Modified version of the official mbed lib providing a RTOS enabled i2c-driver based on the official i2c-C-api.

Dependencies:   mbed-rtos mbed-src

mbed-RtosI2cDriver

This version is obsolete!

Please use this one:
http://mbed.org/users/humlet/code/I2cRtosDriver/

Overview

  • Based on RTOS
    • No busy wait waste of CPU cycles
    • ... but still some waste of CPU cycles by context switches
  • Spends minimal time in interrupt context
  • Supports I2C Master and Slave mode
  • Interface compatible to official I2C lib
  • Supports LPC1768 and LPC11U24.
    • Performs fine on the LPC1768, see measurements below
    • OK it works for the LPC11U24, but the performance data doesn't look that promising.
  • Reuses the official I2C implementation
    • Implemented with a few tiny but rather intrusive add-ons to the official I2C C-API
    • Updates of the official I2C lib can be easily merged into this library. Merges should be rather trivial.
    • Requires a rebuild of the mbed library (builds within a few seconds)
    • Official I2C interface not usable in parallel
  • The test and example programs works quite well and the results look promising. But this is by no means a thoroughly regression tested library. There might be some surprises.

Usage

  • In existing projects simply replace in the I2C interface class declaration the official type by one of the adapters I2CMasterRtos or I2CSlaveRtos described below. The behavior should be the same.
  • The declaration has to be done in thread context, i.e. in a thread function or in main. A global declaration does not work.
  • Don't use the original I2C interface classes. They don't work anymore.
  • You can also use the I2CDriver interface directly.
  • You can create several instances of I2CMasterRtos, I2CSlaveRtos and I2CDriver. The interface classes are lightweight and work in parallel.
  • See also the test/example implementations in I2CDriverTest01.h and I2CDriverTest02.h

Design

Basic Idea

Each time the official I2C implementation has requested the I2C controller to perform an action, it enters a central busy wait loop (i2c_wait_SI(...) in i2c_api.c) and simply polls the I2C controller until it reports that it has completed the request. By running the I2C API on a RTOS thread and replacing the busy wait loop by an RTOS signal wait, the wasted CPU time can be made available for other threads ... apart from interrupt latency and task switching overhead.

"Hack" of the I2C-API

Unfortunately this busy wait loop is located down in the i2C-C-API in the platform dependent mbed-NXP lib. Because I was too lazy to clone the whole interface and wanted to be able to easily merge updates of the official implementation to the driver, I decided to simply tweak the official implementation. The changes are rather small. Instead of entering a busy wait loop, the function i2c_wait_SI(...) now enables the I2C interrupt and waits for a RTOS semaphore. This semaphore is given by a tiny ISR. The ISR just releases the semaphore and then immediately disables the i2c interrupt. The disabling is necessary because, before the interrupt is cleared, the I2C controller HW expects new requests, which have not been applied yet. The first implementation utilized RTOS signals, but measurements revealed, that semaphores are slightly faster.
A second busy wait loop in the i2c_stop function has not been touched. It is not entered that frequently and does only take 10µs at 100kHz bus speed. At 400kHz even less time is consumed. Thus there wouldn't be any benefit if one triggers the whole interrupt task wait/switch sequence for that short period of time.
BTW: Since the last re-base to the latest version of the mbed-NXP lib (rev 10 by emilmont) the change set of i2c_api.c looks awful. The diff tool reports 900 changed lines, which is nonsense. This seems to be a bug of the diff tool. In fact there are only three additional blocks of code compared to the original revision, one at the top defining two additional local static functions, one in the i2c_wait_SI(..) function replacing the busy wait and one at the bottom behind the i2c_slave_receive(...) function.

Driver interface

The I2CDriver class is the central component of this I2C interface

  • On creation it registers the ISR and starts the high priority driver thread that runs the I2C accesses (if not already running).
  • Communication between the calling user thread and the high priority driver thread is realized by a simple static transfer struct and RTOS signals.
    • All requests are blocking.
    • I did not see much added value for implementing a more complex non-blocking buffered access using the RTOS mail or queue feature.
  • I2CDriver provides "fat" API for I2C master and slave access
    • It supports on the fly changes from master to slave mode and vice versa.
    • It ensures mutual exclusive access to the I2C HW. This is realized by a static RTOS mutex for each I2C channel that is taken by the calling thread on each call of an interface function. Thus accesses are prioritized automatically by the priority of the calling user threads. Once having access to the interface the requests are performed with high priority and cannot be interrupted by other threads. In fact the user thread inherits the high priority of the driver thread during I2C access. The user thread does not do very much in the function call, it sends request to the driver thread and then waits for the driver thread to complete the request. The priority inheritance ensures that the I2C device is freed as fast as possible and prevents dead locks.
    • The interface can be locked for other threads, in order to run a sequence of commands without interruption
    • All interface functions are blocking, i.e. they return when the requested I2C transaction is completed.
    • Multiple I2CDriver instances are allowed

I2C Master/Slave Interface Adapters

I2CMasterRtos and I2CSlaveRtos provide an interface compatible to the official mbed I2C interface. Additionally

  • the constructors provide parameters for defining the frequency and the slave address
  • I2CMasterRtos provides a function to read data from a given slave register
  • In contrast to the original interface the I2CSlaveRtos::receive() function is blocking, i.e it returns, when he master sends a request to the listening slave. There is no need to poll the receive status in a loop. Optionally a timeout value can be passed to the function.
  • The interface adapters are implemented as object adapters, i.e they hold an I2CDriver-instance, to which they forward the user requests by simple inline functions. The overhead should be negligible.
  • I thought of inheriting from the original interfaces in order to be able to pass the adapters as references of the original I2C/I2CSlave types to I2C access classes or functions. But I have decided against this approach because of the virtual function call overhead.

Performance

The following performance data have been measured with the small test application in I2CDriverTest01.h. In this application a high priority thread, triggered at a rate of 1kHz, reads on each trigger a data packet of given size with given I2C bus speed from a SRF08 ultra sonic ranger or a MPU6050 accelerometer/gyro. At the same time the main thread - running at a lower priority - counts in an endless loop adjacent increments of the mbed's µs-ticker API and calculates a duty cycle from this. These duty cycle measurements are shown in the table below together with the time measured for one read sequence (write address/register; read x byte of data). The measurements have been performed with the RTOS wait as used by this driver and with the busy wait approach used by the official mbed I2C implementation. The wait method has been selected by setting #define I2CDRVRTOS in i2c_api.c.

LPC1768
  • SRF08
    • The time for one read cycle is almost the same for both approaches
    • At full load (6byte/100kHz and 25byte@400kHz) the duty cycle of the low priority thread drops almost to zero for the busy wait approach, whereas it stays at 82% / 61% with the RTOS enabled driver.
    • The SRF08 seems to apply some clock stretching.
  • MPU6050 FIFO read:
    • At 100kz results are compatible with the SRF08
    • At 400kHz the MPU performs much better
      • Busy wait: No clock stretching at all is visible on a scope. The clock signal does not show any gaps.
      • RTOS wait: Between each byte a pause of 6µs shows up. These gaps are probably caused by the ISR->driver thread context switch. Thus the RTOS driver needs some more time to complete a read cycle.
      • When using the RTOS driver at full load (30byte/ms@400kHz), still 56% of the CPU time is available for other threads. This is more than 3.3 times the 16.8% observed with he official i2c implementation.
  • => Especially at low bus speeds and/or high data transfer loads the driver is able to free a significant amount of CPU time.
  • Comparison: MODI2C claims to achieve an efficiency resulting in a duty cycle of 75% at 400kHz. Sounds much better. OK, it is expected to be more efficient, because it operates completely in interrupt context (25%) and does not suffer from any RTOS overhead. ... and some of the 75% the user might spend for busy wait checking that the non blocking commands have completed.
LPC17681byte/ms4byte/ms6byte/ms1byte/ms6byte/ms12byte/ms25byte/ms
SRF08@ 100kHz@ 100kHz@ 100kHz@ 400kHz@ 400kHz@ 400kHz@ 400kHz
rtosDC[%]88.184.582.189.583.876.761.4
waitt[µs]438734930160334541996
busyDC[%]54.625.15.483.466.145.30.28
waitt[µs]433733930144317530984
LPC17681byte/ms4byte/ms6byte/ms1byte/ms6byte/ms12byte/ms30byte/ms
MPU6050@ 100kHz@ 100kHz@ 100kHz@ 400kHz@ 400kHz@ 400kHz@ 400kHz
rtosDC[%]81.484.682.389.683.876.956.2
waitt[µs]430712894155298475999
busyDC[%]65.628.410.384.863.159.016.8
waitt[µs]430700880131249389816
LPC11U24
  • Here the results don't look that promising
  • At a bus speed of 100kHz a slightly higher duty cycle can be achieved for the low priority thread
  • At a bus speed of 400kHz the busy wait approach shows better results
  • Keep in mind that the RTOS lib consumes a significant amount of the 11U24's small memory
LPC11U241byte/ms4byte/ms1byte/ms6byte/ms16byte/ms
MPU6050@ 100kHz@ 100kHz@ 400kHz@ 400kHz@ 400kHz
rtosDC[%]36.127.735.424.63.0
waitt[µs]525-569836-880256465-512884-935
busyDC[%]32.610.441.034.621.6
waitt[µs]475-517749-790184303542-589

A second test application (I2CDriverTest01.h) makes the mbed LPC1768 talk to itself. The two I2C channels are directly connected and master/slave mode of the two I2C interfaces are changed on the fly. The communication has been tested to work synchronously and stable at 100kHz and 400kHz.

Committer:
humlet
Date:
Sun Apr 14 06:39:04 2013 +0000
Revision:
1:90455d5bdd8c
Parent:
0:13c962fecb13
Child:
2:514105beb343
no more smoke

Who changed what in which revision?

UserRevisionLine numberNew contents of line
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 1 #ifndef I2CDRIVER_H
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 2 #define I2CDRIVER_H
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 3
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 4 #include "stdint.h"
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 5
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 6 #include "I2C.h"
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 7
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 8 #include "Thread.h"
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 9 #include "Semaphore.h"
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 10 #include "Mutex.h"
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 11
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 12 namespace mbed
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 13 {
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 14
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 15 class I2CDriver : protected I2C
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 16 {
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 17 public:
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 18 using I2C::RxStatus;
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 19 using I2C::Acknowledge;
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 20 using I2C::frequency;
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 21
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 22 /** Create an I2C Master interface, connected to the specified pins
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 23 *
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 24 * @param sda I2C data line pin
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 25 * @param scl I2C clock line pin
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 26 */
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 27 I2CDriver(PinName sda, PinName scl);
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 28
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 29 /** Read from an I2C slave
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 30 *
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 31 * Performs a complete read transaction. The bottom bit of
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 32 * the address is forced to 1 to indicate a read.
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 33 *
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 34 * @param address 8-bit I2C slave address [ addr | 1 ]
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 35 * @param data Pointer to the byte-array to read data in to
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 36 * @param length Number of bytes to read
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 37 * @param repeated Repeated start, true - don't send stop at end
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 38 *
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 39 * @returns
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 40 * 0 on success (ack),
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 41 * non-0 on failure (nack)
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 42 */
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 43 int read(int address, char *data, int length, bool repeated = false);
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 44
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 45 int read(int address, uint8_t regist, char *data, int length, bool repeated = false);
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 46
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 47 /** Read a single byte from the I2C bus
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 48 *
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 49 * @param ack indicates if the byte is to be acknowledged (1 = acknowledge)
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 50 *
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 51 * @returns
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 52 * the byte read
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 53 */
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 54 int read(int ack);
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 55
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 56 /** Write to an I2C slave
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 57 *
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 58 * Performs a complete write transaction. The bottom bit of
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 59 * the address is forced to 0 to indicate a write.
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 60 *
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 61 * @param address 8-bit I2C slave address [ addr | 0 ]
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 62 * @param data Pointer to the byte-array data to send
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 63 * @param length Number of bytes to send
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 64 * @param repeated Repeated start, true - do not send stop at end
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 65 *
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 66 * @returns
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 67 * 0 on success (ack),
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 68 * non-0 on failure (nack)
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 69 */
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 70 int write(int address, const char *data, int length, bool repeated = false);
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 71
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 72 /** Write single byte out on the I2C bus
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 73 *
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 74 * @param data data to write out on bus
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 75 *
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 76 * @returns
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 77 * '1' if an ACK was received,
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 78 * '0' otherwise
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 79 */
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 80 int write(int data);
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 81
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 82 /// Creates a start condition on the I2C bus
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 83 void start(void);
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 84
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 85 ///Creates a stop condition on the I2C bus
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 86 void stop(void);
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 87
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 88 /// Wait until the i2c driver becomes available.
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 89 void lock() {
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 90 // if one and the same thread can lock twice, but then it needs also to unlock twice.
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 91 // exactly what we need here
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 92 m_channel->mutex.lock(osWaitForever);
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 93 }
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 94
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 95 /// Unlock the driver that has previously been locked by the same thread
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 96 void unlock() {
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 97 m_channel->mutex.unlock();
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 98 }
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 99
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 100
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 101 protected:
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 102
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 103 enum Command {
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 104 START,
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 105 STOP,
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 106 WRITE_BYTE,
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 107 WRITE,
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 108 READ_BYTE,
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 109 READ,
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 110 READ_FROM_REGISTER
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 111 };
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 112
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 113 struct Transfer {
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 114 osThreadId caller;
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 115 Command cmd;
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 116 int freq;
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 117 int adr;
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 118 uint8_t reg;
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 119 char* dta;
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 120 const char* wdta;
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 121 int len;
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 122 int ack;
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 123 bool rep;
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 124 int ret;
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 125 };
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 126
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 127 struct Channel {
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 128 volatile osThreadId driver;
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 129 rtos::Mutex mutex;
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 130 volatile Transfer transfer;
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 131 volatile int freq;
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 132 };
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 133
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 134 static const PinName c_sdas[2];
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 135 static const PinName c_scls[2];
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 136
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 137 static Channel* s_channels[2];
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 138
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 139 Channel* m_channel;
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 140
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 141 static void channel_0_ISR();
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 142 static void channel_1_ISR();
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 143
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 144 static void threadFun(void const *args);
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 145
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 146 void sendNwait();
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 147
humlet 1:90455d5bdd8c 148 };
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 149 }
humlet 0:13c962fecb13 150 #endif