gcoap contains a hack where a `coap_pkt_t` is pulled out of thin air,
parts of the members are left uninitialized and a function is called on
that mostly uninitialized data while crossing fingers hard that the
result will be correct. (With the current implementation of the used
function this hack does actually work.)
Estimated level of insanity: 😱😱😱😱😱
This adds to insane functions to get the length of a token and the
length of a header of a CoAP packet while crossing fingers hard that
the packet is valid and that the functions do not overread.
Estimated level of insanity: 😱😱😱
The newly introduced insane functions are used to replace the old
insane hack, resulting in an estimated reduction of insanity of 😱😱.
Side note: This actually does fix a bug, as the old code did not take
into account the length of the extended TKL field in case of
RFC 8974 being used. But that is a bug in the abused API,
and not in the caller abusing the API.
In order to properly handle an observe cancellation of a client, the server has to keep track of the notification MIDs (to be able to match an RST to a notification), see [RFC7641, 3.6 Cancellation](https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc7641.html#section-3.6) for mor details. An alternative to this would be to make either the client send an explicit observe deregister request, or make the server send the next notification via CON (which hten allows matching of the RST due to the CON state).
This splits the _find_req_memo util function into multiple variants that match on different things. This is done in preparation of a feature that has to find a request based on a token value, without creating an artificial pdu for that. A nice side effect is that it also makes the calls to the find functions a bit more readable by not relying on an anonymous bool input.
19212: shell/rtc: use rtc_tm_normalize() to sanitize input r=benpicco a=benpicco
19360: gcoap: make use coap_build_reply() in gcoap_resp_init() r=benpicco a=benpicco
19401: shell/cmds: add genfile command r=benpicco a=benpicco
19645: sys/isrpipe: Replace xtimer with ztimer_usec r=benpicco a=MrKevinWeiss
### Contribution description
Getting ready for the xtimer dep.
### Testing procedure
Green murdock, there is no explicit test for isrpipe but since it runs xtimer compat it should operate the same.
### Issues/PRs references
19720: tests: remove unnecessary use of floating point r=benpicco a=benpicco
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Valentin <benjamin.valentin@bht-berlin.de>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Valentin <benjamin.valentin@ml-pa.com>
Co-authored-by: MrKevinWeiss <weiss.kevin604@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Valentin <benpicco@beuth-hochschule.de>
18620: core: add core_mutex_debug to aid debugging deadlocks r=maribu a=maribu
### Contribution description
Adding `USEMODULE += core_mutex_debug` to your `Makefile` results in
on log messages such as
[mutex] waiting for thread 1 (pc = 0x800024d)
being added whenever `mutex_lock()` blocks. This makes tracing down
deadlocks easier.
### Testing procedure
Run e.g.
```sh
USEMODULE=core_mutex_debug BOARD=nucleo-f767zi make -C tests/mutex_cancel flash test
```
which should provide output such as
```
Welcome to pyterm!
Type '/exit' to exit.
READY
s
[mutex] waiting for thread 1 (pc = 0x8000f35)
START
main(): This is RIOT! (Version: 2022.10-devel-841-g5cc02-core/mutex/debug)
Test Application for mutex_cancel / mutex_lock_cancelable
=========================================================
Test without cancellation: OK
Test early cancellation: OK
Verify no side effects on subsequent calls: [mutex] waiting for thread 1 (pc = 0x800024d)
OK
Test late cancellation: [mutex] waiting for thread 1 (pc = 0x0)
OK
TEST PASSED
```
```sh
$ arm-none-eabi-addr2line -a 0x800024d -e tests/mutex_cancel/bin/nucleo-f767zi/tests_mutex_cancel.elf
0x0800024d
/home/maribu/Repos/software/RIOT/tests/mutex_cancel/main.c:51
```
### Issues/PRs references
Depends on and includes https://github.com/RIOT-OS/RIOT/pull/18619
19296: nanocoap: allow to define CoAP resources as XFA r=maribu a=benpicco
19504: cpu/cc26xx_cc13xx: Fix bogus array-bound warning r=maribu a=maribu
### Contribution description
GCC 12 create a bogus array out of bounds warning as it assumes that because there is special handling for `uart == 0` and `uart == 1`, `uart` can indeed be `1`. There is an `assert(uart < UART_NUMOF)` above that would blow up prior to any out of bounds access.
In any case, optimizing out the special handling of `uart == 1` for when `UART_NUMOF == 1` likely improves the generated code and fixes the warning.
/home/maribu/Repos/software/RIOT/cc2650/cpu/cc26xx_cc13xx/periph/uart.c:88:8: error: array subscript 1 is above array bounds of 'uart_isr_ctx_t[1]' [-Werror=array-bounds]
88 | ctx[uart].rx_cb = rx_cb;
| ~~~^~~~~~
/home/maribu/Repos/software/RIOT/cc2650/cpu/cc26xx_cc13xx/periph/uart.c:52:23: note: while referencing 'ctx'
52 | static uart_isr_ctx_t ctx[UART_NUMOF];
| ^~~
/home/maribu/Repos/software/RIOT/cc2650/cpu/cc26xx_cc13xx/periph/uart.c:89:8: error: array subscript 1 is above array bounds of 'uart_isr_ctx_t[1]' [-Werror=array-bounds]
89 | ctx[uart].arg = arg;
| ~~~^~~~~~
/home/maribu/Repos/software/RIOT/cc2650/cpu/cc26xx_cc13xx/periph/uart.c:52:23: note: while referencing 'ctx'
52 | static uart_isr_ctx_t ctx[UART_NUMOF];
| ^~~
### Testing procedure
The actual change is a pretty obvious one-liner, so that code review and a green CI should be sufficient. If not, running any UART example app without regression should do.
### Issues/PRs references
None
19506: tools/openocd: Fix handling of OPENOCD_CMD_RESET_HALT r=maribu a=maribu
### Contribution description
The OPENOCD_CMD_RESET_HALT was not longer correctly passed to the script. This fixes the issue.
### Testing procedure
Flashing of e.g. the `cc2650-launchpad` with upstream OpenOCD should work again.
### Issues/PRs references
The change was added to https://github.com/RIOT-OS/RIOT/pull/19050 after testing the PR and before merging. I'm not sure if the fix never worked because of this, or if behavior of `target-export-variables` or GNU Make changed.
Co-authored-by: Marian Buschsieweke <marian.buschsieweke@ovgu.de>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Valentin <benjamin.valentin@bht-berlin.de>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Valentin <benjamin.valentin@ml-pa.com>
This is an API change in the latter, which would typically now take an
extra argument GCOAP_SOCKET_TYPE_UNDEF.
Follow-Up-For: https://github.com/RIOT-OS/RIOT/pull/16688