Add the target config option "boot-stack-size" which is passed to the
linker as the define "MBED_BOOT_STACK_SIZE" so the linker can
adjust the stack accordingly. On mbed 2 the boot stack becomes the
main stack after boot. On mbed 5 the boot stack becomes the
ISR stack after boot. Because of these different uses the stack size
for mbed 2 is set to 4K by default while on mbed 5 it is set to 1k.
Additionally, the NRF5X family requires a larger interrupt stack size
due to the softdevice so the size is increased to 2k on mbed 5 builds.
Code had mixed up order of 'c' and 'n' arguments to memset().
Fix this.
Spotted-by: kjbracey-arm & a GCC profile without "-fno-builtin"
Related GCC warnings:
---8<---8<----
[Warning] mbed_error.c@123,5: 'memset' used with constant zero length parameter; this could be due to transposed parameters [-Wmemset-transposed-args]
[Warning] mbed_error.c@282,5: 'memset' used with constant zero length parameter; this could be due to transposed parameters [-Wmemset-transposed-args]
- Bug fix: Remove timed out blockwise message from resend queue. If blockwise message was timed out message was still kept in the resend queue which causes unnecessary reconnections on client side.
- Documentation: Document all the available macros.
Quite a few of the scatter files are not (yet) aligned to 8-byte
boundaries and therefore the removal of legacy alignment feature
(which is under deprecation warning, but it actually not YET
deprecated) broke quite a few builds to this error:
Error: L6244E: Exec region RW_IRAM1 address (0x200001ac) not aligned on a 8 byte boundary.
We must bring this option now back to fix the builds.
This option to ld (--legacyalign) can only be removed once all of
the scatter files have been fixed.
Sometimes you want don't want to directly call a method on your
SingletonPtr-wrapped object, but you want to pass it to something
else.
For example
SingletonPtr<PlatformMutex> mutex;
mutex->lock();
is fine, but what about
SingletonPtr<PlatformMutex> mutex;
ScopedLock<PlatformMutex> lock(*mutex.get());
Add an overload for operator* to make this more elegant:
SingletonPtr<PlatformMutex> mutex;
ScopedLock<PlatformMutex> lock(*mutex);
This addition is consistent with standard C++ classes such as
`unique_ptr` and `shared_ptr`, which likewise have
get, operator-> and operator*.