This patch replaces the 'old style' ringbuffer by the ByteBuffer class.
An effort was made to keep the exchange as close as possible from a
drop-in replacement to minimize the risk of introducing bugs.
Although the exchange opens opportunities for improvement and
simplification of this class.
When the buffer wraps and we do it in 2 steps, we can't actually do the
second part if it fails or if we wrote less bytes than we intended,
otherwise we will corrupt the data being sent.
We can't give the TX buffer 16 bytes more since next time begin() is
called it will compare the buffer size to the value the caller is trying
to set. In this case we would free and alloc the buffer again each time
begin was called.
This patch replaces the 'old style' ringbuffer by the ByteBuffer class.
An effort was made to keep the exchange as close as possible from a
drop-in replacement to minimize the risk of introducing bugs.
Although the exchange opens opportunities for improvement and
simplification of this class.
While at it, just like in the write case, explain why we are stopping.
When the buffer wraps and we do it in 2 steps, we can't actually do the
second part if it fails or if we wrote less bytes than we intended,
otherwise we will corrupt the data being sent.
While at it, just like in the write case, explain why we are stopping.
We can't give the TX buffer 16 bytes more since next time begin() is
called it will compare the buffer size to the value the caller is trying
to set. In this case we would free and alloc the buffer again each time
begin was called.
This patch replaces the 'old style' ringbuffer by the ByteBuffer class.
An effort was made to keep the exchange as close as possible from a
drop-in replacement to minimize the risk of introducing bugs.
Although the exchange opens opportunities for improvement and
simplification of this class.
When the buffer wraps and we do it in 2 steps, we can't actually do the
second part if it fails or if we wrote less bytes than we intended,
otherwise we will corrupt the data being sent.
This patch replaces the 'old style' ringbuffer by the ByteBuffer class.
An effort was made to keep the exchange as close as possible from a
drop-in replacement to minimize the risk of introducing bugs.
Although the exchange opens opportunities for improvement and
simplification of this class.
Summary of significant changes:
-Autsave doesn't depend on STREAM_EXTRA3
-Don't risk only saving one compass on copter if CAL_ALWAYS_REBOOT is set
-Only calibrate compasses that are both health and marked for use (there was a inconsistency in handling the mask)
-Fix incorrect failure reporting on DO_ACCEPT_MAG_CAL with a mask of 0 if a channel was specifically not started
-Fix not starting the buzzer if the delay is set to 0 seconds
-Always send MAG_CAL_REPORT until its acknowledged
-Correct the field in MAG_CAL_REPORT for autosave to indicate if the compass had actually been saved, rather then being scheduled to be saved
-Remmove unused public interfaces
The constant passed to cflag is BOTHER, meaning the actual baud is set
in the other specific members. Don't define B* constants as they are
misleading here and this is why it doesn't work with e.g.
cfset[io]speed()... that function expect a B* constant which in Linux
is not the speed, but an index to an array with speeds.
Rover now accepts a new message MAV_CMD_NAV_SET_YAW_SPEED
which has an angle in centidegrees and a speed scale and the rover
will drive based on these inputs.