Add new "RAM" storage macro for putting constant data in RAM

Also update comments in common_macros.h following #142
This commit is contained in:
Angus Gratton 2016-05-28 12:29:28 +10:00
parent b304f65c21
commit 230aa9fd37
2 changed files with 66 additions and 33 deletions

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@ -37,15 +37,71 @@
#define VAL2FIELD_M(fieldname, value) (((value) & fieldname##_M) << fieldname##_S) #define VAL2FIELD_M(fieldname, value) (((value) & fieldname##_M) << fieldname##_S)
#define SET_FIELD_M(regbits, fieldname, value) (((regbits) & ~FIELD_MASK(fieldname)) | VAL2FIELD_M(fieldname, value)) #define SET_FIELD_M(regbits, fieldname, value) (((regbits) & ~FIELD_MASK(fieldname)) | VAL2FIELD_M(fieldname, value))
/* Use this macro to store constant values in IROM flash instead /* Use the IRAM macro to place functions into Instruction RAM (IRAM)
of having them loaded into rodata (which resides in DRAM) instead of flash (aka irom).
Unlike the ESP8266 SDK you don't need an attribute like this for (This is the opposite to the Espressif SDK, where functions default
standard functions. They're stored in flash by default. But to being placed in IRAM but the ICACHE_FLASH_ATTR attribute will
variables need them. place them in flash.)
Important to note: IROM flash can only be accessed via 32-bit word Use the IRAM attribute for functions which are called when the
aligned reads. It's up to the user of this attribute to ensure this. flash may not be available (for example during NMI exceptions), or
for functions which are called very frequently and need high
performance.
Usage example:
void IRAM high_performance_function(void)
{
// do important thing here
}
Bear in mind IRAM is limited (32KB), compared to up to 1MB of flash.
*/
#define IRAM __attribute__((section(".iram1.text")))
/* Use the RAM macro to place constant data (rodata) into RAM (data
RAM) instead of the default placement in flash. This is useful for
constant data which needs high performance access.
Usage example:
const RAM uint8_t constants[] = { 1, 2, 3, 7 };
When placing string literals in RAM, they need to be declared with
the type "const char[]" not "const char *"
Usage example:
const RAM char hello_world[] = "Hello World";
*/
#define RAM __attribute__((section(".data")))
/* Use the IRAM_DATA macro to place data into Instruction RAM (IRAM)
instead of the default of flash (for constant data) or data RAM
(for non-constant data).
This may be useful to free up data RAM. However all data read from
any instruction space (either IRAM or Flash) must be 32-bit aligned
word reads. Reading unaligned data stored with IRAM_DATA will be
slower than reading data stored in RAM. You can't perform unaligned
writes to IRAM.
*/
#define IRAM_DATA __attribute__((section(".iram1.data")))
/* Use the IROM macro to store constant values in IROM flash. In
esp-open-rtos this is already the default location for most constant
data (rodata), so you don't need this attribute in 99% of cases.
The exceptions are to mark data in the core & freertos libraries,
where the default for constant data storage is RAM.
(Unlike the Espressif SDK you don't need to use an attribute like
ICACHE_FLASH_ATTR for functions, they go into flash by default.)
Important to note: IROM flash is accessed via 32-bit word aligned
reads. esp-open-rtos does some magic to "fix" unaligned reads, but
performance is reduced.
*/ */
#ifdef __cplusplus #ifdef __cplusplus
#define IROM __attribute__((section(".irom0.literal"))) #define IROM __attribute__((section(".irom0.literal")))
@ -53,28 +109,5 @@
#define IROM __attribute__((section(".irom0.literal"))) const #define IROM __attribute__((section(".irom0.literal"))) const
#endif #endif
/* Use this macro to place functions into Instruction RAM (IRAM)
instead of flash memory (IROM).
This is useful for functions which are called when the flash may
not be available (for example during NMI exceptions), or for
functions which are called very frequently and need high
performance.
Bear in mind IRAM is limited (32KB), compared to up to 1MB of flash.
*/
#define IRAM __attribute__((section(".iram1.text")))
/* Use this macro to place data into Instruction RAM (IRAM)
instead of loaded into rodata which resides in DRAM.
(IRAM can also be written to as necessary.)
This may be useful to free up data RAM. However all data read from
the instruction space must be 32-bit aligned word reads
(non-aligned reads will use an interrupt routine to "fix" them and
still work, but are very slow..
*/
#define IRAM_DATA __attribute__((section(".iram1.rodata")))
#endif #endif

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@ -13,9 +13,9 @@
#define TESTSTRING "O hai there! %d %d %d" #define TESTSTRING "O hai there! %d %d %d"
const char *dramtest = TESTSTRING; const RAM char dramtest[] = TESTSTRING;
const __attribute__((section(".iram1.notrodata"))) char iramtest[] = TESTSTRING; const char *iromtest = TESTSTRING;
const __attribute__((section(".text.notrodata"))) char iromtest[] = TESTSTRING; const IRAM_DATA char iramtest[] = TESTSTRING;
static inline uint32_t get_ccount (void) static inline uint32_t get_ccount (void)
{ {