Initial revision

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Raphaël Assénat 2007-03-25 02:59:30 +00:00
commit 6c88641e07
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--- v1.4 (Dec 3, 2006)
- Added support for Atari style joysticks. Two button
variations (SMS) are supported.
- Added padding to nes report descriptor. This makes it
work correcly on windows. Linux sure is tolerant...
--- v1.3 (Oct 28, 2006)
- Fixed a bug in nes.c, snes.c and snesmouse.c which prevented the pullup
on the data pin (from device) from being enabled. This resulted in
random button toggling when no controller was connected.
- A separate USB PID is used when in NES mode.
- PD1 is now left as input (no pullup) since it is shorted with PD0 on the
PCB rev.C. (And I didnt want to scrap a batch of 50 pcb nor cut a track
and solder a wire 50 times...)
--- v1.2 (Oct 6, 2006)
Added serial number
Added support for Snes mouse (auto detected in snes mode)
- Default speed: Low
- 3 Speeds selectable by holding some buttons at
startup (USB connect or mouse connect)
Left+right buttons: Low speed
Left buton: Medium speed
Right button: High speed
No button: Default speed when USB connect,
continue using same speed for mouse (re)-connect
--- v1.1
Reworked report descriptor for better behaviour
in Windows and Mac OS X
--- v1.0 (Jul 5, 2006)
Initial release:
Snes gamepad support
Nes gamepad support

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PREFACE
Conceiving and understanding a new license is not an easy task. To make things
easier for both, the author and the licensee, we have decided to base our
license for the USB driver on an existing license with well-understood
properties.
Our favorite choice for the base license was the GNU General Public License
(GPL). However, we cannot use the GNU GPL directly for the following reasons:
(1) It was not intended for projects involving hardware -- we must extend the
term "source code" to at least the circuit diagram.
(2) The GNU GPL does not require publication. Only if a binary is published,
it requires that the source is published as well. This is reasonable for
software because unpublished software is of little relevance. For projects
involving hardware, we want to REQUIRE publication. More than that, we
even want to define HOW the publication must be done (files contained,
file formats etc).
(3) As the author of the software, we can distribute it under more than one
license. For people who don't want to meet the obligations of the GNU GPL,
we want to offer commercial licenses. To avoid a split in revisions of
the driver, we need special privileges to distribute contributed
modifications under proprietary licenses.
We can not simply modify the GNU GPL and incorporate our changes because the
Free Software Foundation (FSF) who holds the copyright for the text of the
GNU GPL does not allow modifications. We therefore set up our own small
license which incorporates the GNU GPL by reference:
LICENSE FOR PROJECTS BUILT WITH "OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT'S
FIRMWARE-ONLY USB-DRIVER FOR ATMEL'S AVR MICROCONTROLLERS"
Version 2006-01
I. Definitions
"OBDEV" shall mean OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH or any legal successor
thereof.
"Software Source Code" shall mean the preferred form of the software for
making modifications to it.
"USB Driver" shall mean the Software Source Code for OBDEV's firmware-only
USB-driver for Atmel's AVR microcontrollers.
"Function" shall mean the Software Source Code for all software executed on
the microcontroller except the USB Driver.
"Host Software" shall mean the Software Source Code for all software required
to control the USB device from the USB host running any operating system.
"Project" shall mean the USB Driver, the Function, the Host Software, circuit
diagrams of the controller based hardware and accompanying documentation.
"source code" shall have the same meaning as the term "Project" above.
"Web Site" shall mean a collection of text and multimedia documents accessible
worldwide over internet through the HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP) on
TCP port 80 (standard HTTP port).
II. General License Terms
The general terms of this license consist of the GNU General Public License
Version 2 (GNU GPL2) which is hereby incorporated into this section as though
it were fully set forth here. A copy of the GNU GPL2 is included for your
convenience in appendix A of this license.
The term "source code" in the GNU GPL2 is to be understood as defined in
section I above. If any term or definition in section I, III, IV or V
conflicts with the GNU GPL2, the term or definition in section I, III, IV or
V has precedence of the GNU GPL2.
III. Distribution of the Project
The distributed form of a Project must contain at least the following files:
(a) Software Source Code files for the USB Driver, the Function and the Host
Software.
(b) Circuit diagrams for the hardware in PDF, PNG or GIF image file format.
(c) A file with name "Readme.txt" in ASCII format with at least the following
content (in English language):
- An explanation what the Project does.
- What to do with the distributed files (installation procedure etc.).
- A reference to Objective Development's USB driver.
- Your (author's) name and contact information. E-mail and/or URL is
sufficient.
(d) Optionally a text file with a description of the circuit diagram, an
explanation of special (software) techniques used etc.
(e) A copy of this license in a file with the name "License.txt". This copy
can be in the "usbdrv" subdirectory which contains the driver.
IV. Requirement for Publication
All modifications and derived work (Projects using the USB Driver) MUST be
distributed (published) as described in section III above on a Web Site. The
main page must reproduce at least a description of the Project (e.g. as
contained in the "Readme.txt" file distributed) and a download link for the
entire Project. The URL of the main page must be submitted to OBDEV. OBDEV
will provide a mechanism for submitting Project URLs and for publishing
Projects on their Web Site. The Project must remain available for at least
twelve (12) months after the initial publication or at least six (6) months
after a subsequent version of that particular Project has been published.
V. Author Privileges
OBDEV reserves the right to distribute the USB Driver and all modified
versions under other (proprietary) licenses. If you modify the USB Driver
under the grants of this license, you therefore grant OBDEV (in addition to
the grants of the GNU GPL2) a worldwide, perpetual, irrevocable royalty free
license for your modifications. OBDEV shall not automatically gain rights
other than those of the GNU GPL2 in the other parts of the Project. This
section V overrides possibly contradicting terms in the GNU GPL2 referenced
in section II.
APPENDIX A
GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 2, June 1991
Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
Preamble
The licenses for most software are designed to take away your
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When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not
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GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
0. This License applies to any program or other work which contains
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How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
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To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
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convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
<one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
Copyright (C) <year> <name of author>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
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Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) year name of author
Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may
be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be
mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program.
You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if
necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
`Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
<signature of Ty Coon>, 1 April 1989
Ty Coon, President of Vice
This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
Public License instead of this License.

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# Name: Makefile
# Project: HIDKeys
# Author: Christian Starkjohann
# Creation Date: 2006-02-02
# Tabsize: 4
# Copyright: (c) 2006 by OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH
# License: Proprietary, free under certain conditions. See Documentation.
# This Revision: $Id: Makefile,v 1.1 2007-03-25 02:59:30 raph Exp $
UISP = uisp -dprog=stk500 -dpart=atmega8 -dserial=/dev/avr
COMPILE = avr-gcc -Wall -Os -Iusbdrv -I. -mmcu=atmega8 #-DDEBUG_LEVEL=1
COMMON_OBJS = usbdrv/usbdrv.o usbdrv/usbdrvasm.o usbdrv/oddebug.o main.o
OBJECTS = usbdrv/usbdrv.o usbdrv/usbdrvasm.o usbdrv/oddebug.o main.o snes.o devdesc.o
# symbolic targets:
all: main.hex
.c.o:
$(COMPILE) -c $< -o $@
.S.o:
$(COMPILE) -x assembler-with-cpp -c $< -o $@
# "-x assembler-with-cpp" should not be necessary since this is the default
# file type for the .S (with capital S) extension. However, upper case
# characters are not always preserved on Windows. To ensure WinAVR
# compatibility define the file type manually.
.c.s:
$(COMPILE) -S $< -o $@
clean:
rm -f main.hex main.lst main.obj main.cof main.list main.map main.eep.hex main.bin *.o usbdrv/*.o main.s usbdrv/oddebug.s usbdrv/usbdrv.s
# file targets:
main.bin: $(COMMON_OBJS) snes.o devdesc.o
$(COMPILE) -o main.bin $(OBJECTS) -Wl,-Map=main.map
main.hex: main.bin
rm -f main.hex main.eep.hex
avr-objcopy -j .text -j .data -O ihex main.bin main.hex
./checksize main.bin
flash: all
#$(UISP) --erase --upload --verify if=main.hex
$(UISP) --erase --upload if=main.hex
# Fuse high byte:
# 0xc9 = 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 <-- BOOTRST (boot reset vector at 0x0000)
# ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^------ BOOTSZ0
# | | | | | +-------- BOOTSZ1
# | | | | + --------- EESAVE (don't preserve EEPROM over chip erase)
# | | | +-------------- CKOPT (full output swing)
# | | +---------------- SPIEN (allow serial programming)
# | +------------------ WDTON (WDT not always on)
# +-------------------- RSTDISBL (reset pin is enabled)
# Fuse low byte:
# 0x9f = 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1
# ^ ^ \ / \--+--/
# | | | +------- CKSEL 3..0 (external >8M crystal)
# | | +--------------- SUT 1..0 (crystal osc, BOD enabled)
# | +------------------ BODEN (BrownOut Detector enabled)
# +-------------------- BODLEVEL (2.7V)
fuse:
$(UISP) --wr_fuse_h=0xc9 --wr_fuse_l=0x9f

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This is 4nes3snes Readme.txt file.
Table of contents:
1) What is 4nes3snes?
2) USB Implementation
3) Compilation and installation
4) License
5) About the vendor id/product id pair:
6) Where do I get more information and updates?
1) What is 4nes3snes?
--------------------
4nes3snes if a firmware for Atmel ATmega8 which
allows one to connect NES and SNES controllers to
a PC using a single circuit. Here are the possible
combinations:
- 4 NES controllers
- 3 SNES controllers
- 2 SNES controllers + 2 NES controllers
- 1 SNES controller + 3 NES controllers
The device connects to an USB port and appears to the
PC as standard HID joystick with 4 axes and 32 buttons.
The two first controllers get their D-PADs mapped to a
pair of axes. The remaining controllers D-PADs
are mapped to ordinary buttons.
2) USB Implementation
------------------
4nes3snes uses the software-only usb driver from Objective Development.
See http://www.obdev.at/products/avrusb/index.html
A good portion of 4nes3snes is based on Objective Development's
HIDKeys example.
3) Compilation and installation
----------------------------
First, you must compile it. To compile, you need a working avr-gcc and
avr-libc. Under linux or cygwin, simply type make in the project directory.
(assuming avr-gcc is in your path).
Next, you must upload the generated file (main.hex) to the Atmega8 using
whatever tools you like. Personally, I use uisp. The 'flash' and 'fuse'
targets in the makefile is a good example about how to use it.
The Atmega fuse bits must also be set properly. The idea behind this is to
enable the external 12mhz crystal instead of the internal clock. Check the
makefile for good fuse bytes values.
4) License
-------
4nes3snes is released under Objective Development's extended GPL
license. See License.txt
5) About the vendor id/product id pair:
------------------------------------
Please dont re-use them for other projects. Instead,
obtain your own. I got mine from mecanique:
http://www.mecanique.co.uk/products/usb/pid.html
6) Where do I get more information and updates?
--------------------------------------------
Visit 4nes3snes page:
http://www.raphnet.net/electronique/4nes_3snes/index_en.php
you may also contact me by email:
Raphael Assenat <raph@raphnet.net>

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#!/bin/sh
# Name: checksize
# Project: AVR-USB
# Author: Christian Starkjohann
# Creation Date: 2004-12-29
# Tabsize: 4
# Copyright: (c) 2005 OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH.
# Revision: $Id: checksize,v 1.1 2007-03-25 02:59:31 raph Exp $
error=0
codelimit=8192
datalimit=960 # leave 64 bytes for stack
if [ $# -gt 1 ]; then
codelimit="$2"
fi
if [ $# -gt 2 ]; then
datalimit="$3"
fi
set -- `avr-size -d "$1" | awk '/[0-9]/ {print $1 + $2, $2 + $3, $2}'`
if [ $1 -gt $codelimit ]; then
echo "*** code size $1 exceeds limit of $codelimit"
error=1
else
echo "ROM: $1 bytes (data=$3)"
fi
if [ $2 -gt $datalimit ]; then
echo "*** data size $2 exceeds limit of $datalimit"
error=1
else
echo "RAM: $2 bytes"
fi
exit $error

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#include "devdesc.h"
#include "usbconfig.h"
#define USBDESCR_DEVICE 1
const char usbDescrDevice[] PROGMEM = { /* USB device descriptor */
18, /* sizeof(usbDescrDevice): length of descriptor in bytes */
USBDESCR_DEVICE, /* descriptor type */
0x01, 0x01, /* USB version supported */
USB_CFG_DEVICE_CLASS,
USB_CFG_DEVICE_SUBCLASS,
0, /* protocol */
8, /* max packet size */
USB_CFG_VENDOR_ID, /* 2 bytes */
USB_CFG_DEVICE_ID, /* 2 bytes */
USB_CFG_DEVICE_VERSION, /* 2 bytes */
#if USB_CFG_VENDOR_NAME_LEN
1, /* manufacturer string index */
#else
0, /* manufacturer string index */
#endif
#if USB_CFG_DEVICE_NAME_LEN
2, /* product string index */
#else
0, /* product string index */
#endif
#if USB_CFG_SERIAL_NUMBER_LENGTH
3, /* serial number string index */
#else
0, /* serial number string index */
#endif
1, /* number of configurations */
};
int getUsbDescrDevice_size(void) { return sizeof(usbDescrDevice); }

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#ifndef _devdesc_h__
#define _devdesc_h__
#include <avr/pgmspace.h>
extern const char usbDescrDevice[] PROGMEM;
int getUsbDescrDevice_size(void);
#endif // _devdesc_h__

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#ifndef _gamepad_h__
#define _gamepad_h__
typedef struct {
// size of reports built by buildReport
int report_size;
int reportDescriptorSize;
void *reportDescriptor; // must be in flash
int deviceDescriptorSize; // if 0, use default
void *deviceDescriptor; // must be in flash
void (*init)(void);
void (*update)(void);
char (*changed)(void);
void (*buildReport)(unsigned char *buf);
} Gamepad;
#endif // _gamepad_h__

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#ifndef _leds_h__
#define _leds_h__
#ifndef PORTD
#include <avr/io.h>
#endif
#define LED_OFF()
#define LED_ON();
#define LED_TOGGLE();
//#define LED_OFF() do { PORTD |= 0x20; } while(0)
//#define LED_ON() do { PORTD &= ~0x20; } while(0)
//#define LED_TOGGLE() do { PORTD ^= 0x20; } while(0)
#endif

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/* Name: main.c
* Project: Multiple NES/SNES to USB converter
* Author: Raphael Assenat <raph@raphnet.net>
* Copyright: (C) 2007 Raphael Assenat <raph@raphnet.net>
* License: Proprietary, free under certain conditions. See Documentation.
* Tabsize: 4
* Comments: Based on HID-Test by Christian Starkjohann
*/
#define F_CPU 12000000L
#include <avr/io.h>
#include <avr/interrupt.h>
#include <avr/pgmspace.h>
#include <avr/wdt.h>
#include <util/delay.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "usbdrv.h"
#include "oddebug.h"
#include "gamepad.h"
#include "snes.h"
#include "leds.h"
#include "devdesc.h"
int usbCfgSerialNumberStringDescriptor[] PROGMEM = {
USB_STRING_DESCRIPTOR_HEADER(USB_CFG_SERIAL_NUMBER_LENGTH),
'1', '0', '0', '0'
};
static Gamepad *curGamepad;
/* ----------------------- hardware I/O abstraction ------------------------ */
static void hardwareInit(void)
{
uchar i, j;
// init port C as input with pullup
DDRC = 0x00;
PORTC = 0xff;
/* 1101 1000 bin: activate pull-ups except on USB lines
*
* USB signals are on bit 0 and 2.
*
* Bit 1 is connected with bit 0 (rev.C pcb error), so the pullup
* is not enabled.
* */
PORTD = 0xf8;
/* Usb pin are init as outputs */
DDRD = 0x01 | 0x04;
j = 0;
while(--j){ /* USB Reset by device only required on Watchdog Reset */
i = 0;
while(--i); /* delay >10ms for USB reset */
}
DDRD = 0x00; /* 0000 0000 bin: remove USB reset condition */
/* configure timer 0 for a rate of 12M/(1024 * 256) = 45.78 Hz (~22ms) */
TCCR0 = 5; /* timer 0 prescaler: 1024 */
TCCR2 = (1<<WGM21)|(1<<CS22)|(1<<CS21)|(1<<CS20);
OCR2 = 196; // for 60 hz
}
static uchar reportBuffer[18]; /* buffer for HID reports */
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* ----------------------------- USB interface ----------------------------- */
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
static uchar idleRate; /* in 4 ms units */
uchar usbFunctionSetup(uchar data[8])
{
usbRequest_t *rq = (void *)data;
usbMsgPtr = reportBuffer;
if((rq->bmRequestType & USBRQ_TYPE_MASK) == USBRQ_TYPE_CLASS){ /* class request type */
if(rq->bRequest == USBRQ_HID_GET_REPORT){ /* wValue: ReportType (highbyte), ReportID (lowbyte) */
/* we only have one report type, so don't look at wValue */
curGamepad->buildReport(reportBuffer);
return curGamepad->report_size;
}else if(rq->bRequest == USBRQ_HID_GET_IDLE){
usbMsgPtr = &idleRate;
return 1;
}else if(rq->bRequest == USBRQ_HID_SET_IDLE){
idleRate = rq->wValue.bytes[1];
}
}else{
/* no vendor specific requests implemented */
}
return 0;
}
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
int main(void)
{
char must_report = 0, first_run = 1;
uchar idleCounter = 0;
// int run_mode;
// led pin as output
// DDRD |= 0x20;
#if 0
/* Dip switch common: DB0, outputs: DB1 and DB2 */
DDRB |= 0x01;
DDRB &= ~0x06;
PORTB |= 0x06; /* enable pull up on DB1 and DB2 */
PORTB &= ~0x01; /* Set DB0 to low */
_delay_ms(10); /* let pins settle */
run_mode = (PINB & 0x06)>>1;
switch(run_mode)
{
default:
case 3:
curGamepad = snesGetGamepad();
break;
}
#endif
curGamepad = snesGetGamepad();
// configure report descriptor according to
// the current gamepad
rt_usbHidReportDescriptor = curGamepad->reportDescriptor;
rt_usbHidReportDescriptorSize = curGamepad->reportDescriptorSize;
if (curGamepad->deviceDescriptor != 0)
{
rt_usbDeviceDescriptor = (void*)curGamepad->deviceDescriptor;
rt_usbDeviceDescriptorSize = curGamepad->deviceDescriptorSize;
}
else
{
// use descriptor from devdesc.c
//
rt_usbDeviceDescriptor = (void*)usbDescrDevice;
rt_usbDeviceDescriptorSize = getUsbDescrDevice_size();
}
//wdt_enable(WDTO_2S);
hardwareInit();
curGamepad->init();
odDebugInit();
usbInit();
sei();
DBG1(0x00, 0, 0);
for(;;){ /* main event loop */
wdt_reset();
// this must be called at each 50 ms or less
usbPoll();
if (first_run) {
curGamepad->update();
first_run = 0;
}
if(TIFR & (1<<TOV0)){ /* 22 ms timer */
TIFR = 1<<TOV0;
if(idleRate != 0){
if(idleCounter > 4){
idleCounter -= 5; /* 22 ms in units of 4 ms */
}else{
idleCounter = idleRate;
must_report = 1;
}
}
}
if (TIFR & (1<<OCF2))
{
TIFR = 1<<OCF2;
if (!must_report)
{
curGamepad->update();
if (curGamepad->changed()) {
must_report = 1;
}
}
}
if(must_report)
{
if (usbInterruptIsReady())
{
must_report = 0;
curGamepad->buildReport(reportBuffer);
usbSetInterrupt(reportBuffer, curGamepad->report_size);
}
}
}
return 0;
}
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */

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/* Name: snes.c
* Project: Multiple NES/SNES to USB converter
* Author: Raphael Assenat <raph@raphnet.net>
* Copyright: (C) 2007 Raphael Assenat <raph@raphnet.net>
* License: Proprietary, free under certain conditions. See Documentation.
* Tabsize: 4
*/
#define F_CPU 12000000L
#include <avr/io.h>
#include <avr/interrupt.h>
#include <util/delay.h>
#include <avr/pgmspace.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "gamepad.h"
#include "leds.h"
#include "snes.h"
#define REPORT_SIZE 8
#define GAMEPAD_BYTES 8 /* 2 byte per snes controller * 4 controllers */
/******** IO port definitions **************/
#define SNES_LATCH_DDR DDRC
#define SNES_LATCH_PORT PORTC
#define SNES_LATCH_BIT (1<<4)
#define SNES_CLOCK_DDR DDRC
#define SNES_CLOCK_PORT PORTC
#define SNES_CLOCK_BIT (1<<5)
#define SNES_DATA_PORT PORTC
#define SNES_DATA_DDR DDRC
#define SNES_DATA_PIN PINC
#define SNES_DATA_BIT1 (1<<3) /* controller 1 */
#define SNES_DATA_BIT2 (1<<2) /* controller 2 */
#define SNES_DATA_BIT3 (1<<1) /* controller 3 */
#define SNES_DATA_BIT4 (1<<0) /* controller 4 */
/********* IO port manipulation macros **********/
#define SNES_LATCH_LOW() do { SNES_LATCH_PORT &= ~(SNES_LATCH_BIT); } while(0)
#define SNES_LATCH_HIGH() do { SNES_LATCH_PORT |= SNES_LATCH_BIT; } while(0)
#define SNES_CLOCK_LOW() do { SNES_CLOCK_PORT &= ~(SNES_CLOCK_BIT); } while(0)
#define SNES_CLOCK_HIGH() do { SNES_CLOCK_PORT |= SNES_CLOCK_BIT; } while(0)
#define SNES_GET_DATA1() (SNES_DATA_PIN & SNES_DATA_BIT1)
#define SNES_GET_DATA2() (SNES_DATA_PIN & SNES_DATA_BIT2)
#define SNES_GET_DATA3() (SNES_DATA_PIN & SNES_DATA_BIT3)
#define SNES_GET_DATA4() (SNES_DATA_PIN & SNES_DATA_BIT4)
/*********** prototypes *************/
static void snesInit(void);
static void snesUpdate(void);
static char snesChanged(void);
static void snesBuildReport(unsigned char *reportBuffer);
// the most recent bytes we fetched from the controller
static unsigned char last_read_controller_bytes[GAMEPAD_BYTES];
// the most recently reported bytes
static unsigned char last_reported_controller_bytes[GAMEPAD_BYTES];
// indicates if a controller is in NES mode
static unsigned char nesMode=0; /* Bit0: controller 1, Bit1: controller 2...*/
static void snesInit(void)
{
unsigned char sreg;
sreg = SREG;
cli();
// clock and latch as output
SNES_LATCH_DDR |= SNES_LATCH_BIT;
SNES_CLOCK_DDR |= SNES_CLOCK_BIT;
// data as input
SNES_DATA_DDR &= ~(SNES_DATA_BIT1 | SNES_DATA_BIT2 | SNES_DATA_BIT3 | SNES_DATA_BIT4 );
// enable pullup. This should prevent random toggling of pins
// when no controller is connected.
SNES_DATA_PORT |= (SNES_DATA_BIT1 | SNES_DATA_BIT2 | SNES_DATA_BIT3 | SNES_DATA_BIT4 );
// clock is normally high
SNES_CLOCK_PORT |= SNES_CLOCK_BIT;
// LATCH is Active HIGH
SNES_LATCH_PORT &= ~(SNES_LATCH_BIT);
nesMode = 0;
snesUpdate();
/* Snes controller buttons are sent in this order:
* 1st byte: B Y SEL START UP DOWN LEFT RIGHT
* 2nd byte: A X L R 1 1 1 1
*
* Nes controller buttons are sent in this order:
* One byte: A B SEL START UP DOWN LEFT RIGHT
*
* When an additional byte is read from a NES controller,
* all bits are 0. Because the data signal is active low,
* this corresponds to pressed buttons. When we read
* from the controller for the first time, detect NES
* controllers by checking those 4 bits.
**/
if (last_read_controller_bytes[1]==0xFF)
nesMode |= 1;
if (last_read_controller_bytes[3]==0xFF)
nesMode |= 2;
if (last_read_controller_bytes[5]==0xFF)
nesMode |= 4;
/* The last controllers are always in NES mode. But
* it is accessible only of the third is in NES mode
* too. */
if (last_read_controller_bytes[7]==0xFF)
nesMode |= 8;
SREG = sreg;
}
/*
*
Clock Cycle Button Reported
=========== ===============
1 B
2 Y
3 Select
4 Start
5 Up on joypad
6 Down on joypad
7 Left on joypad
8 Right on joypad
9 A
10 X
11 L
12 R
13 none (always high)
14 none (always high)
15 none (always high)
16 none (always high)
*
*/
static void snesUpdate(void)
{
int i;
unsigned char tmp1=0;
unsigned char tmp2=0;
unsigned char tmp3=0;
unsigned char tmp4=0;
SNES_LATCH_HIGH();
_delay_us(12);
SNES_LATCH_LOW();
for (i=0; i<8; i++)
{
_delay_us(6);
SNES_CLOCK_LOW();
tmp1 <<= 1;
tmp2 <<= 1;
tmp3 <<= 1;
tmp4 <<= 1;
if (!SNES_GET_DATA1()) { tmp1 |= 1; }
if (!SNES_GET_DATA2()) { tmp2 |= 1; }
if (!SNES_GET_DATA3()) { tmp3 |= 1; }
if (!SNES_GET_DATA4()) { tmp4 |= 1; }
_delay_us(6);
SNES_CLOCK_HIGH();
}
last_read_controller_bytes[0] = tmp1;
last_read_controller_bytes[2] = tmp2;
last_read_controller_bytes[4] = tmp3;
last_read_controller_bytes[6] = tmp4;
for (i=0; i<8; i++)
{
_delay_us(6);
SNES_CLOCK_LOW();
// notice that this is different from above. We
// want the bits to be in reverse-order
tmp1 >>= 1;
tmp2 >>= 1;
tmp3 >>= 1;
tmp4 >>= 1;
if (!SNES_GET_DATA1()) { tmp1 |= 0x80; }
if (!SNES_GET_DATA2()) { tmp2 |= 0x80; }
if (!SNES_GET_DATA3()) { tmp3 |= 0x80; }
if (!SNES_GET_DATA4()) { tmp4 |= 0x80; }
_delay_us(6);
SNES_CLOCK_HIGH();
}
/* Force extra bits to 0 when in NES mode. Otherwise, if
* we read zeros on the wire, we will have permanantly
* pressed buttons */
last_read_controller_bytes[1] = (nesMode & 1) ? 0x00 : tmp1;
last_read_controller_bytes[3] = (nesMode & 2) ? 0x00 : tmp2;
last_read_controller_bytes[5] = (nesMode & 4) ? 0x00 : tmp3;
last_read_controller_bytes[7] = (nesMode & 8) ? 0x00 : tmp4;
}
static char snesChanged(void)
{
static int first = 1;
if (first) { first = 0; return 1; }
return memcmp(last_read_controller_bytes,
last_reported_controller_bytes, GAMEPAD_BYTES);
}
static char getX(unsigned char nesByte1)
{
char x = 128;
if (nesByte1&0x1) { x = 255; }
if (nesByte1&0x2) { x = 0; }
return x;
}
static char getY(unsigned char nesByte1)
{
char y = 128;
if (nesByte1&0x4) { y = 255; }
if (nesByte1&0x8) { y = 0; }
return y;
}
static unsigned char snesReorderButtons(unsigned char bytes[2])
{
unsigned char v;
/* pack the snes button bits, which are on two bytes, in
* one single byte. */
v = (bytes[0]&0x80)>>7;
v |= (bytes[0]&0x40)>>5;
v |= (bytes[0]&0x20)>>3;
v |= (bytes[0]&0x10)>>1;
v |= (bytes[1]&0x0f)<<4;
return v;
}
static void snesBuildReport(unsigned char *reportBuffer)
{
/* last_read_controller_bytes[] structure:
*
* [0] : controller 1, 8 first bits (dpad + start + sel + y|a + b)
* [1] : controller 1, 8 snes extra bits (4 lower bits are buttons)
*
* [2] : controller 2, 8 first bits
* [3] : controller 2, 4 extra snes buttons
*
* [4] : controller 3, 8 first bits
* [5] : controller 3, 4 extra snes buttons
*
* [6] : controller 4, 8 first bits
* [7] : controller 4, 4 extra snes buttons
*/
if (reportBuffer != NULL)
{
reportBuffer[0]=getX(last_read_controller_bytes[0]);
reportBuffer[1]=getY(last_read_controller_bytes[0]);
reportBuffer[2]=getX(last_read_controller_bytes[2]);
reportBuffer[3]=getY(last_read_controller_bytes[2]);
reportBuffer[4] = snesReorderButtons(&last_read_controller_bytes[0]);
reportBuffer[5] = snesReorderButtons(&last_read_controller_bytes[2]);
if (nesMode & 0x04) {
// Two last controllers are in NES mode.
reportBuffer[6] = last_read_controller_bytes[4];
reportBuffer[7] = last_read_controller_bytes[6];
}
else {
// Third controller is in SNES mode. Use the two
// last bytes for it. Sorry, no fourth controller.
reportBuffer[6] = last_read_controller_bytes[4];
reportBuffer[7] = last_read_controller_bytes[5];
}
}
memcpy(last_reported_controller_bytes,
last_read_controller_bytes,
GAMEPAD_BYTES);
}
const char snes_usbHidReportDescriptor[] PROGMEM = {
0x05, 0x01, // USAGE_PAGE (Generic Desktop)
0x09, 0x04, // USAGE (Joystick)
0xa1, 0x01, // COLLECTION (Application)
0x09, 0x01, // USAGE (Pointer)
0xa1, 0x00, // COLLECTION (Physical)
0x09, 0x30, // USAGE (X)
0x09, 0x31, // USAGE (Y)
0x09, 0x32, // USAGE (Z)
0x09, 0x36, // USAGE (SLIDER)
0x15, 0x00, // LOGICAL_MINIMUM (0)
0x26, 0xff, 0x00, // LOGICAL_MAXIMUM (255)
0x75, 0x08, // REPORT_SIZE (8)
0x95, 0x04, // REPORT_COUNT (4)
0x81, 0x02, // INPUT (Data,Var,Abs)
0xc0, // END_COLLECTION
0x05, 0x09, // USAGE_PAGE (Button)
0x19, 1, // USAGE_MINIMUM (Button 1)
0x29, 32, // USAGE_MAXIMUM (Button 32)
0x15, 0x00, // LOGICAL_MINIMUM (0)
0x25, 0x01, // LOGICAL_MAXIMUM (1)
0x75, 1, // REPORT_SIZE (1)
0x95, 32, // REPORT_COUNT (32)
0x81, 0x02, // INPUT (Data,Var,Abs)
0xc0 // END_COLLECTION
};
Gamepad SnesGamepad = {
report_size: REPORT_SIZE,
reportDescriptorSize: sizeof(snes_usbHidReportDescriptor),
init: snesInit,
update: snesUpdate,
changed: snesChanged,
buildReport: snesBuildReport
};
Gamepad *snesGetGamepad(void)
{
SnesGamepad.reportDescriptor = (void*)snes_usbHidReportDescriptor;
return &SnesGamepad;
}

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#include "gamepad.h"
Gamepad *snesGetGamepad(void);

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/* Name: usbconfig.h
* Project: AVR USB driver
* Author: Christian Starkjohann, Modified by Raphael Assenat <raph@raphnet.net>
* Creation Date: 2005-04-01
* Tabsize: 4
* Copyright: (c) 2005 by OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH
* License: Proprietary, free under certain conditions. See Documentation.
* This Revision: $Id: usbconfig.h,v 1.1 2007-03-25 02:59:31 raph Exp $
*/
#ifndef __usbconfig_h_included__
#define __usbconfig_h_included__
/*
General Description:
This file contains parts of the USB driver which can be configured and can or
must be adapted to your hardware.
*/
/* ---------------------------- Hardware Config ---------------------------- */
#define USB_CFG_IOPORT PORTD
/* This is the port where the USB bus is connected. When you configure it to
* "PORTB", the registers PORTB, PINB (=PORTB+2) and DDRB (=PORTB+1) will be
* used.
*/
#define USB_CFG_DMINUS_BIT 0
/* This is the bit number in USB_CFG_IOPORT where the USB D- line is connected.
* This MUST be bit 0. All other values will result in a compile error!
*/
#define USB_CFG_DPLUS_BIT 2
/* This is the bit number in USB_CFG_IOPORT where the USB D+ line is connected.
* This may be any bit in the port. Please note that D+ must also be connected
* to interrupt pin INT0!
*/
/* --------------------------- Functional Range ---------------------------- */
#define USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT 1
/* Define this to 1 if you want to compile a version with two endpoints: The
* default control endpoint 0 and an interrupt-in endpoint 1.
*/
#define USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_HALT 0
/* Define this to 1 if you also want to implement the ENDPOINT_HALT feature
* for endpoint 1 (interrupt endpoint). Although you may not need this feature,
* it is required by the standard. We have made it a config option because it
* bloats the code considerably.
*/
#define USB_CFG_INTR_POLL_INTERVAL 10
/* If you compile a version with endpoint 1 (interrupt-in), this is the poll
* interval. The value is in milliseconds and must not be less than 10 ms for
* low speed devices.
*/
#define USB_CFG_IS_SELF_POWERED 0
/* Define this to 1 if the device has its own power supply. Set it to 0 if the
* device is powered from the USB bus.
*/
#define USB_CFG_MAX_BUS_POWER 100
/* Set this variable to the maximum USB bus power consumption of your device.
* The value is in milliamperes. [It will be divided by two since USB
* communicates power requirements in units of 2 mA.]
*/
#define USB_CFG_SAMPLE_EXACT 1
/* This variable affects Sampling Jitter for USB receiving. When it is 0, the
* driver guarantees a sampling window of 1/2 bit. The USB spec requires
* that the receiver has at most 1/4 bit sampling window. The 1/2 bit window
* should still work reliably enough because we work at low speed. If you want
* to meet the spec, set this value to 1. This will unroll a loop which
* results in bigger code size.
* If you have problems with long cables, try setting this value to 1.
*/
#define USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_WRITE 0
/* Set this to 1 if you want usbFunctionWrite() to be called for control-out
* transfers. Set it to 0 if you don't need it and want to save a couple of
* bytes.
*/
#define USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_READ 0
/* Set this to 1 if you need to send control replies which are generated
* "on the fly" when usbFunctionRead() is called. If you only want to send
* data from a static buffer, set it to 0 and return the data from
* usbFunctionSetup(). This saves a couple of bytes.
*/
/* -------------------------- Device Description --------------------------- */
/* We cannot use Obdev's free shared VID/PID pair because this is a HID.
* We use John Hyde's VID (author of the book "USB Design By Example") for
* this example instead. John has offered this VID for use by students for
* non-commercial devices. Well... This example is for demonstration and
* education only... DO NOT LET DEVICES WITH THIS VID ESCAPE YOUR LAB!
* The Product-ID is a random number.
*/
#define USB_CFG_VENDOR_ID 0x81, 0x17
/* USB vendor ID for the device, low byte first. If you have registered your
* own Vendor ID, define it here. Otherwise you use obdev's free shared
* VID/PID pair. Be sure to read USBID-License.txt for rules!
*/
#define USB_CFG_DEVICE_ID 0x9c, 0x0a
/* This is the ID of the product, low byte first. It is interpreted in the
* scope of the vendor ID. If you have registered your own VID with usb.org
* or if you have licensed a PID from somebody else, define it here. Otherwise
* you use obdev's free shared VID/PID pair. Be sure to read the rules in
* USBID-License.txt!
*/
#define USB_CFG_DEVICE_VERSION 0x04, 0x01
/* Version number of the device: Minor number first, then major number.
*/
#define USB_CFG_VENDOR_NAME 'r', 'a', 'p', 'h', 'n', 'e', 't', '.', 'n', 'e', 't'
#define USB_CFG_VENDOR_NAME_LEN 11
/* These two values define the vendor name returned by the USB device. The name
* must be given as a list of characters under single quotes. The characters
* are interpreted as Unicode (UTF-16) entities.
* If you don't want a vendor name string, undefine these macros.
* ALWAYS define a vendor name containing your Internet domain name if you use
* obdev's free shared VID/PID pair. See the file USBID-License.txt for
* details.
*/
#define USB_CFG_DEVICE_NAME '4',' ','A','x','e','s',',',' ', \
'3','2',' ','B','u','t','t','o','n','s'
#define USB_CFG_DEVICE_NAME_LEN 18
/* Same as above for the device name. If you don't want a device name, undefine
* the macros. See the file USBID-License.txt before you assign a name.
*/
#define USB_CFG_SERIAL_NUMBER_LENGTH 4
/* Set this define to the number of charcters in the serial number if your
* device should have a serial number to uniquely identify each hardware
* instance. You must supply the serial number in a string descriptor with the
* name "usbCfgSerialNumberStringDescriptor", e.g.:
* #define USB_CFG_SERIAL_NUMBER_LENGTH 5
* int usbCfgSerialNumberStringDescriptor[] PROGMEM = {
* USB_STRING_DESCRIPTOR_HEADER(USB_CFG_SERIAL_NUMBER_LENGTH),
* '1', '2', '3', '4', '5'
* };
* See usbdrv.h for more information about the USB_STRING_DESCRIPTOR_HEADER()
* macro or usbdrv.c for example string descriptors.
* You may want to put "usbCfgSerialNumberStringDescriptor" at a constant
* flash memory address (with magic linker commands) so that you don't need
* to recompile if you change it.
*/
#define USB_CFG_DEVICE_CLASS 0 /* specify the class at the interface level */
#define USB_CFG_DEVICE_SUBCLASS 0
/* See USB specification if you want to conform to an existing device class.
*/
#define USB_CFG_INTERFACE_CLASS 0x03 /* HID class */
#define USB_CFG_INTERFACE_SUBCLASS 0 /* no boot interface */
#define USB_CFG_INTERFACE_PROTOCOL 0 /* no protocol */
/* See USB specification if you want to conform to an existing device class or
* protocol.
*/
//#define USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH 42
/* Define this to the length of the HID report descriptor, if you implement
* an HID device. Otherwise don't define it or define it to 0.
*/
/* Define this if you want to be able to set the report descriptor
* dynamically at runtime.
* */
#define USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME
/* Define this if you want to be able to set the device descriptor
* dynamically at runtime.
*/
#define USB_CFG_DEVICE_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME
#endif /* __usbconfig_h_included__ */

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This file documents changes in the firmware-only USB driver for atmel's AVR
microcontrollers. New entries are always appended to the end of the file.
Scroll down to the bottom to see the most recent changes.
2005-04-01:
- Implemented endpoint 1 as interrupt-in endpoint.
- Moved all configuration options to usbconfig.h which is not part of the
driver.
- Changed interface for usbVendorSetup().
- Fixed compatibility with ATMega8 device.
- Various minor optimizations.
2005-04-11:
- Changed interface to application: Use usbFunctionSetup(), usbFunctionRead()
and usbFunctionWrite() now. Added configuration options to choose which
of these functions to compile in.
- Assembler module delivers receive data non-inverted now.
- Made register and bit names compatible with more AVR devices.
2005-05-03:
- Allow address of usbRxBuf on any memory page as long as the buffer does
not cross 256 byte page boundaries.
- Better device compatibility: works with Mega88 now.
- Code optimization in debugging module.
- Documentation updates.
2006-01-02:
- Added (free) default Vendor- and Product-IDs bought from voti.nl.
- Added USBID-License.txt file which defines the rules for using the free
shared VID/PID pair.
- Added Readme.txt to the usbdrv directory which clarifies administrative
issues.
2006-01-25:
- Added "configured state" to become more standards compliant.
- Added "HALT" state for interrupt endpoint.
- Driver passes the "USB Command Verifier" test from usb.org now.
- Made "serial number" a configuration option.
- Minor optimizations, we now recommend compiler option "-Os" for best
results.
- Added a version number to usbdrv.h
2006-02-03:
- New configuration variable USB_BUFFER_SECTION for the memory section where
the USB rx buffer will go. This defaults to ".bss" if not defined. Since
this buffer MUST NOT cross 256 byte pages (not even touch a page at the
end), the user may want to pass a linker option similar to
"-Wl,--section-start=.mybuffer=0x800060".
- Provide structure for usbRequest_t.
- New defines for USB constants.
- Prepared for HID implementations.
- Increased data size limit for interrupt transfers to 8 bytes.
- New macro usbInterruptIsReady() to query interrupt buffer state.
2006-02-18:
- Ensure that the data token which is sent as an ack to an OUT transfer is
always zero sized. This fixes a bug where the host reports an error after
sending an out transfer to the device, although all data arrived at the
device.
- Updated docs in usbdrv.h to reflect changed API in usbFunctionWrite().
* Release 2006-02-20
- Give a compiler warning when compiling with debugging turned on.
- Added Oleg Semyonov's changes for IAR-cc compatibility.
- Added new (optional) functions usbDeviceConnect() and usbDeviceDisconnect()
(also thanks to Oleg!).
- Rearranged tests in usbPoll() to save a couple of instructions in the most
likely case that no actions are pending.
- We need a delay between the SET ADDRESS request until the new address
becomes active. This delay was handled in usbPoll() until now. Since the
spec says that the delay must not exceed 2ms, previous versions required
aggressive polling during the enumeration phase. We have now moved the
handling of the delay into the interrupt routine.
- We must not reply with NAK to a SETUP transaction. We can only achieve this
by making sure that the rx buffer is empty when SETUP tokens are expected.
We therefore don't pass zero sized data packets from the status phase of
a transfer to usbPoll(). This change MAY cause troubles if you rely on
receiving a less than 8 bytes long packet in usbFunctionWrite() to
identify the end of a transfer. usbFunctionWrite() will NEVER be called
with a zero length.
* Release 2006-03-14

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PREFACE
Conceiving and understanding a new license is not an easy task. To make things
easier for both, the author and the licensee, we have decided to base our
license for the USB driver on an existing license with well-understood
properties.
Our favorite choice for the base license was the GNU General Public License
(GPL). However, we cannot use the GNU GPL directly for the following reasons:
(1) It was not intended for projects involving hardware -- we must extend the
term "source code" to at least the circuit diagram.
(2) The GNU GPL does not require publication. Only if a binary is published,
it requires that the source is published as well. This is reasonable for
software because unpublished software is of little relevance. For projects
involving hardware, we want to REQUIRE publication. More than that, we
even want to define HOW the publication must be done (files contained,
file formats etc).
(3) As the author of the software, we can distribute it under more than one
license. For people who don't want to meet the obligations of the GNU GPL,
we want to offer commercial licenses. To avoid a split in revisions of
the driver, we need special privileges to distribute contributed
modifications under proprietary licenses.
We can not simply modify the GNU GPL and incorporate our changes because the
Free Software Foundation (FSF) who holds the copyright for the text of the
GNU GPL does not allow modifications. We therefore set up our own small
license which incorporates the GNU GPL by reference:
LICENSE FOR PROJECTS BUILT WITH "OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT'S
FIRMWARE-ONLY USB-DRIVER FOR ATMEL'S AVR MICROCONTROLLERS"
Version 2006-01
I. Definitions
"OBDEV" shall mean OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH or any legal successor
thereof.
"Software Source Code" shall mean the preferred form of the software for
making modifications to it.
"USB Driver" shall mean the Software Source Code for OBDEV's firmware-only
USB-driver for Atmel's AVR microcontrollers.
"Function" shall mean the Software Source Code for all software executed on
the microcontroller except the USB Driver.
"Host Software" shall mean the Software Source Code for all software required
to control the USB device from the USB host running any operating system.
"Project" shall mean the USB Driver, the Function, the Host Software, circuit
diagrams of the controller based hardware and accompanying documentation.
"source code" shall have the same meaning as the term "Project" above.
"Web Site" shall mean a collection of text and multimedia documents accessible
worldwide over internet through the HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP) on
TCP port 80 (standard HTTP port).
II. General License Terms
The general terms of this license consist of the GNU General Public License
Version 2 (GNU GPL2) which is hereby incorporated into this section as though
it were fully set forth here. A copy of the GNU GPL2 is included for your
convenience in appendix A of this license.
The term "source code" in the GNU GPL2 is to be understood as defined in
section I above. If any term or definition in section I, III, IV or V
conflicts with the GNU GPL2, the term or definition in section I, III, IV or
V has precedence of the GNU GPL2.
III. Distribution of the Project
The distributed form of a Project must contain at least the following files:
(a) Software Source Code files for the USB Driver, the Function and the Host
Software.
(b) Circuit diagrams for the hardware in PDF, PNG or GIF image file format.
(c) A file with name "Readme.txt" in ASCII format with at least the following
content (in English language):
- An explanation what the Project does.
- What to do with the distributed files (installation procedure etc.).
- A reference to Objective Development's USB driver.
- Your (author's) name and contact information. E-mail and/or URL is
sufficient.
(d) Optionally a text file with a description of the circuit diagram, an
explanation of special (software) techniques used etc.
(e) A copy of this license in a file with the name "License.txt". This copy
can be in the "usbdrv" subdirectory which contains the driver.
IV. Requirement for Publication
All modifications and derived work (Projects using the USB Driver) MUST be
distributed (published) as described in section III above on a Web Site. The
main page must reproduce at least a description of the Project (e.g. as
contained in the "Readme.txt" file distributed) and a download link for the
entire Project. The URL of the main page must be submitted to OBDEV. OBDEV
will provide a mechanism for submitting Project URLs and for publishing
Projects on their Web Site. The Project must remain available for at least
twelve (12) months after the initial publication or at least six (6) months
after a subsequent version of that particular Project has been published.
V. Author Privileges
OBDEV reserves the right to distribute the USB Driver and all modified
versions under other (proprietary) licenses. If you modify the USB Driver
under the grants of this license, you therefore grant OBDEV (in addition to
the grants of the GNU GPL2) a worldwide, perpetual, irrevocable royalty free
license for your modifications. OBDEV shall not automatically gain rights
other than those of the GNU GPL2 in the other parts of the Project. This
section V overrides possibly contradicting terms in the GNU GPL2 referenced
in section II.
APPENDIX A
GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 2, June 1991
Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
Preamble
The licenses for most software are designed to take away your
freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public
License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free
software--to make sure the software is free for all its users. This
General Public License applies to most of the Free Software
Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to
using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by
the GNU Library General Public License instead.) You can apply it to
your programs, too.
When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not
price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you
have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for
this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it
if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it
in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things.
To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid
anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights.
These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you
distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it.
For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether
gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that
you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the
source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their
rights.
We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and
(2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy,
distribute and/or modify the software.
Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain
that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free
software. If the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we
want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so
that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original
authors' reputations.
Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software
patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free
program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the
program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any
patent must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all.
The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and
modification follow.
GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
0. This License applies to any program or other work which contains
a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed
under the terms of this General Public License. The "Program", below,
refers to any such program or work, and a "work based on the Program"
means either the Program or any derivative work under copyright law:
that is to say, a work containing the Program or a portion of it,
either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another
language. (Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation in
the term "modification".) Each licensee is addressed as "you".
Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not
covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act of
running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the
Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).
Whether that is true depends on what the Program does.
1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's
source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you
conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate
copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the
notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty;
and give any other recipients of the Program a copy of this License
along with the Program.
You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and
you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee.
2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion
of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and
distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1
above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
a) You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices
stating that you changed the files and the date of any change.
b) You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in
whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any
part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third
parties under the terms of this License.
c) If the modified program normally reads commands interactively
when run, you must cause it, when started running for such
interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an
announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a
notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide
a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under
these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this
License. (Exception: if the Program itself is interactive but
does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on
the Program is not required to print an announcement.)
These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If
identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program,
and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in
themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those
sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you
distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based
on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of
this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the
entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it.
Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest
your rights to work written entirely by you; rather, the intent is to
exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or
collective works based on the Program.
In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program
with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of
a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under
the scope of this License.
3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it,
under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of
Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following:
a) Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable
source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections
1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
b) Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three
years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your
cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete
machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be
distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium
customarily used for software interchange; or,
c) Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer
to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is
allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you
received the program in object code or executable form with such
an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.)
The source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for
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anything that is normally distributed (in either source or binary
form) with the major components (compiler, kernel, and so on) of the
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If distribution of executable or object code is made by offering
access to copy from a designated place, then offering equivalent
access to copy the source code from the same place counts as
distribution of the source code, even though third parties are not
compelled to copy the source along with the object code.
4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program
except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt
otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is
void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License.
However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under
this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such
parties remain in full compliance.
5. You are not required to accept this License, since you have not
signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or
distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions are
prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by
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all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying
the Program or works based on it.
6. Each time you redistribute the Program (or any work based on the
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You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties to
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infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues),
conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or
otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not
excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot
distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this
License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you
may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent
license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by
all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then
the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to
refrain entirely from distribution of the Program.
If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under
any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to
apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other
circumstances.
It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any
patents or other property right claims or to contest validity of any
such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the
integrity of the free software distribution system, which is
implemented by public license practices. Many people have made
generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed
through that system in reliance on consistent application of that
system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is willing
to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot
impose that choice.
This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to
be a consequence of the rest of this License.
8. If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in
certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the
original copyright holder who places the Program under this License
may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding
those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among
countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates
the limitation as if written in the body of this License.
9. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions
of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will
be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to
address new problems or concerns.
Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program
specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and "any
later version", you have the option of following the terms and conditions
either of that version or of any later version published by the Free
Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of
this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software
Foundation.
10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free
programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author
to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free
Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes
make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals
of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and
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NO WARRANTY
11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED
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TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE
PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING,
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WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES,
INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING
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YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER
PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE
POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
<one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
Copyright (C) <year> <name of author>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
when it starts in an interactive mode:
Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) year name of author
Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may
be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be
mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program.
You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if
necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
`Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
<signature of Ty Coon>, 1 April 1989
Ty Coon, President of Vice
This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
Public License instead of this License.

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This is the Readme file to Objective Development's firmware-only USB driver
for Atmel AVR microcontrollers. For more information please visit
http://www.obdev.at/avrusb/
This directory contains the USB firmware only. Copy it as-is to your own
project and add your own version of "usbconfig.h".
TECHNICAL DOCUMENTATION
=======================
The technical documentation for the firmware driver is contained in the file
"usbdrv.h". Please read all of it carefully!
USB IDENTIFIERS
===============
Every USB device needs a vendor- and a product-identifier (VID and PID). VIDs
are obtained from usb.org for a price of 1,500 USD. Once you have a VID, you
can assign PIDs at will.
Since an entry level cost of 1,500 USD is too high for most small companies
and hobbyists, we provide a single VID/PID pair for free. If you want to use
your own VID and PID instead of our's, define the macros "USB_CFG_VENDOR_ID"
and "USB_CFG_DEVICE_ID" accordingly in "usbconfig.h".
To use our predefined VID/PID pair, you MUST conform to a couple of
requirements. See the file "USBID-License.txt" for details.
HOST DRIVER
===========
You have received this driver together with an example device implementation
and an example host driver. The host driver is based on libusb and compiles
on various Unix flavors (Linux, BSD, Mac OS X). It also compiles natively on
Windows using MinGW (see www.mingw.org) and libusb-win32 (see
libusb-win32.sourceforge.net). The "Automator" project contains a native
Windows host driver (not based on libusb) for Human Interface Devices.
DEVELOPMENT SYSTEM
==================
This driver has been developed and optimized for the GNU compiler version 3
(gcc 3). It does work well with gcc 4 and future versions will probably be
optimized for gcc 4. We recommend that you use the GNU compiler suite because
it is freely available. AVR-USB has also been ported to the IAR compiler and
assembler. It has been tested with IAR 4.10B/W32 and 4.12A/W32 on an ATmega8
with the "small" memory model. The "tiny" memory is not supported. Please
note that gcc is more efficient for usbdrv.c because this module has been
deliberately optimized for gcc.
USING AVR-USB FOR FREE
======================
The AVR firmware driver is published under an Open Source compliant license.
See the file "License.txt" for details. Since it is not obvious for many
people how this license applies to their own projects, here's a short guide:
(1) The USB driver and all your modifications to the driver itself are owned
by Objective Development. You must give us a worldwide, perpetual,
irrevocable royalty free license for your modifications.
(2) Since you own the code you have written (except where you modify our
driver), you can (at least in principle) determine the license for it freely.
However, to "pay" for the USB driver code you link against, we demand that
you choose an Open Source compliant license (compatible with our license) for
your source code and the hardware circuit diagrams. Simply attach your
license of choice to your parts of the project and leave our "License.txt" in
the "usbdrv" subdirectory.
(3) We also demand that you publish your work on the Internet and drop us a
note with the URL. The publication must meet certain formal criteria (files
distributed, file formats etc.). See the file "License.txt" for details.
Other than that, you are allowed to manufacture any number of units and sell
them for any price. If you like our driver, we also encourage you to make a
donation on our web site.
COMMERCIAL LICENSES FOR AVR-USB
===============================
If you don't want to publish your source code and the circuit diagrams under
an Open Source license, you can simply pay money for AVR-USB. As an
additional benefit you get USB PIDs for free, licensed exclusively to you.
See http://www.obdev.at/products/avrusb/license.html for details.

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Royalty-Free Non-Exclusive License USB Product-ID
=================================================
Version 2006-02-20
OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH hereby grants you the non-exclusive
right to use two USB.org vendor-ID (VID) / product-ID (PID) pairs with
products based on Objective Development's firmware-only USB driver for
Atmel AVR microcontrollers:
* VID = 5824 (=0x16c0) / PID = 1500 (=0x5dc) for devices implementing no
USB device class (vendor-class devices with USB class = 0xff). Devices
using this pair will be referred to as "VENDOR CLASS" devices.
* VID = 5824 (=0x16c0) / PID = 1503 (=0x5df) for HID class devices
(excluding mice and keyboards). Devices using this pair will be referred
to as "HID CLASS" devices.
Since the granted right is non-exclusive, the same VID/PID pairs may be
used by many companies and individuals for different products. To avoid
conflicts, your device and host driver software MUST adhere to the rules
outlined below.
OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH has licensed these VID/PID pairs from
Wouter van Ooijen (see www.voti.nl), who has licensed the VID from the USB
Implementers Forum, Inc. (see www.usb.org). The VID is registered for the
company name "Van Ooijen Technische Informatica".
RULES AND RESTRICTIONS
======================
(1) The USB device MUST provide a textual representation of the
manufacturer and product identification. The manufacturer identification
MUST be available at least in USB language 0x0409 (English/US).
(2) The textual manufacturer identification MUST contain either an Internet
domain name (e.g. "mycompany.com") registered and owned by you, or an
e-mail address under your control (e.g. "myname@gmx.net"). You can embed
the domain name or e-mail address in any string you like, e.g. "Objective
Development http://www.obdev.at/avrusb/".
(3) You are responsible for retaining ownership of the domain or e-mail
address for as long as any of your products are in use.
(4) You may choose any string for the textual product identification, as
long as this string is unique within the scope of your textual manufacturer
identification.
(5) Matching of device-specific drivers MUST be based on the textual
manufacturer and product identification in addition to the usual VID/PID
matching. This means that operating system features which are based on
VID/PID matching only (e.g. Windows kernel level drivers, automatic actions
when the device is plugged in etc) MUST NOT be used. The driver matching
MUST be a comparison of the entire strings, NOT a sub-string match.
(6) The extent to which VID/PID matching is allowed for non device-specific
drivers or features depends on the operating system and particular VID/PID
pair used:
* Mac OS X, Linux, FreeBSD and other Unixes: No VID/PID matching is
required for both, the VENDOR and the HID CLASS devices and hence no
VID/PID-only matching is allowed at all.
* Windows: The operating system performs VID/PID matching for the kernel
level driver. You are REQUIRED to use libusb-win32 (see
http://libusb-win32.sourceforge.net/) as the kernel level driver for
VENDOR CLASS devices. HID CLASS devices all use the generic HID class
driver shipped with Windows, except mice and keyboards. You therefore
MUST NOT use any of the shared VID/PID pairs for mice or keyboards.
(7) OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH disclaims all liability for any
problems which are caused by the shared use of these VID/PID pairs. You
have been warned that the sharing of VID/PID pairs may cause problems. If
you want to avoid them, get your own VID/PID pair for exclusive use.
HOW TO IMPLEMENT THESE RULES
============================
The host driver MUST iterate over all devices with the given VID/PID
numbers in their device descriptors and query the string representation for
the manufacturer name in USB language 0x0409 (English/US). It MUST compare
the ENTIRE string with your textual manufacturer identification chosen in
(2) above. A substring search for your domain or e-mail address is NOT
acceptable. The driver MUST NOT touch the device (other than querying the
descriptors) unless the strings match.
For all USB devices with matching VID/PID and textual manufacturer
identification, the host driver must query the textual product
identification and string-compare it with the name of the product it can
control. It may only initialize the device if the product matches exactly.
Objective Development provides examples for these matching rules with the
"PowerSwitch" project (using libusb) and with the "Automator" project
(using Windows calls on Windows and libusb on Unix).
Technical Notes:
================
Sharing the same VID/PID pair among devices is possible as long as ALL
drivers which match the VID/PID also perform matching on the textual
identification strings. This is easy on all operating systems except
Windows, since Windows establishes a static connection between the VID/PID
pair and a kernel level driver. All devices with the same VID/PID pair must
therefore use THE SAME kernel level driver.
We therefore demand that you use libusb-win32 for VENDOR CLASS devices.
This is a generic kernel level driver which allows all types of USB access
for user space applications. This is only a partial solution of the
problem, though, because different device drivers may come with different
versions of libusb-win32 and they may not work with the libusb version of
the respective other driver. You are therefore encouraged to test your
driver against a broad range of libusb-win32 versions. Do not use new
features in new versions, or check for their existence before you use them.
When a new libusb-win32 becomes available, make sure that your driver is
compatible with it.
For HID CLASS devices it is necessary that all those devices bind to the
same kernel driver: Microsoft's generic USB HID driver. This is true for
all HID devices except those with a specialized driver. Currently, the only
HIDs with specialized drivers are mice and keyboards. You therefore MUST
NOT use a shared VID/PID with mouse and keyboard devices.
Sharing the same VID/PID among different products is unusual and probably
violates the USB specification. If you do it, you do it at your own risk.
To avoid possible incompatibilities, we highly recommend that you get your
own VID/PID pair if you intend to sell your product. Objective
Development's commercial licenses for AVR-USB include a PID for
unrestricted exclusive use.

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/* Name: iarcompat.h
* Project: AVR USB driver
* Author: Christian Starkjohann
* Creation Date: 2006-03-01
* Tabsize: 4
* Copyright: (c) 2006 by OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH
* License: Proprietary, free under certain conditions. See Documentation.
* This Revision: $Id: iarcompat.h,v 1.1 2007-03-25 02:59:32 raph Exp $
*/
/*
General Description:
This header is included when we compile with the IAR C-compiler and assembler.
It defines macros for cross compatibility between gcc and IAR-cc.
Thanks to Oleg Semyonov for his help with the IAR tools port!
*/
#ifndef __iarcompat_h_INCLUDED__
#define __iarcompat_h_INCLUDED__
#if defined __IAR_SYSTEMS_ICC__ || defined __IAR_SYSTEMS_ASM__
/* Enable bit definitions */
#ifndef ENABLE_BIT_DEFINITIONS
# define ENABLE_BIT_DEFINITIONS 1
#endif
/* Include IAR headers */
#include <ioavr.h>
#ifndef __IAR_SYSTEMS_ASM__
# include <inavr.h>
#endif
#define __attribute__(arg)
#define IAR_SECTION(section) @ section
#ifndef USB_BUFFER_SECTION
# define USB_BUFFER_SECTION "TINY_Z" /* if user has not selected a named section */
#endif
#ifdef __IAR_SYSTEMS_ASM__
# define __ASSEMBLER__
#endif
#ifdef __HAS_ELPM__
# define PROGMEM __farflash
#else
# define PROGMEM __flash
#endif
#define PRG_RDB(addr) (*(PROGMEM char *)(addr))
/* The following definitions are not needed by the driver, but may be of some
* help if you port a gcc based project to IAR.
*/
#define cli() __disable_interrupt()
#define sei() __enable_interrupt()
#define wdt_reset() __watchdog_reset()
#endif /* defined __IAR_SYSTEMS_ICC__ || defined __IAR_SYSTEMS_ASM__ */
#endif /* __iarcompat_h_INCLUDED__ */

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/* Name: oddebug.c
* Project: AVR library
* Author: Christian Starkjohann
* Creation Date: 2005-01-16
* Tabsize: 4
* Copyright: (c) 2005 by OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH
* License: Proprietary, free under certain conditions. See Documentation.
* This Revision: $Id: oddebug.c,v 1.1 2007-03-25 02:59:31 raph Exp $
*/
#include "iarcompat.h"
#ifndef __IAR_SYSTEMS_ICC__
# include <avr/io.h>
#endif
#include "oddebug.h"
#if DEBUG_LEVEL > 0
#warning "Debugging is turned on! Never compile production devices with debugging!"
static void uartPutc(char c)
{
while(!(ODDBG_USR & (1 << ODDBG_UDRE))); /* wait for data register empty */
ODDBG_UDR = c;
}
static uchar hexAscii(uchar h)
{
h &= 0xf;
if(h >= 10)
h += 'a' - (uchar)10 - '0';
h += '0';
return h;
}
static void printHex(uchar c)
{
uartPutc(hexAscii(c >> 4));
uartPutc(hexAscii(c));
}
void odDebug(uchar prefix, uchar *data, uchar len)
{
printHex(prefix);
uartPutc(':');
while(len--){
uartPutc(' ');
printHex(*data++);
}
uartPutc('\r');
uartPutc('\n');
}
#endif

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/* Name: oddebug.h
* Project: AVR library
* Author: Christian Starkjohann
* Creation Date: 2005-01-16
* Tabsize: 4
* Copyright: (c) 2005 by OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH
* License: Proprietary, free under certain conditions. See Documentation.
* This Revision: $Id: oddebug.h,v 1.1 2007-03-25 02:59:32 raph Exp $
*/
#ifndef __oddebug_h_included__
#define __oddebug_h_included__
/*
General Description:
This module implements a function for debug logs on the serial line of the
AVR microcontroller. Debugging can be configured with the define
'DEBUG_LEVEL'. If this macro is not defined or defined to 0, all debugging
calls are no-ops. If it is 1, DBG1 logs will appear, but not DBG2. If it is
2, DBG1 and DBG2 logs will be printed.
A debug log consists of a label ('prefix') to indicate which debug log created
the output and a memory block to dump in hex ('data' and 'len').
*/
#ifndef F_CPU
# define F_CPU 12000000 /* 12 MHz */
#endif
#ifndef uchar
# define uchar unsigned char
#endif
#if DEBUG_LEVEL > 0 && !(defined TXEN || defined TXEN0) /* no UART in device */
# warning "Debugging disabled because device has no UART"
# undef DEBUG_LEVEL
#endif
#ifndef DEBUG_LEVEL
# define DEBUG_LEVEL 0
#endif
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#if DEBUG_LEVEL > 0
# define DBG1(prefix, data, len) odDebug(prefix, data, len)
#else
# define DBG1(prefix, data, len)
#endif
#if DEBUG_LEVEL > 1
# define DBG2(prefix, data, len) odDebug(prefix, data, len)
#else
# define DBG2(prefix, data, len)
#endif
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#if DEBUG_LEVEL > 0
extern void odDebug(uchar prefix, uchar *data, uchar len);
/* Try to find our control registers; ATMEL likes to rename these */
#if defined UBRR
# define ODDBG_UBRR UBRR
#elif defined UBRRL
# define ODDBG_UBRR UBRRL
#elif defined UBRR0
# define ODDBG_UBRR UBRR0
#elif defined UBRR0L
# define ODDBG_UBRR UBRR0L
#endif
#if defined UCR
# define ODDBG_UCR UCR
#elif defined UCSRB
# define ODDBG_UCR UCSRB
#elif defined UCSR0B
# define ODDBG_UCR UCSR0B
#endif
#if defined TXEN
# define ODDBG_TXEN TXEN
#else
# define ODDBG_TXEN TXEN0
#endif
#if defined USR
# define ODDBG_USR USR
#elif defined UCSRA
# define ODDBG_USR UCSRA
#elif defined UCSR0A
# define ODDBG_USR UCSR0A
#endif
#if defined UDRE
# define ODDBG_UDRE UDRE
#else
# define ODDBG_UDRE UDRE0
#endif
#if defined UDR
# define ODDBG_UDR UDR
#elif defined UDR0
# define ODDBG_UDR UDR0
#endif
static inline void odDebugInit(void)
{
ODDBG_UCR |= (1<<ODDBG_TXEN);
ODDBG_UBRR = F_CPU / (19200 * 16L) - 1;
}
#else
# define odDebugInit()
#endif
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#endif /* __oddebug_h_included__ */

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/* Name: usbdrv.c
* Project: AVR USB driver
* Author: Christian Starkjohann
* Creation Date: 2004-12-29
* Tabsize: 4
* Copyright: (c) 2005 by OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH
* License: Proprietary, free under certain conditions. See Documentation.
* This Revision: $Id: usbdrv.c,v 1.1 2007-03-25 02:59:32 raph Exp $
*/
#include "iarcompat.h"
#ifndef __IAR_SYSTEMS_ICC__
# include <avr/io.h>
# include <avr/pgmspace.h>
#endif
#include "usbdrv.h"
#include "oddebug.h"
#include "../leds.h"
/*
General Description:
This module implements the C-part of the USB driver. See usbdrv.h for a
documentation of the entire driver.
*/
#ifndef IAR_SECTION
#define IAR_SECTION(arg)
#define __no_init
#endif
/* The macro IAR_SECTION is a hack to allow IAR-cc compatibility. On gcc, it
* is defined to nothing. __no_init is required on IAR.
*/
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* raw USB registers / interface to assembler code: */
/* usbRxBuf MUST be in 1 byte addressable range (because usbInputBuf is only 1 byte) */
__no_init uchar usbRxBuf[2][USB_BUFSIZE] __attribute__ ((section (USB_BUFFER_SECTION))) IAR_SECTION(USB_BUFFER_SECTION);/* raw RX buffer: PID, 8 bytes data, 2 bytes CRC */
uchar usbDeviceAddr; /* assigned during enumeration, defaults to 0 */
uchar usbNewDeviceAddr; /* device ID which should be set after status phase */
uchar usbConfiguration; /* currently selected configuration. Administered by driver, but not used */
uchar usbInputBuf; /* ptr to raw buffer used for receiving */
uchar usbAppBuf; /* ptr to raw buffer passed to app for processing */
volatile schar usbRxLen; /* = 0; number of bytes in usbAppBuf; 0 means free */
uchar usbCurrentTok; /* last token received */
uchar usbRxToken; /* token for data we received */
uchar usbMsgLen = 0xff; /* remaining number of bytes, no msg to send if -1 (see usbMsgPtr) */
volatile schar usbTxLen = -1; /* number of bytes to transmit with next IN token */
uchar usbTxBuf[USB_BUFSIZE];/* data to transmit with next IN, free if usbTxLen == -1 */
#if USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT
/* uchar usbRxEndp; endpoint which was addressed (1 bit in MSB) [not impl] */
volatile schar usbTxLen1 = -1; /* TX count for endpoint 1 */
uchar usbTxBuf1[USB_BUFSIZE];/* TX data for endpoint 1 */
#endif
uchar usbAckBuf[1] = {USBPID_ACK}; /* transmit buffer for ack tokens */
uchar usbNakBuf[1] = {USBPID_NAK}; /* transmit buffer for nak tokens */
/* USB status registers / not shared with asm code */
uchar *usbMsgPtr; /* data to transmit next -- ROM or RAM address */
static uchar usbMsgFlags; /* flag values see below */
static uchar usbIsReset; /* = 0; USB bus is in reset phase */
#define USB_FLG_TX_PACKET (1<<0)
/* Leave free 6 bits after TX_PACKET. This way we can increment usbMsgFlags to toggle TX_PACKET */
#define USB_FLG_MSGPTR_IS_ROM (1<<6)
#define USB_FLG_USE_DEFAULT_RW (1<<7)
/* Parameters that are configurable at runtime */
#ifdef USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME
const char *rt_usbHidReportDescriptor;
uchar rt_usbHidReportDescriptorSize;
#endif
#ifdef USB_CFG_DEVICE_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME
const char *rt_usbDeviceDescriptor;
uchar rt_usbDeviceDescriptorSize;
#endif
/*
optimizing hints:
- do not post/pre inc/dec integer values in operations
- assign value of PRG_RDB() to register variables and don't use side effects in arg
- use narrow scope for variables which should be in X/Y/Z register
- assign char sized expressions to variables to force 8 bit arithmetics
*/
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#ifndef USB_CFG_DEVICE_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME
static PROGMEM char usbDescrDevice[] = { /* USB device descriptor */
18, /* sizeof(usbDescrDevice): length of descriptor in bytes */
USBDESCR_DEVICE, /* descriptor type */
0x01, 0x01, /* USB version supported */
USB_CFG_DEVICE_CLASS,
USB_CFG_DEVICE_SUBCLASS,
0, /* protocol */
8, /* max packet size */
USB_CFG_VENDOR_ID, /* 2 bytes */
USB_CFG_DEVICE_ID, /* 2 bytes */
USB_CFG_DEVICE_VERSION, /* 2 bytes */
#if USB_CFG_VENDOR_NAME_LEN
1, /* manufacturer string index */
#else
0, /* manufacturer string index */
#endif
#if USB_CFG_DEVICE_NAME_LEN
2, /* product string index */
#else
0, /* product string index */
#endif
#if USB_CFG_SERIAL_NUMBER_LENGTH
3, /* serial number string index */
#else
0, /* serial number string index */
#endif
1, /* number of configurations */
};
#endif
static PROGMEM char usbDescrConfig[] = { /* USB configuration descriptor */
9, /* sizeof(usbDescrConfig): length of descriptor in bytes */
USBDESCR_CONFIG, /* descriptor type */
(18 + 7 * USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT
#if USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH || defined(USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME)
+ 9
#endif
), 0, /* total length of data returned (including inlined descriptors) */
1, /* number of interfaces in this configuration */
1, /* index of this configuration */
0, /* configuration name string index */
#if USB_CFG_IS_SELF_POWERED
USBATTR_SELFPOWER, /* attributes */
#else
USBATTR_BUSPOWER, /* attributes */
#endif
USB_CFG_MAX_BUS_POWER/2, /* max USB current in 2mA units */
/* interface descriptor follows inline: */
9, /* sizeof(usbDescrInterface): length of descriptor in bytes */
USBDESCR_INTERFACE, /* descriptor type */
0, /* index of this interface */
0, /* alternate setting for this interface */
USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT, /* endpoints excl 0: number of endpoint descriptors to follow */
USB_CFG_INTERFACE_CLASS,
USB_CFG_INTERFACE_SUBCLASS,
USB_CFG_INTERFACE_PROTOCOL,
0, /* string index for interface */
#if USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH || defined(USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME) /* HID descriptor */
9, /* sizeof(usbDescrHID): length of descriptor in bytes */
USBDESCR_HID, /* descriptor type: HID */
0x01, 0x01, /* BCD representation of HID version */
0x00, /* target country code */
0x01, /* number of HID Report (or other HID class) Descriptor infos to follow */
0x22, /* descriptor type: report */
#ifndef USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH
0, /* substituted with real value on the fly in usbRead */
#else
USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH,
#endif
0, /* total length of report descriptor */
#endif
#if USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT /* endpoint descriptor for endpoint 1 */
7, /* sizeof(usbDescrEndpoint) */
USBDESCR_ENDPOINT, /* descriptor type = endpoint */
0x81, /* IN endpoint number 1 */
0x03, /* attrib: Interrupt endpoint */
8, 0, /* maximum packet size */
USB_CFG_INTR_POLL_INTERVAL, /* in ms */
#endif
};
static PROGMEM char usbDescrString0[] = { /* language descriptor */
4, /* sizeof(usbDescrString0): length of descriptor in bytes */
3, /* descriptor type */
0x09, 0x04, /* language index (0x0409 = US-English) */
};
#if USB_CFG_VENDOR_NAME_LEN
static PROGMEM int usbDescrString1[] = {
USB_STRING_DESCRIPTOR_HEADER(USB_CFG_VENDOR_NAME_LEN),
USB_CFG_VENDOR_NAME
};
#endif
#if USB_CFG_DEVICE_NAME_LEN
static PROGMEM int usbDescrString2[] = {
USB_STRING_DESCRIPTOR_HEADER(USB_CFG_DEVICE_NAME_LEN),
USB_CFG_DEVICE_NAME
};
#endif
/* We don't use prog_int or prog_int16_t for compatibility with various libc
* versions. Here's an other compatibility hack:
*/
#ifndef PRG_RDB
#define PRG_RDB(addr) pgm_read_byte(addr)
#endif
typedef union{
unsigned word;
uchar *ptr;
uchar bytes[2];
}converter_t;
/* We use this union to do type conversions. This is better optimized than
* type casts in gcc 3.4.3 and much better than using bit shifts to build
* ints from chars. Byte ordering is not a problem on an 8 bit platform.
*/
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#if USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT
static uchar usbTxPacketCnt1;
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_HALT
static uchar usbHalted1; /* not 0 if endpoint 1 is halted */
#endif
void usbSetInterrupt(uchar *data, uchar len)
{
uchar *p, i;
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_HALT
if(usbHalted1)
return;
#endif
if(len > 8) /* interrupt transfers are limited to 8 bytes */
len = 8;
i = USBPID_DATA1;
if(usbTxPacketCnt1 & 1)
i = USBPID_DATA0;
if(usbTxLen1 < 0){ /* packet buffer was empty */
usbTxPacketCnt1++;
}else{
usbTxLen1 = -1; /* avoid sending incomplete interrupt data */
}
p = usbTxBuf1;
*p++ = i;
for(i=len;i--;)
*p++ = *data++;
usbCrc16Append(&usbTxBuf1[1], len);
usbTxLen1 = len + 4; /* len must be given including sync byte */
#if DEBUG_LEVEL > 1
DBG2(0x21, usbTxBuf1, usbTxLen1-1);
#else
DBG1(0x21, usbTxBuf1 + 1, 2);
#endif
}
#endif
static uchar usbRead(uchar *data, uchar len)
{
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_READ
if(usbMsgFlags & USB_FLG_USE_DEFAULT_RW){
#endif
uchar i = len, *r = usbMsgPtr;
if(usbMsgFlags & USB_FLG_MSGPTR_IS_ROM){ /* ROM data */
while(i--){
uchar c = PRG_RDB(r); /* assign to char size variable to enforce byte ops */
#ifdef USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME
if ((usbDescrConfig + 18 + 7) == (void*)r) {
*data++ = rt_usbHidReportDescriptorSize;
}
else {
*data++ = c;
}
#else
*data++ = c;
#endif
r++;
}
}else{ /* RAM data */
while(i--)
*data++ = *r++;
}
usbMsgPtr = r;
return len;
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_READ
}else{
if(len != 0) /* don't bother app with 0 sized reads */
return usbFunctionRead(data, len);
return 0;
}
#endif
}
/* Don't make this function static to avoid inlining.
* The entire function would become too large and exceed the range of
* relative jumps.
* 2006-02-25: Either gcc 3.4.3 is better than the gcc used when the comment
* above was written, or other parts of the code have changed. We now get
* better results with an inlined function. Test condition: PowerSwitch code.
*/
static void usbProcessRx(uchar *data, uchar len)
{
usbRequest_t *rq = (void *)data;
uchar replyLen = 0, flags = USB_FLG_USE_DEFAULT_RW;
/* We use if() cascades because the compare is done byte-wise while switch()
* is int-based. The if() cascades are therefore more efficient.
*/
#if DEBUG_LEVEL > 1
DBG2(0x10 + (usbRxToken == (uchar)USBPID_SETUP), data, len);
#else
DBG1(0x10 + (usbRxToken == (uchar)USBPID_SETUP), data, 2);
#endif
if(usbRxToken == (uchar)USBPID_SETUP){
if(len == 8){ /* Setup size must be always 8 bytes. Ignore otherwise. */
uchar type = rq->bmRequestType & USBRQ_TYPE_MASK;
if(type == USBRQ_TYPE_STANDARD){
uchar *replyData = usbTxBuf + 9; /* there is 3 bytes free space at the end of the buffer */
replyData[0] = 0; /* common to USBRQ_GET_STATUS and USBRQ_GET_INTERFACE */
if(rq->bRequest == USBRQ_GET_STATUS){ /* 0 */
uchar __attribute__((__unused__)) recipient = rq->bmRequestType & USBRQ_RCPT_MASK; /* assign arith ops to variables to enforce byte size */
#if USB_CFG_IS_SELF_POWERED
if(recipient == USBRQ_RCPT_DEVICE)
replyData[0] = USB_CFG_IS_SELF_POWERED;
#endif
#if USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT && USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_HALT
if(usbHalted1 && recipient == USBRQ_RCPT_ENDPOINT && rq->wIndex.bytes[0] == 0x81) /* request status for endpoint 1 */
replyData[0] = 1;
#endif
replyData[1] = 0;
replyLen = 2;
}else if(rq->bRequest == USBRQ_SET_ADDRESS){ /* 5 */
usbNewDeviceAddr = rq->wValue.bytes[0];
}else if(rq->bRequest == USBRQ_GET_DESCRIPTOR){ /* 6 */
flags = USB_FLG_MSGPTR_IS_ROM | USB_FLG_USE_DEFAULT_RW;
if(rq->wValue.bytes[1] == 1){ /* descriptor type requested */
#ifndef USB_CFG_DEVICE_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME
replyLen = sizeof(usbDescrDevice);
replyData = (uchar *)usbDescrDevice;
#else
replyLen = rt_usbDeviceDescriptorSize;
replyData = (uchar *)rt_usbDeviceDescriptor;
#endif
}else if(rq->wValue.bytes[1] == 2){
replyLen = sizeof(usbDescrConfig);
replyData = (uchar *)usbDescrConfig;
}else if(rq->wValue.bytes[1] == 3){ /* string descriptor */
if(rq->wValue.bytes[0] == 0){ /* descriptor index */
replyLen = sizeof(usbDescrString0);
replyData = (uchar *)usbDescrString0;
#if USB_CFG_VENDOR_NAME_LEN
}else if(rq->wValue.bytes[0] == 1){
replyLen = sizeof(usbDescrString1);
replyData = (uchar *)usbDescrString1;
#endif
#if USB_CFG_DEVICE_NAME_LEN
}else if(rq->wValue.bytes[0] == 2){
replyLen = sizeof(usbDescrString2);
replyData = (uchar *)usbDescrString2;
#endif
#if USB_CFG_SERIAL_NUMBER_LENGTH
}else if(rq->wValue.bytes[0] == 3){
replyLen = 2 * USB_CFG_SERIAL_NUMBER_LENGTH + 2;
replyData = (uchar *)usbCfgSerialNumberStringDescriptor;
#endif
}
}
#if USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH || defined(USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME)
else if(rq->wValue.bytes[1] == USBDESCR_HID){ /* 0x21 */
replyLen = 9;
replyData = (uchar *)usbDescrConfig + 18;
}else if(rq->wValue.bytes[1] == USBDESCR_HID_REPORT){ /* 0x22 */
#ifdef USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH
replyLen = USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH;
replyData = (uchar *)usbHidReportDescriptor;
#endif
#ifdef USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME
replyLen = rt_usbHidReportDescriptorSize;
replyData = (uchar *)rt_usbHidReportDescriptor;
//replyData = snes_usbHidReportDescriptor;
// if (replyData != (void*)0x86) { LED_ON(); }
// if (replyLen != 42) { LED_ON(); }
#endif
}
#endif
}else if(rq->bRequest == USBRQ_GET_CONFIGURATION){ /* 8 */
replyLen = 1;
replyData = &usbConfiguration; /* send current configuration value */
}else if(rq->bRequest == USBRQ_SET_CONFIGURATION){ /* 9 */
usbConfiguration = rq->wValue.bytes[0];
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_HALT
usbHalted1 = 0;
#endif
}else if(rq->bRequest == USBRQ_GET_INTERFACE){ /* 10 */
replyLen = 1;
#if USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_HALT
}else if(rq->bRequest == USBRQ_CLEAR_FEATURE || rq->bRequest == USBRQ_SET_FEATURE){ /* 1|3 */
if(rq->wValue.bytes[0] == 0 && rq->wIndex.bytes[0] == 0x81){ /* feature 0 == HALT for endpoint == 1 */
usbHalted1 = rq->bRequest - 1;
if(usbHalted1){
usbTxBuf1[0] = USBPID_STALL;
usbTxLen1 = 2; /* length including sync byte */
}
usbTxPacketCnt1 = 0; /* reset data toggling for interrupt endpoint */
}
#endif
}else if(rq->bRequest == USBRQ_SET_INTERFACE){ /* 11 */
usbTxPacketCnt1 = 0; /* reset data toggling for interrupt endpoint */
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_HALT
usbHalted1 = 0;
#endif
#endif
}else{
/* the following requests can be ignored, send default reply */
/* 1: CLEAR_FEATURE, 3: SET_FEATURE, 7: SET_DESCRIPTOR */
/* 12: SYNCH_FRAME */
}
usbMsgPtr = replyData;
if(!rq->wLength.bytes[1] && replyLen > rq->wLength.bytes[0]) /* max length is in */
replyLen = rq->wLength.bytes[0];
}else{ /* not a standard request -- must be vendor or class request */
replyLen = usbFunctionSetup(data);
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_READ || USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_WRITE
if(replyLen == 0xff){ /* use user-supplied read/write function */
if((rq->bmRequestType & USBRQ_DIR_MASK) == USBRQ_DIR_DEVICE_TO_HOST){
replyLen = rq->wLength.bytes[0]; /* IN transfers only */
}
flags = 0; /* we have no valid msg, use user supplied read/write functions */
}
#endif
}
}
/* make sure that data packets which are sent as ACK to an OUT transfer are always zero sized */
}else{ /* DATA packet from out request */
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_WRITE
if(!(usbMsgFlags & USB_FLG_USE_DEFAULT_RW)){
uchar rval = usbFunctionWrite(data, len);
replyLen = 0xff;
if(rval == 0xff){ /* an error occurred */
/* usbMsgLen = 0xff; cancel potentially pending ACK [has been done by ASM module when OUT token arrived] */
usbTxBuf[0] = USBPID_STALL;
usbTxLen = 2; /* length including sync byte */
}else if(rval != 0){ /* This was the final package */
replyLen = 0; /* answer with a zero-sized data packet */
}
flags = 0; /* start with a DATA1 package, stay with user supplied write() function */
}
#else
replyLen = 0; /* send zero-sized block as ACK */
#endif
}
usbMsgFlags = flags;
usbMsgLen = replyLen;
}
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
static void usbBuildTxBlock(void)
{
uchar wantLen, len, txLen, token;
wantLen = usbMsgLen;
if(wantLen > 8)
wantLen = 8;
usbMsgLen -= wantLen;
token = USBPID_DATA1;
if(usbMsgFlags & USB_FLG_TX_PACKET)
token = USBPID_DATA0;
usbMsgFlags++;
len = usbRead(usbTxBuf + 1, wantLen);
if(len <= 8){ /* valid data packet */
usbCrc16Append(usbTxBuf + 1, len);
txLen = len + 4; /* length including sync byte */
if(len < 8) /* a partial package identifies end of message */
usbMsgLen = 0xff;
}else{
token = USBPID_STALL;
txLen = 2; /* length including sync byte */
usbMsgLen = 0xff;
}
usbTxBuf[0] = token;
usbTxLen = txLen;
#if DEBUG_LEVEL > 1
DBG2(0x20, usbTxBuf, txLen-1);
#else
DBG1(0x20, usbTxBuf + 1, 2);
#endif
}
static inline uchar isNotSE0(void)
{
uchar rval;
/* We want to do
* return (USBIN & USBMASK);
* here, but the compiler does int-expansion acrobatics.
* We can avoid this by assigning to a char-sized variable.
*/
rval = USBIN & USBMASK;
return rval;
}
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
void usbPoll(void)
{
uchar len;
if((len = usbRxLen) > 0){
/* We could check CRC16 here -- but ACK has already been sent anyway. If you
* need data integrity checks with this driver, check the CRC in your app
* code and report errors back to the host. Since the ACK was already sent,
* retries must be handled on application level.
* unsigned crc = usbCrc16((uchar *)(unsigned)(usbAppBuf + 1), usbRxLen - 3);
*/
len -= 3; /* remove PID and CRC */
if(len < 128){ /* no overflow */
converter_t appBuf;
appBuf.ptr = (uchar *)usbRxBuf;
appBuf.bytes[0] = usbAppBuf;
appBuf.bytes[0]++;
usbProcessRx(appBuf.ptr, len);
}
usbRxLen = 0; /* mark rx buffer as available */
}
if(usbMsgLen != 0xff){ /* transmit data pending? */
if(usbTxLen < 0) /* transmit system idle */
usbBuildTxBlock();
}
if(isNotSE0()){ /* SE0 state */
usbIsReset = 0;
}else{
/* check whether SE0 lasts for more than 2.5us (3.75 bit times) */
if(!usbIsReset){
uchar i;
for(i=100;i;i--){
if(isNotSE0())
goto notUsbReset;
}
usbIsReset = 1;
usbNewDeviceAddr = 0;
usbDeviceAddr = 0;
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_HALT
usbHalted1 = 0;
#endif
DBG1(0xff, 0, 0);
notUsbReset:;
}
}
}
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
void usbInit(void)
{
usbInputBuf = (uchar)usbRxBuf[0];
usbAppBuf = (uchar)usbRxBuf[1];
#if USB_INTR_CFG_SET != 0
USB_INTR_CFG |= USB_INTR_CFG_SET;
#endif
#if USB_INTR_CFG_CLR != 0
USB_INTR_CFG &= ~(USB_INTR_CFG_CLR);
#endif
USB_INTR_ENABLE |= (1 << USB_INTR_ENABLE_BIT);
}
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */

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/* Name: usbdrv.h
* Project: AVR USB driver
* Author: Christian Starkjohann
* Creation Date: 2004-12-29
* Tabsize: 4
* Copyright: (c) 2005 by OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH
* License: Proprietary, free under certain conditions. See Documentation.
* This Revision: $Id: usbdrv.h,v 1.1 2007-03-25 02:59:32 raph Exp $
*/
#ifndef __usbdrv_h_included__
#define __usbdrv_h_included__
#include "usbconfig.h"
#include "iarcompat.h"
/*
Hardware Prerequisites:
=======================
USB lines D+ and D- MUST be wired to the same I/O port. Line D- MUST be wired
to bit number 0. D+ must also be connected to INT0. D- requires a pullup of
1.5k to +3.5V (and the device must be powered at 3.5V) to identify as
low-speed USB device. A pullup of 1M SHOULD be connected from D+ to +3.5V to
prevent interference when no USB master is connected. We use D+ as interrupt
source and not D- because it does not trigger on keep-alive and RESET states.
As a compile time option, the 1.5k pullup resistor on D- can be made
switchable to allow the device to disconnect at will. See the definition of
usbDeviceConnect() and usbDeviceDisconnect() further down in this file.
Please adapt the values in usbconfig.h according to your hardware!
The device MUST be clocked at 12 MHz. This is more than the 10 MHz allowed by
an AT90S2313 powered at 4.5V. However, if the supply voltage to maximum clock
relation is interpolated linearly, an ATtiny2313 meets the requirement by
specification. In practice, the AT90S2313 can be overclocked and works well.
Limitations:
============
Compiling:
You should link the usbdrv.o module first because it has special alignment
requirements for the receive buffer (the buffer must not cross a 256 byte
page boundary, it must not even touch it at the end). If you can't link it
first, you must use other measures to ensure alignment.
Note: gcc does not always assign variable addresses in the order as the modules
are linked or the variables are declared. You can choose a memory section for
the receive buffer with the configuration option "USB_BUFFER_SECTION". This
option defaults to ".bss". If you use your own section, you can place it at
an arbitrary location with a linker option similar to
"-Wl,--section-start=.mybuffer=0x800060". Use "avr-nm -ng" on the binary and
search for "usbRxBuf" to find tbe base address of the 22 bytes rx buffer.
Robustness with respect to communication errors:
The driver assumes error-free communication. It DOES check for errors in
the PID, but does NOT check bit stuffing errors, SE0 in middle of a byte,
token CRC (5 bit) and data CRC (16 bit). CRC checks can not be performed due
to timing constraints: We must start sending a reply within 7 bit times.
Bit stuffing and misplaced SE0 would have to be checked in real-time, but CPU
performance does not permit that. The driver does not check Data0/Data1
toggling, but application software can implement the check.
Sampling jitter:
The driver guarantees a sampling window of 1/2 bit. The USB spec requires
that the receiver has at most 1/4 bit sampling window. The 1/2 bit window
should still work reliably enough because we work at low speed. If you want
to meet the spec, define the macro "USB_CFG_SAMPLE_EXACT" to 1 in usbconfig.h.
This will unroll a loop which results in bigger code size.
Input characteristics:
Since no differential receiver circuit is used, electrical interference
robustness may suffer. The driver samples only one of the data lines with
an ordinary I/O pin's input characteristics. However, since this is only a
low speed USB implementation and the specification allows for 8 times the
bit rate over the same hardware, we should be on the safe side. Even the spec
requires detection of asymmetric states at high bit rate for SE0 detection.
Number of endpoints:
The driver supports up to two endpoints: One control endpoint (endpoint 0) and
one interrupt-in endpoint (endpoint 1) where the device can send interrupt
data to the host. Endpoint 1 is only compiled in if
USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT is defined to 1 in usbconfig.h.
Maximum data payload:
Data payload of control in and out transfers may be up to 254 bytes. In order
to accept payload data of out transfers, you need to implement
'usbFunctionWrite()'.
USB Suspend Mode supply current:
The USB standard limits power consumption to 500uA when the bus is in suspend
mode. This is not a problem for self-powered devices since they don't need
bus power anyway. Bus-powered devices can achieve this only by putting the
CPU in sleep mode. The driver does not implement suspend handling by itself.
However, the application may implement activity monitoring and wakeup from
sleep. The host sends regular SE0 states on the bus to keep it active. These
SE0 states can be detected by wiring the INT1 pin to D+. It is not necessary
to enable the interrupt, checking the interrupt pending flag should suffice.
Before entering sleep mode, the application should enable INT1 for a wakeup
on the next bus activity.
Operation without an USB master:
The driver behaves neutral without connection to an USB master if D- reads
as 1. To avoid spurious interrupts, we recommend a high impedance (e.g. 1M)
pullup resistor on D+. If D- becomes statically 0, the driver may block in
the interrupt routine.
Interrupt latency:
The application must ensure that the USB interrupt is not disabled for more
than 20 cycles. This implies that all interrupt routines must either be
declared as "INTERRUPT" instead of "SIGNAL" (see "avr/signal.h") or that they
are written in assembler with "sei" as the first instruction.
Maximum interrupt duration / CPU cycle consumption:
The driver handles all USB communication during the interrupt service
routine. The routine will not return before an entire USB message is received
and the reply is sent. This may be up to ca. 1200 cycles = 100us if the host
conforms to the standard. The driver will consume CPU cycles for all USB
messages, even if they address another (low-speed) device on the same bus.
*/
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* --------------------------- Module Interface ---------------------------- */
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#define USBDRV_VERSION 20060314
/* This define uniquely identifies a driver version. It is a decimal number
* constructed from the driver's release date in the form YYYYMMDD. If the
* driver's behavior or interface changes, you can use this constant to
* distinguish versions. If it is not defined, the driver's release date is
* older than 2006-01-25.
*/
#ifndef __ASSEMBLER__
#ifndef uchar
#define uchar unsigned char
#endif
#ifndef schar
#define schar signed char
#endif
/* shortcuts for well defined 8 bit integer types */
extern void usbInit(void);
/* This function must be called before interrupts are enabled and the main
* loop is entered.
*/
extern void usbPoll(void);
/* This function must be called at regular intervals from the main loop.
* Maximum delay between calls is somewhat less than 50ms (USB timeout for
* accepting a Setup message). Otherwise the device will not be recognized.
* Please note that debug outputs through the UART take ~ 0.5ms per byte
* at 19200 bps.
*/
extern uchar *usbMsgPtr;
/* This variable may be used to pass transmit data to the driver from the
* implementation of usbFunctionWrite(). It is also used internally by the
* driver for standard control requests.
*/
extern uchar usbFunctionSetup(uchar data[8]);
/* This function is called when the driver receives a SETUP transaction from
* the host which is not answered by the driver itself (in practice: class and
* vendor requests). All control transfers start with a SETUP transaction where
* the host communicates the parameters of the following (optional) data
* transfer. The SETUP data is available in the 'data' parameter which can
* (and should) be casted to 'usbRequest_t *' for a more user-friendly access
* to parameters.
*
* If the SETUP indicates a control-in transfer, you should provide the
* requested data to the driver. There are two ways to transfer this data:
* (1) Set the global pointer 'usbMsgPtr' to the base of the static RAM data
* block and return the length of the data in 'usbFunctionSetup()'. The driver
* will handle the rest. Or (2) return 0xff in 'usbFunctionSetup()'. The driver
* will then call 'usbFunctionRead()' when data is needed. See the
* documentation for usbFunctionRead() for details.
*
* If the SETUP indicates a control-out transfer, the only way to receive the
* data from the host is through the 'usbFunctionWrite()' call. If you
* implement this function, you must return 0xff in 'usbFunctionSetup()' to
* indicate that 'usbFunctionWrite()' should be used. See the documentation of
* this function for more information. If you just want to ignore the data sent
* by the host, return 0 in 'usbFunctionSetup()'.
*
* Note that calls to the functions usbFunctionRead() and usbFunctionWrite()
* are only done if enabled by the configuration in usbconfig.h.
*/
#if USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT
void usbSetInterrupt(uchar *data, uchar len);
/* This function sets the message which will be sent during the next interrupt
* IN transfer. The message is copied to an internal buffer and must not exceed
* a length of 8 bytes. The message may be 0 bytes long just to indicate the
* interrupt status to the host.
* If you need to transfer more bytes, use a control read after the interrupt.
*/
extern volatile schar usbTxLen1;
#define usbInterruptIsReady() (usbTxLen1 == -1)
/* This macro indicates whether the last interrupt message has already been
* sent. If you set a new interrupt message before the old was sent, the
* message already buffered will be lost.
*/
#endif /* USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT */
#if USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH
extern PROGMEM const char usbHidReportDescriptor[];
/* If you implement an HID device, you need to provide a report descriptor.
* The HID report descriptor syntax is a bit complex. If you understand how
* report descriptors are constructed, we recommend that you use the HID
* Descriptor Tool from usb.org, see http://www.usb.org/developers/hidpage/.
* Otherwise you should probably start with a working example.
*/
#endif /* USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH */
#ifdef USB_CFG_DEVICE_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME
extern const char *rt_usbDeviceDescriptor;
extern uchar rt_usbDeviceDescriptorSize;
#endif
#ifdef USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_RUNTIME
/* If you have many different HID report descriptors and
* you want to select one of them at runtime (dip switchs?),
* set those globals variables before initializing the driver.
*/
extern const char *rt_usbHidReportDescriptor;
extern uchar rt_usbHidReportDescriptorSize;
#endif
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_WRITE
extern uchar usbFunctionWrite(uchar *data, uchar len);
/* This function is called by the driver to provide a control transfer's
* payload data (control-out). It is called in chunks of up to 8 bytes. The
* total count provided in the current control transfer can be obtained from
* the 'length' property in the setup data. If an error occurred during
* processing, return 0xff (== -1). The driver will answer the entire transfer
* with a STALL token in this case. If you have received the entire payload
* successfully, return 1. If you expect more data, return 0. If you don't
* know whether the host will send more data (you should know, the total is
* provided in the usbFunctionSetup() call!), return 1.
* NOTE: If you return 0xff for STALL, 'usbFunctionWrite()' may still be called
* for the remaining data. You must continue to return 0xff for STALL in these
* calls.
* In order to get usbFunctionWrite() called, define USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_WRITE
* to 1 in usbconfig.h and return 0xff in usbFunctionSetup()..
*/
#endif /* USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_WRITE */
#if USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_READ
extern uchar usbFunctionRead(uchar *data, uchar len);
/* This function is called by the driver to ask the application for a control
* transfer's payload data (control-in). It is called in chunks of up to 8
* bytes each. You should copy the data to the location given by 'data' and
* return the actual number of bytes copied. If you return less than requested,
* the control-in transfer is terminated. If you return 0xff, the driver aborts
* the transfer with a STALL token.
* In order to get usbFunctionRead() called, define USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_READ
* to 1 in usbconfig.h and return 0xff in usbFunctionSetup()..
*/
#endif /* USB_CFG_IMPLEMENT_FN_READ */
#ifdef USB_CFG_PULLUP_IOPORT
#define usbDeviceConnect() ((USB_PULLUP_DDR |= (1<<USB_CFG_PULLUP_BIT)), \
(USB_PULLUP_OUT |= (1<<USB_CFG_PULLUP_BIT)))
/* This macro (intended to look like a function) connects the device to the
* USB bus. It is only available if you have defined the constants
* USB_CFG_PULLUP_IOPORT and USB_CFG_PULLUP_BIT in usbconfig.h.
*/
#define usbDeviceDisconnect() (USB_PULLUP_OUT &= ~(1<<USB_CFG_PULLUP_BIT))
/* This macro (intended to look like a function) disconnects the device from
* the USB bus. It is only available if you have defined the constants
* USB_CFG_PULLUP_IOPORT and USB_CFG_PULLUP_BIT in usbconfig.h.
*/
#endif /* USB_CFG_PULLUP_IOPORT */
extern unsigned usbCrc16(uchar *data, uchar len);
/* This function calculates the binary complement of the data CRC used in
* USB data packets. The value is used to build raw transmit packets.
* You may want to use this function for data checksums or to verify received
* data.
*/
extern unsigned usbCrc16Append(unsigned char *data, unsigned char len);
/* This function is equivalent to usbCrc16() above, except that it appends
* the 2 bytes CRC (lowbyte first) in the 'data' buffer after reading 'len'
* bytes.
*/
extern uchar usbConfiguration;
/* This value contains the current configuration set by the host. The driver
* allows setting and querying of this variable with the USB SET_CONFIGURATION
* and GET_CONFIGURATION requests, but does not use it otherwise.
* You may want to reflect the "configured" status with a LED on the device or
* switch on high power parts of the circuit only if the device is configured.
*/
#define USB_STRING_DESCRIPTOR_HEADER(stringLength) ((2*(stringLength)+2) | (3<<8))
/* This macro builds a descriptor header for a string descriptor given the
* string's length. See usbdrv.c for an example how to use it.
*/
#if USB_CFG_SERIAL_NUMBER_LENGTH
extern PROGMEM int usbCfgSerialNumberStringDescriptor[];
/* This array of unicode characters (prefixed by a string descriptor header as
* explained above) represents the serial number of the device.
*/
#endif
#endif /* __ASSEMBLER__ */
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* ------------------------- Constant definitions -------------------------- */
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#if USB_CFG_HID_REPORT_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH && (!defined USB_CFG_VENDOR_ID || !defined USB_CFG_DEVICE_ID)
#error "You MUST NOT use obdev's shared VID/PID with HID class devices!"
/* The shared VID/PID must be used in conjunction with libusb (see license for
* the IDs). This contradicts HID usage (at least on Windows).
*/
#endif
/* make sure we have a VID and PID defined, byte order is lowbyte, highbyte */
#ifndef USB_CFG_VENDOR_ID
# define USB_CFG_VENDOR_ID 0xc0, 0x16 /* 5824 in dec, stands for VOTI */
#endif
#ifndef USB_CFG_DEVICE_ID
# define USB_CFG_DEVICE_ID 0xdc, 0x05 /* 1500 in dec, obdev's free PID */
#endif
#ifndef USB_BUFFER_SECTION
# define USB_BUFFER_SECTION ".bss" /* if user has not selected a named section */
#endif
/* I/O definitions for assembler module */
#define USBOUT USB_CFG_IOPORT /* output port for USB bits */
#define USB_PULLUP_OUT USB_CFG_PULLUP_IOPORT
#ifdef __ASSEMBLER__
/* the following two lines must start in column 0 for IAR assembler */
USBIN = (USB_CFG_IOPORT - 2) /* input port for USB bits */
USBDDR = (USB_CFG_IOPORT - 1) /* data direction for USB bits */
#else
#define USBIN (*(&USB_CFG_IOPORT - 2)) /* input port for USB bits */
#define USBDDR (*(&USB_CFG_IOPORT - 1)) /* data direction for USB bits */
#define USB_PULLUP_DDR (*(&USB_CFG_PULLUP_IOPORT - 1))
#endif
#if USB_CFG_DMINUS_BIT != 0
# error "USB_CFG_DMINUS_BIT MUST be 0!"
#endif
#define USBMINUS 0 /* D- MUST be on bit 0 */
#define USBIDLE 0x01 /* value representing J state */
#define USBMASK ((1<<USB_CFG_DPLUS_BIT) | 1) /* mask for USB I/O bits */
#define USB_BUFSIZE 11 /* PID, 8 bytes data, 2 bytes CRC */
/* Try to find registers and bits responsible for ext interrupt 0 */
#if defined EICRA
# define USB_INTR_CFG EICRA
#else
# define USB_INTR_CFG MCUCR
#endif
#define USB_INTR_CFG_SET ((1 << ISC00) | (1 << ISC01)) /* cfg for rising edge */
#define USB_INTR_CFG_CLR 0 /* no bits to clear */
#if defined GIMSK
# define USB_INTR_ENABLE GIMSK
#elif defined EIMSK
# define USB_INTR_ENABLE EIMSK
#else
# define USB_INTR_ENABLE GICR
#endif
#define USB_INTR_ENABLE_BIT INT0
#if defined EIFR
# define USB_INTR_PENDING EIFR
#else
# define USB_INTR_PENDING GIFR
#endif
#define USB_INTR_PENDING_BIT INTF0
/*
The defines above don't work for the following chips
at90c8534: no ISC0?, no PORTB, can't find a data sheet
at86rf401: no PORTB, no MCUCR etc, low clock rate
atmega103: no ISC0? (maybe omission in header, can't find data sheet)
atmega603: not defined in avr-libc
at43usb320, at43usb355, at76c711: have USB anyway
at94k: is different...
at90s1200, attiny11, attiny12, attiny15, attiny28: these have no RAM
*/
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* ----------------- USB Specification Constants and Types ----------------- */
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* USB Token values */
#define USBPID_SETUP 0x2d
#define USBPID_OUT 0xe1
#define USBPID_IN 0x69
#define USBPID_DATA0 0xc3
#define USBPID_DATA1 0x4b
#define USBPID_ACK 0xd2
#define USBPID_NAK 0x5a
#define USBPID_STALL 0x1e
#ifndef __ASSEMBLER__
typedef union usbWord{
unsigned word;
uchar bytes[2];
}usbWord_t;
typedef struct usbRequest{
uchar bmRequestType;
uchar bRequest;
usbWord_t wValue;
usbWord_t wIndex;
usbWord_t wLength;
}usbRequest_t;
/* This structure matches the 8 byte setup request */
#endif
/* bmRequestType field in USB setup:
* d t t r r r r r, where
* d ..... direction: 0=host->device, 1=device->host
* t ..... type: 0=standard, 1=class, 2=vendor, 3=reserved
* r ..... recipient: 0=device, 1=interface, 2=endpoint, 3=other
*/
/* USB setup recipient values */
#define USBRQ_RCPT_MASK 0x1f
#define USBRQ_RCPT_DEVICE 0
#define USBRQ_RCPT_INTERFACE 1
#define USBRQ_RCPT_ENDPOINT 2
/* USB request type values */
#define USBRQ_TYPE_MASK 0x60
#define USBRQ_TYPE_STANDARD (0<<5)
#define USBRQ_TYPE_CLASS (1<<5)
#define USBRQ_TYPE_VENDOR (2<<5)
/* USB direction values: */
#define USBRQ_DIR_MASK 0x80
#define USBRQ_DIR_HOST_TO_DEVICE (0<<7)
#define USBRQ_DIR_DEVICE_TO_HOST (1<<7)
/* USB Standard Requests */
#define USBRQ_GET_STATUS 0
#define USBRQ_CLEAR_FEATURE 1
#define USBRQ_SET_FEATURE 3
#define USBRQ_SET_ADDRESS 5
#define USBRQ_GET_DESCRIPTOR 6
#define USBRQ_SET_DESCRIPTOR 7
#define USBRQ_GET_CONFIGURATION 8
#define USBRQ_SET_CONFIGURATION 9
#define USBRQ_GET_INTERFACE 10
#define USBRQ_SET_INTERFACE 11
#define USBRQ_SYNCH_FRAME 12
/* USB descriptor constants */
#define USBDESCR_DEVICE 1
#define USBDESCR_CONFIG 2
#define USBDESCR_STRING 3
#define USBDESCR_INTERFACE 4
#define USBDESCR_ENDPOINT 5
#define USBDESCR_HID 0x21
#define USBDESCR_HID_REPORT 0x22
#define USBDESCR_HID_PHYS 0x23
#define USBATTR_BUSPOWER 0x80
#define USBATTR_SELFPOWER 0x40
#define USBATTR_REMOTEWAKE 0x20
/* USB HID Requests */
#define USBRQ_HID_GET_REPORT 0x01
#define USBRQ_HID_GET_IDLE 0x02
#define USBRQ_HID_GET_PROTOCOL 0x03
#define USBRQ_HID_SET_REPORT 0x09
#define USBRQ_HID_SET_IDLE 0x0a
#define USBRQ_HID_SET_PROTOCOL 0x0b
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#endif /* __usbdrv_h_included__ */

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/* Name: usbdrvasm.S
* Project: AVR USB driver
* Author: Christian Starkjohann
* Creation Date: 2004-12-29
* Tabsize: 4
* Copyright: (c) 2005 by OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH
* License: Proprietary, free under certain conditions. See Documentation.
* This Revision: $Id: usbdrvasm.S,v 1.1 2007-03-25 02:59:31 raph Exp $
*/
/*
General Description:
This module implements the assembler part of the USB driver. See usbdrv.h
for a description of the entire driver.
Since almost all of this code is timing critical, don't change unless you
really know what you are doing! Many parts require not only a maximum number
of CPU cycles, but even an exact number of cycles!
*/
#include "iarcompat.h"
#ifndef __IAR_SYSTEMS_ASM__
/* configs for io.h */
# define __SFR_OFFSET 0
# define _VECTOR(N) __vector_ ## N /* io.h does not define this for asm */
# include <avr/io.h> /* for CPU I/O register definitions and vectors */
#endif /* __IAR_SYSTEMS_ASM__ */
#include "usbdrv.h" /* for common defs */
/* register names */
#define x1 r16
#define x2 r17
#define shift r18
#define cnt r19
#define x3 r20
#define x4 r21
/* Some assembler dependent definitions and declarations: */
#ifdef __IAR_SYSTEMS_ASM__
# define nop2 rjmp $+2 /* jump to next instruction */
# define XL r26
# define XH r27
# define YL r28
# define YH r29
# define ZL r30
# define ZH r31
# define lo8(x) LOW(x)
# define hi8(x) ((x)>>8) /* not HIGH to allow XLINK to make a proper range check */
extern usbRxBuf, usbDeviceAddr, usbNewDeviceAddr, usbInputBuf
extern usbCurrentTok, usbRxLen, usbRxToken, usbAppBuf, usbTxLen
extern usbTxBuf, usbMsgLen, usbNakBuf, usbAckBuf, usbTxLen1, usbTxBuf1
public usbCrc16
public usbCrc16Append
# ifndef IVT_BASE_ADDRESS
# define IVT_BASE_ADDRESS 0
# endif
ASEG
ORG INT0_vect + IVT_BASE_ADDRESS
rjmp SIG_INTERRUPT0
RSEG CODE
#else /* __IAR_SYSTEMS_ASM__ */
# define nop2 rjmp .+0 /* jump to next instruction */
.text
.global SIG_INTERRUPT0
.type SIG_INTERRUPT0, @function
.global usbCrc16
.global usbCrc16Append
#endif /* __IAR_SYSTEMS_ASM__ */
SIG_INTERRUPT0:
;Software-receiver engine. Strict timing! Don't change unless you can preserve timing!
;interrupt response time: 4 cycles + insn running = 7 max if interrupts always enabled
;max allowable interrupt latency: 32 cycles -> max 25 cycles interrupt disable
;max stack usage: [ret(2), x1, SREG, x2, cnt, shift, YH, YL, x3, x4] = 11 bytes
usbInterrupt:
;order of registers pushed:
;x1, SREG, x2, cnt, shift, [YH, YL, x3]
push x1 ;2 push only what is necessary to sync with edge ASAP
in x1, SREG ;1
push x1 ;2
;sync byte (D-) pattern LSb to MSb: 01010100 [1 = idle = J, 0 = K]
;sync up with J to K edge during sync pattern -- use fastest possible loops
;first part has no timeout because it waits for IDLE or SE1 (== disconnected)
#if !USB_CFG_SAMPLE_EXACT
ldi x1, 5 ;1 setup a timeout for waitForK
#endif
waitForJ:
sbis USBIN, USBMINUS ;1 wait for D- == 1
rjmp waitForJ ;2
#if USB_CFG_SAMPLE_EXACT
;The following code represents the unrolled loop in the else branch. It
;results in a sampling window of 1/4 bit which meets the spec.
sbis USBIN, USBMINUS
rjmp foundK
sbis USBIN, USBMINUS
rjmp foundK
sbis USBIN, USBMINUS
rjmp foundK
nop
nop2
foundK:
#else
waitForK:
dec x1 ;1
sbic USBIN, USBMINUS ;1 wait for D- == 0
brne waitForK ;2
#endif
;{2, 6} after falling D- edge, average delay: 4 cycles [we want 4 for center sampling]
;we have 1 bit time for setup purposes, then sample again:
push x2 ;2
push cnt ;2
push shift ;2
shortcutEntry:
ldi cnt, 1 ;1 pre-init bit counter (-1 because no dec follows, -1 because 1 bit already sampled)
ldi x2, 1<<USB_CFG_DPLUS_BIT ;1 -> 8 edge sync ended with D- == 0
;now wait until SYNC byte is over. Wait for either 2 bits low (success) or 2 bits high (failure)
waitNoChange:
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample, timing: edge + {2, 6} cycles
eor x2, x1 ;1
sbrc x2, 0 ;1 | 2
ldi cnt, 2 ;1 | 0 cnt = numBits - 1 (because dec follows)
mov x2, x1 ;1
dec cnt ;1
brne waitNoChange ;2 | 1
sbrc x1, USBMINUS ;2
rjmp sofError ;0 two consecutive "1" bits -> framing error
;start reading data, but don't check for bitstuffing because these are the
;first bits. Use the cycles for initialization instead. Note that we read and
;store the binary complement of the data stream because eor results in 1 for
;a change and 0 for no change.
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 0, timing: edge + {3, 7} cycles
eor x2, x1 ;1
ror x2 ;1
ldi shift, 0x7f ;1 The last bit of the sync pattern was a "no change"
ror shift ;1
push YH ;2 -> 7
in x2, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 1, timing: edge + {2, 6} cycles
eor x1, x2 ;1
ror x1 ;1
ror shift ;1
push YL ;2
lds YL, usbInputBuf ;2 -> 8
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 2, timing: edge + {2, 6} cycles
eor x2, x1 ;1
ror x2 ;1
ror shift ;1
ldi cnt, USB_BUFSIZE;1
ldi YH, hi8(usbRxBuf);1 assume that usbRxBuf does not cross a page
push x3 ;2 -> 8
in x2, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 3, timing: edge + {2, 6} cycles
eor x1, x2 ;1
ror x1 ;1
ror shift ;1
ser x3 ;1
nop ;1
rjmp rxbit4 ;2 -> 8
shortcutToStart: ;{,43} into next frame: max 5.5 sync bits missed
#if !USB_CFG_SAMPLE_EXACT
ldi x1, 5 ;2 setup timeout
#endif
waitForJ1:
sbis USBIN, USBMINUS ;1 wait for D- == 1
rjmp waitForJ1 ;2
#if USB_CFG_SAMPLE_EXACT
;The following code represents the unrolled loop in the else branch. It
;results in a sampling window of 1/4 bit which meets the spec.
sbis USBIN, USBMINUS
rjmp foundK1
sbis USBIN, USBMINUS
rjmp foundK1
sbis USBIN, USBMINUS
rjmp foundK1
nop
nop2
foundK1:
#else
waitForK1:
dec x1 ;1
sbic USBIN, USBMINUS ;1 wait for D- == 0
brne waitForK1 ;2
#endif
pop YH ;2 correct stack alignment
nop2 ;2 delay for the same time as the pushes in the original code
rjmp shortcutEntry ;2
; ################# receiver loop #################
; extra jobs done during bit interval:
; bit 6: se0 check
; bit 7: or, store, clear
; bit 0: recover from delay [SE0 is unreliable here due to bit dribbling in hubs]
; bit 1: se0 check
; bit 2: se0 check
; bit 3: overflow check
; bit 4: se0 check
; bit 5: rjmp
; stuffed* helpers have the functionality of a subroutine, but we can't afford
; the overhead of a call. We therefore need a separate routine for each caller
; which jumps back appropriately.
stuffed5: ;1 for branch taken
in x2, USBIN ;1 <-- sample @ +1
andi x2, USBMASK ;1
breq se0a ;1
andi x3, 0xc0 ;1 (0xff03 >> 2) & 0xff
ori shift, 0xfc ;1
rjmp rxbit6 ;2
stuffed6: ;1 for branch taken
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample @ +1
andi x1, USBMASK ;1
breq se0a ;1
andi x3, 0x81 ;1 (0xff03 >> 1) & 0xff
ori shift, 0xfc ;1
rjmp rxbit7 ;2
; This is somewhat special because it has to compensate for the delay in bit 7
stuffed7: ;1 for branch taken
andi x1, USBMASK ;1 already sampled by caller
breq se0a ;1
mov x2, x1 ;1 ensure correct NRZI sequence [we can save andi x3 here]
ori shift, 0xfc ;1
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 0
rjmp unstuffed7 ;2
stuffed0: ;1 for branch taken
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample @ +1
andi x1, USBMASK ;1
breq se0a ;1
andi x3, 0xfe ;1 (0xff03 >> 7) & 0xff
ori shift, 0xfc ;1
rjmp rxbit1 ;2
;-----------------------------
rxLoop:
brlo stuffed5 ;1
rxbit6:
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 6
andi x1, USBMASK ;1
breq se0a ;1
eor x2, x1 ;1
ror x2 ;1
ror shift ;1
cpi shift, 4 ;1
brlo stuffed6 ;1
rxbit7:
in x2, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 7
eor x1, x2 ;1
ror x1 ;1
ror shift ;1
eor x3, shift ;1 x3 is 0 at bit locations we changed, 1 at others
st y+, x3 ;2 the eor above reconstructed modified bits and inverted rx data
ser x3 ;1
rxbit0:
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 0
cpi shift, 4 ;1
brlo stuffed7 ;1
unstuffed7:
eor x2, x1 ;1
ror x2 ;1
ror shift ;1
cpi shift, 4 ;1
brlo stuffed0 ;1
rxbit1:
in x2, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 1
andi x2, USBMASK ;1
se0a: ; enlarge jump range to SE0
breq se0 ;1 check for SE0 more often close to start of byte
eor x1, x2 ;1
ror x1 ;1
ror shift ;1
cpi shift, 4 ;1
brlo stuffed1 ;1
rxbit2:
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 2
andi x1, USBMASK ;1
breq se0 ;1
eor x2, x1 ;1
ror x2 ;1
ror shift ;1
cpi shift, 4 ;1
brlo stuffed2 ;1
rxbit3:
in x2, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 3
eor x1, x2 ;1
ror x1 ;1
ror shift ;1
dec cnt ;1 check for buffer overflow
breq overflow ;1
cpi shift, 4 ;1
brlo stuffed3 ;1
rxbit4:
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 4
andi x1, USBMASK ;1
breq se0 ;1
eor x2, x1 ;1
ror x2 ;1
ror shift ;1
cpi shift, 4 ;1
brlo stuffed4 ;1
rxbit5:
in x2, USBIN ;1 <-- sample bit 5
eor x1, x2 ;1
ror x1 ;1
ror shift ;1
cpi shift, 4 ;1
rjmp rxLoop ;2
;-----------------------------
stuffed1: ;1 for branch taken
in x2, USBIN ;1 <-- sample @ +1
andi x2, USBMASK ;1
breq se0 ;1
andi x3, 0xfc ;1 (0xff03 >> 6) & 0xff
ori shift, 0xfc ;1
rjmp rxbit2 ;2
stuffed2: ;1 for branch taken
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample @ +1
andi x1, USBMASK ;1
breq se0 ;1
andi x3, 0xf8 ;1 (0xff03 >> 5) & 0xff
ori shift, 0xfc ;1
rjmp rxbit3 ;2
stuffed3: ;1 for branch taken
in x2, USBIN ;1 <-- sample @ +1
andi x2, USBMASK ;1
breq se0 ;1
andi x3, 0xf0 ;1 (0xff03 >> 4) & 0xff
ori shift, 0xfc ;1
rjmp rxbit4 ;2
stuffed4: ;1 for branch taken
in x1, USBIN ;1 <-- sample @ +1
andi x1, USBMASK ;1
breq se0 ;1
andi x3, 0xe0 ;1 (0xff03 >> 3) & 0xff
ori shift, 0xfc ;1
rjmp rxbit5 ;2
;################ end receiver loop ###############
overflow: ; ignore package if buffer overflow
rjmp rxDoReturn ; enlarge jump range
;This is the only non-error exit point for the software receiver loop
;{4, 20} cycles after start of SE0, typically {10, 18} after SE0 start = {-6, 2} from end of SE0
;next sync starts {16,} cycles after SE0 -> worst case start: +4 from next sync start
;we don't check any CRCs here because there is no time left.
se0: ;{-6, 2} from end of SE0 / {,4} into next frame
mov cnt, YL ;1 assume buffer in lower 256 bytes of memory
lds YL, usbInputBuf ;2 reposition to buffer start
sub cnt, YL ;1 length of message
ldi x1, 1<<USB_INTR_PENDING_BIT ;1
cpi cnt, 3 ;1
out USB_INTR_PENDING, x1;1 clear pending intr and check flag later. SE0 must be over. {,10} into next frame
brlo rxDoReturn ;1 ensure valid packet size, ignore others
ld x1, y ;2 PID
ldd x2, y+1 ;2 ADDR + 1 bit endpoint number
mov x3, x2 ;1 store for endpoint number
andi x2, 0x7f ;1 mask endpoint number bit
lds shift, usbDeviceAddr;2
cpi x1, USBPID_SETUP ;1
breq isSetupOrOut ;2 -> 19 = {13, 21} from SE0 end
cpi x1, USBPID_OUT ;1
breq isSetupOrOut ;2 -> 22 = {16, 24} from SE0 end / {,24} into next frame
cpi x1, USBPID_IN ;1
breq handleIn ;1
#define USB_DATA_MASK ~(USBPID_DATA0 ^ USBPID_DATA1)
andi x1, USB_DATA_MASK ;1
cpi x1, USBPID_DATA0 & USB_DATA_MASK ;1
brne rxDoReturn ;1 not a data PID -- ignore
isData:
lds x2, usbCurrentTok ;2
tst x2 ;1
breq rxDoReturn ;1 for other device or spontaneous data -- ignore
lds x1, usbRxLen ;2
cpi x1, 0 ;1
brne sendNakAndReti ;1 no buffer space available / {30, 38} from SE0 end
; 2006-03-11: The following two lines fix a problem where the device was not
; recognized if usbPoll() was called less frequently than once every 4 ms.
cpi cnt, 4 ;1 zero sized data packets are status phase only -- ignore and ack
brmi sendAckAndReti ;1 keep rx buffer clean -- we must not NAK next SETUP
sts usbRxLen, cnt ;2 store received data, swap buffers
sts usbRxToken, x2 ;2
lds x1, usbAppBuf ;2
sts usbAppBuf, YL ;2
sts usbInputBuf, x1 ;2 buffers now swapped
rjmp sendAckAndReti ;2 -> {43, 51} from SE0 end
handleIn: ; {18, 26} from SE0 end
cp x2, shift ;1 shift contains our device addr
brne rxDoReturn ;1 other device
#if USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT
sbrc x3, 7 ;2 x3 contains addr + endpoint
rjmp handleIn1 ;0
#endif
lds cnt, usbTxLen ;2
cpi cnt, -1 ;1
breq sendNakAndReti ;1 -> {27, 35} from SE0 end
ldi x1, -1 ;1
sts usbTxLen, x1 ;2 buffer is now free
ldi YL, lo8(usbTxBuf) ;1
ldi YH, hi8(usbTxBuf) ;1
rjmp usbSendAndReti ;2 -> {34, 43} from SE0 end
; Comment about when to set usbTxLen to -1:
; We should set it back to -1 when we receive the ACK from the host. This would
; be simple to implement: One static variable which stores whether the last
; tx was for endpoint 0 or 1 and a compare in the receiver to distinguish the
; ACK. However, we set it back to -1 immediately when we send the package,
; assuming that no error occurs and the host sends an ACK. We save one byte
; RAM this way and avoid potential problems with endless retries. The rest of
; the driver assumes error-free transfers anyway.
otherOutOrSetup:
clr x1
sts usbCurrentTok, x1
rxDoReturn:
pop x3 ;2
pop YL ;2
pop YH ;2
rjmp sofError ;2
isSetupOrOut: ; we must be fast here -- a data package may follow / {,24} into next frame
cp x2, shift ;1 shift contains our device addr
brne otherOutOrSetup ;1 other device -- ignore
sts usbCurrentTok, x1 ;2
#if 0 /* we implement only one rx endpoint */
sts usbRxEndp, x3 ;2 only stored if we may have to distinguish endpoints
#endif
;A transmission can still have data in the output buffer while we receive a
;SETUP package with an IN phase. To avoid that the old data is sent as a reply,
;we abort transmission. ### This mechanism assumes that NO OUT OR SETUP package
;is ever sent to endpoint 1. We would abort transmission for endpoint 0
;in this case.
ldi x1, -1 ;1
sts usbMsgLen, x1 ;2
sts usbTxLen, x1 ;2 abort transmission
pop x3 ;2
pop YL ;2
in x1, USB_INTR_PENDING;1
sbrc x1, USB_INTR_PENDING_BIT;1 check whether data is already arriving {,41} into next frame
rjmp shortcutToStart ;2 save the pops and pushes -- a new interrupt is aready pending
;If the jump above was not taken, we can be at {,2} into the next frame here
pop YH ;2
txDoReturn:
sofError: ; error in start of frame -- ignore frame
ldi x1, 1<<USB_INTR_PENDING_BIT;1 many int0 events occurred during our processing -- clear pending flag
out USB_INTR_PENDING, x1;1
pop shift ;2
pop cnt ;2
pop x2 ;2
pop x1 ;2
out SREG, x1 ;1
pop x1 ;2
reti ;4 -> {,21} into next frame -> up to 3 sync bits missed
sendNakAndReti: ; 21 cycles until SOP
ldi YL, lo8(usbNakBuf) ;1
ldi YH, hi8(usbNakBuf) ;1
rjmp usbSendToken ;2
sendAckAndReti: ; 19 cycles until SOP
ldi YL, lo8(usbAckBuf) ;1
ldi YH, hi8(usbAckBuf) ;1
usbSendToken:
ldi cnt, 2 ;1
;;;;rjmp usbSendAndReti fallthrough
; USB spec says:
; idle = J
; J = (D+ = 0), (D- = 1) or USBOUT = 0x01
; K = (D+ = 1), (D- = 0) or USBOUT = 0x02
; Spec allows 7.5 bit times from EOP to SOP for replies (= 60 cycles)
;usbSend:
;pointer to data in 'Y'
;number of bytes in 'cnt' -- including sync byte
;uses: x1...x4, shift, cnt, Y
usbSendAndReti: ; SOP starts 16 cycles after call
push x4 ;2
in x1, USBOUT ;1
cbr x1, USBMASK ;1 mask out data bits
ori x1, USBIDLE ;1 idle
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 prepare idle state
ldi x4, USBMASK ;1 exor mask
in x2, USBDDR ;1
ori x2, USBMASK ;1 set both pins to output
out USBDDR, x2 ;1 <-- acquire bus now
; need not init x2 (bitstuff history) because sync starts with 0
ldi shift, 0x80 ;1 sync byte is first byte sent
rjmp txLoop ;2 -> 13 + 3 = 16 cycles until SOP
#if USB_CFG_HAVE_INTRIN_ENDPOINT /* placed here due to relative jump range */
handleIn1:
lds cnt, usbTxLen1
cpi cnt, -1
breq sendNakAndReti
ldi x1, -1
sts usbTxLen1, x1
ldi YL, lo8(usbTxBuf1)
ldi YH, hi8(usbTxBuf1)
rjmp usbSendAndReti
#endif
bitstuff0: ;1 (for branch taken)
eor x1, x4 ;1
ldi x2, 0 ;1
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
rjmp didStuff0 ;2 branch back 2 cycles earlier
bitstuff1: ;1 (for branch taken)
eor x1, x4 ;1
ldi x2, 0 ;1
sec ;1 set carry so that brsh will not jump
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
rjmp didStuff1 ;2 jump back 1 cycle earler
bitstuff2: ;1 (for branch taken)
eor x1, x4 ;1
ldi x2, 0 ;1
rjmp didStuff2 ;2 jump back 3 cycles earlier and do out
bitstuff3: ;1 (for branch taken)
eor x1, x4 ;1
ldi x2, 0 ;1
rjmp didStuff3 ;2 jump back earlier
txLoop:
sbrs shift, 0 ;1
eor x1, x4 ;1
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
ror shift ;1
ror x2 ;1
didStuff0:
cpi x2, 0xfc ;1
brsh bitstuff0 ;1
sbrs shift, 0 ;1
eor x1, x4 ;1
ror shift ;1
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
ror x2 ;1
cpi x2, 0xfc ;1
didStuff1:
brsh bitstuff1 ;1
sbrs shift, 0 ;1
eor x1, x4 ;1
ror shift ;1
ror x2 ;1
didStuff2:
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
cpi x2, 0xfc ;1
brsh bitstuff2 ;1
sbrs shift, 0 ;1
eor x1, x4 ;1
ror shift ;1
ror x2 ;1
didStuff3:
cpi x2, 0xfc ;1
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
brsh bitstuff3 ;1
nop2 ;2
ld x3, y+ ;2
sbrs shift, 0 ;1
eor x1, x4 ;1
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
ror shift ;1
ror x2 ;1
didStuff4:
cpi x2, 0xfc ;1
brsh bitstuff4 ;1
sbrs shift, 0 ;1
eor x1, x4 ;1
ror shift ;1
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
ror x2 ;1
cpi x2, 0xfc ;1
didStuff5:
brsh bitstuff5 ;1
sbrs shift, 0 ;1
eor x1, x4 ;1
ror shift ;1
ror x2 ;1
didStuff6:
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
cpi x2, 0xfc ;1
brsh bitstuff6 ;1
sbrs shift, 0 ;1
eor x1, x4 ;1
ror shift ;1
ror x2 ;1
didStuff7:
cpi x2, 0xfc ;1
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
brsh bitstuff7 ;1
mov shift, x3 ;1
dec cnt ;1
brne txLoop ;2 | 1
cbr x1, USBMASK ;1 prepare SE0 [spec says EOP may be 15 to 18 cycles]
pop x4 ;2
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out SE0 -- from now 2 bits = 16 cycles until bus idle
ldi cnt, 2 ;| takes cnt * 3 cycles
se0Delay: ;|
dec cnt ;|
brne se0Delay ;| -> 2 * 3 = 6 cycles
;2006-03-06: moved transfer of new address to usbDeviceAddr from C-Code to asm:
lds x2, usbNewDeviceAddr ;2
subi YL, lo8(usbNakBuf + 2) ;1
sbci YH, hi8(usbNakBuf + 2) ;1
breq skipAddrAssign ;2
sts usbDeviceAddr, x2 ;0 if not skipped: SE0 is one cycle longer
skipAddrAssign:
;end of usbDeviceAddress transfer
ori x1, USBIDLE ;1
in x2, USBDDR ;1
cbr x2, USBMASK ;1 set both pins to input
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out J (idle) -- end of SE0 (EOP signal)
cbr x1, USBMASK ;1 configure no pullup on both pins
pop x3 ;2
pop YL ;2
out USBDDR, x2 ;1 <-- release bus now
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 set pullup state
pop YH ;2
rjmp txDoReturn ;2 [we want to jump to rxDoReturn, but this saves cycles]
bitstuff4: ;1 (for branch taken)
eor x1, x4 ;1
ldi x2, 0 ;1
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
rjmp didStuff4 ;2 jump back 2 cycles earlier
bitstuff5: ;1 (for branch taken)
eor x1, x4 ;1
ldi x2, 0 ;1
sec ;1 set carry so that brsh is not taken
out USBOUT, x1 ;1 <-- out
rjmp didStuff5 ;2 jump back 1 cycle earlier
bitstuff6: ;1 (for branch taken)
eor x1, x4 ;1
ldi x2, 0 ;1
rjmp didStuff6 ;2 jump back 3 cycles earlier and do out there
bitstuff7: ;1 (for branch taken)
eor x1, x4 ;1
ldi x2, 0 ;1
rjmp didStuff7 ;2 jump back 4 cycles earlier
; ######################## utility functions ########################
#ifdef __IAR_SYSTEMS_ASM__
/* Register assignments for usbCrc16 on IAR cc */
/* Calling conventions on IAR:
* First parameter passed in r16/r17, second in r18/r19 and so on.
* Callee must preserve r4-r15, r24-r29 (r28/r29 is frame pointer)
* Result is passed in r16/r17
*/
RTMODEL "__rt_version", "3"
/* The line above will generate an error if cc calling conventions change.
* The value "3" above is valid for IAR 4.10B/W32
*/
# define argLen r18 /* argument 2 */
# define argPtrL r16 /* argument 1 */
# define argPtrH r17 /* argument 1 */
# define resCrcL r16 /* result */
# define resCrcH r17 /* result */
# define ptrL ZL
# define ptrH ZH
# define ptr Z
# define byte r22
# define bitCnt r19
# define polyL r20
# define polyH r21
# define scratch r23
#else /* __IAR_SYSTEMS_ASM__ */
/* Register assignments for usbCrc16 on gcc */
/* Calling conventions on gcc:
* First parameter passed in r24/r25, second in r22/23 and so on.
* Callee must preserve r1-r17, r28/r29
* Result is passed in r24/r25
*/
# define argLen r22 /* argument 2 */
# define argPtrL r24 /* argument 1 */
# define argPtrH r25 /* argument 1 */
# define resCrcL r24 /* result */
# define resCrcH r25 /* result */
# define ptrL XL
# define ptrH XH
# define ptr x
# define byte r18
# define bitCnt r19
# define polyL r20
# define polyH r21
# define scratch r23
#endif
; extern unsigned usbCrc16(unsigned char *data, unsigned char len);
; data: r24/25
; len: r22
; temp variables:
; r18: data byte
; r19: bit counter
; r20/21: polynomial
; r23: scratch
; r24/25: crc-sum
; r26/27=X: ptr
usbCrc16:
mov ptrL, argPtrL
mov ptrH, argPtrH
ldi resCrcL, 0xff
ldi resCrcH, 0xff
ldi polyL, lo8(0xa001)
ldi polyH, hi8(0xa001)
crcByteLoop:
subi argLen, 1
brcs crcReady
ld byte, ptr+
ldi bitCnt, 8
crcBitLoop:
mov scratch, byte
eor scratch, resCrcL
lsr resCrcH
ror resCrcL
lsr byte
sbrs scratch, 0
rjmp crcNoXor
eor resCrcL, polyL
eor resCrcH, polyH
crcNoXor:
dec bitCnt
brne crcBitLoop
rjmp crcByteLoop
crcReady:
com resCrcL
com resCrcH
ret
; extern unsigned usbCrc16Append(unsigned char *data, unsigned char len);
usbCrc16Append:
rcall usbCrc16
st ptr+, resCrcL
st ptr+, resCrcH
ret

21
usbdrv/usbdrvasm.asm Normal file
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/* Name: usbdrvasm.asm
* Project: AVR USB driver
* Author: Christian Starkjohann
* Creation Date: 2006-03-01
* Tabsize: 4
* Copyright: (c) 2006 by OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT Software GmbH
* License: Proprietary, free under certain conditions. See Documentation.
* This Revision: $Id: usbdrvasm.asm,v 1.1 2007-03-25 02:59:31 raph Exp $
*/
/*
General Description:
The IAR compiler/assembler system prefers assembler files with file extension
".asm". We simply provide this file as an alias for usbdrvasm.S.
Thanks to Oleg Semyonov for his help with the IAR tools port!
*/
#include "usbdrvasm.S"
end