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/* -*- mode: c++ -*-
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* Kaleidoscope-Hardware-OLKB-Planck -- Planck hardware support for Kaleidoscope
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* Copyright (C) 2018, 2019, 2020 Keyboard.io, Inc
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*
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* This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
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* it under the terms of version 3 of the GNU General Public License as
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* published by the Free Software Foundation.
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*
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* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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* GNU General Public License for more details.
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*
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* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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* along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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*/
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#pragma once
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#ifdef ARDUINO_AVR_PLANCK
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#include <Arduino.h>
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#include "kaleidoscope/device/ATmega32U4Keyboard.h"
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#include "kaleidoscope/driver/bootloader/avr/HalfKay.h"
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#include "kaleidoscope/driver/keyscanner/ATmega.h"
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namespace kaleidoscope {
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namespace device {
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namespace olkb {
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struct PlanckProps : kaleidoscope::device::ATmega32U4KeyboardProps {
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struct KeyScannerProps : public kaleidoscope::driver::keyscanner::ATmegaProps {
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static constexpr uint8_t matrix_rows = 4;
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static constexpr uint8_t matrix_columns = 12;
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typedef MatrixAddr<matrix_rows, matrix_columns> KeyAddr;
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#ifndef KALEIDOSCOPE_VIRTUAL_BUILD
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static constexpr uint8_t matrix_row_pins[matrix_rows] = {PIN_D0, PIN_D5, PIN_B5, PIN_B6};
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static constexpr uint8_t matrix_col_pins[matrix_columns] = {PIN_F0, PIN_F1, PIN_F4, PIN_F5, PIN_F6, PIN_F7, PIN_B3, PIN_B1, PIN_B0, PIN_D5, PIN_B7, PIN_C7};
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#endif // KALEIDOSCOPE_VIRTUAL_BUILD
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};
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typedef kaleidoscope::driver::keyscanner::ATmega<KeyScannerProps> KeyScanner;
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typedef kaleidoscope::driver::bootloader::avr::HalfKay Bootloader;
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static constexpr const char *short_name = "planck";
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};
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#ifndef KALEIDOSCOPE_VIRTUAL_BUILD
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class Planck: public kaleidoscope::device::ATmega32U4Keyboard<PlanckProps> {};
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#else // ifndef KALEIDOSCOPE_VIRTUAL_BUILD
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/* Device definition omitted for virtual device builds.
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* We need to forward declare the device name, though, as there are
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* some legacy extern references to boards whose definition
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* depends on this.
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*/
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class Planck;
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#endif // ifndef KALEIDOSCOPE_VIRTUAL_BUILD
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#define PER_KEY_DATA(dflt, \
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R0C0, R0C1, R0C2, R0C3, R0C4, R0C5, R0C6, R0C7, R0C8, R0C9, R0C10, R0C11, \
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R1C0, R1C1, R1C2, R1C3, R1C4, R1C5, R1C6, R1C7, R1C8, R1C9, R1C10, R1C11, \
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R2C0, R2C1, R2C2, R2C3, R2C4, R2C5, R2C6, R2C7, R2C8, R2C9, R2C10, R2C11, \
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R3C0, R3C1, R3C2, R3C3, R3C4, R3C5, R3C6, R3C7, R3C8, R3C9, R3C10, R3C11 \
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) \
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R0C0, R0C1, R0C2, R0C3, R0C4, R0C5, R0C6, R0C7, R0C8, R0C9, R0C10, R0C11, \
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R1C0, R1C1, R1C2, R1C3, R1C4, R1C5, R1C6, R1C7, R1C8, R1C9, R1C10, R1C11, \
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R2C0, R2C1, R2C2, R2C3, R2C4, R2C5, R2C6, R2C7, R2C8, R2C9, R2C10, R2C11, \
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R3C0, R3C1, R3C2, R3C3, R3C4, R3C5, R3C6, R3C7, R3C8, R3C9, R3C10, R3C11
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Standardize namespace block closing comments
This standardizes namespace closing brackets for namespace blocks. Each one is
on its own line, with a comment clearly marking which namespace it closes.
Consecutive lines closing namespace blocks have no whitespace between them, but
there is one blank line before and after a set of namespace block closing lines.
To generate the namespace comments, I used clang-format, with
`FixNamespaceComments: true`. But since clang-format can't exactly duplicate
our astyle formatting, it made lots of other changes, too. To isolate the
namespace comments from the other formatting changes, I first ran clang-format
with `FixNamespaceComments: false`, committed those changes, then ran it again
to generate the namespace comments. Then I stashed the namespace comments,
reset `HEAD` to remove the other changes, applied the stashed namespace
comments, and committed the results (after examining them and making a few minor
adjustments by hand).
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
3 years ago
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} // namespace olkb
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} // namespace device
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Redesign how the hardware objects are defined
Instead of having to define `HARDWARE_IMPLEMENTATION` to the class name of the
device, and define `KeyboardHardware` from within the plugin, let all devices
set `kaleidoscope::Device` to their own class via a typedef. Furthermore,
instead of `KeyboardHardware`, use `Kaleidoscope.device()` instead. This makes
device plugins a little bit simpler, and our naming more consistent.
Because some parts of the firmware need to access the device object before the
`Kaleidoscope` object is available, we can't make it a member of that. For this
reason, the device object is `kaleidoscope_internal::device`, and
`Kaleidoscope.device()` wraps it. In general, the wrapper should be used. But if
access to the device is required before `Kaleidoscope` is available, then that's
also available.
The `Kaleidoscope` object grew a few more wrappers: `storage()` and
`serialPort()`, so that one doesn't need to use `Kaleidoscope.device()`
directly, but can use the wrappers, which are noticably shorter to write.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
5 years ago
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EXPORT_DEVICE(kaleidoscope::device::olkb::Planck)
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Redesign how the hardware objects are defined
Instead of having to define `HARDWARE_IMPLEMENTATION` to the class name of the
device, and define `KeyboardHardware` from within the plugin, let all devices
set `kaleidoscope::Device` to their own class via a typedef. Furthermore,
instead of `KeyboardHardware`, use `Kaleidoscope.device()` instead. This makes
device plugins a little bit simpler, and our naming more consistent.
Because some parts of the firmware need to access the device object before the
`Kaleidoscope` object is available, we can't make it a member of that. For this
reason, the device object is `kaleidoscope_internal::device`, and
`Kaleidoscope.device()` wraps it. In general, the wrapper should be used. But if
access to the device is required before `Kaleidoscope` is available, then that's
also available.
The `Kaleidoscope` object grew a few more wrappers: `storage()` and
`serialPort()`, so that one doesn't need to use `Kaleidoscope.device()`
directly, but can use the wrappers, which are noticably shorter to write.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
5 years ago
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Standardize namespace block closing comments
This standardizes namespace closing brackets for namespace blocks. Each one is
on its own line, with a comment clearly marking which namespace it closes.
Consecutive lines closing namespace blocks have no whitespace between them, but
there is one blank line before and after a set of namespace block closing lines.
To generate the namespace comments, I used clang-format, with
`FixNamespaceComments: true`. But since clang-format can't exactly duplicate
our astyle formatting, it made lots of other changes, too. To isolate the
namespace comments from the other formatting changes, I first ran clang-format
with `FixNamespaceComments: false`, committed those changes, then ran it again
to generate the namespace comments. Then I stashed the namespace comments,
reset `HEAD` to remove the other changes, applied the stashed namespace
comments, and committed the results (after examining them and making a few minor
adjustments by hand).
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
3 years ago
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} // namespace kaleidoscope
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#endif
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