1
0
mirror of https://github.com/DCC-EX/CommandStation-EX.git synced 2024-11-25 00:56:13 +01:00
CommandStation-EX/I2CManager.h
2023-02-25 11:42:12 +00:00

570 lines
20 KiB
C++

/*
* © 2023, Neil McKechnie. All rights reserved.
* © 2022 Paul M Antoine
*
* This file is part of CommandStation-EX
*
* This is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* It is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with CommandStation. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#ifndef I2CMANAGER_H
#define I2CMANAGER_H
#include <inttypes.h>
#include "FSH.h"
#include "defines.h"
#include "DIAG.h"
/*
* Manager for I2C communications. For portability, it allows use
* of the Wire class, but also has a native implementation for AVR
* which supports non-blocking queued I/O requests.
*
* Helps to avoid calling Wire.begin() multiple times (which is not
* entirely benign as it reinitialises).
*
* Also helps to avoid the Wire clock from being set, by another device
* driver, to a speed which is higher than a device supports.
*
* Thirdly, it provides a convenient way to check whether there is a
* device on a particular I2C address.
*
* Non-blocking requests are issued by creating an I2C Request Block
* (I2CRB) which is then added to the I2C manager's queue. The
* application refers to this block to check for completion of the
* operation, and for reading completion status.
*
* Examples:
* I2CRB rb;
* uint8_t status = I2CManager.write(address, buffer, sizeof(buffer), &rb);
* ...
* if (!rb.isBusy()) {
* status = rb.status;
* // Repeat write
* I2CManager.queueRequest(&rb);
* ...
* status = rb.wait(); // Wait for completion and read status
* }
* ...
* I2CRB rb2;
* outbuffer[0] = 12; // Register number in I2C device to be read
* rb2.setRequestParams(address, inBuffer, 1, outBuffer, 1);
* status = I2CManager.queueRequest(&rb2);
* if (status == I2C_STATUS_OK) {
* status = rb2.wait();
* if (status == I2C_STATUS_OK) {
* registerValue = inBuffer[0];
* }
* }
* ...
*
* Synchronous (blocking) calls are also possible, e.g.
* status = I2CManager.write(address, buffer, sizeof(buffer));
*
* When using non-blocking requests, neither the I2CRB nor the input or output
* buffers should be modified until the I2CRB is complete (not busy).
*
* Timeout monitoring is possible, but requires that the following call is made
* reasonably frequently in the program's loop() function:
* I2CManager.loop();
* So that the application doesn't need to do this explicitly, this call is performed
* from the I2CRB::isBusy() or I2CRB::wait() functions.
*
*/
/*
* I2C Multiplexer (e.g. TCA9547, TCA9548)
*
* A multiplexer offers a way of extending the address range of I2C devices. For example, GPIO extenders use address range 0x20-0x27
* to are limited to 8 on a bus. By adding a multiplexer, the limit becomes 8 for each of the multiplexer's 8 sub-buses, i.e. 64.
* And a single I2C bus can have up to 8 multiplexers, giving up to 64 sub-buses and, in theory, up to 512 I/O extenders; that's
* as many as 8192 input/output pins!
* Secondly, the capacitance of the bus is an electrical limiting factor of the length of the bus, speed and number of devices.
* The multiplexer isolates each sub-bus from the others, and so reduces the capacitance of the bus. For example, with one
* multiplexer and 64 GPIO extenders, only 9 devices are connected to the bus at any time (multiplexer plus 8 extenders).
* Thirdly, the multiplexer offers the ability to use mixed-speed devices more effectively, by allowing high-speed devices to be
* put on a different bus to low-speed devices, enabling the software to switch the I2C speed on-the-fly between I2C transactions.
*
*
* Non-interrupting I2C:
*
* Non-blocking I2C may be operated without interrupts (undefine I2C_USE_INTERRUPTS). Instead, the I2C state
* machine handler, currently invoked from the interrupt service routine, is invoked from the loop() function.
* The speed at which I2C operations can be performed then becomes highly dependent on the frequency that
* the loop() function is called, and may be adequate under some circumstances.
* The advantage of NOT using interrupts is that the impact of I2C upon the DCC waveform (when accurate timing mode isn't in use)
* becomes almost zero.
*
*/
// Maximum number of retries on an I2C operation.
// A value of zero will disable retries.
// Maximum value is 254 (unsigned byte counter)
// Note that timeout failures are not retried, but any timeout
// configured applies to each try separately.
#define MAX_I2C_RETRIES 2
// Add following line to config.h to enable Wire library instead of native I2C drivers
//#define I2C_USE_WIRE
// Add following line to config.h to disable the use of interrupts by the native I2C drivers.
//#define I2C_NO_INTERRUPTS
// Default to use interrupts within the native I2C drivers.
#ifndef I2C_NO_INTERRUPTS
#define I2C_USE_INTERRUPTS
#endif
// I2C Extended Address support I2C Multiplexers and allows various properties to be
// associated with an I2C address such as the MUX and SubBus. In the future, this
// may be extended to include multiple buses, and other features.
// Uncomment to enable extended address.
//
//#define I2C_EXTENDED_ADDRESS
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Extended I2C Address type to facilitate extended I2C addresses including
// I2C multiplexer support.
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Currently only one bus supported, and one instance of I2CManager to handle it.
enum I2CBus : uint8_t {
I2CBus_0 = 0,
};
// Currently I2CAddress supports one I2C bus, with up to eight
// multipexers (MUX) attached. Each MUX can have up to eight sub-buses.
enum I2CMux : uint8_t {
I2CMux_0 = 0,
I2CMux_1 = 1,
I2CMux_2 = 2,
I2CMux_3 = 3,
I2CMux_4 = 4,
I2CMux_5 = 5,
I2CMux_6 = 6,
I2CMux_7 = 7,
I2CMux_None = 255, // Address doesn't need mux switching
};
enum I2CSubBus : uint8_t {
SubBus_0 = 0, // Enable individual sub-buses...
SubBus_1 = 1,
#if !defined(I2CMUX_PCA9542)
SubBus_2 = 2,
SubBus_3 = 3,
#if !defined(I2CMUX_PCA9544)
SubBus_4 = 4,
SubBus_5 = 5,
SubBus_6 = 6,
SubBus_7 = 7,
#endif
#endif
SubBus_No, // Number of subbuses (highest + 1)
SubBus_None = 254, // Disable all sub-buses on selected mux
SubBus_All = 255, // Enable all sub-buses (not supported by some multiplexers)
};
// Type to hold I2C address
#if defined(I2C_EXTENDED_ADDRESS)
// First MUX address (they range between 0x70-0x77).
#define I2C_MUX_BASE_ADDRESS 0x70
// Currently I2C address supports one I2C bus, with up to eight
// multiplexers (MUX) attached. Each MUX can have up to eight sub-buses.
// This structure could be extended in the future (if there is a need)
// to support 10-bit I2C addresses, different I2C clock speed for each
// sub-bus, multiple I2C buses, and other features not yet thought of.
struct I2CAddress {
private:
// Fields
I2CBus _busNumber;
I2CMux _muxNumber;
I2CSubBus _subBus;
uint8_t _deviceAddress;
static char addressBuffer[];
public:
// Constructors
// For I2CAddress "{I2CBus_0, Mux_0, SubBus_0, 0x23}" syntax.
I2CAddress(const I2CBus busNumber, const I2CMux muxNumber, const I2CSubBus subBus, const uint8_t deviceAddress) {
_busNumber = busNumber;
_muxNumber = muxNumber;
_subBus = subBus;
_deviceAddress = deviceAddress;
}
// Basic constructor
I2CAddress() : I2CAddress(I2CMux_None, SubBus_None, 0) {}
// For I2CAddress "{Mux_0, SubBus_0, 0x23}" syntax.
I2CAddress(const I2CMux muxNumber, const I2CSubBus subBus, const uint8_t deviceAddress) :
I2CAddress(I2CBus_0, muxNumber, subBus, deviceAddress) {}
// For I2CAddress in form "{SubBus_0, 0x23}" - assume Mux0 (0x70)
I2CAddress(I2CSubBus subBus, uint8_t deviceAddress) :
I2CAddress(I2CMux_0, subBus, deviceAddress) {}
// Conversion from uint8_t to I2CAddress
// For I2CAddress in form "0x23"
// (device assumed to be on the main I2C bus).
I2CAddress(const uint8_t deviceAddress) :
I2CAddress(I2CMux_None, SubBus_None, deviceAddress) {}
// Conversion from uint8_t to I2CAddress
// For I2CAddress in form "{I2CBus_1, 0x23}"
// (device not connected via multiplexer).
I2CAddress(const I2CBus bus, const uint8_t deviceAddress) :
I2CAddress(bus, I2CMux_None, SubBus_None, deviceAddress) {}
// For I2CAddress in form "{I2CMux_0, SubBus_0}" (mux selector)
I2CAddress(const I2CMux muxNumber, const I2CSubBus subBus) :
I2CAddress(muxNumber, subBus, 0x00) {}
// For I2CAddress in form "{i2cAddress, deviceAddress}"
// where deviceAddress is to be on the same subbus as i2cAddress.
I2CAddress(I2CAddress firstAddress, uint8_t newDeviceAddress) :
I2CAddress(firstAddress._muxNumber, firstAddress._subBus, newDeviceAddress) {}
// Conversion operator from I2CAddress to uint8_t
// For "uint8_t address = i2cAddress;" syntax
// (device assumed to be on the main I2C bus or on a currently selected subbus.
operator uint8_t () const { return _deviceAddress; }
// Conversion from I2CAddress to char* (uses static storage so only
// one conversion can be done at a time). So don't call it twice in a
// single DIAG statement for example.
const char* toString() {
char *ptr = addressBuffer;
if (_muxNumber != I2CMux_None) {
strcpy_P(ptr, (const char*)F("{I2CMux_"));
ptr += 8;
*ptr++ = '0' + _muxNumber;
strcpy_P(ptr, (const char*)F(",Subbus_"));
ptr += 8;
if (_subBus == SubBus_None) {
strcpy_P(ptr, (const char*)F("None"));
ptr += 4;
} else if (_subBus == SubBus_All) {
strcpy_P(ptr, (const char*)F("All"));
ptr += 3;
} else
*ptr++ = '0' + _subBus;
*ptr++ = ',';
}
toHex(_deviceAddress, ptr);
ptr += 4;
if (_muxNumber != I2CMux_None)
*ptr++ = '}';
*ptr = 0; // terminate string
return addressBuffer;
}
// Comparison operator
int operator == (I2CAddress &a) const {
if (_deviceAddress != a._deviceAddress)
return false; // Different device address so no match
if (_muxNumber == I2CMux_None || a._muxNumber == I2CMux_None)
return true; // Same device address, one or other on main bus
if (_subBus == SubBus_None || a._subBus == SubBus_None)
return true; // Same device address, one or other on main bus
if (_muxNumber != a._muxNumber)
return false; // Connected to a subbus on a different mux
if (_subBus != a._subBus)
return false; // different subbus
return true; // Same address on same mux and same subbus
}
// Field accessors
I2CMux muxNumber() { return _muxNumber; }
I2CSubBus subBus() { return _subBus; }
uint8_t deviceAddress() { return _deviceAddress; }
private:
// Helper function for converting byte to four-character hex string (e.g. 0x23).
void toHex(const uint8_t value, char *buffer);
};
#else
struct I2CAddress {
private:
uint8_t _deviceAddress;
static char addressBuffer[];
public:
// Constructors
I2CAddress(const uint8_t deviceAddress) {
_deviceAddress = deviceAddress;
}
I2CAddress(I2CMux, I2CSubBus, const uint8_t deviceAddress) {
addressWarning();
_deviceAddress = deviceAddress;
}
I2CAddress(I2CSubBus, const uint8_t deviceAddress) {
addressWarning();
_deviceAddress = deviceAddress;
}
// Basic constructor
I2CAddress() : I2CAddress(0) {}
// Conversion operator from I2CAddress to uint8_t
// For "uint8_t address = i2cAddress;" syntax
operator uint8_t () const { return _deviceAddress; }
// Conversion from I2CAddress to char* (uses static storage so only
// one conversion can be done at a time). So don't call it twice in a
// single DIAG statement for example.
const char* toString () {
char *ptr = addressBuffer;
// Just display hex value, two digits.
toHex(_deviceAddress, ptr);
ptr += 4;
*ptr = 0; // terminate string
return addressBuffer;
}
// Comparison operator
int operator == (I2CAddress &a) const {
if (_deviceAddress != a._deviceAddress)
return false; // Different device address so no match
return true; // Same address on same mux and same subbus
}
private:
// Helper function for converting byte to four-character hex string (e.g. 0x23).
void toHex(const uint8_t value, char *buffer);
void addressWarning() {
if (!_addressWarningDone) {
DIAG(F("WARNIING: Extended I2C address used but not supported in this configuration"));
_addressWarningDone = true;
}
}
static bool _addressWarningDone;
};
#endif // I2C_EXTENDED_ADDRESS
// Status codes for I2CRB structures.
enum : uint8_t {
// Codes used by Wire and by native drivers
I2C_STATUS_OK=0,
I2C_STATUS_TRUNCATED=1,
I2C_STATUS_NEGATIVE_ACKNOWLEDGE=2,
I2C_STATUS_TRANSMIT_ERROR=3,
I2C_STATUS_TIMEOUT=5,
// Code used by Wire only
I2C_STATUS_OTHER_TWI_ERROR=4, // catch-all error
// Codes used by native drivers only
I2C_STATUS_ARBITRATION_LOST=6,
I2C_STATUS_BUS_ERROR=7,
I2C_STATUS_UNEXPECTED_ERROR=8,
I2C_STATUS_PENDING=253,
};
// Status codes for the state machine (not returned to caller).
enum : uint8_t {
I2C_STATE_ACTIVE=253,
I2C_STATE_FREE=254,
I2C_STATE_CLOSING=255,
I2C_STATE_COMPLETED=252,
};
typedef enum : uint8_t
{
OPERATION_READ = 1,
OPERATION_REQUEST = 2,
OPERATION_SEND = 3,
OPERATION_SEND_P = 4,
OPERATION_NORETRY = 0x80, // OR with operation to suppress retries.
OPERATION_MASK = 0x7f, // mask for extracting the operation code
} OperationEnum;
// Default I2C frequency
#ifndef I2C_FREQ
#define I2C_FREQ 400000L
#endif
// Class defining a request context for an I2C operation.
class I2CRB {
public:
volatile uint8_t status; // Completion status, or pending flag (updated from IRC)
volatile uint8_t nBytes; // Number of bytes read (updated from IRC)
inline I2CRB() { status = I2C_STATUS_OK; };
uint8_t wait();
bool isBusy();
void setReadParams(I2CAddress i2cAddress, uint8_t *readBuffer, uint8_t readLen);
void setRequestParams(I2CAddress i2cAddress, uint8_t *readBuffer, uint8_t readLen, const uint8_t *writeBuffer, uint8_t writeLen);
void setWriteParams(I2CAddress i2cAddress, const uint8_t *writeBuffer, uint8_t writeLen);
void suppressRetries(bool suppress);
uint8_t writeLen;
uint8_t readLen;
uint8_t operation;
I2CAddress i2cAddress;
uint8_t *readBuffer;
const uint8_t *writeBuffer;
#if !defined(I2C_USE_WIRE)
I2CRB *nextRequest; // Used by non-blocking devices for I2CRB queue management.
#endif
};
// I2C Manager
class I2CManagerClass {
public:
// If not already initialised, initialise I2C (wire).
void begin(void);
// Set clock speed to the lowest requested one.
void setClock(uint32_t speed);
// Force clock speed
void forceClock(uint32_t speed);
// setTimeout sets the timout value for I2C transactions (milliseconds).
void setTimeout(unsigned long);
// Check if specified I2C address is responding.
uint8_t checkAddress(I2CAddress address);
inline bool exists(I2CAddress address) {
return checkAddress(address)==I2C_STATUS_OK;
}
// Select/deselect Mux Sub-Bus (if using legacy addresses, just checks address)
// E.g. muxSelectSubBus({I2CMux_0, SubBus_3});
uint8_t muxSelectSubBus(I2CAddress address) {
return checkAddress(address);
}
// Write a complete transmission to I2C from an array in RAM
uint8_t write(I2CAddress address, const uint8_t buffer[], uint8_t size);
uint8_t write(I2CAddress address, const uint8_t buffer[], uint8_t size, I2CRB *rb);
// Write a complete transmission to I2C from an array in Flash
uint8_t write_P(I2CAddress address, const uint8_t buffer[], uint8_t size);
uint8_t write_P(I2CAddress address, const uint8_t buffer[], uint8_t size, I2CRB *rb);
// Write a transmission to I2C from a list of bytes.
uint8_t write(I2CAddress address, uint8_t nBytes, ...);
// Write a command from an array in RAM and read response
uint8_t read(I2CAddress address, uint8_t readBuffer[], uint8_t readSize,
const uint8_t writeBuffer[]=NULL, uint8_t writeSize=0);
uint8_t read(I2CAddress address, uint8_t readBuffer[], uint8_t readSize,
const uint8_t writeBuffer[], uint8_t writeSize, I2CRB *rb);
// Write a command from an arbitrary list of bytes and read response
uint8_t read(I2CAddress address, uint8_t readBuffer[], uint8_t readSize,
uint8_t writeSize, ...);
void queueRequest(I2CRB *req);
// Function to abort long-running operations.
void checkForTimeout();
// Loop method
void loop();
// Expand error codes into text. Note that they are in flash so
// need to be printed using FSH.
static const FSH *getErrorMessage(uint8_t status);
private:
bool _beginCompleted = false;
bool _clockSpeedFixed = false;
uint8_t retryCounter; // Count of retries
// Clock speed must be no higher than 400kHz on AVR. Higher is possible on 4809, SAMD
// and STM32 but most popular I2C devices are 400kHz so in practice the higher speeds
// will not be useful. The speed can be overridden by I2CManager::forceClock().
uint32_t _clockSpeed = I2C_FREQ;
// Default timeout 100ms on I2C request block completion.
// A full 32-byte transmission takes about 8ms at 100kHz,
// so this value allows lots of headroom.
// It can be modified by calling I2CManager.setTimeout() function.
// When retries are enabled, the timeout applies to each
// try, and failure from timeout does not get retried.
// A value of 0 means disable timeout monitoring.
unsigned long _timeout = 100000UL;
// Finish off request block by waiting for completion and posting status.
uint8_t finishRB(I2CRB *rb, uint8_t status);
void _initialise();
void _setClock(unsigned long);
#if defined(I2C_EXTENDED_ADDRESS)
// Count of I2C multiplexers found when initialising. If there is only one
// MUX then the subbus does not need de-selecting after use; however, if there
// are two or more, then the subbus must be deselected to avoid multiple
// sub-bus legs on different multiplexers being accessible simultaneously.
private:
uint8_t _muxCount = 0;
public:
uint8_t getMuxCount() { return _muxCount; }
#endif
#if !defined(I2C_USE_WIRE)
// I2CRB structs are queued on the following two links.
// If there are no requests, both are NULL.
// If there is only one request, then queueHead and queueTail both point to it.
// Otherwise, queueHead is the pointer to the first request in the queue and
// queueTail is the pointer to the last request in the queue.
// Within the queue, each request's nextRequest field points to the
// next request, or NULL.
// Mark volatile as they are updated by IRC and read/written elsewhere.
private:
I2CRB * volatile queueHead = NULL;
I2CRB * volatile queueTail = NULL;
// State is set to I2C_STATE_FREE when the interrupt handler has finished
// the current request and is ready to complete.
uint8_t state = I2C_STATE_FREE;
// CompletionStatus may be set by the interrupt handler at any time but is
// not written to the I2CRB until the state is I2C_STATE_FREE.
uint8_t completionStatus = I2C_STATUS_OK;
uint8_t overallStatus = I2C_STATUS_OK;
I2CRB * currentRequest = NULL;
uint8_t txCount = 0;
uint8_t rxCount = 0;
uint8_t bytesToSend = 0;
uint8_t bytesToReceive = 0;
uint8_t operation = 0;
unsigned long startTime = 0;
uint8_t muxPhase = 0;
uint8_t muxAddress = 0;
uint8_t muxData[1];
uint8_t deviceAddress;
const uint8_t *sendBuffer;
uint8_t *receiveBuffer;
volatile uint32_t pendingClockSpeed = 0;
void startTransaction();
// Low-level hardware manipulation functions.
void I2C_init();
void I2C_setClock(unsigned long i2cClockSpeed);
void I2C_handleInterrupt();
void I2C_sendStart();
void I2C_sendStop();
void I2C_close();
public:
// handleInterrupt needs to be public to be called from the ISR function!
void handleInterrupt();
#endif
};
// Pointer to class instance (Note: if there is more than one bus, each will have
// its own instance of I2CManager, selected by the queueRequest function from
// the I2CBus field within the request block's I2CAddress).
extern I2CManagerClass I2CManager;
#endif