1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253
//! USB general purpose timers.
//!
//! Each USB OTG peripheral has two general purpose timers (GPT). You can access
//! GPTs through your USB driver.
//!
//! # Example
//!
//! This example shows how to access a GPT through the
//! [`BusAdapter`](crate::BusAdapter) API. The example skips
//! the bus adapter and USB device setup in order to focus on the GPT API. See the bus
//! adapter documentation for more information.
//!
//! ```no_run
//! use imxrt_usbd::BusAdapter;
//! use imxrt_usbd::gpt;
//!
//! # struct Ps;
//! # unsafe impl imxrt_usbd::Peripherals for Ps { fn usb(&self) -> *const () { panic!() } fn usbphy(&self) -> *const () { panic!() } }
//! # static EP_MEMORY: imxrt_usbd::EndpointMemory<1024> = imxrt_usbd::EndpointMemory::new();
//! # static EP_STATE: imxrt_usbd::EndpointState = imxrt_usbd::EndpointState::max_endpoints();
//!
//! # let my_usb_peripherals = // Your Peripherals instance...
//! # Ps;
//! let bus_adapter = BusAdapter::new(
//! // ...
//! # my_usb_peripherals,
//! # &EP_MEMORY,
//! # &EP_STATE,
//! );
//!
//! // Prepare a GPT before creating a USB device;
//! bus_adapter.gpt_mut(gpt::Instance::Gpt0, |gpt| {
//! gpt.stop(); // Stop the timer, just in case it's already running...
//! gpt.clear_elapsed(); // Clear any outstanding elapsed flags
//! gpt.set_interrupt_enabled(false); // Enable or disable interrupts
//! gpt.set_load(75_000); // Elapse after 75ms (75000us)
//! gpt.set_mode(gpt::Mode::Repeat); // Repeat the timer after it elapses
//! gpt.reset(); // Load the value into the counter
//! });
//! // The timer isn't running until you call run()...
//!
//! # use usb_device::prelude::*;
//! let bus_allocator = usb_device::bus::UsbBusAllocator::new(bus_adapter);
//!
//! let mut device = UsbDeviceBuilder::new(&bus_allocator, UsbVidPid(0x5824, 0x27dd))
//! .product("imxrt-usbd")
//! .build();
//!
//! // You can still access the timer through the bus() method on
//! // the USB device.
//! device.bus().gpt_mut(gpt::Instance::Gpt0, |gpt| gpt.run()); // Timer running!
//!
//! loop {
//! device.bus().gpt_mut(gpt::Instance::Gpt0, |gpt| {
//! if gpt.is_elapsed() {
//! gpt.clear_elapsed();
//! // Timer elapsed!
//!
//! // If your mode is Mode::OneShot, you will need
//! // to call reset() to re-enable the timer. You also
//! // need to call reset() whenever you change the timer
//! // load value.
//! }
//! });
//! }
//! ```
use crate::ral;
/// GPT timer mode.
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)]
#[repr(u32)]
pub enum Mode {
/// In one shot mode, the timer will count down to zero, generate an interrupt,
/// and stop until the counter is reset by software.
OneShot = 0,
/// In repeat mode, the timer will count down to zero, generate an interrupt and
/// automatically reload the counter value to start again.
Repeat = 1,
}
/// GPT instance identifiers.
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)]
#[repr(u32)]
pub enum Instance {
/// The GPT0 timer instance.
Gpt0,
/// The GPT1 timer instance.
Gpt1,
}
/// General purpose timer (GPT).
///
/// USB GPTs have a 1us resolution. The counter is 24 bits wide. GPTs can generate
/// USB interrupts that are independent of USB protocol interrupts. This lets you
/// add additional, time-driven logic into your USB ISR and driver state machine.
///
/// See the module-level documentation for an example.
pub struct Gpt<'a> {
/// Borrow of USB registers from a peripheral
usb: &'a mut ral::usb::Instance,
/// GPT instance
gpt: Instance,
}
impl<'a> Gpt<'a> {
/// Create a GPT instance over the USB core registers.
///
/// *Why take a mutable reference?* The mutable reference prevents you from
/// creating two GPTs that alias the same GPT instance.
///
/// *Why not `pub`?* The `ral::usb::Instance` isn't compatible with the
/// `imxrt_ral::usb::Instance` type, since we're duplicating the RAL module
/// in our package. Since that type isn't exposed outside of this crate, no
/// one could create this `Gpt`, anyway.
pub(crate) fn new(usb: &'a mut ral::usb::Instance, gpt: Instance) -> Self {
Self { usb, gpt }
}
/// Returns the GPT instance identifier.
pub fn instance(&self) -> Instance {
self.gpt
}
/// Run the GPT timer.
///
/// Run will start counting down the timer. Use `stop()` to cancel a running timer.
pub fn run(&mut self) {
match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => ral::modify_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER0CTRL, GPTRUN: 1),
Instance::Gpt1 => ral::modify_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER1CTRL, GPTRUN: 1),
}
}
/// Indicates if the timer is running (`true`) or stopped (`false`).
pub fn is_running(&self) -> bool {
match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => ral::read_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER0CTRL, GPTRUN == 1),
Instance::Gpt1 => ral::read_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER1CTRL, GPTRUN == 1),
}
}
/// Stop the timer.
pub fn stop(&mut self) {
match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => ral::modify_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER0CTRL, GPTRUN: 0),
Instance::Gpt1 => ral::modify_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER1CTRL, GPTRUN: 0),
}
}
/// Reset the timer.
///
/// `reset` loads the counter value. It does not stop a running counter.
pub fn reset(&mut self) {
match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => ral::modify_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER0CTRL, GPTRST: 1),
Instance::Gpt1 => ral::modify_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER1CTRL, GPTRST: 1),
}
}
/// Set the timer mode.
pub fn set_mode(&mut self, mode: Mode) {
match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => {
ral::modify_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER0CTRL, GPTMODE: mode as u32)
}
Instance::Gpt1 => {
ral::modify_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER1CTRL, GPTMODE: mode as u32)
}
}
}
/// Returns the timer mode.
pub fn mode(&self) -> Mode {
let mode: u32 = match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => {
ral::read_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER0CTRL, GPTMODE)
}
Instance::Gpt1 => {
ral::read_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER1CTRL, GPTMODE)
}
};
if mode == (Mode::Repeat as u32) {
Mode::Repeat
} else if mode == (Mode::OneShot as u32) {
Mode::OneShot
} else {
// All raw mode values handled
unreachable!()
}
}
/// Set the counter load value.
///
/// `us` is the number of microseconds to count. `us` will saturate at a 24-bit value (0xFFFFFF,
/// or 16.777215 seconds). A value of `0` will result in a 1us delay.
///
/// Note that the load count value is not loaded until the next call to `reset()` (one shot mode)
/// or until after the timer elapses (repeat mode).
pub fn set_load(&mut self, us: u32) {
let count = us.min(0xFF_FFFF).max(1).saturating_sub(1);
match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => ral::write_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER0LD, count),
Instance::Gpt1 => ral::write_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER1LD, count),
}
}
/// Returns the counter load value.
pub fn load(&self) -> u32 {
match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => ral::read_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER0LD),
Instance::Gpt1 => ral::read_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, GPTIMER1LD),
}
}
/// Indicates if the timer has elapsed.
///
/// If the timer has elapsed, you should clear the elapsed flag with `clear_elapsed()`.
pub fn is_elapsed(&self) -> bool {
match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => ral::read_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, USBSTS, TI0 == 1),
Instance::Gpt1 => ral::read_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, USBSTS, TI1 == 1),
}
}
/// Clear the flag that indicates the timer has elapsed.
pub fn clear_elapsed(&mut self) {
match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => ral::write_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, USBSTS, TI0: 1),
Instance::Gpt1 => ral::write_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, USBSTS, TI1: 1),
}
}
/// Enable or disable interrupt generation when the timer elapses.
///
/// If enabled (`true`), an elapsed GPT will generate an interrupt. This happens regardless of the USB
/// interrupt enable state.
pub fn set_interrupt_enabled(&mut self, enable: bool) {
match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => ral::modify_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, USBINTR, TIE0: enable as u32),
Instance::Gpt1 => ral::modify_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, USBINTR, TIE1: enable as u32),
}
}
/// Indicates if interrupt generation is enabled.
pub fn is_interrupt_enabled(&self) -> bool {
match self.gpt {
Instance::Gpt0 => ral::read_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, USBINTR, TIE0 == 1),
Instance::Gpt1 => ral::read_reg!(ral::usb, self.usb, USBINTR, TIE1 == 1),
}
}
}