2 FreeRTOS V7.4.1 - Copyright (C) 2013 Real Time Engineers Ltd.
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4 FEATURES AND PORTS ARE ADDED TO FREERTOS ALL THE TIME. PLEASE VISIT
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5 http://www.FreeRTOS.org TO ENSURE YOU ARE USING THE LATEST VERSION.
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7 ***************************************************************************
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9 * FreeRTOS tutorial books are available in pdf and paperback. *
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10 * Complete, revised, and edited pdf reference manuals are also *
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13 * Purchasing FreeRTOS documentation will not only help you, by *
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14 * ensuring you get running as quickly as possible and with an *
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15 * in-depth knowledge of how to use FreeRTOS, it will also help *
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16 * the FreeRTOS project to continue with its mission of providing *
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17 * professional grade, cross platform, de facto standard solutions *
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18 * for microcontrollers - completely free of charge! *
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20 * >>> See http://www.FreeRTOS.org/Documentation for details. <<< *
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22 * Thank you for using FreeRTOS, and thank you for your support! *
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24 ***************************************************************************
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27 This file is part of the FreeRTOS distribution.
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29 FreeRTOS is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
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30 the terms of the GNU General Public License (version 2) as published by the
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31 Free Software Foundation AND MODIFIED BY the FreeRTOS exception.
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33 >>>>>>NOTE<<<<<< The modification to the GPL is included to allow you to
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34 distribute a combined work that includes FreeRTOS without being obliged to
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35 provide the source code for proprietary components outside of the FreeRTOS
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38 FreeRTOS is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
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39 WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
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40 FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more
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41 details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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42 and the FreeRTOS license exception along with FreeRTOS; if not it can be
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43 viewed here: http://www.freertos.org/a00114.html and also obtained by
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44 writing to Real Time Engineers Ltd., contact details for whom are available
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45 on the FreeRTOS WEB site.
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49 ***************************************************************************
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51 * Having a problem? Start by reading the FAQ "My application does *
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52 * not run, what could be wrong?" *
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54 * http://www.FreeRTOS.org/FAQHelp.html *
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56 ***************************************************************************
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59 http://www.FreeRTOS.org - Documentation, books, training, latest versions,
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60 license and Real Time Engineers Ltd. contact details.
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62 http://www.FreeRTOS.org/plus - A selection of FreeRTOS ecosystem products,
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63 including FreeRTOS+Trace - an indispensable productivity tool, and our new
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64 fully thread aware and reentrant UDP/IP stack.
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66 http://www.OpenRTOS.com - Real Time Engineers ltd license FreeRTOS to High
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67 Integrity Systems, who sell the code with commercial support,
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68 indemnification and middleware, under the OpenRTOS brand.
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70 http://www.SafeRTOS.com - High Integrity Systems also provide a safety
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71 engineered and independently SIL3 certified version for use in safety and
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72 mission critical applications that require provable dependability.
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75 #include "FreeRTOSConfig.h"
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77 #define portCONTEXT_SIZE 132
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78 #define portEPC_STACK_LOCATION 124
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79 #define portSTATUS_STACK_LOCATION 128
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81 /******************************************************************/
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82 .macro portSAVE_CONTEXT
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84 /* Make room for the context. First save the current status so we can
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85 manipulate it, and the cause and EPC registers so we capture their
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86 original values in case of interrupt nesting. */
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88 addiu sp, sp, -portCONTEXT_SIZE
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89 mfc0 k1, _CP0_STATUS
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91 /* Also save s6 and s5 so we can use them during this interrupt. Any
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92 nesting interrupts should maintain the values of these registers
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96 sw k1, portSTATUS_STACK_LOCATION(sp)
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98 /* Enable interrupts above the current priority. */
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103 /* s5 is used as the frame pointer. */
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106 /* Check the nesting count value. */
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107 la k0, uxInterruptNesting
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110 /* If the nesting count is 0 then swap to the the system stack, otherwise
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111 the system stack is already being used. */
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115 /* Swap to the system stack. */
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116 la sp, xISRStackTop
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119 /* Increment and save the nesting count. */
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123 /* s6 holds the EPC value, this is saved after interrupts are re-enabled. */
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126 /* Re-enable interrupts. */
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127 mtc0 k1, _CP0_STATUS
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129 /* Save the context into the space just created. s6 is saved again
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130 here as it now contains the EPC value. No other s registers need be
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150 sw s6, portEPC_STACK_LOCATION(s5)
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153 /* s6 is used as a scratch register. */
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159 /* Update the task stack pointer value if nesting is zero. */
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160 la s6, uxInterruptNesting
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166 /* Save the stack pointer. */
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167 la s6, uxSavedTaskStackPointer
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172 /******************************************************************/
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173 .macro portRESTORE_CONTEXT
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175 /* Restore the stack pointer from the TCB. This is only done if the
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176 nesting count is 1. */
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177 la s6, uxInterruptNesting
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182 la s6, uxSavedTaskStackPointer
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185 /* Restore the context. */
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191 /* s6 is loaded as it was used as a scratch register and therefore saved
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192 as part of the interrupt context. */
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213 /* Protect access to the k registers, and others. */
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216 /* Decrement the nesting count. */
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217 la k0, uxInterruptNesting
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222 lw k0, portSTATUS_STACK_LOCATION(s5)
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223 lw k1, portEPC_STACK_LOCATION(s5)
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225 /* Leave the stack how we found it. First load sp from s5, then restore
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226 s5 from the stack. */
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229 addiu sp, sp, portCONTEXT_SIZE
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231 mtc0 k0, _CP0_STATUS
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