docs/esp32: Add quickref and full docs for esp32.RMT class.

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Matt Trentini 2019-09-29 23:36:22 +10:00 committed by Damien George
parent 0e0e6132fd
commit 7f235cbee9
3 changed files with 102 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -52,6 +52,7 @@ For your convenience, some of technical specifications are provided below:
* I2S: 2
* ADC: 12-bit SAR ADC up to 18 channels
* DAC: 2 8-bit DACs
* RMT: 8 channels allowing accurate pulse transmit/receive
* Programming: using BootROM bootloader from UART - due to external FlashROM
and always-available BootROM bootloader, the ESP32 is not brickable

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@ -365,6 +365,20 @@ Notes:
p1 = Pin(4, Pin.OUT, None)
RMT
---
The RMT is ESP32-specific and allows generation of accurate digital pulses with
12.5ns resolution. See :ref:`esp32.RMT <esp32.RMT>` for details. Usage is::
import esp32
from machine import Pin
r = esp32.RMT(0, pin=Pin(18), clock_div=8)
r # RMT(channel=0, pin=18, source_freq=80000000, clock_div=8)
# The channel resolution is 100ns (1/(source_freq/clock_div)).
r.write_pulses((1, 20, 2, 40), start=0) # Send 0 for 100ns, 1 for 2000ns, 0 for 200ns, 1 for 4000ns
OneWire driver
--------------

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@ -1,3 +1,5 @@
.. currentmodule:: esp32
:mod:`esp32` --- functionality specific to the ESP32
====================================================
@ -86,6 +88,91 @@ Constants
Used in `Partition.find` to specify the partition type.
.. _esp32.RMT:
RMT
---
The RMT (Remote Control) module, specific to the ESP32, was originally designed
to send and receive infrared remote control signals. However, due to a flexible
design and very accurate (as low as 12.5ns) pulse generation, it can also be
used to transmit or receive many other types of digital signals::
import esp32
from machine import Pin
r = esp32.RMT(0, pin=Pin(18), clock_div=8)
r # RMT(channel=0, pin=18, source_freq=80000000, clock_div=8)
# The channel resolution is 100ns (1/(source_freq/clock_div)).
r.write_pulses((1, 20, 2, 40), start=0) # Send 0 for 100ns, 1 for 2000ns, 0 for 200ns, 1 for 4000ns
The input to the RMT module is an 80MHz clock (in the future it may be able to
configure the input clock but, for now, it's fixed). ``clock_div`` *divides*
the clock input which determines the resolution of the RMT channel. The
numbers specificed in ``write_pulses`` are multiplied by the resolution to
define the pulses.
``clock_div`` is an 8-bit divider (0-255) and each pulse can be defined by
multiplying the resolution by a 15-bit (0-32,768) number. There are eight
channels (0-7) and each can have a different clock divider.
So, in the example above, the 80MHz clock is divided by 8. Thus the
resolution is (1/(80Mhz/8)) 100ns. Since the ``start`` level is 0 and toggles
with each number, the bitstream is ``0101`` with durations of [100ns, 2000ns,
100ns, 4000ns].
For more details see Espressif's `ESP-IDF RMT documentation.
<https://docs.espressif.com/projects/esp-idf/en/latest/api-reference/peripherals/rmt.html>`_.
.. Warning::
The current MicroPython RMT implementation lacks some features, most notably
receiving pulses and carrier transmit. RMT should be considered a
*beta feature* and the interface may change in the future.
.. class:: RMT(channel, \*, pin=None, clock_div=8)
This class provides access to one of the eight RMT channels. *channel* is
required and identifies which RMT channel (0-7) will be configured. *pin*,
also required, configures which Pin is bound to the RMT channel. *clock_div*
is an 8-bit clock divider that divides the source clock (80MHz) to the RMT
channel allowing the resolution to be specified.
.. method:: RMT.source_freq()
Returns the source clock frequency. Currently the source clock is not
configurable so this will always return 80MHz.
.. method:: RMT.clock_div()
Return the clock divider. Note that the channel resolution is
``1 / (source_freq / clock_div)``.
.. method:: RMT.wait_done(timeout=0)
Returns True if `RMT.write_pulses` has completed.
If *timeout* (defined in ticks of ``source_freq / clock_div``) is specified
the method will wait for *timeout* or until `RMT.write_pulses` is complete,
returning ``False`` if the channel continues to transmit.
.. Warning::
Avoid using ``wait_done()`` if looping is enabled.
.. method:: RMT.loop(enable_loop)
Configure looping on the channel, allowing a stream of pulses to be
indefinitely repeated. *enable_loop* is bool, set to True to enable looping.
.. method:: RMT.write_pulses(pulses, start)
Begin sending *pulses*, a list or tuple defining the stream of pulses. The
length of each pulse is defined by a number to be multiplied by the channel
resolution ``(1 / (source_freq / clock_div))``. *start* defines whether the
stream starts at 0 or 1.
The Ultra-Low-Power co-processor
--------------------------------