This fix addresses issue #2638 for STM32F1.
The STM32F1 family has a diffeerent register set for pull-up and pull-down
settings.
The same principle to read HW state is applied, as in commit:
[STM32] Fix pull over write to all families
except registers are different.
Also in this patch we make code a bit more linear.
Depending on pin_index, different register and shift index must be used.
Instead of checking this in several place, let's make a check at the
beginning of the function and use local register and shift variables.
the SPI_ASYNCH feature has been already activated for STM32F4.
This patchset makes it supported on all STM32 families by:
- moving spi_s structure at family level instead of board level
- using the F4 spi_api.c reference implementation and making it a common
stm_spi_api.c file which makes maintenance a lot easier.
- the only part that needs to be implemented for each family is the computation
of the clock frequency input to the spi peripheral which is not the same
accross families. So this is what remains in the spi_api.c of each family.
Because of the introduction of the common file, all the above modifications
needs to be done at once.
Supported toolchains initialization steps have been modified to make sure
that mbed_sdk_initi is called _after_ RAM initialization and _before_ C++
objects creation.
since this was done, there is no need to redundant SystemCoreClockUpdates
in the drivers
Various toolchains supported in MBED don't follow the same initialization
steps. This can have impacts on platform behavior.
For STM32, it is needed to call the HAL_Init() _after_ the RAM has been
initialized (sdata from flash / zero initialized data) and _before_ the C++
objects are being created, especially if those objects require support
of tickers for instance.
In GCC, this is easily done because SystemInit is called after the ram
initialisation, so HAL_Init does not need to called from mbed_sdk_init.
this is covered by the changes in mbed_overrides.c files.
This series should solve issue reported here:
STM32 (At least F401) breaks if Tickers are activated in a global object #2115