* dynamic WiFi.hostname("newname")
* WiFi.hostname() back to String return type
* no silent hostname fix but proceed with debug message and returning false
* Add full gdb support with uart/Serial integration
* Fix GDB merge errors
* Update to unpatched GDB protocol specification
It appears that Espressif patched the open source xtensa GDB port in
order to build their old GDB executable and their old gdbstub (basically
removing any register in a generic xtensa and only leaving those
present in the chip they synthesized). Their GDBStub also assumed this
behavior.
Unpatched upstream GNU GDB now expects all the registers in
xtensa-config.c to be sent/read on a 'g' command. Change the GDB stub
to send "xxxxxxxx"s (legal per the spec) for unimplemented registers.
This makes the 'g' response much longer, but it's results are cached
and in an interactive debugger it isn't noticeable.
* Fix .iram.literal to come before .iram.text for GDB
* Move functions to flash, call using wrappers
All functions which are not interrupt or exception called are now in
flash. A small IRAM wrapper enables flash when processing main GDB ops
by calling Cache_Read_Enable_New() and then jumping to the main flash
code. This seems to work for catching exceptions, data and code breaks,
and Ctrl-C.
The UART ISR handler and exception handler register-saving bits of
code in ASM are still in IRAM.
GDB IRAM usage is now about 670 bytes.
* Remove LWIP2 builder commit
* Add documentation and gdbstub_init header
Add some simple GDB documentation to the main tree showing a worked
example.
Adds the definition of `void gdbstub_init()` to <GDBStub.h>
* Clean up GDB include and library dir
Replace GDBstub.h with the version in the internal/ directory, and
adjust stub code accordingly. This way, only one copy of a file called
"GDBstub.h" will exist.
Update the gdbcommands and replace the obsolete ESPRESSIF readme with
@kylefleming's version since we're mainly doing serial, not TCP,
connected debugging.
Bump the library rev. number since this is a pretty big functionality
change.
Minor documentation tweak.
* Undo much of UART refactoring, set fifo IRQ to 16
Remove the refactoring of pin control and other little things not directly
related to GDB processing. Should greatly reduce the diff size in uart.c.
Should also remove any register value changes (intended or otherwise)
introduced in the original PR from @kylefleming.
Set the FIFO interrupt to 16 chars when in GDB mode, matching the latest
UART configuration for highest speed.
* Add architecture comments, cleanup uart.c code
Comments added to UART.c trying to explain (as best as I understand it)
the changes done to support GDB and how they interact with standard
operation.
Fix the uart_uninit to stop the ISR and then free appropriately.
Fix uart_isr_handle_data (GDB's shim for sending chars to the 8266 app)
to do the exact same thing as the standard UART handler including set
the overflow properly and either discard or overwrite in that case.
Fix serial reception when GDB enabled by enabling the user recv ISR.
Remove commented attributes from gdbstub, leftover from the move to
flash.
General logic cleanup per comments in the PR.
* Also set the UART flags for HW error in GDB
Ensure we also check the UART flags and set the uart status
appropriately when in GDB mode.
There is a bug in the BearSSL PEM decoder when Windows EOLs (\r\n) are
passed in. Avoid the issue by silenly discarding \rs as they are read
from the PEM source in the C code, to keep my sanity by avoiding reworking
the pseudo-Forth parser code.
Fixes#5591
PR #5538 made exceptions disabled by default and changed some file names
which didn't get updated in the linker file, resulting in exceptions ending up
back in IRAM.
Scripts, makefiles, and users who do no changes will not have exceptions
enabled during builds. This should avoid the sketch inflation issue for
users who are space constrained, while allowing users who care about
exceptions to enable them through the IDE.
The new non-exception libstdc++ was not referenced in the linker script,
allowing it to end up in IRAM when not needed. Add the line to match
and move it into IROM where it belongs.
* Keep signing commands in platform.txt on release
The boards packager was deleting what was at the time it was written
unused lines in fht platform.txt file before deploying to Arduino.
One of these lines is now needed for signing to work, so don't delete
it.
Also, explicitly call "python signing.py" because it looks like Arduino
is sanitizing/removing executable bits on files when extracting from
boards manager installations.
Fixes#5483
* Create the build subdir, if needed, for autosign
If the temporary build/core directory isn't available, make it in order
that Updater.cpp will see the generated signing header and not the one
in the main core.
* lwip2: better handling of ipv4_addr/t type + 3 sntp servers
* bump lwip2 version
* Only with FEATURES=1: 3 sntp servers and AutoIP enabled (169.254 when dhcp server fails)
* Only with FEATURES=1: 3 sntp servers and AutoIP enabled (169.254 when dhcp server fails)
* local CI runner: select build type
* new ipv4_addr/t definition makes things easier for IPAddress
* update local CI runner
* lwip2 changes
* lwip2: port esp-ping and espconn
Remove the -fno-jump-tables since the new toolchain places these tables
in ROM now. Rebuild using the toolchain. Saves 1-3KB of flash and
has 0 RAM impact plus may make certain bits marginally faster by using
a LUT instead of a if-else-else chain.
The complete toolchain, including mkspiffs, esptool, C, C++, newlib,
and others (BearSSL excluded) is now built and uploaded with a single
command to ensure repeatability and minimize manual mistakes. All
OSes and architectures are built at a time.
Update to 2.5.0-2 throught the chain.
* Make exceptions a configurable menu
Add a menu, Exceptions, which allows exceptions to be disabled for ROM
sensitive scripts. Default is enabled.
* Update to latest JSON builder
* Fix the template.json with latest core patches
* Add 64-bit %ll printf format support
Adds support for %lld, %llx, etc. 64-bit integer printing, useful
for logging timestamps and other things.
Fixes#5430
* Remove unwanted updated JSON
The packages JSON file which includes the boards, tools, etc. and needs to
have consistent formatting to be reproducible. The current boards.txt.py
uses a REGEX to string-replace a bit of it, but that bit has a different
indent than the rest of the file.
Use Python's JSON writer to format the whole file repeatably.
* Add %z and %x to printf backend
%z is a C99 format used for size_t and was not included in any printf.
On the 8266 it's a no-op as size_t==int, so ignore it and things just
work.
%x lowercase support added back in (wasn't present in nano-printf).
* Update to toolchain built newlib, fix link error
Previous commit was a hand build and copy, this one used the full
toolchain and should not include atexit().
Looks like the pgm_read_(32bit) defines were not used in the main core, and
they contained syntax errors when invoked due to some bad bracket/parens.
Fix the macros
* Move to PROGMEM aware libc, allow PSTR in printf()
A Newlib (libc) patch is in progress to move the _P functions from inside
Arduino into first-class citizens in libc. This Arduino patch cleans up
code that's been migrated there. Binaries for the new libs are included
because it seems they're part of the Arduino git tree, and should be
replaced with @igrr built ones when/if the Newlib changes are accepted.
Notable changes/additions for Arduino:
Allow for use of PROGMEM based format and parameter strings in all
*printf functions. No need for copying PSTR()s into RAM before printing
them out (transparently saves heap space when using _P functions) and
makes it easier to print out constant strings for applications.
Add "%S" (capital-S) format that I've been told, but cannot verify,
is used in Arduino to specify a PROGMEM string parameter in printfs,
as an alias for "%s" since plain "%s" can now handle PROGMEM.
Optimized the memcpy_P, strnlen_P, and strncpy_P functions to use 32-bit
direct reads whenver possible (source and dest alignment mediated), but
there is still room for improvement in others.
Finally, move several constant arrays from RODATA into PROGMEM and
update their accessors. Among these are the ctype array, ~260 bytes,
mprec* arrays, ~300 bytes, and strings/daycounts in the time
formatting functions, ~200 bytes. All told, sketches will see from
300 to 800 additional RAM heap free on startup (depending on their
use of these routines).
* Fix merge error in #ifdef/#endif
* Fix host test using the newlib generic pgmspace.h
Host tests now use the sys/pgmspace.h for compiles instead of the
ESP8266-specific version.
* Update with rebuilt libraries using latest newlib
* Include binaries built directly from @igrr repo
Rebuild the binaries using a git clone of
https://github.com/igrr/newlib-xtensa
Build commands for posterity:
````
rm -rf ./xtensa-lx106-elf/
./configure --prefix=<DIR>/esp8266/tools/sdk/libc --with-newlib \
--enable-multilib --disable-newlib-io-c99-formats \
--disable-newlib-supplied-syscalls \
--enable-newlib-nano-formatted-io --enable-newlib-reent-small \
--enable-target-optspace \
--program-transform-name="s&^&xtensa-lx106-elf-&" \
--disable-option-checking --with-target-subdir=xtensa-lx106-elf \
--target=xtensa-lx106-elf
rm -f etc/config.cache
CROSS_CFLAGS="-fno-omit-frame-pointer -DSIGNAL_PROVIDED -DABORT_PROVIDED"\
" -DMALLOC_PROVIDED" \
PATH=<DIR>/esp8266/tools/xtensa-lx106-elf/bin/:$PATH \
make all install
````
* Fix merge define conflict in c_types.h
* Fix strlen_P misaligned source error
Include fix from newlib-xtensa/fix-strlen branch cleaning up misaligned
access on a non-aligned source string.
* Fix strlen_P and strcpy_P edge cases
Ran the included test suite on ESP8266 tstring.c with the following defines:
#define MAX_1 50
#define memcmp memcmp_P
#define memcpy memcpy_P
#define memmem memmem_P
#define memchr memchr_P
#define strcat strcat_P
#define strncat strncat_P
#define strcpy strcpy_P
#define strlen strlen_P
#define strnlen strnlen_P
#define strcmp strcmp_P
#define strncmp strncmp_P
Uncovered edge case and return value problems in the optimized versions of
the strnlen_P and strncpy_P functions. Corrected.
* Fix memcpy_P return value
memcpy-1.c test suite showed error in return value of memcpy_P. Correct it.
* Fix strnlen_P/strlen_P off-by-4 error
Random crashes, often on String constructors using a PSTR, would occur due
to the accelerated strnlen_P going past the end of the string. Would make
debug builds fail, too (ESP.getVersionString() failure).
Fix to fall through to normal copy on a word that's got a 0 byte anywhere
in it.
* Add device tests for libc functional verification
Add test suite used to debug libc optimized _P functions to the device
tests.
* Rebuild from igrr's repo (same source as prior)
Rebuild .a from igrr's repo at 347260af117b4177389e69fd4d04169b11d87a97
* WIP - add exceptions
* Fix exception to have 0-terminator
* Move some exception constants to TEXT from RODATA
* Remove throw stubs
* Move more exception stuff to ROM
* Enable exceptions in platform.io
* Remove atexit, is duplicated in rebuilt lib
Need to look at the quick-toolchain options, there seems to be a definition
for atexit defined there (libgcc?) that needs to be excised. For now,
remove our local do-nothing copy.
* Update libgcc to remove soft-fp functions
The esp-quick-toolchain generated libgcc.a needed to have the soft-FP routines
that are in ROM removed from it. Remove them in the new esp-quick-toolchain
and update.
* Fix merge typos in Makefile
* Add unhandled exception handler to postmortem
* Return our atexit() handler
* Latest stdc++, minimize exception emercengy area
* Remove atexit from newlib
atexit was defined in newlib strongly, but we also define a noop atexit in core.
Since we never exit, use the core's noop and delete the atexit from libc.a
Updated in esp-quick-toolchain as well.
* Move __FUNCTION__ static strings to PROGMEM
__FUNCTION__ is unlikely to be a timing sensitive variable, so move it to
PROGMEM and not RODATA (RAM) using linker magic.
asserts() now should take no RAM for any strings.
* Clean up linker file, update to latest stdc++
* Update to latest stdc++ which doesn't call strerror
* Update to GCC5.1 exception emergency allocator
Using GCC 5.1's emergency memory allocator for exceptions, much less
space is required in programs which do not use exceptions and when
space is allocated it is managed more efficiently.
* Initial try with new compiler toolchain
* Include newlib built from esp-quick-toolchain
* Update JSON with all new esp-quick-toolchain builds
* Use 64bit Windows compiler on 64bit Windows
* Dump std::exception.what() when possible
When doing the panic on unhandled exceptions, try and grab the
.what() pointer and dump it as part of the termination info.
Makes it easy to see mem errors (std::bad_alloc) or std::runtime_error
strings.
* Use scripted install from esp-quick-toolchain
Makes sure proper libraries and includes are present by using a
scripted installation from esp-quick-install instead of a manual
one.
* Update eqk to remove atexit, fix packaging diff
Using a pluggable architecture, allow updates delivered via the Update
class to be verified as signed by a certificate. By using plugins, avoid
pulling either axTLS or BearSSL into normal builds.
A signature is appended to a binary image, followed by the size of the
signature as a 32-bit int. The updater takes a verification function
and checks this signature using whatever method it chooses, and if it
fails the update is not applied.
A SHA256 hash class is presently implemented for the signing hash (since
MD5 is a busted algorithm).
A BearSSLPublicKey based verifier is implemented for RSA keys. The
application only needs the Public Key, while to sign you can use
OpenSSL and your private key (which should never leave your control
or be deployed on any endpoints).
An example using automatic signing is included.
Update the docs to show the signing steps and how to use it in the
automatic and manual modes.
Also remove one debugging line from the signing tool.
Saves ~600 bytes when in debug mode by moving strings to PMEM
Windows can't run the signing script, nor does it normally have OpenSSL
installed. When trying to build an automatically signed binary, warn
and don't run the python.
* WIP compile examples on host with 'make examples'
* WIP bufferize tcp input
* WIP Makefile
* WIP network to rework, tcp/udp to factorize, udp addresses broken
* minor changes to the core
* WIP basic udp working
* WIP mdns
* WIP mcast receiving, not sending
* WIP mdns OK
* beta version
* SSL + doc
* update travis host test command
* licenses
* typo
* doc: arduino builder is not around: declare functions before calling them
* fix with latest SSL PR, compile in 32 bits mode
* fix make clean
* make -m32 optional
* 32bits compiler ability tester
* WIP
* WIP (fix 1 vtable error, still another one to hunt with using spiffs)
* example astyle
* fix os_printf_plus
* load / save mock spiffs
* fix style
* fix using spiffs/mock
* don't mess ram
* update doc
* remove leftover
* optimization -Os except for CI, rename ARCH32 to FORCE32
* revert useless cast (not even compiled)
* remove unused function
* use proper type for pointer arithmetics
* makefile: sketch object and cpp file moved to bin/ directories
easier to clean, and IDE don't like them
* changes for review
* make use of %zd
* less verbose makefile by default (option)
* update readme
* Update to BearSSL 0.6+ release, add AES_CCM modes
Pull in latest BearSSL head (0.6 + minor additions) release and add AES_CCM
modes to the encryption options.
* Enable the aes_ccm initialization in client/server
* Initial attempt
* Working code with second stack thunking
* Remove #ifdefs in .S file, not needed.
* Clean up thunks and remove separate stack flag
* Fix PIO assembler errors
* Remove #ifdef code changes, ensure same code as PC
Remove "#ifdef ESP8266;...;#else;...;#endif" brackets in BearSSL to
ensure the host-tested code is the same as the ESP8266-run code.
* Move to latest BearSSL w/EC progmem savings
* Merge with master
* Add br_thunk_* calls to do ref counting, painting
Add reference counting br_thunk_add/del_ref() to replace stack handling code
in the class.
Add in stack painting and max usage calculation.
* Add in postmortem stack dump hooks
When a crash occurs while in the second stack, dump the BSSL stack and
then also the stack that it was called from (either cont or sys).
* Update stack dump to match decoder expectations
* Move thunk to code core for linkiage
The thunk code needs to be visible to the core routines, so move it to the
cores/esp8266 directory. Probably need to refactor the stack setup and the
bearssl portion to avoid dependency on bearssl libs in cores/esp8266
* Add 2nd stack dump utility routine
* Refactor once more, update stack size, add stress
Make stack_thunks generic, remove bearssl include inside of cores/esp8266.
Allocate the stack on a WiFiServerSecure object creation to avoid
fragmentation since we will need to allocate the stack to do any
connected work, anyway.
A stress test is now included which checks the total BearSSL second
stack usage for a variety of TLS handshake and certificate options
from badssl.org.
* Update to latest to-thunks branch
* Add BearSSL device test using stack stress
Run a series of SSL connection and transmission tests that stress
BearSSL and its stack usage to the device tests.
Modify device tests to include a possible SPIFFS generation and
upload when a make_spiffs.py file is present in a test directory.
* Use bearssl/master branch, not /to-thunks branch
Update to use the merged master branch of bearssl. Should have no code
changes.
Apply patches developed by Sze Yiu Chau <schau@purdue.edu> which
correct a vulnerability in X509 parsing.
See CVE-2018-16150 and CVE-2018-16149 for more info.
CA certification validation was broken by a change put in during warning
cleanup a long time ago. This binary now includes the 1-line correction
and HTTPSRequestCACert now works again (before was failing
because the key usages in certs were not properly read).
* update to lwIP-2.1.0rc1: partial SACK support
fix#4176
* hash fix
* get some flash back due to mistake in conf (fragmentation & reassembly was incorrectly enabled)
(ahah I scared you)
* add missing include files
* update to lwip-2.1.0(release) + remove unused lwIP's include files
* lwIP release 2.1.0, SACK is now default, bigger, no-SACK is selectable
* fix ldscript
* pio
* rename 'sack' option to 'feat'ure option, + IP fragmentation/reassembly
* merge, fix pio
* change internal/hidden string
* pio: more lwip2 configuration: + without sack for no change in flash footprint
* fwupdate
* fw update to latest version:
WPA working, WEP+Open disabled by default. Need API change.
* helpers to follow sdk updates
* remove compare scripts - made a separate PR for them
* add wep api, restore original espressif comment (wep enabled does not prevent wpa)
* libmain was not up to date
* experimental: DTIM setting in WiFi.setSleepMode(WIFI_LIGHT/MODEM_SLEEP, DTIM-value)
with new getter: .getListenInterval() / .isSleepLevelMax()
* fixes
* fix debug message
* when not using listenInterval, set wifi sleep level to min
* update documentation
* update doc
Pull in latest BearSSL head (0.6 + minor additions) release and add AES_CCM
modes to the encryption options. Enable the aes_ccm initialization in client/server
The EC mul20 and square20 code was identical in two different files,
but because these copies were static, we ended up with an extra 6k of
duplicated code. Updated BearSSL to make them shared, saving 6KB.