mbed library sources. Supersedes mbed-src.

Fork of mbed-dev by Umar Naeem

Revision:
160:d5399cc887bb
Parent:
149:156823d33999
--- a/platform/critical.h	Tue Feb 28 17:13:35 2017 +0000
+++ b/platform/critical.h	Tue Mar 14 16:40:56 2017 +0000
@@ -1,6 +1,3 @@
-
-/** \addtogroup platform */
-/** @{*/
 /*
  * Copyright (c) 2015-2016, ARM Limited, All Rights Reserved
  * SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
@@ -18,342 +15,10 @@
  * limitations under the License.
  */
 
-#ifndef __MBED_UTIL_CRITICAL_H__
-#define __MBED_UTIL_CRITICAL_H__
-
-#include <stdbool.h>
-#include <stdint.h>
-#include <stddef.h>
-
-#ifdef __cplusplus
-extern "C" {
-#endif
-
-
-/** Determine the current interrupts enabled state
-  *
-  * This function can be called to determine whether or not interrupts are currently enabled.
-  * \note
-  * NOTE:
-  * This function works for both cortex-A and cortex-M, although the underlyng implementation
-  * differs.
-  * @return true if interrupts are enabled, false otherwise
-  */
-bool core_util_are_interrupts_enabled(void);
-
-/** Mark the start of a critical section
-  *
-  * This function should be called to mark the start of a critical section of code.
-  * \note
-  * NOTES:
-  * 1) The use of this style of critical section is targetted at C based implementations.
-  * 2) These critical sections can be nested.
-  * 3) The interrupt enable state on entry to the first critical section (of a nested set, or single
-  *    section) will be preserved on exit from the section.
-  * 4) This implementation will currently only work on code running in privileged mode.
-  */
-void core_util_critical_section_enter(void);
-
-/** Mark the end of a critical section
-  *
-  * This function should be called to mark the end of a critical section of code.
-  * \note
-  * NOTES:
-  * 1) The use of this style of critical section is targetted at C based implementations.
-  * 2) These critical sections can be nested.
-  * 3) The interrupt enable state on entry to the first critical section (of a nested set, or single
-  *    section) will be preserved on exit from the section.
-  * 4) This implementation will currently only work on code running in privileged mode.
-  */
-void core_util_critical_section_exit(void);
-
-/**
- * Atomic compare and set. It compares the contents of a memory location to a
- * given value and, only if they are the same, modifies the contents of that
- * memory location to a given new value. This is done as a single atomic
- * operation. The atomicity guarantees that the new value is calculated based on
- * up-to-date information; if the value had been updated by another thread in
- * the meantime, the write would fail due to a mismatched expectedCurrentValue.
- *
- * Refer to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compare-and-set [which may redirect
- * you to the article on compare-and swap].
- *
- * @param  ptr                  The target memory location.
- * @param[in,out] expectedCurrentValue A pointer to some location holding the
- *                              expected current value of the data being set atomically.
- *                              The computed 'desiredValue' should be a function of this current value.
- *                              @Note: This is an in-out parameter. In the
- *                              failure case of atomic_cas (where the
- *                              destination isn't set), the pointee of expectedCurrentValue is
- *                              updated with the current value.
- * @param[in] desiredValue      The new value computed based on '*expectedCurrentValue'.
- *
- * @return                      true if the memory location was atomically
- *                              updated with the desired value (after verifying
- *                              that it contained the expectedCurrentValue),
- *                              false otherwise. In the failure case,
- *                              exepctedCurrentValue is updated with the new
- *                              value of the target memory location.
- *
- * pseudocode:
- * function cas(p : pointer to int, old : pointer to int, new : int) returns bool {
- *     if *p != *old {
- *         *old = *p
- *         return false
- *     }
- *     *p = new
- *     return true
- * }
- *
- * @Note: In the failure case (where the destination isn't set), the value
- * pointed to by expectedCurrentValue is still updated with the current value.
- * This property helps writing concise code for the following incr:
- *
- * function incr(p : pointer to int, a : int) returns int {
- *     done = false
- *     value = *p // This fetch operation need not be atomic.
- *     while not done {
- *         done = atomic_cas(p, &value, value + a) // *value gets updated automatically until success
- *     }
- *     return value + a
- * }
- */
-bool core_util_atomic_cas_u8(uint8_t *ptr, uint8_t *expectedCurrentValue, uint8_t desiredValue);
-
-/**
- * Atomic compare and set. It compares the contents of a memory location to a
- * given value and, only if they are the same, modifies the contents of that
- * memory location to a given new value. This is done as a single atomic
- * operation. The atomicity guarantees that the new value is calculated based on
- * up-to-date information; if the value had been updated by another thread in
- * the meantime, the write would fail due to a mismatched expectedCurrentValue.
- *
- * Refer to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compare-and-set [which may redirect
- * you to the article on compare-and swap].
- *
- * @param  ptr                  The target memory location.
- * @param[in,out] expectedCurrentValue A pointer to some location holding the
- *                              expected current value of the data being set atomically.
- *                              The computed 'desiredValue' should be a function of this current value.
- *                              @Note: This is an in-out parameter. In the
- *                              failure case of atomic_cas (where the
- *                              destination isn't set), the pointee of expectedCurrentValue is
- *                              updated with the current value.
- * @param[in] desiredValue      The new value computed based on '*expectedCurrentValue'.
- *
- * @return                      true if the memory location was atomically
- *                              updated with the desired value (after verifying
- *                              that it contained the expectedCurrentValue),
- *                              false otherwise. In the failure case,
- *                              exepctedCurrentValue is updated with the new
- *                              value of the target memory location.
- *
- * pseudocode:
- * function cas(p : pointer to int, old : pointer to int, new : int) returns bool {
- *     if *p != *old {
- *         *old = *p
- *         return false
- *     }
- *     *p = new
- *     return true
- * }
- *
- * @Note: In the failure case (where the destination isn't set), the value
- * pointed to by expectedCurrentValue is still updated with the current value.
- * This property helps writing concise code for the following incr:
- *
- * function incr(p : pointer to int, a : int) returns int {
- *     done = false
- *     value = *p // This fetch operation need not be atomic.
- *     while not done {
- *         done = atomic_cas(p, &value, value + a) // *value gets updated automatically until success
- *     }
- *     return value + a
- * }
- */
-bool core_util_atomic_cas_u16(uint16_t *ptr, uint16_t *expectedCurrentValue, uint16_t desiredValue);
+#ifndef MBED_OLD_CRITICAL_H
+#define MBED_OLD_CRITICAL_H
 
-/**
- * Atomic compare and set. It compares the contents of a memory location to a
- * given value and, only if they are the same, modifies the contents of that
- * memory location to a given new value. This is done as a single atomic
- * operation. The atomicity guarantees that the new value is calculated based on
- * up-to-date information; if the value had been updated by another thread in
- * the meantime, the write would fail due to a mismatched expectedCurrentValue.
- *
- * Refer to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compare-and-set [which may redirect
- * you to the article on compare-and swap].
- *
- * @param  ptr                  The target memory location.
- * @param[in,out] expectedCurrentValue A pointer to some location holding the
- *                              expected current value of the data being set atomically.
- *                              The computed 'desiredValue' should be a function of this current value.
- *                              @Note: This is an in-out parameter. In the
- *                              failure case of atomic_cas (where the
- *                              destination isn't set), the pointee of expectedCurrentValue is
- *                              updated with the current value.
- * @param[in] desiredValue      The new value computed based on '*expectedCurrentValue'.
- *
- * @return                      true if the memory location was atomically
- *                              updated with the desired value (after verifying
- *                              that it contained the expectedCurrentValue),
- *                              false otherwise. In the failure case,
- *                              exepctedCurrentValue is updated with the new
- *                              value of the target memory location.
- *
- * pseudocode:
- * function cas(p : pointer to int, old : pointer to int, new : int) returns bool {
- *     if *p != *old {
- *         *old = *p
- *         return false
- *     }
- *     *p = new
- *     return true
- * }
- *
- * @Note: In the failure case (where the destination isn't set), the value
- * pointed to by expectedCurrentValue is still updated with the current value.
- * This property helps writing concise code for the following incr:
- *
- * function incr(p : pointer to int, a : int) returns int {
- *     done = false
- *     value = *p // This fetch operation need not be atomic.
- *     while not done {
- *         done = atomic_cas(p, &value, value + a) // *value gets updated automatically until success
- *     }
- *     return value + a
- * }
- */
-bool core_util_atomic_cas_u32(uint32_t *ptr, uint32_t *expectedCurrentValue, uint32_t desiredValue);
+#warning critical.h has been replaced by mbed_critical.h, please update to mbed_critical.h [since mbed-os-5.3]
+#include "platform/mbed_critical.h"
 
-/**
- * Atomic compare and set. It compares the contents of a memory location to a
- * given value and, only if they are the same, modifies the contents of that
- * memory location to a given new value. This is done as a single atomic
- * operation. The atomicity guarantees that the new value is calculated based on
- * up-to-date information; if the value had been updated by another thread in
- * the meantime, the write would fail due to a mismatched expectedCurrentValue.
- *
- * Refer to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compare-and-set [which may redirect
- * you to the article on compare-and swap].
- *
- * @param  ptr                  The target memory location.
- * @param[in,out] expectedCurrentValue A pointer to some location holding the
- *                              expected current value of the data being set atomically.
- *                              The computed 'desiredValue' should be a function of this current value.
- *                              @Note: This is an in-out parameter. In the
- *                              failure case of atomic_cas (where the
- *                              destination isn't set), the pointee of expectedCurrentValue is
- *                              updated with the current value.
- * @param[in] desiredValue      The new value computed based on '*expectedCurrentValue'.
- *
- * @return                      true if the memory location was atomically
- *                              updated with the desired value (after verifying
- *                              that it contained the expectedCurrentValue),
- *                              false otherwise. In the failure case,
- *                              exepctedCurrentValue is updated with the new
- *                              value of the target memory location.
- *
- * pseudocode:
- * function cas(p : pointer to int, old : pointer to int, new : int) returns bool {
- *     if *p != *old {
- *         *old = *p
- *         return false
- *     }
- *     *p = new
- *     return true
- * }
- *
- * @Note: In the failure case (where the destination isn't set), the value
- * pointed to by expectedCurrentValue is still updated with the current value.
- * This property helps writing concise code for the following incr:
- *
- * function incr(p : pointer to int, a : int) returns int {
- *     done = false
- *     value = *p // This fetch operation need not be atomic.
- *     while not done {
- *         done = atomic_cas(p, &value, value + a) // *value gets updated automatically until success
- *     }
- *     return value + a
- * }
- */
-bool core_util_atomic_cas_ptr(void **ptr, void **expectedCurrentValue, void *desiredValue);
-
-/**
- * Atomic increment.
- * @param  valuePtr Target memory location being incremented.
- * @param  delta    The amount being incremented.
- * @return          The new incremented value.
- */
-uint8_t core_util_atomic_incr_u8(uint8_t *valuePtr, uint8_t delta);
-
-/**
- * Atomic increment.
- * @param  valuePtr Target memory location being incremented.
- * @param  delta    The amount being incremented.
- * @return          The new incremented value.
- */
-uint16_t core_util_atomic_incr_u16(uint16_t *valuePtr, uint16_t delta);
-
-/**
- * Atomic increment.
- * @param  valuePtr Target memory location being incremented.
- * @param  delta    The amount being incremented.
- * @return          The new incremented value.
- */
-uint32_t core_util_atomic_incr_u32(uint32_t *valuePtr, uint32_t delta);
-
-/**
- * Atomic increment.
- * @param  valuePtr Target memory location being incremented.
- * @param  delta    The amount being incremented in bytes.
- * @return          The new incremented value.
- *
- * @note The type of the pointer argument is not taken into account
- *       and the pointer is incremented by bytes.
- */
-void *core_util_atomic_incr_ptr(void **valuePtr, ptrdiff_t delta);
-
-/**
- * Atomic decrement.
- * @param  valuePtr Target memory location being decremented.
- * @param  delta    The amount being decremented.
- * @return          The new decremented value.
- */
-uint8_t core_util_atomic_decr_u8(uint8_t *valuePtr, uint8_t delta);
-
-/**
- * Atomic decrement.
- * @param  valuePtr Target memory location being decremented.
- * @param  delta    The amount being decremented.
- * @return          The new decremented value.
- */
-uint16_t core_util_atomic_decr_u16(uint16_t *valuePtr, uint16_t delta);
-
-/**
- * Atomic decrement.
- * @param  valuePtr Target memory location being decremented.
- * @param  delta    The amount being decremented.
- * @return          The new decremented value.
- */
-uint32_t core_util_atomic_decr_u32(uint32_t *valuePtr, uint32_t delta);
-
-/**
- * Atomic decrement.
- * @param  valuePtr Target memory location being decremented.
- * @param  delta    The amount being decremented in bytes.
- * @return          The new decremented value.
- *
- * @note The type of the pointer argument is not taken into account
- *       and the pointer is decremented by bytes
- */
-void *core_util_atomic_decr_ptr(void **valuePtr, ptrdiff_t delta);
-
-#ifdef __cplusplus
-} // extern "C"
 #endif
-
-
-#endif // __MBED_UTIL_CRITICAL_H__
-
-/** @}*/