blinks the user LED on the Nucleo board.
This commit is contained in:
commit
da82843495
9 changed files with 295 additions and 0 deletions
37
.cargo/config.toml
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37
.cargo/config.toml
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[target.thumbv7m-none-eabi]
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# uncomment this to make `cargo run` execute programs on QEMU
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# runner = "qemu-system-arm -cpu cortex-m3 -machine lm3s6965evb -nographic -semihosting-config enable=on,target=native -kernel"
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[target.'cfg(all(target_arch = "arm", target_os = "none"))']
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# uncomment ONE of these three option to make `cargo run` start a GDB session
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# which option to pick depends on your system
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# runner = "arm-none-eabi-gdb -q -x openocd.gdb"
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# runner = "gdb-multiarch -q -x openocd.gdb"
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# runner = "gdb -q -x openocd.gdb"
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rustflags = [
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# Previously, the linker arguments --nmagic and -Tlink.x were set here.
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# They are now set by build.rs instead. The linker argument can still
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# only be set here, if a custom linker is needed.
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# By default, the LLD linker is used, which is shipped with the Rust
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# toolchain. If you run into problems with LLD, you can switch to the
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# GNU linker by uncommenting this line:
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# "-C", "linker=arm-none-eabi-ld",
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# If you need to link to pre-compiled C libraries provided by a C toolchain
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# use GCC as the linker by uncommenting the three lines below:
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# "-C", "linker=arm-none-eabi-gcc",
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# "-C", "link-arg=-Wl,-Tlink.x",
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# "-C", "link-arg=-nostartfiles",
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]
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[build]
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# Pick ONE of these default compilation targets
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# target = "thumbv6m-none-eabi" # Cortex-M0 and Cortex-M0+
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#target = "thumbv7m-none-eabi" # Cortex-M3
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# target = "thumbv7em-none-eabi" # Cortex-M4 and Cortex-M7 (no FPU)
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target = "thumbv7em-none-eabihf" # Cortex-M4F and Cortex-M7F (with FPU)
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# target = "thumbv8m.base-none-eabi" # Cortex-M23
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# target = "thumbv8m.main-none-eabi" # Cortex-M33 (no FPU)
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# target = "thumbv8m.main-none-eabihf" # Cortex-M33 (with FPU)
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13
.gitignore
vendored
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13
.gitignore
vendored
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**/*.rs.bk
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.#*
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.gdb_history
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Cargo.lock
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target/
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# editor files
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.vscode/*
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!.vscode/*.md
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!.vscode/*.svd
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!.vscode/launch.json
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!.vscode/tasks.json
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!.vscode/extensions.json
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43
Cargo.toml
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Cargo.toml
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[package]
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authors = ["Joe Ardent <code@ardent.nebcorp.com>"]
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edition = "2021"
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readme = "README.md"
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name = "tinfoc"
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version = "0.1.0"
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[dependencies]
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cortex-m = "0.7"
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cortex-m-rt = "0.7"
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cortex-m-semihosting = "0.5"
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# panic-halt = "0.2"
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panic-semihosting = "0.6"
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embedded-hal = "1"
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nb = "1"
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[dependencies.stm32f3xx-hal]
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version = "0.10"
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features = ["stm32f302x8", "ld", "rt", "can", "rtc"]
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# Uncomment for the panic example.
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# panic-itm = "0.4.1"
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# Uncomment for the allocator example.
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# alloc-cortex-m = "0.4.0"
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# Uncomment for the device example.
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# Update `memory.x`, set target to `thumbv7em-none-eabihf` in `.cargo/config`,
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# and then use `cargo build --example device` to build it.
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# [dependencies.stm32f3]
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# features = ["stm32f303", "rt"]
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# version = "0.7.1"
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# this lets you use `cargo fix`!
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[[bin]]
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name = "tinfoc"
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test = false
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bench = false
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[profile.release]
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codegen-units = 1 # better optimizations
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debug = true # symbols are nice and they don't increase the size on Flash
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lto = true # better optimizations
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44
README.md
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README.md
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# TinFOC: a Rust-y Field-Oriented Control crate for STM32 MCUs
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A crate that provides an
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[FOC](https://www.st.com/en/applications/industrial-motor-control/3-phase-field-oriented-control-foc.html)
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motor controller using STM32 Cortex microcontrollers.
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## Dependencies
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The MCU I'm using is the
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[STM32F302R8](https://www.st.com/en/microcontrollers-microprocessors/stm32f302r8.html), and I'm
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using the [X-Nuclean IHM07M1] BLDC motor controller shield board that provides the actual power to
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the motor.
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This requires the `thumbv7em-none-eabihf` Rust target:
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``` console
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rustup target add thumbv7em-none-eabihf
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```
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In order to connect to the microcontroller with a debugger (say, to load the program) on Ubuntu
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linux, you'll need to:
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``` console
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sudo apt install openocd gdb-multiarch
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```
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## Running on hardware
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Assuming you've plugged your board into your computer via USB:
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1. build TinFOC with `cargo build`
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2. connect to the board with `openocd &`
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3. start gdb: `gdb-multiarch -q target/thumbv7em-none-eabihf/debug/tinfoc`
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4. inside gdb, attach to openocd: `target remote :3333`
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5. inside gdb, load the program into the MCU's flash: `load`
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Assuming that was successful, you can then enter `continue` in the gdb console, which will run the
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program on the hardware; you should see the `LD2` LED start blinking green, on and off, every 2
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seconds. If you disconnect the board from power and then reconnect, it will automatically run the
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program.
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There are no doubt other ways to flash the board, and I'll update here when I adjust my flow; I'm a
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newb when it comes to this stuff.
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43
build.rs
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43
build.rs
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//! This build script copies the `memory.x` file from the crate root into
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//! a directory where the linker can always find it at build time.
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//! For many projects this is optional, as the linker always searches the
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//! project root directory -- wherever `Cargo.toml` is. However, if you
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//! are using a workspace or have a more complicated build setup, this
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//! build script becomes required. Additionally, by requesting that
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//! Cargo re-run the build script whenever `memory.x` is changed,
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//! updating `memory.x` ensures a rebuild of the application with the
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//! new memory settings.
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//!
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//! The build script also sets the linker flags to tell it which link script to use.
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use std::env;
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use std::fs::File;
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use std::io::Write;
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use std::path::PathBuf;
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fn main() {
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// Put `memory.x` in our output directory and ensure it's
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// on the linker search path.
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let out = &PathBuf::from(env::var_os("OUT_DIR").unwrap());
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File::create(out.join("memory.x"))
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.unwrap()
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.write_all(include_bytes!("memory.x"))
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.unwrap();
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println!("cargo:rustc-link-search={}", out.display());
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// By default, Cargo will re-run a build script whenever
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// any file in the project changes. By specifying `memory.x`
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// here, we ensure the build script is only re-run when
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// `memory.x` is changed.
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println!("cargo:rerun-if-changed=memory.x");
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// Specify linker arguments.
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// `--nmagic` is required if memory section addresses are not aligned to 0x10000,
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// for example the FLASH and RAM sections in your `memory.x`.
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// See https://github.com/rust-embedded/cortex-m-quickstart/pull/95
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println!("cargo:rustc-link-arg=--nmagic");
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// Set the linker script to the one provided by cortex-m-rt.
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println!("cargo:rustc-link-arg=-Tlink.x");
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}
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37
memory.x
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37
memory.x
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MEMORY
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{
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/* NOTE 1 K = 1 KiBi = 1024 bytes */
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/* STM32F302R8T6 from STM32F302R8Tx_FLASH.ld in the STM32Cube archive */
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/* or the reference doc at */
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/* https://www.st.com/en/microcontrollers-microprocessors/stm32f302.html#resource */
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FLASH : ORIGIN = 0x8000000, LENGTH = 64K
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RAM : ORIGIN = 0x20000000, LENGTH = 16K
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}
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/* This is where the call stack will be allocated. */
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/* The stack is of the full descending type. */
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/* You may want to use this variable to locate the call stack and static
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variables in different memory regions. Below is shown the default value */
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/* _stack_start = ORIGIN(RAM) + LENGTH(RAM); */
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/* You can use this symbol to customize the location of the .text section */
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/* If omitted the .text section will be placed right after the .vector_table
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section */
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/* This is required only on microcontrollers that store some configuration right
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after the vector table */
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/* _stext = ORIGIN(FLASH) + 0x400; */
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/* Example of putting non-initialized variables into custom RAM locations. */
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/* This assumes you have defined a region RAM2 above, and in the Rust
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sources added the attribute `#[link_section = ".ram2bss"]` to the data
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you want to place there. */
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/* Note that the section will not be zero-initialized by the runtime! */
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/* SECTIONS {
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.ram2bss (NOLOAD) : ALIGN(4) {
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*(.ram2bss);
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. = ALIGN(4);
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} > RAM2
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} INSERT AFTER .bss;
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*/
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5
openocd.cfg
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5
openocd.cfg
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# Sample OpenOCD configuration for the STM32F3DISCOVERY development board
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source [find interface/stlink.cfg]
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source [find target/stm32f3x.cfg]
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40
openocd.gdb
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40
openocd.gdb
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target extended-remote :3333
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# print demangled symbols
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set print asm-demangle on
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# set backtrace limit to not have infinite backtrace loops
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set backtrace limit 32
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# detect unhandled exceptions, hard faults and panics
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break DefaultHandler
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break HardFault
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break rust_begin_unwind
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# # run the next few lines so the panic message is printed immediately
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# # the number needs to be adjusted for your panic handler
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# commands $bpnum
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# next 4
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# end
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# *try* to stop at the user entry point (it might be gone due to inlining)
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break main
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monitor arm semihosting enable
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# # send captured ITM to the file itm.fifo
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# # (the microcontroller SWO pin must be connected to the programmer SWO pin)
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# # 8000000 must match the core clock frequency
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# monitor tpiu config internal itm.txt uart off 8000000
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# # OR: make the microcontroller SWO pin output compatible with UART (8N1)
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# # 8000000 must match the core clock frequency
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# # 2000000 is the frequency of the SWO pin
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# monitor tpiu config external uart off 8000000 2000000
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# # enable ITM port 0
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# monitor itm port 0 on
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load
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# start the process but immediately halt the processor
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stepi
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33
src/main.rs
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33
src/main.rs
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#![no_std]
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#![no_main]
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// pick a panicking behavior
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//extern crate panic_halt; // you can put a breakpoint on `rust_begin_unwind` to catch panics
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// extern crate panic_abort; // requires nightly
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// extern crate panic_itm; // logs messages over ITM; requires ITM support
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extern crate panic_semihosting; // logs messages to the host stderr; requires a debugger
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use cortex_m_rt::entry;
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//use embedded_hal::digital::OutputPin;
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use stm32f3xx_hal::{self as hal, pac, prelude::*};
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#[entry]
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fn main() -> ! {
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let sp = pac::Peripherals::take().unwrap();
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let mut rcc = sp.RCC.constrain();
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let mut gpiob = sp.GPIOB.split(&mut rcc.ahb);
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let mut led = gpiob
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.pb13
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.into_push_pull_output(&mut gpiob.moder, &mut gpiob.otyper);
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let mut flash = sp.FLASH.constrain();
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let clocks = rcc.cfgr.freeze(&mut flash.acr);
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let cp = cortex_m::Peripherals::take().unwrap();
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let mut delay = hal::delay::Delay::new(cp.SYST, clocks);
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loop {
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led.toggle().unwrap();
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delay.delay_ms(2000_u32);
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}
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}
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