159 lines
4.7 KiB
C
159 lines
4.7 KiB
C
#include "timer.h"
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#include <avr/interrupt.h>
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#include "pinout.h"
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#include "dda_queue.h"
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#include "dda.h"
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#include "watchdog.h"
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#include "temp.h"
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#include "serial.h"
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ISR(TIMER1_COMPA_vect) {
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WRITE(SCK, 1);
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queue_step();
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WRITE(SCK, 0);
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}
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void setupTimerInterrupt()
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{
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// no outputs
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TCCR1A = 0;
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// CTC mode
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TCCR1B = MASK(WGM12);
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// no interrupts yet
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TIMSK1 = 0;
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//start off with a slow frequency.
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setTimer(F_CPU / 100);
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}
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// the following are all from reprap project 5D firmware with some modification to reduce redundancy
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uint8_t getTimerResolution(const uint32_t delay)
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{
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// these also represent frequency: 1000000 / delay / 2 = frequency in hz.
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// our slowest speed at our highest resolution ( (2^16-1) * 0.0625 usecs = 4095 usecs (4 millisecond max))
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// range: 8Mhz max - 122hz min
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if (delay <= 65535L)
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return 1;
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// our slowest speed at our next highest resolution ( (2^16-1) * 0.5 usecs = 32767 usecs (32 millisecond max))
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// range:1Mhz max - 15.26hz min
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else if (delay <= 524280L)
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return 2;
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// our slowest speed at our medium resolution ( (2^16-1) * 4 usecs = 262140 usecs (0.26 seconds max))
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// range: 125Khz max - 1.9hz min
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else if (delay <= 4194240L)
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return 3;
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// our slowest speed at our medium-low resolution ( (2^16-1) * 16 usecs = 1048560 usecs (1.04 seconds max))
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// range: 31.25Khz max - 0.475hz min
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else if (delay <= 16776960L)
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return 4;
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// our slowest speed at our lowest resolution ((2^16-1) * 64 usecs = 4194240 usecs (4.19 seconds max))
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// range: 7.812Khz max - 0.119hz min
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//its really slow... hopefully we can just get by with super slow.
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return 5;
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}
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void setTimerResolution(uint8_t r)
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{
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// assuming CS10,CS11,CS12 are adjacent bits in platform endian order,
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TCCR1B = (TCCR1B & ~(MASK(CS12) | MASK(CS11) | MASK(CS10))) | (r << CS10);
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}
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uint16_t getTimerCeiling(const uint32_t delay)
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{
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// our slowest speed at our highest resolution ( (2^16-1) * 0.0625 usecs = 4095 usecs)
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if (delay <= 65535L)
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return (delay & 0xffff);
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// our slowest speed at our next highest resolution ( (2^16-1) * 0.5 usecs = 32767 usecs)
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else if (delay <= 524280L)
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return ((delay >> 3) & 0xffff);
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// our slowest speed at our medium resolution ( (2^16-1) * 4 usecs = 262140 usecs)
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else if (delay <= 4194240L)
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return ((delay >> 6) & 0xffff);
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// our slowest speed at our medium-low resolution ( (2^16-1) * 16 usecs = 1048560 usecs)
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else if (delay <= 16776960L)
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return ((delay >> 8) & 0xffff);
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// our slowest speed at our lowest resolution ((2^16-1) * 64 usecs = 4194240 usecs)
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else if (delay <= 67107840L)
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return ((delay >> 10) & 0xffff);
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//its really slow... hopefully we can just get by with super slow.
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else
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return 65535;
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}
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// Depending on how much work the interrupt function has to do, this is
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// pretty accurate between 10 us and 0.1 s. At fast speeds, the time
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// taken in the interrupt function becomes significant, of course.
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// Note - it is up to the user to call enableTimerInterrupt() after a call
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// to this function.
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void setTimer(uint32_t delay)
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{
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// delay is the delay between steps in IOclk ticks.
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//
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// we break it into 5 different resolutions based on the delay.
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// then we set the resolution based on the size of the delay.
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// we also then calculate the timer ceiling required. (ie what the counter counts to)
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// the result is the timer counts up to the appropriate time and then fires an interrupt.
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setTimerResolution(0); // stop timer
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GTCCR = MASK(PSRSYNC); // reset prescaler - affects timer 0 too but since it's doing PWM, it's not using the prescaler
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setTimerCeiling(getTimerCeiling(delay)); // set timeout
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setTimerResolution(getTimerResolution(delay)); // restart timer with proper prescaler
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}
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// delay( microseconds )
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void delay(uint32_t delay) {
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wd_reset();
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while (delay > 65535) {
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delayMicrosecondsInterruptible(65533);
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delay -= 65535;
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wd_reset();
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}
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delayMicrosecondsInterruptible(delay & 0xFFFF);
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wd_reset();
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}
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// delay_ms( milliseconds )
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void delay_ms(uint32_t delay) {
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wd_reset();
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while (delay > 65) {
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delayMicrosecondsInterruptible(64999);
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delay -= 65;
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wd_reset();
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}
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delayMicrosecondsInterruptible(delay * 1000);
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wd_reset();
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}
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void delayMicrosecondsInterruptible(uint16_t us)
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{
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// for a one-microsecond delay, simply return. the overhead
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// of the function call yields a delay of approximately 1 1/8 us.
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if (--us == 0)
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return;
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// the following loop takes a quarter of a microsecond (4 cycles)
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// per iteration, so execute it four times for each microsecond of
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// delay requested.
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us <<= 2;
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// account for the time taken in the preceeding commands.
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us -= 2;
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// busy wait
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__asm__ __volatile__ ("1: sbiw %0,1" "\n\t" // 2 cycles
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"brne 1b" :
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"=w" (us) :
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"0" (us) // 2 cycles
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);
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}
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