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threadx/ports/arm9/iar/readme_threadx.txt

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Microsoft's Azure RTOS ThreadX for ARM9
Thumb & 32-bit Mode
Using the IAR Tools
1. Building the ThreadX run-time Library
Building the ThreadX library is easy. First, open the Azure RTOS workspace
azure_rtos.eww. Next, make the TX project the "active project" in the
IAR Embedded Workbench and select the "Make" button. You should observe
assembly and compilation of a series of ThreadX source files. This
results in the ThreadX run-time library file tx.a, which is needed by
the application.
2. Demonstration System
The ThreadX demonstration is designed to execute under the IAR
Windows-based ARM9 simulator.
Building the demonstration is easy; simply make the sample_threadx.ewp project
the "active project" in the IAR Embedded Workbench and select the
"Make" button.
You should observe the compilation of sample_threadx.c (which is the demonstration
application) and linking with tx.a. The resulting file sample_threadx.out is a
binary file that can be downloaded and executed on IAR's ARM9 simulator.
A SPECIAL NOTE: The IAR ARM simulator does simulate interrupts. In order
for the ThreadX demonstration to run properly, a periodic IRQ interrupt must
be setup in the IAR debugging environment. We recommend setting an IRQ
interrupt to execute every 9999 cycles.
3. System Initialization
The entry point in ThreadX for the ARM9 using IAR tools is at label
?cstartup. This is defined within the IAR compiler's startup code. In
addition, this is where all static and global preset C variable
initialization processing takes place.
The ThreadX tx_initialize_low_level.s file is responsible for setting up
various system data structures, and a periodic timer interrupt source.
By default, the vector area is defined at the top of cstartup.s, which is
a slightly modified from the base IAR file.
The _tx_initialize_low_level function inside of tx_initialize_low_level.s
also determines the first available address for use by the application, which
is supplied as the sole input parameter to your application definition function,
tx_application_define. To accomplish this, a section is created in
tx_initialize_low_level.s called FREE_MEM, which must be located after all
other RAM sections in memory.
4. Register Usage and Stack Frames
The IAR ARM compiler assumes that registers r0-r3 (a1-a4) and r12 (ip) are
scratch registers for each function. All other registers used by a C function
must be preserved by the function. ThreadX takes advantage of this in
situations where a context switch happens as a result of making a ThreadX
service call (which is itself a C function). In such cases, the saved
context of a thread is only the non-scratch registers.
The following defines the saved context stack frames for context switches
that occur as a result of interrupt handling or from thread-level API calls.
All suspended threads have one of these two types of stack frames. The top
of the suspended thread's stack is pointed to by tx_thread_stack_ptr in the
associated thread control block TX_THREAD.
Offset Interrupted Stack Frame Non-Interrupt Stack Frame
0x00 1 0
0x04 CPSR CPSR
0x08 r0 (a1) r4 (v1)
0x0C r1 (a2) r5 (v2)
0x10 r2 (a3) r6 (v3)
0x14 r3 (a4) r7 (v4)
0x18 r4 (v1) r8 (v5)
0x1C r5 (v2) r9 (v6)
0x20 r6 (v3) r10 (v7)
0x24 r7 (v4) r11 (fp)
0x28 r8 (v5) r14 (lr)
0x2C r9 (v6)
0x30 r10 (v7)
0x34 r11 (fp)
0x38 r12 (ip)
0x3C r14 (lr)
0x40 PC
5. Conditional Compilation Switches
The following are conditional compilation options for building the ThreadX library
and application:
TX_ENABLE_FIQ_SUPPORT This assembler/compiler define enables
FIQ interrupt handling support in the
ThreadX assembly files. If used,
it should be used on all assembly
files and the generic C source of
ThreadX should be compiled with
TX_ENABLE_FIQ_SUPPORT defined as well.
TX_ENABLE_IRQ_NESTING This assembler define enables IRQ
nested support. If IRQ nested
interrupt support is needed, this
define should be applied to
tx_initialize_low_level.s.
TX_ENABLE_FIQ_NESTING This assembler define enables FIQ
nested support. If FIQ nested
interrupt support is needed, this
define should be applied to
tx_initialize_low_level.s. In addition,
IRQ nesting should also be enabled.
TX_DISABLE_ERROR_CHECKING If defined before tx_api.h is included,
this define causes basic ThreadX error
checking to be disabled. Please see
Chapter 2 in the "ThreadX User Guide"
for more details.
TX_MAX_PRIORITIES Defines the priority levels for ThreadX.
Legal values range from 32 through
1024 (inclusive) and MUST be evenly divisible
by 32. Increasing the number of priority levels
supported increases the RAM usage by 128 bytes
for every group of 32 priorities. However, there
is only a negligible effect on performance. By
default, this value is set to 32 priority levels.
TX_MINIMUM_STACK Defines the minimum stack size (in bytes). It is
used for error checking when threads are created.
The default value is port-specific and is found
in tx_port.h.
TX_TIMER_THREAD_STACK_SIZE Defines the stack size (in bytes) of the internal
ThreadX timer thread. This thread processes all
thread sleep requests as well as all service call
timeouts. In addition, all application timer callback
routines are invoked from this context. The default
value is port-specific and is found in tx_port.h.
TX_TIMER_THREAD_PRIORITY Defines the priority of the internal ThreadX timer
thread. The default value is priority 0 - the highest
priority in ThreadX. The default value is defined
in tx_port.h.
TX_TIMER_PROCESS_IN_ISR Defined, this option eliminates the internal system
timer thread for ThreadX. This results in improved
performance on timer events and smaller RAM requirements
because the timer stack and control block are no
longer needed. However, using this option moves all
the timer expiration processing to the timer ISR level.
By default, this option is not defined.
TX_REACTIVATE_INLINE Defined, this option performs reactivation of ThreadX
timers in-line instead of using a function call. This
improves performance but slightly increases code size.
By default, this option is not defined.
TX_DISABLE_STACK_FILLING Defined, placing the 0xEF value in each byte of each
thread's stack is disabled. By default, this option is
not defined.
TX_ENABLE_STACK_CHECKING Defined, this option enables ThreadX run-time stack checking,
which includes analysis of how much stack has been used and
examination of data pattern "fences" before and after the
stack area. If a stack error is detected, the registered
application stack error handler is called. This option does
result in slightly increased overhead and code size. Please
review the tx_thread_stack_error_notify API for more information.
By default, this option is not defined.
TX_DISABLE_PREEMPTION_THRESHOLD Defined, this option disables the preemption-threshold feature
and slightly reduces code size and improves performance. Of course,
the preemption-threshold capabilities are no longer available.
By default, this option is not defined.
TX_DISABLE_REDUNDANT_CLEARING Defined, this option removes the logic for initializing ThreadX
global C data structures to zero. This should only be used if
the compiler's initialization code sets all un-initialized
C global data to zero. Using this option slightly reduces
code size and improves performance during initialization.
By default, this option is not defined.
TX_DISABLE_NOTIFY_CALLBACKS Defined, this option disables the notify callbacks for various
ThreadX objects. Using this option slightly reduces code size
and improves performance.
TX_BLOCK_POOL_ENABLE_PERFORMANCE_INFO Defined, this option enables the gathering of performance
information on block pools. By default, this option is
not defined.
TX_BYTE_POOL_ENABLE_PERFORMANCE_INFO Defined, this option enables the gathering of performance
information on byte pools. By default, this option is
not defined.
TX_EVENT_FLAGS_ENABLE_PERFORMANCE_INFO Defined, this option enables the gathering of performance
information on event flags groups. By default, this option
is not defined.
TX_MUTEX_ENABLE_PERFORMANCE_INFO Defined, this option enables the gathering of performance
information on mutexes. By default, this option is
not defined.
TX_QUEUE_ENABLE_PERFORMANCE_INFO Defined, this option enables the gathering of performance
information on queues. By default, this option is
not defined.
TX_SEMAPHORE_ENABLE_PERFORMANCE_INFO Defined, this option enables the gathering of performance
information on semaphores. By default, this option is
not defined.
TX_THREAD_ENABLE_PERFORMANCE_INFO Defined, this option enables the gathering of performance
information on threads. By default, this option is
not defined.
TX_TIMER_ENABLE_PERFORMANCE_INFO Defined, this option enables the gathering of performance
information on timers. By default, this option is
not defined.
TX_ENABLE_EVENT_TRACE Defined, this option enables the internal ThreadX trace
feature. The trace buffer is supplied at a later time
via an application call to tx_trace_enable.
TX_TRACE_TIME_SOURCE This defines the time-stamp source for event tracing.
This define is only pertinent if the ThreadX library is
built with TX_ENABLE_EVENT_TRACE defined.
TX_TRACE_TIME_MASK This defines the number of valid bits in the event trace
time-stamp source defined previously. If the time-stamp
source is 16-bits, this value should be 0xFFFF. Alternatively,
if the time-stamp source is 32-bits, this value should be
0xFFFFFFFF. This define is only pertinent if the ThreadX
library is built with TX_ENABLE_EVENT_TRACE defined.
TX_THUMB Defined, this option enables the BX LR calling return sequence
in assembly files, to ensure correct operation on systems that
use both ARM and Thumb mode. By default, this option is
not defined
6. Improving Performance
The distribution version of ThreadX is built without any compiler
optimizations. This makes it easy to debug because you can trace or set
breakpoints inside of ThreadX itself. Of course, this costs some
performance. To make it run faster, you can change the ThreadX library
project to enable various compiler optimizations.
In addition, you can eliminate the ThreadX basic API error checking by
compiling your application code with the symbol TX_DISABLE_ERROR_CHECKING
defined.
7. Interrupt Handling
ThreadX provides complete and high-performance interrupt handling for ARM9
targets. There are a certain set of requirements that are defined in the
following sub-sections:
7.1 Vector Area
The ARM9 vectors start at address zero. The demonstration system startup
cstartup.s file contains the vectors and is loaded at address zero.
On actual hardware platforms, this area might have to be copied to address 0.
7.2 IRQ ISRs
ThreadX fully manages standard and vectored IRQ interrupts. ThreadX also supports nested
IRQ interrupts. The following sub-sections define the IRQ capabilities.
7.2.1 Standard IRQ ISRs
The standard ARM IRQ mechanism has a single interrupt vector at address 0x18. This IRQ
interrupt is managed by the __tx_irq_handler code in tx_initialize_low_level. The following
is the default IRQ handler defined in tx_initialize_low_level.s:
PUBLIC __tx_irq_handler
PUBLIC __tx_irq_processing_return
__tx_irq_handler
;
; /* Jump to context save to save system context. */
B _tx_thread_context_save
__tx_irq_processing_return
;
; /* At this point execution is still in the IRQ mode. The CPSR, point of
; interrupt, and all C scratch registers are available for use. Note
; that IRQ interrupts are still disabled upon return from the context
; save function. */
;
; /* Application ISR dispatch call goes here! */
;
; /* Jump to context restore to restore system context. */
B _tx_thread_context_restore
7.2.2 Vectored IRQ ISRs
The vectored ARM IRQ mechanism has multiple interrupt vectors at addresses specified
by the particular implementation. The following is an example IRQ handler defined in
tx_initialize_low_level.s:
RSEG .text:CODE:NOROOT(2)
PUBLIC __tx_example_vectored_irq_handler
__tx_example_vectored_irq_handler
;
; /* Jump to context save to save system context. */
STMDB sp!, {r0-r3} ; Save some scratch registers
MRS r0, SPSR ; Pickup saved SPSR
SUB lr, lr, #4 ; Adjust point of interrupt
STMDB sp!, {r0, r10, r12, lr} ; Store other registers
BL _tx_thread_vectored_context_save
;
; /* At this point execution is still in the IRQ mode. The CPSR, point of
; interrupt, and all C scratch registers are available for use. Note
; that IRQ interrupts are still disabled upon return from the context
; save function. */
;
; /* Application ISR dispatch call goes here! */
;
; /* Jump to context restore to restore system context. */
B _tx_thread_context_restore
7.2.3 Nested IRQ Support
By default, nested IRQ interrupt support is not enabled. To enable nested
IRQ support, the entire library should be built with TX_ENABLE_IRQ_NESTING
defined. With this defined, two new IRQ interrupt management services are
available, namely _tx_thread_irq_nesting_start and _tx_thread_irq_nesting_end.
These function should be called between the IRQ context save and restore
calls.
Execution between the calls to _tx_thread_irq_nesting_start and
_tx_thread_irq_nesting_end is enabled for IRQ nesting. This is achieved
by switching from IRQ mode to SYS mode and enabling IRQ interrupts.
The SYS mode stack is used during the SYS mode operation, which was
setup in tx_initialize_low_level.s. When nested IRQ interrupts are no
longer required, calling the _tx_thread_irq_nesting_end service disables
nesting by disabling IRQ interrupts and switching back to IRQ mode in
preparation for the IRQ context restore service.
The following is an example of enabling IRQ nested interrupts in a standard
IRQ handler:
RSEG .text:CODE:NOROOT(2)
PUBLIC __tx_irq_handler
RSEG .text:CODE:NOROOT(2)
PUBLIC __tx_irq_processing_return
__tx_irq_handler
;
; /* Jump to context save to save system context. */
B _tx_thread_context_save
__tx_irq_processing_return
;
; /* At this point execution is still in the IRQ mode. The CPSR, point of
; interrupt, and all C scratch registers are available for use. Note
; that IRQ interrupts are still disabled upon return from the context
; save function. */
;
; /* Interrupt nesting is allowed after calling _tx_thread_irq_nesting_start
; from IRQ mode with interrupts disabled. This routine switches to the
; system mode and returns with IRQ interrupts enabled.
;
; NOTE: It is very important to ensure all IRQ interrupts are cleared
; prior to enabling nested IRQ interrupts. */
;
BL _tx_thread_irq_nesting_start
; /* Application ISR dispatch call goes here! */
;
; /* If interrupt nesting was started earlier, the end of interrupt nesting
; service must be called before returning to _tx_thread_context_restore.
; This routine returns in processing in IRQ mode with interrupts disabled. */
;
BL _tx_thread_irq_nesting_end
;
; /* Jump to context restore to restore system context. */
B _tx_thread_context_restore
7.3 FIQ Interrupts
By default, ARM9 FIQ interrupts are left alone by ThreadX. Of course, this
means that the application is fully responsible for enabling the FIQ interrupt
and saving/restoring any registers used in the FIQ ISR processing. To globally
enable FIQ interrupts, the application should enable FIQ interrupts at the
beginning of each thread or before any threads are created in tx_application_define.
In addition, the application must ensure that no ThreadX service calls are made
from default FIQ ISRs, which is located in tx_initialize_low_level.s.
7.3.1 Managed FIQ Interrupts
Full ThreadX management of FIQ interrupts is provided if the ThreadX sources
are built with the TX_ENABLE_FIQ_SUPPORT defined. If the library is built
this way, the FIQ interrupt handlers are very similar to the IRQ interrupt
handlers defined previously. The following is default FIQ handler
defined in tx_initialize_low_level.s:
RSEG .text:CODE:NOROOT(2)
PUBLIC __tx_fiq_handler
RSEG .text:CODE:NOROOT(2)
PUBLIC __tx_fiq_processing_return
__tx_fiq_handler
;
; /* Jump to fiq context save to save system context. */
B _tx_thread_fiq_context_save
__tx_fiq_processing_return:
;
; /* At this point execution is still in the FIQ mode. The CPSR, point of
; interrupt, and all C scratch registers are available for use. */
;
; /* Application FIQ dispatch call goes here! */
;
; /* Jump to fiq context restore to restore system context. */
B _tx_thread_fiq_context_restore
7.3.1.1 Nested FIQ Support
By default, nested FIQ interrupt support is not enabled. To enable nested
FIQ support, the entire library should be built with TX_ENABLE_FIQ_NESTING
defined. With this defined, two new FIQ interrupt management services are
available, namely _tx_thread_fiq_nesting_start and _tx_thread_fiq_nesting_end.
These function should be called between the FIQ context save and restore
calls.
Execution between the calls to _tx_thread_fiq_nesting_start and
_tx_thread_fiq_nesting_end is enabled for FIQ nesting. This is achieved
by switching from FIQ mode to SYS mode and enabling FIQ interrupts.
The SYS mode stack is used during the SYS mode operation, which was
setup in tx_initialize_low_level.s. When nested FIQ interrupts are no
longer required, calling the _tx_thread_fiq_nesting_end service disables
nesting by disabling FIQ interrupts and switching back to FIQ mode in
preparation for the FIQ context restore service.
The following is an example of enabling FIQ nested interrupts in the
typical FIQ handler:
RSEG .text:CODE:NOROOT(2)
PUBLIC __tx_fiq_handler
RSEG .text:CODE:NOROOT(2)
PUBLIC __tx_fiq_processing_return
__tx_fiq_handler
;
; /* Jump to fiq context save to save system context. */
B _tx_thread_fiq_context_save
__tx_fiq_processing_return:
;
; /* At this point execution is still in the FIQ mode. The CPSR, point of
; interrupt, and all C scratch registers are available for use. */
;
; /* Enable nested FIQ interrupts. NOTE: Since this service returns
; with FIQ interrupts enabled, all FIQ interrupt sources must be
; cleared prior to calling this service. */
BL _tx_thread_fiq_nesting_start
;
; /* Application FIQ dispatch call goes here! */
;
; /* Disable nested FIQ interrupts. The mode is switched back to
; FIQ mode and FIQ interrupts are disable upon return. */
BL _tx_thread_fiq_nesting_end
;
; /* Jump to fiq context restore to restore system context. */
B _tx_thread_fiq_context_restore
8. ThreadX Timer Interrupt
ThreadX requires a periodic interrupt source to manage all time-slicing,
thread sleeps, timeouts, and application timers. Without such a timer
interrupt source, these services are not functional. However, all other
ThreadX services are operational without a periodic timer source.
To add the timer interrupt processing, simply make a call to _tx_timer_interrupt
in the IRQ processing.
9. Thumb/ARM9 Mixed Mode
By default, ThreadX is setup for running in ARM9 32-bit mode. This is
also true for the demonstration system. It is possible to build any
ThreadX file and/or the application in Thumb mode. The only exception
to this is the file tx_thread_shell_entry.c. This file must always be
built in 32-bit mode. In addition, if any Thumb code is used the entire
ThreadX assembly source should be built with TX_THUMB defined.
10. IAR Thread-safe Library Support
Thread-safe support for the IAR tools is easily enabled by building the ThreadX library
and the application with TX_ENABLE_IAR_LIBRARY_SUPPORT. Also, the linker control file
should have the following line added (if not already in place):
initialize by copy with packing = none { section __DLIB_PERTHREAD }; // Required in a multi-threaded application
11. Revision History
For generic code revision information, please refer to the readme_threadx_generic.txt
file, which is included in your distribution. The following details the revision
information associated with this specific port of ThreadX:
2021-04-03 01:03:21 +00:00
04-02-2021 Release 6.1.6 changes:
tx_port.h Updated macro definition
2020-09-30 15:42:41 -07:00
09-30-2020 Initial ThreadX version 6.1 for ARM9 using IAR's ARM tools.
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