../../libraries/Filter/examples/Derivative/Derivative.cpp:16:14: warning: ‘float noise()’ defined but not used [-Wunused-function]
static float noise(void)
^
../../libraries/AP_HAL/examples/UART_test/UART_test.cpp:13:28: warning: ‘uarts’ defined but not used [-Wunused-variable]
static AP_HAL::UARTDriver* uarts[] = {
^
The innovation calculation should have been updated when the heading fusion maths was updated.
We now use a direct heading or yaw angle measurement in the derivation, not the difference between observed and published declination.
This removes a legacy design concept that is no longer required in this filter implementation. Planes will not be armed without EKF aiding and the proposed copter throw mode also requires EKF aiding to be operating.
The other problem with interrupting fusion during the launch is it doesn't reduce the corrections, it just delays them as wen the launch completes, the EKF inertial position estimate is still moving still moved and the corrections are therefore just delayed by the short launch interval.
Thank you to OXINARF for picking up the inconsistency with the previous logic
Change to user adjustable fusion of constant position (as per legacy EKF) instead of constant velocity.
Enable user to specify use of 3-axis magnetometer fusion when operating without aiding.
Don't allow gyro scale factor learning without external aiding data as it can be unreliable
/ardupilot/ArduPlane/quadplane.cpp:773:107: warning: implicit conversion from 'float' to 'double' when passing argument to function [-Wdouble-promotion]
// @Description: When enabled, after an autoland and auto-disarm via LAND_DISARMDELAY happens then set all servos to neutral. This is helpful when an aircraft has a rough landing upside down or a crazy angle causing the servos to strain.
- replace tabs with spaces
- remove C-style void from function arguments
- use pragma once
- fix pointer alignement
- remove unused header: AP_Airspeed_I2C_PX4 - we actually use
AP_Airspeed_PX4
This allows us to re-use SPIDevice from SPIDeviceDriver (the
to-become-SPIDeviceProperties) while the drivers are
converted. We create a fake device by calling the temporary
SPIDeviceManager::get_device() method passing the descriptor. The
transfer and assert logic is still using the old code.
Now we can interoperate SPIDeviceDriver with the ones based in
SPIDevice since they are going to use the same semaphore and bus.
The way this code is structured is a little bit different from the
SPIDriver implementation:
- We only open the bus once, no matter how many devices we have in it
- There's a single transfer() method which uses half-duplex mode
instead of full duplex. The reason is that for all cases in the
codebase we are using half-duplex transfers using the full-duplex
API, i.e. a single SPI msg with both tx and rx buffers. This is
cumbersome because the buffers need to be of the same size and the
receive buffer using an offset of the same length as the actux data
being written. This means the high level APIs need to copy buffers
around.
If later we have uses for a real full duplex case it's just a matter
of adding another transfer_fullduplex() method or something like
this.
- The methods are implemented in the SPIDevice class instead of having
proxy methods to SPIDeviceManager as is the case of SPIDriver
Also from now on we refer to the SPIDriver objects as "descriptors"
because they have the parameters of each device in the
SPIDeviceManager::devices[] table. When SPIDeviceDriver is completely
replaced we can rename them to SPIDeviceProperties.
Save in the manager the number of devices so it can be used in other
places like the SPIDevice implementation. This is a temporary storage
while we migrate to SPIDevice.
While at it use protected rather than private.