When using `make flash` or `make term` with `MOST_RECENT_PORT=1`, RIOT
should now only consider plausible TTYs and select the most recently
connected one. The filter is a bit broad, though, and will match
any board with a CH430 USB 2.0 UART2USB bridge. But depending on the
boards attached, it might be good enough to reliably tell it apart from
other boards.
- Rename all `arduino_pinmap.h` to `arduino_iomap.h`
- An empty `arduino_pinmap.h` that just includes `arduino_iomap.h`
is provided for backward compatibility
- Move all info from `arduino_board.h` into the new file as trivial
macros, so that they can also be used outside of sketches
- The new name reflects the fact not just pin mappings, but also
other I/O features such as PWMs are mapped
- Drop all `arduino_board.h`
- `arduino_board.h` and `arduino_iomap.h` now provide the exact
same information, just in a different format
- a generic `arduino_board.h` is provided instead that just
uses the info in `arduinio_iomap.h` and provides them in the
format the code in `sys/arduino` expects it
- Add fine grained features to indicate for mappings
- availability of mappings for analog pins, DAC pins, PWM pins,
UART devices, SPI/I2C buses to the corresponding RIOT
identification can now be expressed:
- `arduino_pins`: `ARDUINO_PIN_0` etc. are available
- `arduino_analog`: `ARDUINO_A0` etc. are available
- `arduino_pwm`: `ARDUINO_PIN_13_PWM_DEV` etc. are available
- `arduino_dac`: `ARDUINO_DAC0` etc. are available
- `arduino_uart`: `ARDUINO_UART_D0D1` or similar are available
- `arduino_spi`: `ARDUINO_SPI_ISP` or similar are available
- `arduino_i2c`: `ARDUINO_I2C_UNO` or similar are available
- mechanical/electrical compatibility with specific form factors
can now be expressed as features:
- `aruino_shield_nano`: Arduino NANO compatible headers
- `aruino_shield_uno`: Arduino UNO compatible headers
- `aruino_shield_mega`: Arduino MEGA compatible headers
- `aruino_shield_isp`: ISP header is available
This provides the groundwork to implement shield support as modules
that can rely on the I/O mappings, rather than having to provide a
configuration per board.
The former FLASH_MODE_{DOUT,DIO,QOUT,QIO} defines are replaced by the corresponding CONFIG_FLASHMODE_{DOUT,DIO,QOUT,QIO} and CONFIG_ESPTOOLPY_FLASHMODE_{DOUT,DIO,QOUT,QIO} as used by the ESP-IDF. This is also needed for the migration of defining flash mode in Kconfig.
Fixes various issues in documentation:
- replaces HTML anchor tags in markdown headings by markdown heading IDs.
- replaces HTML linebreaks by newline commands
- replaces \htmlonly commands for image resizing by the width argument in \image commands
- uses more unique identifiers for references
- uses stable references for driver documentation
- fix broken links to external HTML documents
- replaces the TOC link in headers by a back to TOC link below each section
- replaces ``` fenced code blocks by ~~~
This changes the prefixes of the symbols generated from USEMODULE and
USEPKG variables. The changes are as follow:
KCONFIG_MODULE_ => KCONFIG_USEMODULE_
KCONFIG_PKG_ => KCONFIG_USEPKG_
MODULE_ => USEMODULE_
PKG_ => USEPKG_
Since a number of applications rely on the existence of the BTN0_PIN definition, the BUTTON0_PIN definition has been renamed to BTN0_PIN to make the ESP32 boards compatible with these applications. However, for compatibility with earlier versions, BUTTON0_PIN is still defined as an alias of BTN0_PIN.
Instead of using the same MCU feature table in every board documentation, it refers to the MCU documentation. This makes it easier to maintain the MCU feature table.
SPI0_DEV and SPI1_DEV configuration parameters are renamed SPI0_CTRL and SPI1_CTRL to better describe what they define and to avoid confusion with SPI_DEV (0) and SPI_DEV (1).