This reverts commit 5aeedc4f3a, reversing
changes made to 3d80e414ff.
This merge breaks every uart driver in all BSPs. @bright-pan , is there
any way to get this done without breaking existing code?
When forwarding rx/tx callback from the underlaying device(pipe), the
"dev" argument should be the portal. So the portal callback could think
itself as called.
Portal is a device that connect devices. Currently, you can only connect
pipes in portal. Pipes are unidirectional. But with portal, you can
construct a bidirectional device with two pipes.
Some reader(FinSh again) would like to block on a semaphore which is
released in rx_indicate. So we should invoke rx_indicate in
_rt_pipe_resume_reader.
The previous implementation will always blocks the reader/writer.
However, at least FinSh would expect the device to be nonblocking ---
read should return 0 when there is no data in it.
RT_RINGBUFFER_SIZE could mean "the size of the whole buffer", "the size
of the empty space" or "the size of the data". Moreover, it's never a
micro anymore. Change it to rt_ringbuffer_data_len before it's too late.
Also, RT_RINGBUFFER_EMPTY is changed to rt_ringbuffer_space_len.
This provide the possibility that allocate the buffer of the ringbuffer
on a specific region, instead of always mallocing it. It also bring us
the benefit of using pipe device on the systems without heap.
When the core received an USB_MSG_PLUG_OUT event, it will stop all the
classes. This make a chance that the classes could get rid off doing
useless stuff while the USB cable is plugged out.
When the USB got RESET packet from the host and the address is setup,
all the classes will got reset. The reset is done by class stop and than
class run. So the classes should reset their internal state in
class_{run,stop}.
Besides, the USB device driver could post a USB_MSG_RESET message on
every RESET packet.
Although currently the only message send to the queue is struct
udev_msg, in order to keep backward compacity and for extention in the
future, we set the size of message to 32.