* Update to 2.0.0 SDK
* Board type needs to be set before earliest SDK setup
* Platform includes update
* Boot2 files
* Simple compilation issues
* Build and link
* PIO rebuild with version
* Newlib wrapper update
* Force inclusion of runtime_init_* fcns
The linker was dropping all references to the library's included
runtime_init_xxx functions and hence things like the IRQ vector
table and mutexes and alarms weren't properly set up leading to
instant crashes on start up..
Explicitly call out one function from the object file stored in
the .A to force the inclusion of all the functions. May be a better
way, heppy to hear any ideas.
* Fix SPI GPIO calls
* Fix Ethernet GPIO
* Remove SDK warnings
Remove the skipped error messages once the following PR merged:
https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-sdk/pull/1786
* BTStack moved SBC encode/decode paths
* Platform.IO fixes
* BT No longer has special absolute mouse
* Rebuild and update OTA
* Rebuild BearSSL, too
* Update liker file to latest SDK
* Clean up libpicocmake
* Clean up LWIP/BT library names
* Adapted all libraries to support multiprotocol HID over BT & BLE
* Added ATT DB depending on setup; still no success with working connection
* Added hids_device from BTStack develop branch as override
* Fixing the GATT handle patching, added working ATT DB
* ran astyle on example
* Updates in BLE implementation; WORKING! (but only if all are activated). Removed sdkoverride again, doesn't work.
* Moved ATT DB handles to correct places
* Finally functioning for Mouse+KBD+Joy, and each individual
* Cleaned up code & ran astyle
* Added sdkoverrides to pull develop functions from BTSTack
* Changed a few typos by BTStack to run codespell successfully
* Ran astyle on sdkoverride files
* Added some #if guards for including BTSTack file only if BT is enabled
* Fixed Feature Report value characteristics handle assignment; fixed too long HID report
* Ran astyle
Move the Joystick, Keyboard, and Mouse into a base class which handles
the operation/input, and a subclass which will implement the reporting
as a HID device via USB, Bluetooth Classic, or Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE).
Reduce copies of library code and makes maintainability much better.
* Update to Pico-SDK v1.5
* Hook in pico_rand, use ioctl to set ipv6 allmulti
* Move into PicoSDK LWIP mutex, hack timer sizes
* Utilize much of the PicoSDK infrastructure for WiFi
* Add WiFi::begin(ssid, pass, bssid)
* WiFiMulti to use BSSID, make more robust
WiFiMulti will now be more aggressive and try all matching SSIDs, in order
of RSSI, using the BSSID to identify individual APs in a mesh.
Before, if the highest RSSI AP didn't connect, it would fail immediately.
Now, it will go down the list, ordered by RSSI, to attempt to get a link.
* Add Bluetooth support from Pico-SDK
Able to build and run the HID Keyboard Demo from the Arduino IDE, almost
as-is.
Will probably need to make BT configurable. Enabling BT on a plain WiFi
sketch uses 50KB of flash and 16KB of RAM even if no BT is used.
* Separate picow libs, BT through menus, example
Build normal Pico.a and 4 different options for PicoW IP/BT configuration.
Use IP=>IP/Bluetooth menu to select between options.
* CMakefile rationalization
* Move BT TLV(pairing) out of last 2 flash sectors
The pairing keys for BT are stored at the end of flash by default, but
we use the last sector of flash for EPROM and the penultimate one for
the filesystem. Overwriting those in BT could cause some real exciting
crashes down the line.
Move the store to an app-build specific address using a dummy const
array to allocate space in the application image itself.
* PicoBluetoothHID with BT Mouse, Joystick, Keyboard
Add simple Bluetooth Classic HID helper function and port the existing
USB HID devices to it. Port their examples.
* Protect BT key storage from multicore
* Add short-n-sweet Bluetooth documents
* Add Bluetooth Serial port library
* Turn off BT when the BT libraries exit