Difference between revisions of "Embedded System Tutorial FreeRTOS"
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− | The objective of this assignment is to show you how to create a FreeRTOS task a few different ways. The [[FreeRTOS | + | The objective of this assignment is to show you how to create a FreeRTOS task a few different ways. The [[FreeRTOS Tutorial]] is definitely a must read before going through this lesson. |
== FreeRTOS "Hello World" Task == | == FreeRTOS "Hello World" Task == |
Revision as of 19:32, 5 February 2014
The objective of this assignment is to show you how to create a FreeRTOS task a few different ways. The FreeRTOS Tutorial is definitely a must read before going through this lesson.
FreeRTOS "Hello World" Task
A task just needs memory for its stack and and infinite loop. To prevent "hogging" the CPU, you should use a delay such that the CPU can be allocated to other tasks. Here is the simplest FreeRTOS task:
void hello_world_task(void* p)
{
while(1) {
puts("Hello World!");
vTaskDelay(1000);
}
}
int main()
{
xTaskCreate(hello_world_task, (signed char*)"task_name", STACK_BYTES(2048), 0, 1, 0);
vTaskStartScheduler();
return -1;
}
C++ based FreeRTOS task
As a project gets more complex, it becomes difficult to manage initialization and share queue or semaphore handles. This was the motivation to create a C++ based FreeRTOS task.
Assignment
This assignment is based on SJ-One board, but you can alter the requirement to fit your own hardware.
- Create a task (task1) that computes the orientation of the board.
- Send the orientation enumeration, such as "up", "down", "left", "right" to a queue
- Create another task (task2) that waits on the queued item
- If the orientation is left or right, light up the LEDs (otherwise turn them off)
- Create a terminal task with a command "orientation on" and "orientation off"
- If orientation is commanded on, resume the task1, otherwise suspend it
- See code below on hints of how this command can get control of another task.
// At the terminal tasks taskEntry() function :
bool terminalTask::taskEntry()
{
// Add the command, but pass the "this" pointer when the command is invoked
cp.addHandler(orientationCmd, "orientation", "Two options: 'orientation on' or 'orientation off'", this);
}
// Somewhere else:
CMD_HANDLER_FUNC(orientationCmd)
{
// Our parameter was the terminal task's "this" pointer:
scheduler_task *terminalTask = (scheduler_task*) pDataParam;
// Use this to get the pointer of the "other task"
scheduler_task *orientTask = terminalTask->getTaskPtrByName("orientTask");
// We've got the handle now, so use FreeRTOS API to suspend or resume
if (cmdParams == "on") {
vTaskResume(orientTask->getTaskHandle());
}
else {
vTaskSuspend(orientTask->getTaskHandle());
}
}