This PR converts tabs to white spaces.
The statement I used for the conversion:
'''find . -name "*.[ch]" -exec zsh -c 'expand -t 4 "$0" > /tmp/e && mv /tmp/e "$0"' {} \;'''
Afterwards, I had a quick overview of the converted files to prevent odd indentation.
When using socket stdio, add option to replay what has been written to
stdout while not connected (`-r`).
The implementation is to simply use the existing log file (which is
implicitly created when the option is used), and read from it until
EOF upon reconnect.
closes#476
The transceiver module expects an `ieee802154_packet_t` instead of a
`radio_packet_t` if the device supports the IEEE 802.15.4 packet format.
This commit fixes the corresponding transceiver shell command for
`txtsnd` to set destination address (short address mode), payload, and
length accordingly.
When waiting for transmission (to CC2420) to be done,
we were wrongly waiting for UCBUSY bit to be set,
while one should actually wait for that bit to be cleared.
Ensure that CS is active and IRQ disabled when querying CCA
on CC2420 (cc2420_get_cca() function).
Also do a little refactoring (renamed c variable into count,
and named the constant corresponding to RSSI "timeout").
Currently `boards/qemu-i386/dist/term.py` expects QEMU to connect in
less than 5 seconds, which is plenty on any user machine. Travis CI,
which we use without paying a cent, sometimes fails to start QEMU in
this is timeframe, though.
This PR increases the timeout to one minute.
Currrently native overrides the object file targets, because it needs
the different include paths to interact with libc and the OS.
This PR simplifies their makefiles to only override the variable
INCLUDES, instead of overriding the targets.
When qemu-i386 shuts down the instance on its own accord, like in the
hello-world example, then the terminal is broken afterwards.
This PR ensures that the terminal flags are restored on shutdown.
This includes GNU readline features and debugging.
Build with `make BOARD=qemu-i386 all-debug`.
Run with `make BOARD=qemu-i386 term`.
Debug with `make BOARD=qemu-i386 debug`. The default debugger is `gdb`.
Also supported are `debug-tui` (GDB Text User Interface), `debug-kdbg`,
and `debug-ddd`. Set a breakpoint in e.g. "startup" or "main", and
hit/write "continue".
The debugger can only run with a quite new toolchain (e.g. Debian
testing). Ubuntu 13.10. for example will likely report a crash in GDB
when switching from 16bit code to 32bit code.