The acceleration_rate should really by a premultiplication by 1<<24 so
that the division in Step() (while calculating the acc_step_rate) can be
computed again with a right shift.
This was incorrectly changed to F_CPU, which was close enough but would
cause the acceleration to be always slighly slower than expected.
Fix the ratio, but keep the multiplication in fixed-point to avoid a
float conversion.
Correctly compute both the number of steps and direction when
under/overflowing the current position by performing a relative move.
This makes a repeated PlanMove() _always_ perform the move correcly,
even when the upper-level code might require to handle the overflow
itself for measurement.
Add tests for this condition by exposing the internal CurBlockShift() to
the motion unit tests.
Previously it looked like only the active block has been discarded
which worked most of the time, since we only planned single moves.
But with introduction of PlanLongMove in one of the last commits
this is not true anymore.
Allow to chain moves by adding one extra parameter to the PlanMove[to]
functions: ending speed.
A move will always be accelerated from the last speed towards end ending
speed. The following:
PlanMove(100._mm, 50._mm_s, 50._mm_s);
PlanMove(200._mm, 100._mm_s);
Will first move the axis 100mm, accelerating towards 50mm/s, then
accelerate again to 100mm/s. The move will for then decelerate towards a
full stop after reaching 300mm in total.
Acceleration can be changed for each segment, so that a custom
acceleration curve can be created:
SetAcceleration(10._mm_s2);
PlanMove(100._mm, 50._mm_s, 50._mm_s);
SetAcceleration(100._mm_s2);
PlanMove(100._mm, 50._mm_s, 50._mm_s);
The ending speed might not always be reached, depending on the current
acceleration settings. The new function "Rate()" will return the ending
feedrate of the last move, if necessary.
AbortPlannedMoves accepts a new "halt" parameter to control how moves
will be chanined when interrupting the current move. By default
(halt=true) the move is completely interrupted.
When halt=false is requested, a subsequent move will be chained starting
at the currently aborted velocity. This allows to chain moves in reponse
to events, for example to accelerate the pulley without stopping as soon
as the FINDA is triggered, it's sufficient to interrupt the current move
followed by a new one:
PlanMove(maximum_loading_lenght, slow_feedrate);
... wait for PINDA trigger ...
AbortPlannedMoves(true);
PlanMove(bowden_lenght, fast_feedrate);
will seamlessy continue loading and transition to the fast feedrate.
Jerk control has been simplified. It now handles only the maximal
velocity change of the last segment, which doesn't require reverse
planning.
Add a new parameter "halt" (default to true) to control the stopping
behavior:
- halt=true: no subsequent moves will be planned, motions stops abruptly
- half=false: a new move will be chained after the current one
CurPosition() returns the live axis position, which in this
implementation is inherently expensive to compute.
This shouldn't be required for the MMU, but it /will/ come in handy to
check for the axis position/s in Motion tests.
Since scheduling a move on a block which is being executed will jolt the
motors, be extra-safe and perform an extra lower-level check before
committing even if the caller is responsible.
Return the status, which can be useful to build a simple busy loop.