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AMiRo-LLD is a compilation of low-level hardware drivers for the base version of
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the Autonomous Mini Robot (AMiRo) [1]. It provides directional interfaces for an
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operating system to access the drivers and for the drivers to access the
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communication infrastructure via the operating system.
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Copyright (C) 2016..2019  Thomas Schöpping et al.
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(a complete list of all authors is given below)
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This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
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it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
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the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at
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your option) any later version.
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This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
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WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
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Lesser General Public License for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
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along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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This research/work was supported by the Cluster of Excellence
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Cognitive Interaction Technology 'CITEC' (EXC 277) at Bielefeld
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University, which is funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG).
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Authors:
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 - Thomas Schöpping          <tschoepp[at]cit-ec.uni-bielefeld.de>
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 - Marc Rothmann
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References:
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 [1] S. Herbrechtsmeier, T. Korthals, T. Schopping and U. Rückert, "AMiRo: A
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     modular & customizable open-source mini robot platform," 2016 20th
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     International Conference on System Theory, Control and Computing (ICSTCC),
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     Sinaia, 2016, pp. 687-692.
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################################################################################
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################################################################################
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This file provides information about the purpose of this project, the file
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structure and some helpful guides for development of code.
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================================================================================
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CONTENTS:
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  1  About the Project
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  2  File Structure
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  3  Developer Guides
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    3.1  Adding a Device
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    3.2  Implementing a Driver
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================================================================================
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1 - ABOUT THE PROJECT
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=====================
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AMiRo-LLD is a compilation of low-level hardware drivers, originally developed
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for the Autonomous Mini Robot (AMiRo) [1]. It provides a modular design, so that
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each driver can be activated individually as required. Interface functions allow
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for bidirectional comunication with an operating system. On the one hand drivers
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access according hardware interfaces via defined interface functions (which need
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to be implemented by the operating system) and any applications (or the
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operating system itself) can take advantage of the drivers by their individual
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interfaces. The abstraction layer of the hardware interfaces is called
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"periphAL", which is defined by this project. In order to configure which
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drivers should be used in which version, the project expects an according file
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"alldconf.h" to be found in the include paths.
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Although this compilation was originally designed to be used in combination with
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the AMiRo operating system (AMiRo-OS; cf. https://opensource.cit-ec.de/projects/amiro-os/),
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it is not limited to this use case. The included drivers may be used for any
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purpose and contributions of further drivers, even if the according hardware is
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not present on the AMiRo platform, are highly appreciated.
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2 - FILE STRUCTURE
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==================
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The files are structured as follows:
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./
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│ The project root directory contains this file, a license.html file as well as
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│ a makefile that allows to easily integrate the project. Furthermore, two
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│ interface headers are provided: amiro-lld.h and periphALtypes.h. These are
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│ entry points for any utilizing superproject, so it is not required (and not
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│ recommended) to include each driver individually.
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├── docs/
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│     UML graphs (using PlantUML; see plantuml.com for further information)
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│     visualize the structure of the AMiRo-LLD project. Doxygen related files
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│     can be used to gererate a documentation of the whole project (wip).
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├── drivers/
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│     For each supported hardware device, there is exactly one directory in this
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│     folder. Further subfolders may contain various versions of a driver (e.g.
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│     'v1/', 'v2/', etc.). By convention the root directory of a driver is named
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│     by the form
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│     "<product_name>/"
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│     <product_name> is a placeholder for the exact name of the according
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│     hardware, or the product familiy, if the driver is compatible with all
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│     parts.
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│     Each driver must provide a makefile script, which adds the required
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│     include folders to the AMIROLLD_INC variable and all C source files to the
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│     AMIROLLD_CSRC variable.
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└── templates/
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      AMiRo-LLD expects a configuration header "alldconf.h" to be found in the
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      include paths. An according template for such file can be found here.
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      There is no template for an implementation of periphAL, though. The
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      provided interface header in the root directory (periphAL.h) should give
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      you all required information for such an implementation anyway.
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3 - DEVELOPER GUIDES
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====================
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In order to keep all code within this project as homogeneous as possible, the
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guides of these chapters should help developers to achieve functional and clean
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results, which are portable and maintainable for future use. Whereas the textual
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descriptions of the guides provide additional information about the underlying
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concepts and mechanisms, a short summary is provided at the end of each chapter.
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3.1  Adding a Device
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--------------------
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When adding new device to the project, the very first step is to create the
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according folder in the drivers/ directory. For this guide, we will add the
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fictional DEVICE1234. For this example the folders to be created are
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"drivers/DEVICE1234/" and "drivers/DEVICE1234/v1/". In case there already exists
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a driver implementation for this device, but you want to implement another
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version from scratch (not just an update), the version subfolder must be named
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accordingly (e.g. "drivers/DEVICE1234/v42/").
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Most drivers will consist of exactly three files:
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 - alld_DEVICE1234.mk
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 - alld_DEVICE1234.h
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 - alld_DEVICE1234.c
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However, some drivers may feature multiple .h and/or .c files or even come with
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additional subfolders. In any case, all those required folders, including the
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driver root folder (i.e. "drivers/DEVICE1234/v1/"), as well as all C source
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files must be added to the according makefile variables AMIROLLD_INC and
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AMIROLLD_CSRC by the makefile script.
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It is highly recommended that files in the driver root directory (i.e.
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"drivers/DEVICE1234/v1/") use the prefix "alld_" in their names. This not only
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helps to achieve an easy to understand file structure, but also prevents
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compilation issues due to naming conflicts of header files.
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Summing up, you have to
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1) create device and version folders.
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2) add a makefile script.
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3) add header- and source files as well as subfulders, implementing the diver
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3.2  Implementing a Driver
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Implementation of a new driver usually is very straightforward. You most
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probably have a comprehensive datasheet of the device, or the manufacturer even
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provides a reference driver implementation.
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For the former case, you should first write a comprehensive header, containing
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all information like constants, register maps, etc. and according abstract
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access functions (e.g. for reading and writing registers, and convenient access
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to common functionalities). Only then you implement those functions, using
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periphAL to interface any hardware interfaces (e.g. I2C, SPI, etc.) in a
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separate C source file, or 'inline' in the header file itself.
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For the latter case, the reference implementation will specify some interface
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functions to interact with the hardware (e.g. I2C, SPI etc.). Even though all
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functionality should be covered by the reference driver, you still need to
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implement those interface functions and map them to periphAL.
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Since AMiRo-LLD does not rely on specific hardware or operating system, the only
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valid way to interact with both is through periphAL. Under no circumstances you
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must use any function of your operating system and directly or indirectly access
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the hardware of your platform. For your driver, there is no knowledge about the
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world beyond periphAL! If periphAL does not provide the function you need, you
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can do one of the following:
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1) Think again if you really need that funcionality or whether it can be
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   replicated by the existing API.
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2) File a feature request to extend periphAL.
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3) Write a custom patch that modifies periphAL to meet your requirements.
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Summing up, you have to
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1) Get and read the datasheet of the device (A) or
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   acquire a copy of the reference implementation (B).
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2) Case A: define constants, register map and access functions in a header file.
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   Case B: identify the interface functions of the reference implementation.
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3) Implement the missing functions using periphAL.
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================================================================================
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