/* mbed Microcontroller Library * Copyright (c) 2006-2019 ARM Limited * SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ #ifndef MBED_TICKERDATACLOCK_H #define MBED_TICKERDATACLOCK_H #include #include "hal/ticker_api.h" namespace mbed { /** * \defgroup drivers_TickerDataClock TickerDataClock class * \ingroup drivers-public-api-ticker * @{ */ /** * A partial implementation of a C++11 Clock representing a HAL ticker. * * This class allows us to create chrono time_points for objects like Timer, * with the limitation that the tickers are not singletons. This means: * * * the now() function is not static - this will limit * use with some algorithms, * * there is no distinction between time_points for different * tickers * * This "pseudo-Clock" approach has been endorsed by Howard Hinnant * (designer of Chrono) here: * https://stackoverflow.com/questions/56400313/why-does-the-c-standard-require-the-clocknow-function-to-be-static * * TickerDataClock::time_point values should only be used with mbed APIs specifically taking * them, not passed to generic templated chrono algorithms, and it is up to the user to use them * in conjunction with the correct TickerDataClock. * * operators for `->` and conversion to `ticker_data_t *` are provided allowing * TickerDataClock to be easily substituted in place of a `ticker_data_t *`. */ class TickerDataClock { public: /** Construct a TickerDataClock referring to a ticker_data_t */ constexpr TickerDataClock(const ticker_data_t *ticker) : _ticker(ticker) { } /* duration is C++11 standard microseconds, so representation will be 64-bit signed integer */ using duration = std::chrono::microseconds; using rep = duration::rep; using period = duration::period; using time_point = std::chrono::time_point; static const bool is_steady = false; /** Initialize a ticker and set the event handler * * @param handler A handler to be set */ void set_handler(ticker_event_handler handler) { return ticker_set_handler(_ticker, handler); } /** Remove an event from the queue * * @param obj The event object to be removed from the queue */ void remove_event(ticker_event_t *obj) { ticker_remove_event(_ticker, obj); } /** Insert an event to the queue * * The event will be executed in timestamp - ticker_read_us() us. * * @note If an event is inserted with a timestamp less than the current * timestamp then the event will be scheduled immediately resulting in * an instant call to event handler. * * @param obj The event object to be inserted to the queue * @param timestamp The event's timestamp * @param id The event object */ void insert_event(ticker_event_t *obj, time_point timestamp, uint32_t id) { ticker_insert_event_us(_ticker, obj, timestamp.time_since_epoch().count(), id); } /** Read the current (absolute) ticker's timestamp * * @warning Return an absolute timestamp counting from the initialization of the * ticker. * * @return The current timestamp */ time_point now() const { return time_point(duration(ticker_read_us(_ticker))); } /** Read the next event's timestamp * * @param timestamp The timestamp object. * @return 1 if timestamp is pending event, 0 if there's no event pending */ int get_next_timestamp(time_point *timestamp) const { us_timestamp_t t; int ret = ticker_get_next_timestamp_us(_ticker, &t); *timestamp = time_point(duration(t)); return ret; } /** Suspend this ticker * * When suspended reads will always return the same time and no * events will be dispatched. When suspended the common layer * will only ever call the interface function clear_interrupt() * and that is only if ticker_irq_handler is called. * */ void suspend() { ticker_suspend(_ticker); } /** Resume this ticker * * When resumed the ticker will ignore any time that has passed * and continue counting up where it left off. */ void resume() { ticker_resume(_ticker); } constexpr const ticker_data_t *operator->() const { return _ticker; } constexpr operator const ticker_data_t *() const { return _ticker; } private: const ticker_data_t *const _ticker; }; inline TickerDataClock::time_point get_time_point(const ticker_event_t &event) { return TickerDataClock::time_point{TickerDataClock::duration{event.timestamp}}; } /** @}*/ } #endif /* MBED_TICKERDATACLOCK_H */