grbl-LPC-CoreXY/grbl/system.h
Sonny Jeon 5eee10845b Pin state reporting of all pins. Flash optimization.
- New pin state realtime reporting feature. Instead of `Lim:000` for
limit state reports, the new feature shows `Pin:000|0|0000`, or
something similar. The `|` delimited fields indicate xyz limits, probe,
and control pin states, where 0 is always not triggered, and 1 is
triggered. Invert masks ARE accounted for.
  Each field may be enabled or disabled via the `$10` status report
setting. The probe and control pin flags are bits 5 and 6, respectively.

- Remove the now deprecated `REPORT_CONTROL_PIN_STATE` option in
config.h

- The old limit pin reports `Lim:000` may be re-enabled by commenting
out `REPORT_ALL_PIN_STATES` in config.h.

- Incremented the version letter (v1.0c) to indicate the change in
reporting style.

- Replaced all bit_true_atomic and bit_false_atomic macros with
function calls. This saved a couple hundred bytes of flash.
2015-11-09 21:54:26 -07:00

144 lines
7.1 KiB
C

/*
system.h - Header for system level commands and real-time processes
Part of Grbl
Copyright (c) 2014-2015 Sungeun K. Jeon
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.
Grbl is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with Grbl. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#ifndef system_h
#define system_h
#include "grbl.h"
// Define system executor bit map. Used internally by realtime protocol as realtime command flags,
// which notifies the main program to execute the specified realtime command asynchronously.
// NOTE: The system executor uses an unsigned 8-bit volatile variable (8 flag limit.) The default
// flags are always false, so the realtime protocol only needs to check for a non-zero value to
// know when there is a realtime command to execute.
#define EXEC_STATUS_REPORT bit(0) // bitmask 00000001
#define EXEC_CYCLE_START bit(1) // bitmask 00000010
#define EXEC_CYCLE_STOP bit(2) // bitmask 00000100
#define EXEC_FEED_HOLD bit(3) // bitmask 00001000
#define EXEC_RESET bit(4) // bitmask 00010000
#define EXEC_SAFETY_DOOR bit(5) // bitmask 00100000
#define EXEC_MOTION_CANCEL bit(6) // bitmask 01000000
// Alarm executor bit map.
// NOTE: EXEC_CRITICAL_EVENT is an optional flag that must be set with an alarm flag. When enabled,
// this halts Grbl into an infinite loop until the user aknowledges the problem and issues a soft-
// reset command. For example, a hard limit event needs this type of halt and aknowledgement.
#define EXEC_CRITICAL_EVENT bit(0) // bitmask 00000001 (SPECIAL FLAG. See NOTE:)
#define EXEC_ALARM_HARD_LIMIT bit(1) // bitmask 00000010
#define EXEC_ALARM_SOFT_LIMIT bit(2) // bitmask 00000100
#define EXEC_ALARM_ABORT_CYCLE bit(3) // bitmask 00001000
#define EXEC_ALARM_PROBE_FAIL bit(4) // bitmask 00010000
#define EXEC_ALARM_HOMING_FAIL bit(5) // bitmask 00100000
// Define system state bit map. The state variable primarily tracks the individual functions
// of Grbl to manage each without overlapping. It is also used as a messaging flag for
// critical events.
#define STATE_IDLE 0 // Must be zero. No flags.
#define STATE_ALARM bit(0) // In alarm state. Locks out all g-code processes. Allows settings access.
#define STATE_CHECK_MODE bit(1) // G-code check mode. Locks out planner and motion only.
#define STATE_HOMING bit(2) // Performing homing cycle
#define STATE_CYCLE bit(3) // Cycle is running or motions are being executed.
#define STATE_HOLD bit(4) // Active feed hold
#define STATE_SAFETY_DOOR bit(5) // Safety door is ajar. Feed holds and de-energizes system.
#define STATE_MOTION_CANCEL bit(6) // Motion cancel by feed hold and return to idle.
// Define system suspend flags. Used in various ways to manage suspend states and procedures.
#define SUSPEND_DISABLE 0 // Must be zero.
#define SUSPEND_HOLD_COMPLETE bit(0) // Indicates initial feed hold is complete.
#define SUSPEND_RESTART_RETRACT bit(1) // Flag to indicate a retract from a restore parking motion.
#define SUSPEND_RETRACT_COMPLETE bit(2) // (Safety door only) Indicates retraction and de-energizing is complete.
#define SUSPEND_INITIATE_RESTORE bit(3) // (Safety door only) Flag to initiate resume procedures from a cycle start.
#define SUSPEND_RESTORE_COMPLETE bit(4) // (Safety door only) Indicates ready to resume normal operation.
#define SUSPEND_SAFETY_DOOR_AJAR bit(5) // Indicates suspend was initiated by a safety door state.
#define SUSPEND_MOTION_CANCEL bit(6) // Indicates a canceled resume motion. Currently used by probing routine.
// Define step segment generator state flags.
#define STEP_CONTROL_NORMAL_OP 0
// #define STEP_CONTROL_RECOMPUTE_ACTIVE_BLOCK bit(0)
#define STEP_CONTROL_END_MOTION bit(1)
#define STEP_CONTROL_EXECUTE_HOLD bit(2)
#define STEP_CONTROL_EXECUTE_PARK bit(3)
// Define control pin index for Grbl internal use. Pin maps may change, but these values don't.
#ifdef ENABLE_SAFETY_DOOR_INPUT_PIN
#define N_CONTROL_PIN 4
#define CONTROL_PIN_INDEX_SAFETY_DOOR bit(0)
#define CONTROL_PIN_INDEX_RESET bit(1)
#define CONTROL_PIN_INDEX_FEED_HOLD bit(2)
#define CONTROL_PIN_INDEX_CYCLE_START bit(3)
#else
#define N_CONTROL_PIN 3
#define CONTROL_PIN_INDEX_RESET bit(0)
#define CONTROL_PIN_INDEX_FEED_HOLD bit(1)
#define CONTROL_PIN_INDEX_CYCLE_START bit(2)
#endif
// Define global system variables
typedef struct {
uint8_t abort; // System abort flag. Forces exit back to main loop for reset.
uint8_t state; // Tracks the current state of Grbl.
uint8_t suspend; // System suspend bitflag variable that manages holds, cancels, and safety door.
uint8_t step_control;
int32_t position[N_AXIS]; // Real-time machine (aka home) position vector in steps.
// NOTE: This may need to be a volatile variable, if problems arise.
int32_t probe_position[N_AXIS]; // Last probe position in machine coordinates and steps.
uint8_t probe_succeeded; // Tracks if last probing cycle was successful.
uint8_t homing_axis_lock; // Locks axes when limits engage. Used as an axis motion mask in the stepper ISR.
} system_t;
extern system_t sys;
volatile uint8_t sys_probe_state; // Probing state value. Used to coordinate the probing cycle with stepper ISR.
volatile uint8_t sys_rt_exec_state; // Global realtime executor bitflag variable for state management. See EXEC bitmasks.
volatile uint8_t sys_rt_exec_alarm; // Global realtime executor bitflag variable for setting various alarms.
// Initialize the serial protocol
void system_init();
// Returns bitfield of control pin states, organized by CONTROL_PIN_INDEX. (1=triggered, 0=not triggered).
uint8_t system_control_get_state();
// Returns if safety door is open or closed, based on pin state.
uint8_t system_check_safety_door_ajar();
// Executes an internal system command, defined as a string starting with a '$'
uint8_t system_execute_line(char *line);
// Execute the startup script lines stored in EEPROM upon initialization
void system_execute_startup(char *line);
// Returns machine position of axis 'idx'. Must be sent a 'step' array.
float system_convert_axis_steps_to_mpos(int32_t *steps, uint8_t idx);
// Updates a machine 'position' array based on the 'step' array sent.
void system_convert_array_steps_to_mpos(float *position, int32_t *steps);
// Special handlers for setting and clearing Grbl's real-time execution flags.
void system_set_exec_state_flag(uint8_t mask);
void system_clear_exec_state_flag(uint8_t mask);
void system_set_exec_alarm_flag(uint8_t mask);
void system_clear_exec_alarm_flag(uint8_t mask);
#endif