* Switches HAL to fixed length signed integers, and adds our own HAL_Bool type
* Replaces HAL Floats with Doubles
Doubles are just as fast as floats with optimizations turned on, so
switches to all doubles. All made doubles for consistency.
* Prepends HAL/ to HAL include files. Also fixes some range errors
Also added scripts for EOF newline management and for removing trailing whitespace. configure.bat was rewritten to use CRLF line endings. Documentation for the existing scripts was also improved.
HAL Port is using a special handle, where the module and pin are bit
shifted straight into the handle. This is one of the few special cases
we have, but for the way port is used it is much cleaner and uses much
less memory. Plus it is generic and not specific to one type.
Internally, the linked list now uses shared_ptrs instead of raw
pointers. In addition, in the WPILib the notifier handle is now made
atomic. Then before the class is destructed, the handle is now set to 0.
This should help solve one of the existing race conditions. A 0 handle
is correctly handled down at the HAL level.
In case of Spontaneous wake ups, we should be checking a condition
variable as well.
Note that we can not use the existing m_newControlData, as that has a
possible race condition with existing user code that it does not look
like we could work around.
Split to match the new headers. Uses a namespace 'hal' for internal functions and globals.
SPIAccumulator merged back into SPI header, as it was not a good split. Analog
accumulator will move back to analog input when the analog split is done.
* Replaced include guards with #pragma once
* All source files now have exactly one newline appended
Some files had either two newlines at the end or none (which isn't POSIX compliant). This patch fixes that.
Subsections are alphabetized according to lexographic ordering. Also, HAL includes were moved from headers to source files where possible. This change may cause user code which uses HAL functionality and does not include the relevant HAL header (since it may have been provided by another WPILib header) to fail to compile.
This is a follow-up of 3cd1253. A C++ program was written to automate the license update originally. That program was translated to Python so it can be kept in the repository and run when needed. It has been tested on Windows using the standard Python 3 installation and on Linux.
The original version skipped files that had "//" at the beginning since most were files that should be excluded. The relevant files are now in an exclusion list and the rest are processed normally. The .hpp file extension has been added as well. The script rewrote CompressorJNI.cpp to remove the carriage returns from its line endings.
The Digital and Analog headers (and the implementations, but that will
be moved over later) are just too big and congested. This splits those
headers, and then changes the few things that needed to be changed in
WPILib to get the code working again. No function changes were made in
this commit.
CANJaguar is the only motor controller using sync groups, so that feature doesn't belong in an interface used by all motor controllers. If teams want to use sync groups, they should cast to the appropriate motor controller type themselves.
First part of the HAL changes. Returns -1 to 1 for joysticks instead of
-128 to 127. Implemented by replacing the old structure with a new
structure that uses floats instead of shorts.
Currently, about 5ms of every 20ms loop the DS thread would hold
the mutex, while grabbing data. During this time, and call to grab
joystick data would be blocked. This change grabs the joystick data
to a cache, and then grabs the mutex and moves the data references
around. This is much more efficient then the old code, and gives
teams more of their teleop loop time back for use.
Another major change this does is use preallocated arrays when entering
the JNI. Previously every JNI DS call would allocate an entire new array.
With a GC'd language where those arrays go on the heap, thats a problem,
and creates tons of garbage. That garbage is no longer created anymore,
as all arrays and byte buffers sent to JNI in the DS are preallocated.
In addition, GetJoystickName was always returning joystick 0 data, which
this fixes.