From 1848db3d66e232b10d7e701063f1238809cf6a53 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Matthijs Kooijman Date: Tue, 3 Dec 2013 21:15:17 +0100 Subject: Put each HardwareSerial instance in its own .cpp file By putting the ISRs and HardwareSerial instance for each instance in a separate compilation unit, the compile will only consider them for linking when the instance is actually used. The ISR is always referenced by the compiler runtime and the Serialx_available() function is always referenced by SerialEventRun(), but both references are weak and thus do not cause the compilation to be included in the link by themselves. The effect of this is that when multiple HardwareSerial ports are available, but not all are used, buffers are only allocated and ISRs are only included for the serial ports that are used. On the mega, this lowers memory usage from 653 bytes to just 182 when only using the first serial port. On boards with just a single port, there is no change, since the code and memory was already left out when no serial port was used at all. This fixes #1425 and fixes #1259. --- cores/arduino/HardwareSerial1.cpp | 54 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 54 insertions(+) create mode 100644 cores/arduino/HardwareSerial1.cpp (limited to 'cores/arduino/HardwareSerial1.cpp') diff --git a/cores/arduino/HardwareSerial1.cpp b/cores/arduino/HardwareSerial1.cpp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c04263e --- /dev/null +++ b/cores/arduino/HardwareSerial1.cpp @@ -0,0 +1,54 @@ +#include "Arduino.h" +#include "HardwareSerial.h" + +// Each HardwareSerial is defined in its own file, sine the linker pulls +// in the entire file when any element inside is used. --gc-sections can +// additionally cause unused symbols to be dropped, but ISRs have the +// "used" attribute so are never dropped and they keep the +// HardwareSerial instance in as well. Putting each instance in its own +// file prevents the linker from pulling in any unused instances in the +// first place. + +#if defined(HAVE_HWSERIAL1) + +#if defined(USART_RX_vect) + ISR(USART_RX_vect) +#elif defined(USART1_RX_vect) + ISR(USART1_RX_vect) +#elif defined(USART_RXC_vect) + ISR(USART_RXC_vect) // ATmega8 +#else + #error "Don't know what the Data Received vector is called for the first UART" +#endif + { + Serial1._rx_complete_irq(); + } + +#if defined(UART1_UDRE_vect) +ISR(UART1_UDRE_vect) +#elif defined(UART_UDRE_vect) +ISR(UART_UDRE_vect) +#elif defined(USART1_UDRE_vect) +ISR(USART1_UDRE_vect) +#elif defined(USART_UDRE_vect) +ISR(USART_UDRE_vect) +#else + #error "Don't know what the Data Register Empty vector is called for the first UART" +#endif +{ + Serial1._tx_udr_empty_irq(); +} + +#if defined(UBRRH) && defined(UBRRL) + HardwareSerial Serial1(&UBRRH, &UBRRL, &UCSRA, &UCSRB, &UCSRC, &UDR); +#else + HardwareSerial Serial1(&UBRR1H, &UBRR1L, &UCSR1A, &UCSR1B, &UCSR1C, &UDR1); +#endif + +// Function that can be weakly referenced by serialEventRun to prevent +// pulling in this file if it's not otherwise used. +bool Serial1_available() { + return Serial1.available(); +} + +#endif // HAVE_HWSERIAL1 -- cgit v1.2.3-18-g5258