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60 lines
3.8 KiB
Markdown
60 lines
3.8 KiB
Markdown
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# Target Architecture
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While RTIC can currently target all Cortex-m devices there are some key architecure differences that
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users should be aware. Namely the absence of hardware priority ceiling (BASEPRI) support in the
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ARMv6-M and ARMv8-M-base architectures requires a few tweaks from RTIC to deliver the same
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features. These differences result in two flavors of critical sections: priority ceiling, and source
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masking. Table 1 below shows a list of Cortex-m processors and which type of critical section they
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employ.
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#### *Table 1: Critical Section Implementation by Processor Architecture*
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| Processor | Architecture | Priority Ceiling | Source Masking |
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| :--------- | :----------: | :--------------: | :------------: |
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| Cortex-M0 | ARMv6-M | | ઙ |
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| Cortex-M0+ | ARMv6-M | | ઙ |
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| Cortex-M3 | ARMv7-M | ઙ | |
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| Cortex-M4 | ARMv7-M | ઙ | |
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| Cortex-M23 | ARMv8-M-base | | ઙ |
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| Cortex-M33 | ARMv8-M-main | ઙ | |
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| Cortex-M7 | ARMv7-M | ઙ | |
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## Priority Ceiling
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This implementation is covered in depth by Chapter 4.5 of this book.
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## Source Masking
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Since there is no hardware support for a priority ceiling, RTIC must instead rely on the Nested
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Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC) present in the core architecture. Consider Figure 1 below,
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showing two tasks A and B where A has higher priority but shares a resource with B.
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#### *Figure 1: Shared Resources and Source Masking*
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```text
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┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
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│ │
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│ │
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3 │ Pending Preempts │
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2 │ ↑- - -A- - - - -↓A─────────► │
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1 │ B───────────────────► - - - - B────────► │
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0 │Idle┌─────► Resumes ┌────────► │
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├────┴────────────────────────────────────────────┴──────────────┤
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│ │
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└────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┴──► Time
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t1 t2 t3 t4
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```
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At time *t1*, task B locks the shared resource by selectively disabling all other tasks which share
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the resource using the NVIC. In effect this raisis the virtual priority ceiling. Task A is one such
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task that shares resources with task B. At time *t2*, task A is either spawned by task B or becomes
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pending through an interrupt condition, but does not yet preempt task B even though it's priority is
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greater. This is because the NVIC is preventing it from starting due to task A's source mask being
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disabled. At time *t3*, task B releases the lock by re-enabling the tasks in the NVIC. Because
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task A was pending and has a higher priority than task B, it immediately preempts task B and is
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free to use the shared resource without risk of data race conditions. At time *t4*, task A completes
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and returns the execution context to B.
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Since source masking relies on use of the NVIC, core exception sources such as HardFault, SVCall,
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PendSV, and SysTick cannot share data with other tasks.
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