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/*
FreeRTOS V8.2.0rc1 - Copyright (C) 2014 Real Time Engineers Ltd.
All rights reserved
VISIT http://www.FreeRTOS.org TO ENSURE YOU ARE USING THE LATEST VERSION.
This file is part of the FreeRTOS distribution.
FreeRTOS is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the GNU General Public License (version 2) as published by the
Free Software Foundation >>!AND MODIFIED BY!<< the FreeRTOS exception.
>>! NOTE: The modification to the GPL is included to allow you to !<<
>>! distribute a combined work that includes FreeRTOS without being !<<
>>! obliged to provide the source code for proprietary components !<<
>>! outside of the FreeRTOS kernel. !<<
FreeRTOS 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. Full license text is available on the following
link: http://www.freertos.org/a00114.html
1 tab == 4 spaces!
***************************************************************************
* *
* Having a problem? Start by reading the FAQ "My application does *
* not run, what could be wrong?". Have you defined configASSERT()? *
* *
* http://www.FreeRTOS.org/FAQHelp.html *
* *
***************************************************************************
***************************************************************************
* *
* FreeRTOS provides completely free yet professionally developed, *
* robust, strictly quality controlled, supported, and cross *
* platform software that is more than just the market leader, it *
* is the industry's de facto standard. *
* *
* Help yourself get started quickly while simultaneously helping *
* to support the FreeRTOS project by purchasing a FreeRTOS *
* tutorial book, reference manual, or both: *
* http://www.FreeRTOS.org/Documentation *
* *
***************************************************************************
***************************************************************************
* *
* Investing in training allows your team to be as productive as *
* possible as early as possible, lowering your overall development *
* cost, and enabling you to bring a more robust product to market *
* earlier than would otherwise be possible. Richard Barry is both *
* the architect and key author of FreeRTOS, and so also the world's *
* leading authority on what is the world's most popular real time *
* kernel for deeply embedded MCU designs. Obtaining your training *
* from Richard ensures your team will gain directly from his in-depth *
* product knowledge and years of usage experience. Contact Real Time *
* Engineers Ltd to enquire about the FreeRTOS Masterclass, presented *
* by Richard Barry: http://www.FreeRTOS.org/contact
* *
***************************************************************************
***************************************************************************
* *
* You are receiving this top quality software for free. Please play *
* fair and reciprocate by reporting any suspected issues and *
* participating in the community forum: *
* http://www.FreeRTOS.org/support *
* *
* Thank you! *
* *
***************************************************************************
http://www.FreeRTOS.org - Documentation, books, training, latest versions,
license and Real Time Engineers Ltd. contact details.
http://www.FreeRTOS.org/plus - A selection of FreeRTOS ecosystem products,
including FreeRTOS+Trace - an indispensable productivity tool, a DOS
compatible FAT file system, and our tiny thread aware UDP/IP stack.
http://www.FreeRTOS.org/labs - Where new FreeRTOS products go to incubate.
Come and try FreeRTOS+TCP, our new open source TCP/IP stack for FreeRTOS.
http://www.OpenRTOS.com - Real Time Engineers ltd license FreeRTOS to High
Integrity Systems ltd. to sell under the OpenRTOS brand. Low cost OpenRTOS
licenses offer ticketed support, indemnification and commercial middleware.
http://www.SafeRTOS.com - High Integrity Systems also provide a safety
engineered and independently SIL3 certified version for use in safety and
mission critical applications that require provable dependability.
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*/
/******************************************************************************
* NOTE 1: This project provides two demo applications. A simple blinky style
* project, and a more comprehensive test and demo application. The
* mainCREATE_SIMPLE_BLINKY_DEMO_ONLY setting in main.c is used to select
* between the two. See the notes on using mainCREATE_SIMPLE_BLINKY_DEMO_ONLY
* in main.c. This file implements the simply blinky style version.
*
* NOTE 2: This file only contains the source code that is specific to the
* basic demo. Generic functions, such FreeRTOS hook functions, and functions
* required to configure the hardware, are defined in main.c.
******************************************************************************
*
* main_blinky() creates one queue, and two tasks. It then starts the
* scheduler.
*
* The Queue Send Task:
* The queue send task is implemented by the prvQueueSendTask() function in
* this file. prvQueueSendTask() sits in a loop that causes it to repeatedly
* block for 200 milliseconds, before sending the value 100 to the queue that
* was created within main_blinky(). Once the value is sent, the task loops
* back around to block for another 200 milliseconds.
*
* The Queue Receive Task:
* The queue receive task is implemented by the prvQueueReceiveTask() function
* in this file. prvQueueReceiveTask() sits in a loop where it repeatedly
* blocks on attempts to read data from the queue that was created within
* main_blinky(). When data is received, the task checks the value of the
* data, and if the value equals the expected 100, toggles the LED. The 'block
* time' parameter passed to the queue receive function specifies that the
* task should be held in the Blocked state indefinitely to wait for data to
* be available on the queue. The queue receive task will only leave the
* Blocked state when the queue send task writes to the queue. As the queue
* send task writes to the queue every 200 milliseconds, the queue receive
* task leaves the Blocked state every 200 milliseconds, and therefore toggles
* the LED every 200 milliseconds.
*/
/* Standard includes. */
#include <stdio.h>
/* Kernel includes. */
#include "FreeRTOS.h"
#include "task.h"
#include "semphr.h"
/* Hardware includes. */
#include "XMC4500.h"
#include "System_XMC4500.h"
/* Priorities at which the tasks are created. */
#define mainQUEUE_RECEIVE_TASK_PRIORITY ( tskIDLE_PRIORITY + 2 )
#define mainQUEUE_SEND_TASK_PRIORITY ( tskIDLE_PRIORITY + 1 )
/* The rate at which data is sent to the queue. The 200ms value is converted
to ticks using the portTICK_PERIOD_MS constant. */
#define mainQUEUE_SEND_FREQUENCY_MS ( 200 / portTICK_PERIOD_MS )
/* The number of items the queue can hold. This is 1 as the receive task
will remove items as they are added, meaning the send task should always find
the queue empty. */
#define mainQUEUE_LENGTH ( 1 )
/* Values passed to the two tasks just to check the task parameter
functionality. */
#define mainQUEUE_SEND_PARAMETER ( 0x1111UL )
#define mainQUEUE_RECEIVE_PARAMETER ( 0x22UL )
/* To toggle the single LED */
#define mainTOGGLE_LED() ( PORT3->OMR = 0x02000200 )
/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/
/*
* The tasks as described in the comments at the top of this file.
*/
static void prvQueueReceiveTask( void *pvParameters );
static void prvQueueSendTask( void *pvParameters );
/*
* Called by main() to create the simply blinky style application if
* mainCREATE_SIMPLE_BLINKY_DEMO_ONLY is set to 1.
*/
void main_blinky( void );
/*
* The hardware only has a single LED. Simply toggle it.
*/
extern void vMainToggleLED( void );
/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/
/* The queue used by both tasks. */
static QueueHandle_t xQueue = NULL;
/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/
void main_blinky( void )
{
/* Create the queue. */
xQueue = xQueueCreate( mainQUEUE_LENGTH, sizeof( unsigned long ) );
if( xQueue != NULL )
{
/* Start the two tasks as described in the comments at the top of this
file. */
xTaskCreate( prvQueueReceiveTask, /* The function that implements the task. */
"Rx", /* The text name assigned to the task - for debug only as it is not used by the kernel. */
configMINIMAL_STACK_SIZE, /* The size of the stack to allocate to the task. */
( void * ) mainQUEUE_RECEIVE_PARAMETER, /* The parameter passed to the task - just to check the functionality. */
mainQUEUE_RECEIVE_TASK_PRIORITY, /* The priority assigned to the task. */
NULL ); /* The task handle is not required, so NULL is passed. */
xTaskCreate( prvQueueSendTask, "TX", configMINIMAL_STACK_SIZE, ( void * ) mainQUEUE_SEND_PARAMETER, mainQUEUE_SEND_TASK_PRIORITY, NULL );
/* Start the tasks and timer running. */
vTaskStartScheduler();
}
/* If all is well, the scheduler will now be running, and the following
line will never be reached. If the following line does execute, then
there was insufficient FreeRTOS heap memory available for the idle and/or
timer tasks to be created. See the memory management section on the
FreeRTOS web site for more details. */
for( ;; );
}
/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/
static void prvQueueSendTask( void *pvParameters )
{
TickType_t xNextWakeTime;
const unsigned long ulValueToSend = 100UL;
/* Check the task parameter is as expected. */
configASSERT( ( ( unsigned long ) pvParameters ) == mainQUEUE_SEND_PARAMETER );
/* Initialise xNextWakeTime - this only needs to be done once. */
xNextWakeTime = xTaskGetTickCount();
for( ;; )
{
/* Place this task in the blocked state until it is time to run again.
The block time is specified in ticks, the constant used converts ticks
to ms. While in the Blocked state this task will not consume any CPU
time. */
vTaskDelayUntil( &xNextWakeTime, mainQUEUE_SEND_FREQUENCY_MS );
/* Send to the queue - causing the queue receive task to unblock and
toggle the LED. 0 is used as the block time so the sending operation
will not block - it shouldn't need to block as the queue should always
be empty at this point in the code. */
xQueueSend( xQueue, &ulValueToSend, 0U );
}
}
/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/
static void prvQueueReceiveTask( void *pvParameters )
{
unsigned long ulReceivedValue;
/* Check the task parameter is as expected. */
configASSERT( ( ( unsigned long ) pvParameters ) == mainQUEUE_RECEIVE_PARAMETER );
for( ;; )
{
/* Wait until something arrives in the queue - this task will block
indefinitely provided INCLUDE_vTaskSuspend is set to 1 in
FreeRTOSConfig.h. */
xQueueReceive( xQueue, &ulReceivedValue, portMAX_DELAY );
/* To get here something must have been received from the queue, but
is it the expected value? If it is, toggle the LED. */
if( ulReceivedValue == 100UL )
{
mainTOGGLE_LED();
ulReceivedValue = 0U;
}
}
}
/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/