Relies on global flags set when the user ISR is executing.
Unclear if this fixes any bugs as ISR code may not have been calling
into LWIP, but the previous implementation was broken.
RTOS Timer tick handler is now the same as any other ISR.
This causes a few subtle behaviour changes that seem OK but are worth noting:
* RTOS tick handler sdk__xt_timer_int() is now called from one stack
frame deeper (inside _xt_isr_handler()), whereas before it was called
from the level above in UserHandleInterrupt. I can't see any way that
the extra ~40 bytes of stack use here hurt, though.
* sdk__xt_timer_int() was previous called after all other interrupts
flagged in the handler, now it's called before the TIMER FRC1 & FRC2
handlers. The tick handler doesn't appear to do anything particularly
timing intensive, though.
* GPIO interrupt (value 3) is now lower priority than the SPI
interrupt (value 2), whereas before it would have been called before
SPI if both interrupts triggered at once.