| :orphan: |
| |
| .. _glossary: |
| |
| Glossary of Terms |
| ################# |
| |
| .. glossary:: |
| :sorted: |
| |
| API |
| (Application Program Interface) A defined set of routines and protocols for |
| building application software. |
| |
| application |
| The set of user-supplied files that the Zephyr build system uses |
| to build an application image for a specified board configuration. |
| It can contain application-specific code, kernel configuration settings, |
| and at least one CMakeLists.txt file. |
| The application's kernel configuration settings direct the build system |
| to create a custom kernel that makes efficient use of the board's |
| resources. |
| An application can sometimes be built for more than one type of board |
| configuration (including boards with different CPU architectures), |
| if it does not require any board-specific capabilities. |
| |
| application image |
| A binary file that is loaded and executed by the board for which |
| it was built. |
| Each application image contains both the application's code and the |
| Zephyr kernel code needed to support it. They are compiled as a single, |
| fully-linked binary. |
| Once an application image is loaded onto a board, the image takes control |
| of the system, initializes it, and runs as the system's sole application. |
| Both application code and kernel code execute as privileged code |
| within a single shared address space. |
| |
| board |
| A target system with a defined set of devices and capabilities, |
| which can load and execute an application image. It may be an actual |
| hardware system or a simulated system running under QEMU. |
| The Zephyr kernel supports a :ref:`variety of boards <boards>`. |
| |
| board configuration |
| A set of kernel configuration options that specify how the devices |
| present on a board are used by the kernel. |
| The Zephyr build system defines one or more board configurations |
| for each board it supports. The kernel configuration settings that are |
| specified by the build system can be over-ridden by the application, |
| if desired. |
| |
| IDT |
| (Interrupt Descriptor Table) a data structure used by the x86 |
| architecture to implement an interrupt vector table. The IDT is used |
| to determine the correct response to interrupts and exceptions. |
| |
| ISR |
| (Interrupt Service Routine) Also known as an interrupt handler, an ISR |
| is a callback function whose execution is triggered by a hardware |
| interrupt (or software interrupt instructions) and is used to handle |
| high-priority conditions that require interrupting the current code |
| executing on the processor. |
| |
| kernel |
| The set of Zephyr-supplied files that implement the Zephyr kernel, |
| including its core services, device drivers, network stack, and so on. |
| |
| SoC |
| `System on a chip`_ |
| |
| west |
| A multi-repo meta-tool developed for the Zephyr project. See :ref:`west`. |
| |
| west installation |
| A term for a :term:`west workspace` used prior to west 0.7. |
| |
| west manifest |
| A YAML file named :file:`west.yml` which describes projects, or the Git |
| repositories which make up a :term:`west installation`, along with |
| additional metadata. See :ref:`west-multi-repo` for general information |
| and :ref:`west-manifests` for details. |
| |
| west manifest repository |
| The Git repository in a :term:`west installation` which contains the |
| :term:`west manifest`. Its location is given by the :ref:`manifest.path |
| configuration option <west-config-index>`. See :ref:`west-multi-repo`. |
| |
| west workspace |
| A directory on your system with a :file:`.west` subdirectory and |
| a :term:`west manifest repository`. You clone the Zephyr source |
| code onto your system by creating a west workspace using the |
| ``west init`` command. See :ref:`west-multi-repo`. |
| |
| XIP |
| (eXecute In Place) a method of executing programs directly from long |
| term storage rather than copying it into RAM, saving writable memory for |
| dynamic data and not the static program code. |
| |
| .. _System on a chip: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_on_a_chip |