Gergely Nagy
583e916590
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8 years ago | |
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examples/EEPROM-Settings | 8 years ago | |
src | 8 years ago | |
.gitignore | 8 years ago | |
.travis.yml | 8 years ago | |
COPYING | 8 years ago | |
Makefile | 8 years ago | |
README.md | 8 years ago | |
library.properties | 8 years ago |
README.md
Kaleidoscope-EEPROM-Settings
To be able to reliably store persistent configuration in EEPROM
, we need to be
able to split up the available space for plugins to use. We also want to make
sure that we notice when the EEPROM
contents and the firmware are out of sync.
This plugin provides the tools to do that.
It does not guard against errors, it merely provides the means to discover them,
and let the firmware Sketch handle the case in whatever way it finds reasonable.
It's a building block, and not much else. All Kaleidoscope plugins that need to
store data in EEPROM
are encouraged to make use of this library.
Using the plugin
There are a few steps one needs to take to use the plugin: we must first
register it, then either let other plugins request slices of EEPROM
, or do so
ourselves. And finally, seal it, to signal that we are done setting up. At that
point, we can verify whether the contents of the EEPROM
agree with our
firmware.
#include <Kaleidoscope.h>
#include <Kaleidoscope-EEPROM-Settings.h>
static uint16_t settingsBase;
static struct {
bool someSettingFlag;
} testSettings;
void setup () {
USE_PLUGINS(&EEPROMSettings);
/* Use other plugins that make use of the EEPROM */
Kaleidoscope.setup();
settingsBase = EEPROMSettings.requestSlice(sizeof(testSettings));
EEPROMSettings.seal();
if (!EEPROMSettings.isValid()) {
// Handle the case where the settings are out of sync...
// Flash LEDs, for example.
return;
}
EEPROM.get(settingsBase, testSettings);
}
Plugin methods
The plugin provides the EEPROMSettings
object, which has the following methods:
requestSlice(size)
Requests a slice of the
EEPROM
, and returns the starting address (or 0 on error, including when the request arrived after sealing the layout).Should only be called before calling
seal()
.
seal()
Seal the
EEPROM
layout, so no new slices can be requested. The CRC checksum is considered final at this time, and theisValid()
,crc()
,used()
andversion()
methods can be used from this point onwards.
update()
Updates the
EEPROM
header with the current status quo, including the version and the CRC checksum.This should be called when upgrading from one version to another, or when fixing up an out-of-sync case.
isValid()
Returns whether the
EEPROM
header is valid, that is, if it has the expected CRC checksum.Should only be called after calling
seal()
.
invalidate()
Invalidates the
EEPROM
header. Use when the version does not match what the firmware would expect. This signals to other plugins that the contents ofEEPROM
should not be trusted.
version([newVersion])
Sets or returns the version of the
EEPROM
layout. This is purely for use by the firmware, so it can attempt to upgrade the contents, if need be, or alert the user in there's a mismatch. Plugins do not use this property.Should only be called after calling
seal()
.
crc()
Returns the CRC checksum of the layout. Should only be used after calling
seal()
.
used()
Returns the amount of space requested so far.
Should only be used after calling
seal()
.
Focus commands
The plugin provides two Focus hooks: FOCUS_HOOK_SETTINGS
, and
FOCUS_HOOK_EEPROM
, that register commands that allow one to work with the
settings, and with the contents of the EEPROM
through Focus.
These provide the following Focus
commands:
settings.crc
Returns the actual, and the expected checksum of the settings.
settings.valid?
Returns either
true
orfalse
, depending on whether the sealed settings are to be considered valid or not.
settings.version
Returns the (user-set) version of the settings.
eeprom.contents
Without argument, displays the full contents of the
EEPROM
, including the settings header.With arguments, the command updates as much of the
EEPROM
as arguments are provided. It will discard any unnecessary arguments.
eeprom.free
Returns the amount of free bytes in
EEPROM
.
Dependencies
Further reading
Starting from the example is the recommended way of getting started with the plugin.