To be able to define configurations like EP data sizes depending on whether full-speed or high-speed USB device peripherals are used, the feature `periph_usbdev_hs` is introduced.
A if `netdev_driver_t::confirm_send()` is provided, it provides the
new netdev API. However, detecting the API at runtime and handling
both API styles comes at a cost. This can be optimized in case only
new or only old style netdevs are in use.
To do so, this adds the pseudo modules `netdev_legacy_api` and
`netdev_new_api`. As right now no netdev actually implements the new
API, all netdevs pull in `netdev_legacy_api`. If `netdev_legacy_api` is
in used but `netdev_new_api` is not, we can safely assume at compile
time that only legacy netdevs are in use. Similar, if only
`netdev_new_api` is used, only support for the new API is needed. Only
when both are in use, run time checks are needed.
This provides two helper function to check for a netif if the
corresponding netdev implements the old or the new API. (With one
being the inverse of the other.) They are suitable for constant folding
when only new or only legacy devices are in use. Consequently, dead
branches should be eliminated by the optimizer.
The driver uses the netdev interface. Due to the limited
capabilities of the transceiver (32 byte FIFO and no source address in the layer2 frame),
it relies on 6LowPAN compression and adds the source address to the frame for that.
The SI1133 from Silicon Labs is a UV Index Sensor and Ambient Light
Sensor in a small 2x2 mm DFN package. The sensor can measure
independently ultra violet (UV) light, infra red (IR) light and
ambient light, however the ambient light is also influenced by the
IR light requiring compensation from the IR readings.
The SI1133 is quite different from other Silicon Labs chips in RIOT OS
and therefore needs its own driver. In particular, the SI1133 has 7
different photodiode configurations to read but only 6 channels to
read them in parallel so only some channels can be read each time.
This patch implements a new driver allowing to read the data directly
and a saul interface for the three kinds of light source. There are
many configuration options including interrupts and continous modes
that are left out of this initial driver.
In analogy to the existing GPIO mappings, this provides (write-only)
SAUL entries for PWM'd LEDs in a single-LED (as SAUL_ACT_DIMMER) and an
RGB (as SAUL_ACT_RGB_LED) mode.
Co-authored-by: Marian Buschsieweke <marian.buschsieweke@ovgu.de>