194: bump heapless dependency to v0.5.0; remove "nightly" feature r=japaric a=japaric
with the upcoming version of heapless we are able to initialize all internal
queues in const context removing the need for late initialization
this commit also removes the "nightly" feature because all the optimization
provided by it are now enabled by default
Co-authored-by: Jorge Aparicio <jorge@japaric.io>
with the upcoming version of heapless we are able to initialize all internal
queues in const context removing the need for late initialization
this commit also removes the "nightly" feature because all the optimization
provided by it are now enabled by default
189: write generated code to disk for easier inspection r=japaric a=japaric
now that the generated code is actually readable let's make it easier to access
this commit also documents how to inspect the generated code via
`rtfm-expansion.rs` and `cargo-expand`
Co-authored-by: Jorge Aparicio <jorge@japaric.io>
now that the generated code is actually readable let's make it easier to access
this commit also documents how to inspect the generated code via
`rtfm-expansion.rs` and `cargo-expand`
This commit:
- Implements RFC 147: "all functions must be safe"
- Implements RFC 155: "explicit Context parameter"
- Implements the pending breaking change #141: reject assign syntax in `init`
(which was used to initialize late resources)
- Refactors code generation to make it more readable -- there are no more random
identifiers in the output -- and align it with the book description of RTFM
internals.
- Makes the framework hard depend on `core::mem::MaybeUninit` and thus will
require nightly until that API is stabilized.
- Fixes a ceiling analysis bug where the priority of the system timer was not
considered in the analysis.
- Shrinks the size of all the internal queues by turning `AtomicUsize` indices
into `AtomicU8`s.
- Removes the integration with `owned_singleton`.
170: check task priority at compile time r=TeXitoi a=japaric
before we were checking the priority at runtime. The compile time error message
when the priority is too high is kind of awful though.
Co-authored-by: Jorge Aparicio <jorge@japaric.io>
This program was being accepted:
``` rust
#[task(
capacity = 1,
capacity = 2,
priority = 1,
priority = 2,
)]
fn foo() {}
```
now it will trigger a compiler error