- rename stall*guard to StallGuard (match name with the vendor)
- separate TMC2130 module from EEPROM (they do not need to know about each other at all)
- separate SGTHRS settings from motion - moved to globals like all other "global" parameters
- improved EEPROM storage for SGTHRS
While motion queuing is safe, code that relies on the current block
needs to run with the isr disabled.
Protect AbortPlannedMoves and CurPosition from isr' interference by
using a RAII guard.
Motion::SetMode(axis, mode) was incorrectly looping through all axes,
setting the same axis three times.
Fix this and introduce Motion::SetMode(mode) which actually loops
through all axes (see PR #110)
If the queue is full and a new move is queued, panic!
Introduce a new error code QUEUE_FULL to help diagnose situations where
the queue is handled improperly: likely one of the state machines not
waiting for the previous actions to finish.
PulseGen::PlanMove returns a boolean if the queue cannot be moved.
We could extend this to Motion::PlanMove, however all moves would then
have to check for this. Having a global check such as this ensures
we never ignore such situation.
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
Move motion.Step() directly inside the __AVR__ code, silencing an unused
variable warning.
Calling motion.Step() without getting or setting the timer is not useful
anyway.
Avoid calling PulseGen::Step() on idle axes by checking for a non-zero
queue size (which is more efficient to compute).
Increase stepTimerQuantum to 128us to ensure acceleration can be
computed in realtime for 3 axes at the same time.
Fix the logic of the static assertion, which was flipped: we need to
create slices larger than the maximal step frequency in order to ensure
no axis is starved while moving.
This is a tentative/crude implementation of an Init and ISR for the MMU
in order to check the motion API.
We remove the "extern void Isr", declaring it "static inline" instead.
We need to inline the ISR here in order to avoid the function call.
Include the missing speed_table data in the executable. This bumps the
code size to ~60% of the flash.
Implemement motion::Init to setup the ISR and timers, and replace the
call in main from tmc::Init to motion::Init. Motion will init each
driver every time the axis is enabled, so there should be no need for
a global module initialization (we need SPI, but this is initialized
earlier on by it's own module anyway).
The timer is currently setup without any HAL or proper TIMER1 wrapper.
This is to be improved later.
The real MMU unit seems to slow down quite a bit during acceleration.
At this point we need to inline some methods in PulseGen to avoid
overhead, however this breaks the stubs.
This matches PulseGen::Position() and avoids confusion around the term
"current": Position() returns the head position in the queue, not the
"live" axis position.
We have PulseGen::CurPosition() now for this purpose, although we don't
expose it to Motion yet.
Motion::Full() (without a specific axis) is counter-productive.
When planning new moves the axis needs to be known beforehand, so it
might be as well be given to Full() to check the proper queue.
Implement Motion::SetEnabled (for symmetry with TMC2130::SetEnabled).
Rename DisableAxis to Disable and use the new SetEnabled. This makes the
member names more consistent.
- Remove the combined PlanMove(a,b,c,rate) call. If we allow the units
of the various motors to be changed at compile time, the unit of
rate can vary between axes.
- Build PlanMove on top of the absolute PlanMoveTo.
- Add required stubs for TMC2130.
- Allow each axis mode to be set independently, since we have this
feature for free anyway.
- Rework internals to use PulseGen data types and structs.