self._close(None)
File "/usr/lib64/python3.12/asyncio/unix_events.py", line 592, in _close
self._loop.call_soon(self._call_connection_lost, exc)
File "/usr/lib64/python3.12/asyncio/base_events.py", line 793, in call_soon
self._check_closed()
File "/usr/lib64/python3.12/asyncio/base_events.py", line 540, in _check_closed
raise RuntimeError('Event loop is closed')
RuntimeError: Event loop is closed
This is caused because asyncio Runner context in asyncio.run is closing the event
loop and if exception is unhandled in coroutine(run_command) the transport is not
closed before the even loop is closed and we get RuntimeError: Event loop is closed
in the transport __del__ function because it's trying to use the closed
even loop.
Let's catch asyncio.CancelledError in case the process we are trying to
read from is terminated, print message, let the asyncio finish and exit
gracefully.
Closes https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/issues/13418
Signed-off-by: Frantisek Hrbata <frantisek.hrbata@espressif.com>
Documented specific checks/subchecks for header file verification
Simplified the process, now we use simple regex to remove macros from
the current header. Before, we re-ran preprocess_one_header()
function with removed `#include ...`s from the header under test, so
we were looking into the actual header (rather than included headers)
when checking for `extern "C"` keyword.
The procedure is easier to follow without this recursion (mostly because
in the second execution we might encounter compilation failers and
ignore them).
Note that this procedure is not 100% correct (we might see some false
positive and false negatives)