* don't enable ipv6 by default due to privacy concerns
* move list of board support for ipv6 to socketpool documentation
* removed wifi.supports_ipvx properties
* throw an exception when start_dhcp_client(ipv6=True) but not supported
For ESP32C3/S2/S3 IDFv5 exposes new internal temperature API which is
different to the base ESP32, IDFv4.
Thanks to @robert-hh for cleaner code and testing sensor capability in
these devices.
See discussion #10443.
Signed-off-by: Rick Sorensen <rick.sorensen@gmail.com>
In the case where an OUT control transfer triggers with wLength==0 (i.e.
all data sent in the SETUP phase, and no additional data phase) the
callbacks were previously implemented to return b"" (i.e. an empty buffer
for the data phase).
However this didn't actually work as intended because b"" can't provide a
RW buffer (needed for OUT transfers with a data phase to write data into),
so actually the endpoint would stall.
The symptom was often that the device process the request (if processing
it in the SETUP phase when all information was already available), but the
host sees the endpoint stall and eventually returns an error.
This commit changes the behaviour so returning True from the SETUP phase of
a control transfer queues a zero length status response.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
It is enabled on:
* SAMD51 boards with 1MB flash (SKU ending in 20A)
* Feather RP2040 DVI. Others have PIO usb host.
* All ESP32 boards.
* All nRF boards
Fixes#8676
This commit implements the 'e' half-float format: 10-bit mantissa, 5-bit
exponent. It uses native _Float16 if supported by the compiler, otherwise
uses custom bitshifting encoding/decoding routines.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Urlichs <matthias@urlichs.de>
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This new machine-module driver provides a "USBDevice" singleton object and
a shim TinyUSB "runtime" driver that delegates the descriptors and all of
the TinyUSB callbacks to Python functions. This allows writing arbitrary
USB devices in pure Python. It's also possible to have a base built-in
USB device implemented in C (eg CDC, or CDC+MSC) and a Python USB device
added on top of that.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Prior to this commit, the pin defined for power would be used by the
esp_idf driver to reset the PHY. That worked, but sometimes the MDIO
configuration started before the power was fully settled, leading to an
error.
With the change in this commit, the power for the PHY is independently
enabled in network_lan.c with a 100ms delay to allow the power to settle.
A separate define for a reset pin is provided, even if the PHY reset
pin is rarely connected.
Fixes issue #14013.
Signed-off-by: robert-hh <robert@hammelrath.com>
The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit
d5df6cd44a. The original reason for this was
to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions
become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so
one could do function size comparison and other things.
This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and
heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when
they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when
fully optimised.
So the macro does not have much use and it's simpler to just remove it.
Then you know exactly what it's doing. For example, newcomers don't have
to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is
also less "loud" with a lowercase static.
One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with
`STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`.
Methodology for this commit was:
1) git ls-files | egrep '\.[ch]$' | \
xargs sed -Ei "s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/"
2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in
comments and changing those back.
3) "git-grep STATIC docs/", manually fixed those cases.
4) "rg -t python STATIC", manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>