Upstream's edge-detect interrupt that starts SPI transmission was not
firing. Sometimes. On some boards only. The cause was Downstream not
allowing enough time between edges for Upstream to catch the signal.
Also misc code tidyups.
It turns out that suspend support on the STM32 USB core is buggy as
heck. Host mode cannot resume after suspend, and device mode cannot
receive resume or send wakeup signalling.
I managed to fake resume support by keeping Downstream and our connected
device running at full power, and simulating a wakeup event to the host
by disconnecting/reconnecting Upstream from the host.
...Downstream was not always changing state correctly after closely
spaced interrupts.
Also improve flash-write-lockout function to avoid dependency on
optimisation level.
Conflicts:
Upstream/Src/interrupts.c
Each USB transaction passed to the driver now consists of multiple
64-byte packets. 8 packets when receiving, 4 packets when transmitting.
The STM32 silicon bugs out when more than 4 packets are scheduled to
write at a time :(
Reads 1.0MB/sec, writes 967kB/sec, not CPU limited :)
- Unexpected second port-connected interrupt on cold boot with low-speed
device connected.
- Retry on failure to get device descriptor. (We still fail after three
attempts, but that is better than failing after the first one!)
Also changed eclipse project to use external builder.
Our custom OpenOCD scripts are now linked directly into the Eclipse
debug configurations. No need to manually copy the files into OpenOCD's
script directory.
some circumstances the 405 is equally buggy as the 401!
Work around an intermittent stall/timeout by busy-waiting Upstream's
packet length transmission and reception, instead of DMA-ing it like the
packet body. Ugh...
correctly now, either because SPI is in 16-bit mode, or because I found
all the other bugs!
Doubled SPI baudrate to 10.5Mbps. Transfer speed now limited (again) by
Downstream's lack of FIFO buffering in the USB host controller.
Also disabled DMA transaction half-complete interrupt in
stm32f4xx_hal_dma.c, as it wasn't doing anything useful.