• Coding a bare-metal readline() function.

    Rebecca Buckingham02/10/2019 at 02:58 0 comments

    One of my goals is to have some sort of console-like connection to the processor so I can run commands or even code interactively.  

    To do this, however, I need code running on the pi that can listen over serial for commands and respond to them.

    I decided to write a bare-metal compatible readline() function.  Basically, it is to allow editing of  typed-in commands before processing them.  Additionally, GNU readline adds history to the command line, so you can press CTRL+P and get the previous line.

    I first prototyped this in Ruby, and then today, I've translated the Ruby code into C++.  I've had to restart the code over and over, so instead of testing on the pi, I'm running against a Teensy 3.6.

    Moving the code from the Teensy to the Pi will be pretty easy.

    Next step: write a simple command shell.

  • Circle Up and Running

    Rebecca Buckingham02/05/2019 at 01:11 1 comment

    I've got my development environment up & running now.  

    I'm using the gcc-arm-none-eabi-7-2018-q2-update toolchain from Arm's website on my Mac.  Kind of happy about the Mac part just because it's nice to not to have to run say, Linux in a VM for this.

    Next step will probably be to write some preliminary code using the Circle library.

  • Researching Circle

    Rebecca Buckingham01/29/2019 at 01:04 0 comments

    So, I already have a Pi 3B and a Teensy Audio Board.  I ordered my touchscreen today on Amazon.

    While I'm waiting for that to get here, I am going to start playing with the Circle library and see how it goes.