correct calculation of advanced timers
add support for linker script configuration in mcu config script
use linker script configuration for H750 and H730
add single OTG_HS support on H730 via OTG2
make sure complimentary channels get advanced timers
complemntary timers do not require advanced mode
allow custom clockspeeds of 550Mhz
correct debug pins on H730
support custom clockrate of 520Mhz on H730
correct H730 USB end point pins
restructure linker script for STM32H730
allow chibios_hwdef.py to set advanced timer on L431
don't define RAMFUNC on STM32H730
clock tree for STM32H730
create non-cacheable memory area for SDMMC DMA
don't look for RAM_MAP in bootloader with external flash
Added support for stm32l4+ processor
- Added scripts for hwdef generation
- Tested in custom hardware prototype (stm32l4r5vit6)
- Tested all peripherals and auto pilot modes.
this fixes the flash re-init problem when flash storage fills on
H7. It was caused by rejecting writes where one or more of the 32 byte
chunks was not all 0xff but was equal to the current data. That
happens when writing to the sector header in AP_FlashStorage
it also moves the interrupt disable inside the loop to allow for
other interrupts to run between blocks
we have now shown that interrupts being enabled during flash
operations can cause the infamous "68ms" bug, or watchdog when using a
32 bit timer on boards using flash for storage
The issue is quite repeatable with a load of a very large waypoint
file (over 500 waypoints) using "wp ftpload" in MAVProxy. This puts a
huge load on flash storage.
Our current working theory is that while doing flash writes for
storage on dual-bank we block access to only one bank, so if another
thread uses a timeout function with a short timeout while the flash
write is happening and chVTDoTickI calls code which crosses the flash
bank boundary then it can cause chVTDoTickI to violate the assumption
that no more than CH_CFG_ST_DELTA ticks pass while it is calculating
the value to set in the system timer. In that case we get a delay of a
full timer wrap, which is 68ms on boards with 16 bit timer and 70
minutes on boards with 32 bit timer