USB device stack, with KL25Z fixes for USB 3.0 hosts and sleep/resume interrupt handling

Dependents:   frdm_Slider_Keyboard idd_hw2_figlax_PanType idd_hw2_appachu_finger_chording idd_hw3_AngieWangAntonioDeLimaFernandesDanielLim_BladeSymphony ... more

Fork of USBDevice by mbed official

This is an overhauled version of the standard mbed USB device-side driver library, with bug fixes for KL25Z devices. It greatly improves reliability and stability of USB on the KL25Z, especially with devices using multiple endpoints concurrently.

I've had some nagging problems with the base mbed implementation for a long time, manifesting as occasional random disconnects that required rebooting the device. Recently (late 2015), I started implementing a USB device on the KL25Z that used multiple endpoints, and suddenly the nagging, occasional problems turned into frequent and predictable crashes. This forced me to delve into the USB stack and figure out what was really going on. Happily, the frequent crashes made it possible to track down and fix the problems. This new version is working very reliably in my testing - the random disconnects seem completely eradicated, even under very stressful conditions for the device.

Summary

  • Overall stability improvements
  • USB 3.0 host support
  • Stalled endpoint fixes
  • Sleep/resume notifications
  • Smaller memory footprint
  • General code cleanup

Update - 2/15/2016

My recent fixes introduced a new problem that made the initial connection fail most of the time on certain hosts. It's not clear if the common thread was a particular type of motherboard or USB chip set, or a specific version of Windows, or what, but several people ran into it. We tracked the problem down to the "stall" fixes in the earlier updates, which we now know weren't quite the right fixes after all. The latest update (2/15/2016) fixes this. It has new and improved "unstall" handling that so far works well with diverse hosts.

Race conditions and overall stability

The base mbed KL25Z implementation has a lot of problems with "race conditions" - timing problems that can happen when hardware interrupts occur at inopportune moments. The library shares a bunch of static variable data between interrupt handler context and regular application context. This isn't automatically a bad thing, but it does require careful coordination to make sure that the interrupt handler doesn't corrupt data that the other code was in the middle of updating when an interrupt occurs. The base mbed code, though, doesn't do any of the necessary coordination. This makes it kind of amazing that the base code worked at all for anyone, but I guess the interrupt rate is low enough in most applications that the glitch rate was below anyone's threshold to seriously investigate.

This overhaul adds the necessary coordination for the interrupt handlers to protect against these data corruptions. I think it's very solid now, and hopefully entirely free of the numerous race conditions in the old code. It's always hard to be certain that you've fixed every possible bug like this because they strike (effectively) at random, but I'm pretty confident: my test application was reliably able to trigger glitches in the base code in a matter of minutes, but the same application (with the overhauled library) now runs for days on end without dropping the connection.

Stalled endpoint fixes

USB has a standard way of handling communications errors called a "stall", which basically puts the connection into an error mode to let both sides know that they need to reset their internal states and sync up again. The original mbed version of the USB device library doesn't seem to have the necessary code to recover from this condition properly. The KL25Z hardware does some of the work, but it also seems to require the software to take some steps to "un-stall" the connection. (I keep saying "seems to" because the hardware reference material is very sketchy about all of this. Most of what I've figured out is from observing the device in action with a Windows host.) This new version adds code to do the necessary re-syncing and get the connection going again, automatically, and transparently to the user.

USB 3.0 Hosts

The original mbed code sometimes didn't work when connecting to hosts with USB 3.0 ports. This didn't affect every host, but it affected many of them. The common element seemed to be the Intel Haswell chip set on the host, but there may be other chip sets affected as well. In any case, the problem affected many PCs from the Windows 7 and 8 generation, as well as many Macs. It was possible to work around the problem by avoiding USB 3.0 ports - you could use a USB 2 port on the host, or plug a USB 2 hub between the host and device. But I wanted to just fix the problem and eliminate the need for such workarounds. This modified version of the library has such a fix, which so far has worked for everyone who's tried.

Sleep/resume notifications

This modified version also contains an innocuous change to the KL25Z USB HAL code to handle sleep and resume interrupts with calls to suspendStateChanged(). The original KL25Z code omitted these calls (and in fact didn't even enable the interrupts), but I think this was an unintentional oversight - the notifier function is part of the generic API, and other supported boards all implement it. I use this feature in my own application so that I can distinguish sleep mode from actual disconnects and handle the two conditions correctly.

Smaller memory footprint

The base mbed version of the code allocates twice as much memory for USB buffers as it really needed to. It looks like the original developers intended to implement the KL25Z USB hardware's built-in double-buffering mechanism, but they ultimately abandoned that effort. But they left in the double memory allocation. This version removes that and allocates only what's actually needed. The USB buffers aren't that big (128 bytes per endpoint), so this doesn't save a ton of memory, but even a little memory is pretty precious on this machine given that it only has 16K.

(I did look into adding the double-buffering support that the original developers abandoned, but after some experimentation I decided they were right to skip it. It just doesn't seem to mesh well with the design of the rest of the mbed USB code. I think it would take a major rewrite to make it work, and it doesn't seem worth the effort given that most applications don't need it - it would only benefit applications that are moving so much data through USB that they're pushing the limits of the CPU. And even for those, I think it would be a lot simpler to build a purely software-based buffer rotation mechanism.)

General code cleanup

The KL25Z HAL code in this version has greatly expanded commentary and a lot of general cleanup. Some of the hardware constants were given the wrong symbolic names (e.g., EVEN and ODD were reversed), and many were just missing (written as hard-coded numbers without explanation). I fixed the misnomers and added symbolic names for formerly anonymous numbers. Hopefully the next person who has to overhaul this code will at least have an easier time understanding what I thought I was doing!

Committer:
mjr
Date:
Fri Mar 17 22:01:47 2017 +0000
Revision:
54:2e181d51495a
Parent:
25:7c72828865f3
Comments

Who changed what in which revision?

UserRevisionLine numberNew contents of line
samux 8:335f2506f422 1 /* Copyright (c) 2010-2011 mbed.org, MIT License
samux 8:335f2506f422 2 *
samux 8:335f2506f422 3 * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software
samux 8:335f2506f422 4 * and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without
samux 8:335f2506f422 5 * restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
samux 8:335f2506f422 6 * distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
samux 8:335f2506f422 7 * Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
samux 8:335f2506f422 8 *
samux 8:335f2506f422 9 * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or
samux 8:335f2506f422 10 * substantial portions of the Software.
samux 8:335f2506f422 11 *
samux 8:335f2506f422 12 * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
samux 8:335f2506f422 13 * BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
samux 8:335f2506f422 14 * NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM,
samux 8:335f2506f422 15 * DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
samux 8:335f2506f422 16 * OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
samux 8:335f2506f422 17 */
samux 8:335f2506f422 18
samux 8:335f2506f422 19 #define NUMBER_OF_LOGICAL_ENDPOINTS (16)
samux 8:335f2506f422 20 #define NUMBER_OF_PHYSICAL_ENDPOINTS (NUMBER_OF_LOGICAL_ENDPOINTS * 2)
samux 8:335f2506f422 21
samux 8:335f2506f422 22 /* Define physical endpoint numbers */
samux 8:335f2506f422 23
samux 8:335f2506f422 24 /* Endpoint No. */
samux 8:335f2506f422 25 /* ---------------- */
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 26 #define EP0OUT (0)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 27 #define EP0IN (1)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 28 #define EP1OUT (2)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 29 #define EP1IN (3)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 30 #define EP2OUT (4)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 31 #define EP2IN (5)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 32 #define EP3OUT (6)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 33 #define EP3IN (7)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 34 #define EP4OUT (8)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 35 #define EP4IN (9)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 36 #define EP5OUT (10)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 37 #define EP5IN (11)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 38 #define EP6OUT (12)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 39 #define EP6IN (13)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 40 #define EP7OUT (14)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 41 #define EP7IN (15)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 42 #define EP8OUT (16)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 43 #define EP8IN (17)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 44 #define EP9OUT (18)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 45 #define EP9IN (19)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 46 #define EP10OUT (20)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 47 #define EP10IN (21)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 48 #define EP11OUT (22)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 49 #define EP11IN (23)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 50 #define EP12OUT (24)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 51 #define EP12IN (25)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 52 #define EP13OUT (26)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 53 #define EP13IN (27)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 54 #define EP14OUT (28)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 55 #define EP14IN (29)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 56 #define EP15OUT (30)
mbed_official 25:7c72828865f3 57 #define EP15IN (31)
samux 8:335f2506f422 58
samux 8:335f2506f422 59 /* Maximum Packet sizes */
samux 8:335f2506f422 60
samux 8:335f2506f422 61 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP0 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 62 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP1 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 63 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP2 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 64 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP3 (1023)
samux 8:335f2506f422 65 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP4 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 66 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP5 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 67 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP6 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 68 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP7 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 69 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP8 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 70 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP9 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 71 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP10 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 72 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP11 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 73 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP12 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 74 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP13 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 75 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP14 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 76 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP15 (64)
samux 8:335f2506f422 77
samux 8:335f2506f422 78 /* Generic endpoints - intended to be portable accross devices */
samux 8:335f2506f422 79 /* and be suitable for simple USB devices. */
samux 8:335f2506f422 80
samux 8:335f2506f422 81 /* Bulk endpoints */
samux 8:335f2506f422 82 #define EPBULK_OUT (EP2OUT)
samux 8:335f2506f422 83 #define EPBULK_IN (EP2IN)
samux 8:335f2506f422 84 /* Interrupt endpoints */
samux 8:335f2506f422 85 #define EPINT_OUT (EP1OUT)
samux 8:335f2506f422 86 #define EPINT_IN (EP1IN)
samux 8:335f2506f422 87 /* Isochronous endpoints */
samux 8:335f2506f422 88 #define EPISO_OUT (EP3OUT)
samux 8:335f2506f422 89 #define EPISO_IN (EP3IN)
samux 8:335f2506f422 90
samux 8:335f2506f422 91 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EPBULK (MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP2)
samux 8:335f2506f422 92 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EPINT (MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP1)
samux 8:335f2506f422 93 #define MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EPISO (MAX_PACKET_SIZE_EP3)