Reputation: 41
I've been trying to implement a basic per-byte UART Rx Interrupt on a STM32F4 board using HAL skeleton code generated by STMCubeMX version 4.26.0
Quite simply - I want to receive a character in UART1 via an Rx interrupt and transmit it on UART 6
I have successfully implemented a polled version of what I want to achieve
uint8_t in_usart1[10];
HAL_StatusTypeDef usart1_status;
usart1_status = HAL_UART_Receive(&huart1, in_usart1, 1, 1);
if (usart1_status != HAL_TIMEOUT)
{
HAL_UART_Transmit(&huart6, in_usart1, 1, 100);
}
I've enabled the UART 1 NVIC interrupt in STMCubeMX and stm32f4xx_it.c contains the IRQ handler which I've added my own user handler to:
void USART1_IRQHandler(void)
{
/* USER CODE BEGIN USART1_IRQn 0 */
/* USER CODE END USART1_IRQn 0 */
HAL_UART_IRQHandler(&huart1);
/* USER CODE BEGIN USART1_IRQn 1 */
HAX_USART1_IRQHandler(&huart1); /* My Handler */
/* USER CODE END USART1_IRQn 1 */
}
I've seen lot's of commentary about UART_Receive_IT() - but I suspect this is based on older versions of HAL due to UART_Receive_IT() being defined in stm32f4xx_hal_uart.c
My suspicion is that I need to enable to interrupt / clear the interrupt flag as when I debug, USART1_IRQHandler() is NEVER called
Does any one have any code that demonstrates what I am trying to achieve? My google-foo has failed me
EDIT: I've gotten a little closer... In main.c I added (comments are existing code)
/* USER CODE BEGIN PV */
uint8_t rx_buffer;
/* USER CODE END PV */
...
/* USER CODE BEGIN 2 */
HAL_UART_Receive_IT(&huart1, (uint8_t *)rx_buffer, 10);
/* USER CODE END 2 */
And then created:
void HAL_UART_RxCpltCallback(UART_HandleTypeDef *huart)
{
if (huart->Instance == USART1)
{
HAL_UART_Transmit(&huart6, &rx_buffer, 1, 100);
}
}
Now the Rx interrupt gets fired - but it's a bit flakey on the USART6 Tx, and the Rx interrupt only gets fired once
Upvotes: 1
Views: 27561
Reputation: 41
For anybody stumbling across this question, the answer is embarrassingly simple. I have two UARTs - One I was using an Rx Interrupt, and the other using DMA.
Turns out the one I thought I had configured for Interrupt was actually configured for DMA and visa-versa...
In STMCubeMX - USART1 (RS485) has DMA Tx and DMA Rx enabled - USART6 (Debug - RS232) has global interrupt enabled
In main.c
/* USER CODE BEGIN 2 */
HAL_UART_Receive_IT(debug_uart(), debug_rx_buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
HAL_UART_Receive_DMA(rs485_uart(), rs485_rx_buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
/* USER CODE END 2 */
I have a user_main.c which has the following code:
#include <string.h>
#include "stm32f4xx_hal.h"
extern UART_HandleTypeDef huart1;
extern UART_HandleTypeDef huart6;
UART_HandleTypeDef *debug_uart(void)
{
return &huart6;
}
UART_HandleTypeDef *rs485_uart(void)
{
return &huart1;
}
#define BUFFER_SIZE 1
uint8_t debug_rx_buffer[BUFFER_SIZE];
uint8_t debug_tx_buffer[BUFFER_SIZE];
uint8_t rs485_rx_buffer[BUFFER_SIZE];
uint8_t rs485_tx_buffer[BUFFER_SIZE];
static void rs485_tx(uint8_t *tx_buffer, uint16_t len)
{
HAL_UART_Transmit_DMA(rs485_uart(), tx_buffer, len);
}
static void debug_tx(uint8_t *tx_buffer, uint16_t len)
{
HAL_UART_Transmit(debug_uart(), tx_buffer, len, 1000);
}
void HAL_UART_RxCpltCallback(UART_HandleTypeDef *huart)
{
if (huart == debug_uart())
{
memcpy(rs485_tx_buffer, debug_rx_buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
rs485_tx(rs485_tx_buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
HAL_UART_Receive_IT(debug_uart(), debug_rx_buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
}
else if (huart == rs485_uart())
{
memcpy(debug_tx_buffer, rs485_rx_buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
debug_tx(debug_tx_buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
HAL_UART_Receive_DMA(rs485_uart(), rs485_rx_buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
}
}
void HAL_UART_TxCpltCallback(UART_HandleTypeDef *huart)
{
if (huart == debug_uart())
{
}
else if (huart == rs485_uart())
{
}
}
void HAL_UART_TxHalfCpltCallback(UART_HandleTypeDef *huart)
{
}
The memcpy()'s may not be strictly required, but they do provide a level of isolation between all the buffers. Technically, there probably should be semaphores providing even more protection...
Note that I DO NOT use HAL_UART_Transmit_IT() for the debug UART - If you want to use HAL_UART_Transmit_IT (i.e. interrupt generated on completion of Tx), you will need to write code that handles transmission of characters from a circular buffer
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 637
Do not block HAL_UART_RxCpltCallback
for a long time! Just set a flag and check it and then send data from the main
function.
And rx_buffer
is variable so correct call HAL_UART_Receive_IT(&huart1, &rx_buffer, 1);
Upvotes: 2