esp-idf-hal/examples/timer_notify.rs
2023-10-14 07:36:30 +00:00

53 lines
1.8 KiB
Rust

use std::num::NonZeroU32;
use esp_idf_hal::peripherals::*;
use esp_idf_hal::sys::EspError;
use esp_idf_hal::task::notification::Notification;
use esp_idf_hal::timer::*;
fn main() -> Result<(), EspError> {
// It is necessary to call this function once. Otherwise some patches to the runtime
// implemented by esp-idf-sys might not link properly. See https://github.com/esp-rs/esp-idf-template/issues/71
esp_idf_hal::sys::link_patches();
let per = Peripherals::take()?;
// A safer abstraction over FreeRTOS/ESP-IDF task notifications.
let notification = Notification::new();
// BaseClock for the Timer is the APB_CLK that is running on 80MHz at default
// The default clock-divider is -> 80
// default APB clk is available with the APB_CLK_FREQ constant
let timer_conf = config::Config::new().auto_reload(true);
let mut timer = TimerDriver::new(per.timer00, &timer_conf)?;
// Every half a second
timer.set_alarm(timer.tick_hz() / 2)?;
let notifier = notification.notifier();
// Saftey: make sure the `Notification` object is not dropped while the subscription is active
unsafe {
timer.subscribe(move || {
let bitset = 0b10001010101;
notifier.notify_and_yield(NonZeroU32::new(bitset).unwrap());
})?;
}
timer.enable_interrupt()?;
timer.enable_alarm(true)?;
timer.enable(true)?;
loop {
// Notify approach
// The benefit with this approach over checking a global static variable is
// that the scheduler can block the task, and quickly resume it when notified
// so no spinlock is needed / the CPU does not waste cycles.
let bitset = notification.wait(esp_idf_hal::delay::BLOCK);
if let Some(bitset) = bitset {
println!("got event with bits {bitset:#b} from ISR");
}
}
}