grbl-LPC-CoreXY/serial.h

60 lines
1.6 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

2009-01-25 00:48:56 +01:00
/*
serial.c - Low level functions for sending and recieving bytes via the serial port
Part of Grbl
2009-01-25 00:48:56 +01:00
Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Simen Svale Skogsrud
Copyright (c) 2011-2012 Sungeun K. Jeon
2009-01-25 00:48:56 +01:00
Grbl is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
2009-01-25 00:48:56 +01:00
Grbl is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
2009-01-25 00:48:56 +01:00
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
2009-01-25 00:48:56 +01:00
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with Grbl. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
2009-01-25 00:48:56 +01:00
*/
/* This code was initially inspired by the wiring_serial module by David A. Mellis which
used to be a part of the Arduino project. */
#ifndef serial_h
#define serial_h
2009-01-25 00:48:56 +01:00
New startup script setting. New dry run, check gcode switches. New system state variable. Lots of reorganizing. (All v0.8 features installed. Still likely buggy, but now thourough testing will need to start to squash them all. As soon as we're done, this will be pushed to master and v0.9 development will be started. Please report ANY issues to us so we can get this rolled out ASAP.) - User startup script! A user can now save one (up to 5 as compile-time option) block of g-code in EEPROM memory. This will be run everytime Grbl resets. Mainly to be used as a way to set your preferences, like G21, G54, etc. - New dry run and check g-code switches. Dry run moves ALL motions at rapids rate ignoring spindle, coolant, and dwell commands. For rapid physical proofing of your code. The check g-code switch ignores all motion and provides the user a way to check if there are any errors in their program that Grbl may not like. - Program restart! (sort of). Program restart is typically an advanced feature that allows users to restart a program mid-stream. The check g-code switch can perform this feature by enabling the switch at the start of the program, and disabling it at the desired point with some minimal changes. - New system state variable. This state variable tracks all of the different state processes that Grbl performs, i.e. cycle start, feed hold, homing, etc. This is mainly for making managing of these task easier and more clear. - Position lost state variable. Only when homing is enabled, Grbl will refuse to move until homing is completed and position is known. This is mainly for safety. Otherwise, it will let users fend for themselves. - Moved the default settings defines into config.h. The plan is to eventually create a set of config.h's for particular as-built machines to help users from doing it themselves. - Moved around misc defines into .h files. And lots of other little things.
2012-11-03 18:32:23 +01:00
#include "nuts_bolts.h"
#ifndef RX_BUFFER_SIZE
#define RX_BUFFER_SIZE 128
#endif
#ifndef TX_BUFFER_SIZE
#define TX_BUFFER_SIZE 64
#endif
#define SERIAL_NO_DATA 0xff
New startup script setting. New dry run, check gcode switches. New system state variable. Lots of reorganizing. (All v0.8 features installed. Still likely buggy, but now thourough testing will need to start to squash them all. As soon as we're done, this will be pushed to master and v0.9 development will be started. Please report ANY issues to us so we can get this rolled out ASAP.) - User startup script! A user can now save one (up to 5 as compile-time option) block of g-code in EEPROM memory. This will be run everytime Grbl resets. Mainly to be used as a way to set your preferences, like G21, G54, etc. - New dry run and check g-code switches. Dry run moves ALL motions at rapids rate ignoring spindle, coolant, and dwell commands. For rapid physical proofing of your code. The check g-code switch ignores all motion and provides the user a way to check if there are any errors in their program that Grbl may not like. - Program restart! (sort of). Program restart is typically an advanced feature that allows users to restart a program mid-stream. The check g-code switch can perform this feature by enabling the switch at the start of the program, and disabling it at the desired point with some minimal changes. - New system state variable. This state variable tracks all of the different state processes that Grbl performs, i.e. cycle start, feed hold, homing, etc. This is mainly for making managing of these task easier and more clear. - Position lost state variable. Only when homing is enabled, Grbl will refuse to move until homing is completed and position is known. This is mainly for safety. Otherwise, it will let users fend for themselves. - Moved the default settings defines into config.h. The plan is to eventually create a set of config.h's for particular as-built machines to help users from doing it themselves. - Moved around misc defines into .h files. And lots of other little things.
2012-11-03 18:32:23 +01:00
#ifdef ENABLE_XONXOFF
#define RX_BUFFER_FULL 96 // XOFF high watermark
#define RX_BUFFER_LOW 64 // XON low watermark
#define SEND_XOFF 1
#define SEND_XON 2
#define XOFF_SENT 3
#define XON_SENT 4
#define XOFF_CHAR 0x13
#define XON_CHAR 0x11
#endif
void serial_init(long baud);
void serial_write(uint8_t data);
uint8_t serial_read();
2009-01-25 00:48:56 +01:00
// Reset and empty data in read buffer. Used by e-stop and reset.
void serial_reset_read_buffer();
2009-01-25 00:48:56 +01:00
#endif