GEX thesis source code, full text, references
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
gex-thesis/ch.freertos.tex

43 lines
5.0 KiB

7 years ago
\chapter{FreeRTOS}
7 years ago
FreeRTOS is a free, open-source real time operating system kernel that has been ported to over 30 microcontroller architectures. The kernel provides a scheduler and implements queues, semaphores and mutexes that are used for message passing between concurrent tasks and for synchronization. FreeRTOS is compact designed to be easy to understand; it's written in C with the exception of some architecture-specific routines that use assembly.
FreeRTOS is used in GEX for its synchronization objects and queues that make it easy to safely pass messages from USB interrupts to a working thread that processes them and sends back responses. Similar mechanism is used to handle external interrupts.
\section{Basic FreeRTOS Concepts and Functions}
\subsection{Tasks}
Threads in FreeRTOS are called \textit{tasks}. Each task is assigned a memory area to use as its stack space, and a structure with it's name, saved context and other metadata used by the kernel. A context includes the program counter, stack pointer and other register values. Task switching is done by saving and restoring this context by manipulating the values on stack before leaving and interrupt.
At start-up the firmware initializes the kernel, registers tasks to run and starts the scheduler. From this point onward the scheduler is in control and runs the tasks using a round robin scheme. Which task should run is primarily determined by their priority numbers, but there are other factors. FreeRTOS supports both static and dynamic object creation, including registering new tasks at run-time.
\subsubsection{Task Run States}
Tasks can be in one of four states: Suspended, Ready, Blocked, Running. The Suspended state does not normally occur in a task's life cycle, it's entered and left using API calls on demand. A task is in the Ready state when it can run, but is currently paused because a higher priority task is running. It enters the Running state when the scheduler switches to it. A Running task can wait for a synchronization object (e.g. a mutex) to be available. At this point it enters a Blocked state and the scheduler runs the next Ready task. When no tasks can run, the Idle Task takes control; it can either enter a sleep state to save power, or wait in an infinite loop until another task is available.
\subsubsection{Task Switching and Interrupts}
Task switching occurs periodically in a SysTick interrupt, usually every 1\,ms. After one tick of run time, the running task is paused (enters Ready state), or continues to run if no higher priority task is available. If a high priority task waits for an object and this is made available in an interrupt, the previously running task is paused and the waiting task is resumed immediately (enters the Running state).
Only a subset of the FreeRTOS API can be accessed from interrupt routines, for example it's not possible to use the delay function or wait for an object with a timeout, because the SysTick interrupt which increments the tick counter has the lowest priority and couldn't run. This is by design to prevent unexpected context switching in nested interrupts.
FreeRTOS uses a \textit{priority inheritance} mechanism to prevent situations where a high priority task waits for an object held by a lower priority task (called \textit{priority inversion}). The blocking task's priority is temporarily raised to the level of the blocked high priority task so it can finish faster and release the held object. Its priority is then degraded back to the original value. When the lower priority task itself is blocked, the same process can be repeated.
\subsection{Synchronization Objects}
FreeRTOS provides binary and counting semaphores, mutexes and queues.
Binary semaphores can be used for task notifications, e.g. a task waits for a semaphore to be set by an interrupt when a byte is received on the serial port. This makes the task Ready and if it has a higher priority than the previously running task, it's immediately resumed to process the event.
Counting semaphores are used to represent available resources. A pool of resources (e.g. DMA channels) is accompanied by a counting semaphore, so that tasks can wait for a resource to become available in the pool and then subtract the semaphore value. After finishing with a resource, the semaphore is incremented again and another task can use it.
Mutexes, unlike semaphores, must be taken and released in the same thread (task). They're used to guard exclusive access to a resource, such as transmitting on the serial port. When a mutex is taken, a task that wishes to use it enters Blocked state and is resumed once the mutex becomes available and it can take it.
Queues are used for passing messages between tasks, or from interrupts to tasks. Both sending and receiving queue messages can block until the operation becomes possible.
In GEX, mutexes and semaphores are used for sending messages to the PC, and a queue is used for processing received bytes and to send messages from interrupts, because it's not possible to block on a mutex or semaphore while inside an interrupt routine.
% TODO diagrams, figures