| .. _settings_api: |
| |
| Settings |
| ######## |
| |
| The settings subsystem gives modules a way to store persistent per-device |
| configuration and runtime state. A variety of storage implementations are |
| provided behind a common API using FCB, NVS, or a file system. These different |
| implementations give the application developer flexibility to select an |
| appropriate storage medium, and even change it later as needs change. This |
| subsystem is used by various Zephyr components and can be used simultaneously by |
| user applications. |
| |
| Settings items are stored as key-value pair strings. By convention, |
| the keys can be organized by the package and subtree defining the key, |
| for example the key ``id/serial`` would define the ``serial`` configuration |
| element for the package ``id``. |
| |
| Convenience routines are provided for converting a key value to |
| and from a string type. |
| |
| For an example of the settings subsystem refer to |
| :ref:`the sample <settings_subsys_sample>`. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| As of Zephyr release 2.1 the recommended backend for non-filesystem |
| storage is :ref:`NVS <nvs_api>`. |
| |
| Handlers |
| ******** |
| |
| Settings handlers for subtree implement a set of handler functions. |
| These are registered using a call to ``settings_register()``. |
| |
| **h_get** |
| This gets called when asking for a settings element value by its name using |
| ``settings_runtime_get()`` from the runtime backend. |
| |
| **h_set** |
| This gets called when the value is loaded from persisted storage with |
| ``settings_load()``, or when using ``settings_runtime_set()`` from the |
| runtime backend. |
| |
| **h_commit** |
| This gets called after the settings have been loaded in full. |
| Sometimes you don't want an individual setting value to take |
| effect right away, for example if there are multiple settings |
| which are interdependent. |
| |
| **h_export** |
| This gets called to write all current settings. This happens |
| when ``settings_save()`` tries to save the settings or transfer to any |
| user-implemented back-end. |
| |
| Backends |
| ******** |
| |
| Backends are meant to load and save data to/from setting handlers, and |
| implement a set of handler functions. These are registered using a call to |
| ``settings_src_register()`` for backends that can load data, and/or |
| ``settings_dst_register()`` for backends that can save data. The current |
| implementation allows for multiple source backends but only a single destination |
| backend. |
| |
| **csi_load** |
| This gets called when loading values from persistent storage using |
| ``settings_load()``. |
| |
| **csi_save** |
| This gets called when a saving a single setting to persistent storage using |
| ``settings_save_one()``. |
| |
| **csi_save_start** |
| This gets called when starting a save of all current settings using |
| ``settings_save()``. |
| |
| **csi_save_end** |
| This gets called after having saved of all current settings using |
| ``settings_save()``. |
| |
| Zephyr Storage Backends |
| *********************** |
| |
| Zephyr has three storage backends: a Flash Circular Buffer |
| (:option:`CONFIG_SETTINGS_FCB`), a file in the filesystem |
| (:option:`CONFIG_SETTINGS_FS`), or non-volatile storage |
| (:option:`CONFIG_SETTINGS_NVS`). |
| |
| You can declare multiple sources for settings; settings from |
| all of these are restored when ``settings_load()`` is called. |
| |
| There can be only one target for writing settings; this is where |
| data is stored when you call ``settings_save()``, or ``settings_save_one()``. |
| |
| FCB read target is registered using ``settings_fcb_src()``, and write target |
| using ``settings_fcb_dst()``. As a side-effect, ``settings_fcb_src()`` |
| initializes the FCB area, so it must be called before calling |
| ``settings_fcb_dst()``. File read target is registered using |
| ``settings_file_src()``, and write target by using ``settings_file_dst()``. |
| Non-volatile storage read target is registered using |
| ``settings_nvs_src()``, and write target by using |
| ``settings_nvs_dst()``. |
| |
| Loading data from persisted storage |
| *********************************** |
| |
| A call to ``settings_load()`` uses an ``h_set`` implementation |
| to load settings data from storage to volatile memory. |
| After all data is loaded, the ``h_commit`` handler is issued, |
| signalling the application that the settings were successfully |
| retrieved. |
| |
| Technically FCB and filesystem backends may store some history of the entities. |
| This means that the newest data entity is stored after any |
| older existing data entities. |
| Starting with Zephyr 2.1, the back-end must filter out all old entities and |
| call the callback with only the newest entity. |
| |
| Storing data to persistent storage |
| ********************************** |
| |
| A call to ``settings_save_one()`` uses a backend implementation to store |
| settings data to the storage medium. A call to ``settings_save()`` uses an |
| ``h_export`` implementation to store different data in one operation using |
| ``settings_save_one()``. |
| A key need to be covered by a ``h_export`` only if it is supposed to be stored |
| by ``settings_save()`` call. |
| |
| For both FCB and filesystem back-end only storage requests with data which |
| changes most actual key's value are stored, therefore there is no need to check |
| whether a value changed by the application. Such a storage mechanism implies |
| that storage can contain multiple value assignments for a key , while only the |
| last is the current value for the key. |
| |
| Garbage collection |
| ================== |
| When storage becomes full (FCB) or consumes too much space (file system), |
| the backend removes non-recent key-value pairs records and unnecessary |
| key-delete records. |
| |
| Example: Device Configuration |
| ***************************** |
| |
| This is a simple example, where the settings handler only implements ``h_set`` |
| and ``h_export``. ``h_set`` is called when the value is restored from storage |
| (or when set initially), and ``h_export`` is used to write the value to |
| storage thanks to ``storage_func()``. The user can also implement some other |
| export functionality, for example, writing to the shell console). |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| #define DEFAULT_FOO_VAL_VALUE 1 |
| |
| static int8 foo_val = DEFAULT_FOO_VAL_VALUE; |
| |
| static int foo_settings_set(const char *name, size_t len, |
| settings_read_cb read_cb, void *cb_arg) |
| { |
| const char *next; |
| int rc; |
| |
| if (settings_name_steq(name, "bar", &next) && !next) { |
| if (len != sizeof(foo_val)) { |
| return -EINVAL; |
| } |
| |
| rc = read_cb(cb_arg, &foo_val, sizeof(foo_val)); |
| if (rc >= 0) { |
| /* key-value pair was properly read. |
| * rc contains value length. |
| */ |
| return 0; |
| } |
| /* read-out error */ |
| return rc; |
| } |
| |
| return -ENOENT; |
| } |
| |
| static int foo_settings_export(int (*storage_func)(const char *name, |
| void *value, |
| size_t val_len)) |
| { |
| return storage_func("foo/bar", &foo_val, sizeof(foo_val)); |
| } |
| |
| struct settings_handler my_conf = { |
| .name = "foo", |
| .h_set = foo_settings_set, |
| .h_export = foo_settings_export |
| }; |
| |
| Example: Persist Runtime State |
| ****************************** |
| |
| This is a simple example showing how to persist runtime state. In this example, |
| only ``h_set`` is defined, which is used when restoring value from |
| persisted storage. |
| |
| In this example, the ``main`` function increments ``foo_val``, and then |
| persists the latest number. When the system restarts, the application calls |
| ``settings_load()`` while initializing, and ``foo_val`` will continue counting |
| up from where it was before restart. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| #include <zephyr.h> |
| #include <sys/reboot.h> |
| #include <settings/settings.h> |
| #include <sys/printk.h> |
| #include <inttypes.h> |
| |
| #define DEFAULT_FOO_VAL_VALUE 0 |
| |
| static uint8_t foo_val = DEFAULT_FOO_VAL_VALUE; |
| |
| static int foo_settings_set(const char *name, size_t len, |
| settings_read_cb read_cb, void *cb_arg) |
| { |
| const char *next; |
| int rc; |
| |
| if (settings_name_steq(name, "bar", &next) && !next) { |
| if (len != sizeof(foo_val)) { |
| return -EINVAL; |
| } |
| |
| rc = read_cb(cb_arg, &foo_val, sizeof(foo_val)); |
| if (rc >= 0) { |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| return rc; |
| } |
| |
| |
| return -ENOENT; |
| } |
| |
| struct settings_handler my_conf = { |
| .name = "foo", |
| .h_set = foo_settings_set |
| }; |
| |
| void main(void) |
| { |
| settings_subsys_init(); |
| settings_register(&my_conf); |
| settings_load(); |
| |
| foo_val++; |
| settings_save_one("foo/bar", &foo_val, sizeof(foo_val)); |
| |
| printk("foo: %d\n", foo_val); |
| |
| k_sleep(1000); |
| sys_reboot(SYS_REBOOT_COLD); |
| } |
| |
| Example: Custom Backend Implementation |
| ************************************** |
| |
| This is a simple example showing how to register a simple custom backend |
| handler (:option:`CONFIG_SETTINGS_CUSTOM`). |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| static int settings_custom_load(struct settings_store *cs) |
| { |
| //... |
| } |
| |
| static int settings_custom_save(struct settings_store *cs, const char *name, |
| const char *value, size_t val_len) |
| { |
| //... |
| } |
| |
| /* custom backend interface */ |
| static struct settings_store_itf settings_custom_itf = { |
| .csi_load = settings_custom_load, |
| .csi_save = settings_custom_save, |
| }; |
| |
| /* custom backend node */ |
| static struct settings_store settings_custom_store = { |
| .cs_itf = &settings_custom_itf |
| } |
| |
| int settings_backend_init(void) |
| { |
| /* register custom backend */ |
| settings_dst_register(&settings_custom_store); |
| settings_src_register(&settings_custom_store); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| API Reference |
| ************* |
| |
| The Settings subsystem APIs are provided by ``settings.h``: |
| |
| API for general settings usage |
| ============================== |
| .. doxygengroup:: settings |
| |
| API for key-name processing |
| =========================== |
| .. doxygengroup:: settings_name_proc |
| |
| API for runtime settings manipulation |
| ===================================== |
| .. doxygengroup:: settings_rt |
| |
| API of backend interface |
| ======================== |
| .. doxygengroup:: settings_backend |