stm32ral 0.3.1

Register access layer for all STM32 microcontrollers
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stm32ral

This project provides a Rust RAL (register access layer) for all STM32 microcontrollers.

The underlying data is generated via the patched SVD files in stm32-rs.

Version Documentation Build Status License

Documentation · Repository · Supported Devices · Example Project

What is it?

stm32ral is an experiment into a lightweight register access layer. It provides access to every register, and provides constants which define the fields and possible field values in those registers. In that sense it is a lot like C device header files. However, it also provides a couple of simple macros that permit very easy register access, with very simple generated code which is efficient even without optimisations enabled.

The main aims are simplicity, compactness, and completeness. You get a module structure that contains a struct for each peripheral comprising just its registers in order, and you get a lot of constants for field widths, positions, and possible values. There's not much else, so it takes little disk and builds very quickly. It covers all registers of all STM32 devices, including core Cortex-M peripherals, and aims to include full enumerated values for each field as soon as possible.

Please consider trying it out and contributing or leaving feedback!

Quick Example

use stm32ral::{read_reg, write_reg, modify_reg, reset_reg};
use stm32ral::{rcc, gpio};

// For safe access we have to first `take()` the peripheral instance.
// This only returns Some(Instance) if that instance is not already
// taken; otherwise it returns None. This ensures that no other code can be
// simultaneously accessing the peripheral, which could lead to a race
// condition. There's `release()` to return it. See below for unsafe use.
let gpioa = gpio::GPIOA::take().unwrap();
let rcc = rcc::RCC::take().unwrap();

// Field-level read/modify/write, with either named values or just literals.
// Most of your code will look like this.
modify_reg!(rcc, rcc, AHB1ENR, GPIOAEN: Enabled);
modify_reg!(gpio, gpioa, MODER, MODER1: Input, MODER2: Output, MODER3: Input);
while read_reg!(gpio, gpioa, IDR, IDR3 == High) {
    let pa1 = read_reg!(gpio, gpioa, IDR, IDR1);
    modify_reg!(gpio, gpioa, ODR, ODR2: pa1);
}

// You can also reset whole registers or specific fields
reset_reg!(gpio, gpioa, GPIOA, MODER, MODER13, MODER14, MODER15);
reset_reg!(gpio, gpioa, GPIOA, MODER);

// Whole-register read/modify/write.
// Rarely used but nice to have the option.
let port = read_reg!(gpio, gpioa, IDR);
write_reg!(gpio, gpioa, ODR, 0x12345678);
modify_reg!(gpio, gpioa, MODER, |r| r | (0b10 << 4));

// Or forego the macros and just use the constants yourself.
// The macros above just expand to these forms for you, bringing
// the relevant constants into scope. Nothing else is going on.
let pa1 = (gpioa.IDR.read() & gpio::IDR::IDR1::mask) >> gpio::IDR::IDR1::offset;
gpioa.ODR.write(gpio::ODR::ODR2::RW::Output << gpio::ODR::ODR2::offset);

// Once you're done with a peripheral, you can release it so it is available
// to `take()` again. You can't use `gpioa` after this line.
gpio::GPIOA::release(gpioa);

// For unsafe access, you don't need to first call `take()`, just use `GPIOA`:
unsafe { modify_reg!(gpio, GPIOA, MODER, MODER1: Output) };
// With the `nosync` feature set, this is the only way to access registers.

See the example project for a more complete example that should build out of the box.

Why use stm32ral?

  • Small and lightweight (~30MB total file size, ~2MB compressed)
  • Simple (just 4 macros and a lot of constants)
  • Quick to compile (~2s build time)
  • Covers all STM32 devices in one crate
  • Supports cortex-m-rt via the rt feature, including interrupts
  • Supports cortex-m-rtfm via the rtfm feature, exposing a device with all peripherals taken
  • Doesn't get in your way
  • A bit like what you're used to from C header files

Why not use stm32ral?

  • Still experimental, might have breaking changes to API design
  • Won't keep you warm burning CPU time
  • A bit like what you're used to from C header files

Instead, consider using...

  • svd2rust is the obvious choice for generating Cortex-M device crates from SVD files, and provided inspiration for this project
  • stm32-rs provides svd2rust crates for all STM32 devices supported by this crate, and uses the same underlying patched SVD files
  • TockOS has a nice looking API for register access using their svd2regs tool.
  • Bobbin also has some good looking ideas for register access (see bobbin-dsl).

Using in your own crates

In your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies.stm32ral]
version = "0.3.0"
features = ["stm32f405"]

Replace stm32f405 with the required chip name. See Supported Devices for the full list.

Then, in your code:

#[macro_use]
extern crate stm32ral;

let gpioa = stm32ral::gpio::GPIOA::take().unwrap();
modify_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, gpioa, MODER, MODER1: Input, MODER2: Output, MODER3: Input);

Crate Features

  • inline-asm: enables inline-asm on the cortex_m dependency. Recommended if you're using a nightly compiler that supports it.
  • rt: enables device on the cortex_m_rt dependency, and provides the relevant interrupt linker scripts. Recommended for most users, but you can leave it off if you want to handle interrupts yourself.
  • doc: makes all devices visible in the output without using any of them at the top level. Ideal for generating documentation. Not useful for actually building code.
  • nosync: disables all synchronised access (take()/release() functions). The only way to access registers is with the direct unsafe access, such as write_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, GPIOA, MODER, MODER1: Input). Removes all associated synchronisation overhead, but of course the user must ensure they do not cause race conditions. "C" mode. Especially useful if enabled by a HAL crate which will perform its own synchronisation but can still permit unsafe direct access to peripherals by users (which is why this is a 'negative' feature).
  • rtfm: adds a Peripherals struct to each device module which contains a Instance for each device peripheral, and has a steal() method to unsafely create it while taking all the peripherals; this feature adds compatibility for using stm32ral as a cortex-m-rtfm device crate. If nosync is also enabled, the Peripherals struct will be empty and have an empty steal() method, retaining compatibility (but only direct unsafe access to peripherals is possible).
  • CPU features like armv7em: brings in peripherals from the CPU core itself, the relevant one is automatically included by the device features.
  • Device features: one per supported device, for example, stm32f405. You should enable precisely one of these.

Internal Structure

At the top level of stm32ral, there is a module for each supported family of devices, such as stm32ral::stm32f4. Inside each family are modules for each supported device, such as stm32ral::stm32f4::stm32f405. When you specify a device feature, everything inside that module is re-exported at the top level, so that for example stm32ral::stm32f4::stm32f405::gpio is also accessible as stm32ral::gpio. This means for many devices you can simply change which feature you build stm32ral with, and not have to change any of the code that uses it (since the paths will remain the same).

Inside each device module there is a module for each peripheral, such as stm32f405::gpio. Inside each peripheral module is a module for each register, such as stm32f405::gpio::MODER, and inside each register module is a module for each field, such as stm32f405::gpio::MODER::MODER15.

Inside each field is a mask and offset constant which define the bitmask for that field and its bit offset within the register. Each field also contains an R, W, and RW module, which contain values which may be read, written, or read+written from this module (mapping to enumeratedValues from the SVD).

An example so far:

// Equivalent to stm32ral crate root with `--features stm32f405`
pub mod stm32f4 {
    pub mod stm32f405 {
        pub mod gpio {
            pub mod MODER {
                pub mod MODER15 {
                    pub const offset: u32 = 30;
                    pub const mask: u32 = 0b11 << offset;
                    pub mod R {}
                    pub mod W {}
                    pub mod RW {
                        pub const Input: u32 = 0b00;
                        pub const Output: u32 = 0b01;
                        pub const Alternate: u32 = 0b10;
                        pub const Analog: u32 = 0b11;
                    }
                }
            }
        }
    }
}
pub use stm32f4::stm32f405::*;

Next there is the RegisterBlock, a struct which contains the registers for all instances of this peripheral. Each register is one of RWRegister, RORegister, WORegister, or the Unsafe* variants thereof. These provide .read() and .write(value) methods.

// Inside a peripheral module such as `stm32ral::stm32f4::stm32f405::gpio`

pub struct RegisterBlock {
    pub MODER: RWRegister<u32>,
    pub OTYPER: RWRegister<u32>,
    // ...
}

Then there is the ResetValues struct, which has an integer field for each register in the RegisterBlock. Each instance of the peripheral will include one ResetValues appropriately initialised, so you can:

// In reality, you'd use reset_reg!(gpio, gpioa, GPIOA, MODER);
gpioa.MODER.write(stm32ral::gpio::GPIOA::reset.MODER);

There is an Instance struct which represents a value you can own and move around and give out references to, which Derefs to a RegisterBlock to actually access the registers. There's only one Instance for each peripheral instance; you can get it using take() and return it for someone else using release() (see below).

// Inside a peripheral module such as `stm32ral::stm32f4::stm32f405::gpio`

pub struct Instance {
    addr: u32,
}
impl Deref for Instance {
    type Target = RegisterBlock;
    fn deref(&self) -> &RegisterBlock { ... }
}

Finally there is a module for each instance of the peripheral, containing its ResetValues, its one Instance, and a take() function to obtain it. take() returns an Option<Instance> which will be Some if the instance was available and None if not. This ensures you have exclusive acess to the peripheral and cannot encounter data races with other safe code. You can call release() to return the instance for others to take().

// Inside a peripheral module such as `stm32ral::stm32f4::stm32f405::gpio`

pub mod GPIOA {
    pub const reset: ResetValues = ResetValues { ... };
    const INSTANCE: Instance = Instance { ... };
    pub fn take() -> Option<Instance> { ... };
    pub fn release(Instance) { ... };
}

pub mod GPIOB { ... }
pub mod GPIOC { ... }
// and so on

These instances are what permit access to the relevant registers:

// In reality, you'd use write_reg!(gpio, gpioa, MODER, 0x1234)
// and read_reg!(gpio, gpioa, MODER)
let gpioa = gpio::GPIOA::take().unwrap();
gpioa.MODER.write(0x1234);
let _ = gpioa.MODER.read();

For convenience in unsafe code, there is also a raw pointer directly to each RegisterBlock:

pub const GPIOA: *const RegisterBlock = ...;

This permits direct use in macros without requiring you to first call take() (see below for macros).

Note that with the nosync feature enabled, the Instance and take()/release() methods are not generated; the only access is via the raw pointer described above.

As an implementation detail, many structs are actually refactored to live in the family level, with the original definitions replaced by pub use statements, to reduce duplication and bloat in the crate source files. The same is also true of duplicated values in the R, W, and RW modules.

Macros

To simplify using all the constants and registers, four macros are provided. For full details please check out the documentation.

In the definitions below:

  • peripheral is a path to a peripheral module, for example stm32ral::gpio,
  • instance is any expression that dereferences to RegisterBlock: an Instance, &Instance, &RegisterBlock, or *const RegisterBlock,
  • INSTANCE is the path to an instance module, for example stm32ral::gpio::GPIOA, but anything inside the peripheral module will be in scope, so you can simply specify GPIOA,
  • REGISTER is an ident and the name of any register in the peripheral, for example MODER, which must exist as a field in the RegisterBlock,
  • value can be a literal value or any named values from the register module.

write_reg!(peripheral, instance, REGISTER, value)

  • Directly writes value to instance.REGISTER.
// Set PA3 high (and all other GPIOA pins low).
write_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, gpioa, ODR, 1<<3);

write_reg!(peripheral, instance, REGISTER, FIELD1: value1, FIELD2: value2, ...)

  • Writes values to FIELDs and all other fields to 0 (for one or more FIELDs)
  • You can use any FIELD which is a submodule of REGISTER.
  • You can specify any arbitrary value, or you can also use any constant value inside the W or RW modules of the FIELD module.
// Set PA3 to Output, PA4 to Analog, PA5 to 0b01 (also Output), everything
// else gets set to 0 (Input).
// (In reality, be careful, as this operation will change the state of the
//  JTAG/SWD pins PA13-15, possibly breaking debugger access.
//  Use modify_reg!() instead.)
write_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, gpioa, MODER, MODER3: Output, MODER4: Analog, MODER5: 0b01);

read_reg!(peripheral, instance, REGISTER)

  • Reads and returns the current value of instance.REGISTER
// Get the value of the whole register IDR
let val = read_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, gpioa, IDR);

read_reg!(peripheral, instance, REGISTER, FIELD1, FIELD2, ...)

  • Reads and returns the current values of FIELD1, FIELD2, ... inside instance.REGISTER
// Get the value of IDR2 (masked and shifted down to the LSbits)
let idr2 = read_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, gpioa, IDR, IDR2);

// Get the value of IDR2 and IDR3
let (idr2, idr3) = read_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, gpioa, IDR, IDR2, IDR3);

read_reg!(peripheral, instance, REGISTER, FIELD EXPRESSION)

  • Reads the current value of FIELD and returns the value of FIELD EXPRESSION
  • EXPRESSION can be any token tree that makes sense in context, but is typically something like == value, != value
  • As with write_reg!(), all the values from R and RW modules of FIELD are brought into scope, so you can use MODER5 == Output for example
// Busy wait while PA2 is high
while read_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, gpioa, IDR, IDR2 == High) {}

modify_reg!(peripheral, instance, REGISTER, |r| fn(r))

  • Reads instance.REGISTER as r, then writes fn(r) to it
  • Any lambda or function taking the register's type is acceptable
// Set PA3 high without affecting any other bits
// (in reality, use the BSRR register for this).
modify_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, gpioa, ODR, |reg| reg | (1<<3));

modify_reg!(peripheral, instance, REGISTER, FIELD1: VALUE1, FIELD2: VALUE2, ...)

  • Updates only the specified FIELDs to the new VALUEs, without changing any other fields
  • Reads instance.REGISTER, masks out the bits corresponding to the specified FIELDs, sets those bits to the specified VALUEs, and writes back the result
  • As with write_reg!(), all the values from the W and RW modules of FIELD are brought into scope
// Set PA3 to Output and PA4 to Analog, but without affecting any other pins.
modify_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, gpioa, MODER, MODER3: Output, MODER4: Analog);

reset_reg!(peripheral, instance, INSTANCE, REGISTER)

  • Writes the reset value to instance.REGISTER
  • Note you have to specify both an instance (anything that derefs to RegisterBlock) and INSTANCE (the name of the instance module inside the peripheral module, e.g. peripheral::INSTANCE::reset must exist).
// Reset GPIOA back to reset state, with JTAG/SWD pins on PA13, PA14, PA15.
reset_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, gpioa, GPIOA, MODER);

reset_reg!(peripheral, instance, INSTANCE, REGISTER, FIELD1, FIELD2)

  • Writes the reset value to the specified FIELDs without changing the other fields
  • Reads instance.REGISTER, masks off the specified FIELDs, sets those bits to their reset values, and writes back the result
  • Note you have to specify both an instance (anything that derefs to RegisterBlock) and INSTANCE (the name of the instance module inside the peripheral module, e.g. peripheral::INSTANCE::reset must exist).
// Reset PA13, PA14, PA15 to their reset state.
reset_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, gpioa, GPIOA, MODER, MODER13, MODER14, MODER15);

Unsafe Macro Use

For convenience, when using the macros in an unsafe context, you do not need to first take() the instance and can instead specify it directly:

// Unsafely and directly access GPIOE.
unsafe { write_reg!(stm32ral::gpio, GPIOE, 0x01010101) };

// The macro is effectively doing this:
unsafe { (*stm32ral::gpio::GPIOE).MODER.write( 0x01010101 ) };

This works because each instance also exists as a *const RegisterBlock in the peripheral module, which the macros bring into scope and dereference.

Runtime Support & Interrupts

Use the rt feature to bring in cortex-m-rt support, providing a suitable device.x linker script and interrupt definitions.

You can then specify your own interrupt handler:

#[interrupt]
fn TIM2() {
    write_reg!(stm32ral::tim2, TIM2, SR, UIF: 0);
}

If you're using cortex-m, the Interrupt enum is compatible (it implements Nr):

peripherals.NVIC.enable(stm32ral::Interrupt::TIM2);

Safety

First, a safety preface. This crate considers safety strictly in the Rust sense of avoiding undefined behaviour, and not in any more general sense related to embedded hardware. We use safety to avoid data races but not to avoid shorting out your hardware: that's on you. Given the low-level nature of this crate, it is expected it will often (though not always!) be used in an unsafe context, and is designed to facilitate this as much as possible. Higher level crates such as HALs seem a better place to facilitate safe abstractions.

There are two major safety concerns with a register access crate.

First is the possibility that peripherals will perform actions on unrelated memory, for example a DMA peripheral or a cache control register. Such registers are marked as unsafe and reading or writing them will always require an unsafe block or function. Under the hood, they use the UnsafeXXRegister types instead of the usual XXRegister. Since such registers could potentially cause undefined behaviour, the user must make sure when accessing them to provide their own safety guarantees.

Most registers will not be unsafe and can be directly accessed in safe code. The macros provided for field access ensure values are masked for the field width, but otherwise nothing prevents safe code writing arbitrary values to registers not specifically marked unsafe. This is considered a usability trade-off; while some illegal values in some device registers will surely cause unexpected behaviour; so will many legal values (Rust cannot prevent you setting an output low which is hardwired to the supply rail, for example). Aside from a few specific registers, writing those values should not cause undefined behaviour in Rust itself, so our tradeoff is to try and prevent UB while not trying to use the safety system to enforce that all register fields may only be written with legal values.

The second safety issue is around synchronised access to peripherals, which are effectively global shared memory. The safety concern is around data races: if you are reading and writing from a peripheral but halfway through an interrupt routine wants to access the same peripheral, you will race it, leading to undefined behaviour.

The solution provided here is similar to svd2rust, though more granular: every peripheral instance has a take() -> Option<Instance> function which returns Some(Instance) if the instance is not currently taken, and None if it is. You can therefore use this safe function in your code to obtain an Instance, and pass it (or a reference to it) on to any other functions that require it, while ensuring no other threads (or interrupt routines) can access the peripheral in safe code. When you're done using it, you can call release(instance) to make it available to take() again.

However, you will often need to use peripherals in other contexts where it is awkward or impossible to safely pass the Instance around. This crate provides a *const RegisterBlock which can be unsafely dereferenced for this purpose, and can be given directly in the macros in an unsafe context. When using these unsafe features, you must ensure no data races will happen yourself (for instance, because an interrupt will only fire after you are done initialising the peripheral and don't access it thereafter, or because you use your own mutex to ensure exclusive access, etc).

The nosync feature removes all the synchronisation methods described above and leaves only unsafe access, reducing overhead and permitting some higher level crate to provide its own safe access guarantees without having to take every peripheral at runtime.

Contributing

Contributions are very welcome!

To add new named values for registers or fix errors in the registers, please instead update the SVD files in stm32-rs, which will then be used in this crate.

Changes to this crate are primarily concerned with how the RAL is generated from the SVD files.

Building stm32ral

You only need to do this if you are planning on modifying stm32ral.py or otherwise changing how stm32ral is put together; it's not required just to use it in another Rust project.

First set up the stm32-rs submodule:

$ git submodule update --init
$ cd stm32-rs/svd
$ ./extract.sh
$ cd ../..

Now you should simply be able to run make, which will automatically run make patch inside the stm32-rs submodule to produce up-to-date patched SVDs.

$ make

Be sure to update the submodule (git submodule update) if it's been changed upstream to make sure you're using the latest available SVD patches.

Outstanding Work

There are a few unresolved issues which require some further thought, but shouldn't present major backwards compatibility issues:

More Enumerated Values, Bad SVD Files

The work to add all possible enumerated values and fix incorrect SVD files is always ongoing at stm32-rs.

Aliased Registers

Aliased registers are not as well handled as they could be. This is a classic problem for Rust register accesses as Rust does not yet have anonymous unions, which would be the usual solution in C.

At the moment, stm32ral merges aliased registers, attempting to pick a suitable merged name, and combining all the fields together. This is ergonomic for many aliased registers (e.g., CCMR in timers), but not for others (such as OTG_HS_DIEPINT5 and OTG_HS_DIEPTSIZ7, yuck).

Once there are anonymous unions there might be a better solution.

Timers

Most peripherals combine well, for instance GPIOA through GPIOK are all instances of gpio::RegisterBlock. The same applies to most other peripherals like USART, SPI, I2C, and so on.

Timers are not well merged because their hierarchy is complicated: we can't just have a single TIM since there are so many different register blocks, but the solution at the moment (no merging) is not optimal either.

Ideally we might identify the various categories, such as:

  • Advanced
  • Basic
  • General purpose (type 1)
  • General purpose (type 2)
  • General purpose (32 bit)
  • Low power
  • High resolution

We could then try to group those together.

Other Peripherals

A few other peripherals do not merge well yet either, especially on STM32F373 and STM32F3x8 where some GPIO peripherals do not have the LCKR registers, annoyingly. The best solution might be to just pretend it does have it.

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.