//go:build rp2350 package machine import ( "device/rp" "runtime/volatile" "unsafe" ) const ( _NUMBANK0_GPIOS = 48 _NUMBANK0_IRQS = 6 rp2350ExtraReg = 1 _NUMIRQ = 51 notimpl = "rp2350: not implemented" RESETS_RESET_Msk = 0x1fffffff initUnreset = rp.RESETS_RESET_ADC | rp.RESETS_RESET_SPI0 | rp.RESETS_RESET_SPI1 | rp.RESETS_RESET_UART0 | rp.RESETS_RESET_UART1 | rp.RESETS_RESET_USBCTRL initDontReset = rp.RESETS_RESET_USBCTRL | rp.RESETS_RESET_SYSCFG | rp.RESETS_RESET_PLL_USB | rp.RESETS_RESET_PLL_SYS | rp.RESETS_RESET_PADS_QSPI | rp.RESETS_RESET_IO_QSPI | rp.RESETS_RESET_JTAG padEnableMask = rp.PADS_BANK0_GPIO0_IE_Msk | rp.PADS_BANK0_GPIO0_OD_Msk | rp.PADS_BANK0_GPIO0_ISO_Msk ) const ( PinOutput PinMode = iota PinInput PinInputPulldown PinInputPullup PinAnalog PinUART PinPWM PinI2C PinSPI PinPIO0 PinPIO1 PinPIO2 ) const ( clkGPOUT0 clockIndex = iota // GPIO Muxing 0 clkGPOUT1 // GPIO Muxing 1 clkGPOUT2 // GPIO Muxing 2 clkGPOUT3 // GPIO Muxing 3 clkRef // Watchdog and timers reference clock clkSys // Processors, bus fabric, memory, memory mapped registers clkPeri // Peripheral clock for UART and SPI ClkHSTX // High speed interface clkUSB // USB clock clkADC // ADC clock numClocks ) func calcClockDiv(srcFreq, freq uint32) uint32 { // Div register is 4.16 int.frac divider so multiply by 2^16 (left shift by 16) return uint32((uint64(srcFreq) << 16) / uint64(freq)) } type clocksType struct { clk [numClocks]clockType dftclk_xosc_ctrl volatile.Register32 dftclk_rosc_ctrl volatile.Register32 dftclk_lposc_ctrl volatile.Register32 resus struct { ctrl volatile.Register32 status volatile.Register32 } fc0 fc wakeEN0 volatile.Register32 wakeEN1 volatile.Register32 sleepEN0 volatile.Register32 sleepEN1 volatile.Register32 enabled0 volatile.Register32 enabled1 volatile.Register32 intR volatile.Register32 intE volatile.Register32 intF volatile.Register32 intS volatile.Register32 } // GPIO function selectors const ( // Connect the high-speed transmit peripheral (HSTX) to GPIO. fnHSTX pinFunc = 0 fnSPI pinFunc = 1 // Connect one of the internal PL022 SPI peripherals to GPIO fnUART pinFunc = 2 fnI2C pinFunc = 3 // Connect a PWM slice to GPIO. There are eight PWM slices, // each with two outputchannels (A/B). The B pin can also be used as an input, // for frequency and duty cyclemeasurement fnPWM pinFunc = 4 // Software control of GPIO, from the single-cycle IO (SIO) block. // The SIO function (F5)must be selected for the processors to drive a GPIO, // but the input is always connected,so software can check the state of GPIOs at any time. fnSIO pinFunc = 5 // Connect one of the programmable IO blocks (PIO) to GPIO. PIO can implement a widevariety of interfaces, // and has its own internal pin mapping hardware, allowing flexibleplacement of digital interfaces on bank 0 GPIOs. // The PIO function (F6, F7, F8) must beselected for PIO to drive a GPIO, but the input is always connected, // so the PIOs canalways see the state of all pins. fnPIO0, fnPIO1, fnPIO2 pinFunc = 6, 7, 8 // General purpose clock outputs. Can drive a number of internal clocks (including PLL // outputs) onto GPIOs, with optional integer divide. fnGPCK pinFunc = 9 // QSPI memory interface peripheral, used for execute-in-place from external QSPI flash or PSRAM memory devices. fnQMI pinFunc = 9 // USB power control signals to/from the internal USB controller. fnUSB pinFunc = 10 fnUARTAlt pinFunc = 11 fnNULL pinFunc = 0x1f ) // Configure configures the gpio pin as per mode. func (p Pin) Configure(config PinConfig) { if p == NoPin { return } p.init() mask := uint32(1) << p switch config.Mode { case PinOutput: p.setFunc(fnSIO) rp.SIO.GPIO_OE_SET.Set(mask) case PinInput: p.setFunc(fnSIO) p.pulloff() case PinInputPulldown: p.setFunc(fnSIO) p.pulldown() case PinInputPullup: p.setFunc(fnSIO) p.pullup() case PinAnalog: p.setFunc(fnNULL) p.pulloff() case PinUART: p.setFunc(fnUART) case PinPWM: p.setFunc(fnPWM) case PinI2C: // IO config according to 4.3.1.3 of rp2040 datasheet. p.setFunc(fnI2C) p.pullup() p.setSchmitt(true) p.setSlew(false) case PinSPI: p.setFunc(fnSPI) case PinPIO0: p.setFunc(fnPIO0) case PinPIO1: p.setFunc(fnPIO1) case PinPIO2: p.setFunc(fnPIO2) } } var ( timer = (*timerType)(unsafe.Pointer(rp.TIMER0)) ) // Enable or disable a specific interrupt on the executing core. // num is the interrupt number which must be in [0,_NUMIRQ). func irqSet(num uint32, enabled bool) { if num >= _NUMIRQ { return } register_index := num / 32 var mask uint32 = 1 << (num % 32) if enabled { // Clear pending before enable //(if IRQ is actually asserted, it will immediately re-pend) if register_index == 0 { rp.PPB.NVIC_ICPR0.Set(mask) rp.PPB.NVIC_ISER0.Set(mask) } else { rp.PPB.NVIC_ICPR1.Set(mask) rp.PPB.NVIC_ISER1.Set(mask) } } else { if register_index == 0 { rp.PPB.NVIC_ICER0.Set(mask) } else { rp.PPB.NVIC_ICER1.Set(mask) } } } func (clks *clocksType) initRTC() {} // No RTC on RP2350. func (clks *clocksType) initTicks() { rp.TICKS.SetTIMER0_CTRL_ENABLE(0) rp.TICKS.SetTIMER0_CYCLES(12) rp.TICKS.SetTIMER0_CTRL_ENABLE(1) } func EnterBootloader() { enterBootloader() } // startTick starts the watchdog tick. // On RP2040, the watchdog contained a tick generator used to generate a 1μs tick for the watchdog. This was also // distributed to the system timer. On RP2350, the watchdog instead takes a tick input from the system-level ticks block. See Section 8.5. func (wd *watchdogImpl) startTick(cycles uint32) { rp.TICKS.WATCHDOG_CTRL.SetBits(1) }