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/* ec_uart.h - UART module for Chrome EC
*
* (Chromium license) */
#ifndef __CROS_EC_UART_H
#define __CROS_EC_UART_H
#include "ec_common.h"
/*****************************************************************************/
/* Output functions */
/* Print formatted output to the UART, like printf().
*
* Returns error if output was truncated.
*
* Must support format strings for:
* char (%c)
* string (%s)
* native int (signed/unsigned) (%d / %u / %x)
* int32_t / uint32_t (%d / %x)
* int64_t / uint64_t (%ld / %lu / %lx)
* pointer (%p)
* including padding (%-5s, %8d, %08x)
*
* Note: Floating point output (%f / %g) is not required.
*/
EcError UartPrintf(const char* format, ...);
/* Put a null-terminated string to the UART, like puts().
*
* Returns error if output was truncated. */
EcError UartPuts(const char* outstr);
/* Flushes output. Blocks until UART has transmitted all output. */
void UartFlush(void);
/*****************************************************************************/
/* Input functions */
/* Flushes input buffer, discarding all input. */
void UartFlushInput(void);
/* Non-destructively checks for a character in the input buffer.
*
* Returns non-zero if the character <c> is in the input buffer. If
* c<0, returns non-zero if any character is in the input buffer. */
/* TODO: add boolean type? */
/* TODO: return offset of the character? That is, how many bytes of
* input up to and including the character. */
int UartPeek(int c);
/* Reads characters from the UART, similar to fgets().
*
* Reads input until one of the following conditions is met:
* (1) <size-1> characters have been read.
* (2) A newline ('\n') has been read.
* (3) The input buffer is empty.
*
* Condition (3) means this call never blocks. This is important
* because it prevents a race condition where the caller calls
* UartPeek() to see if input is waiting, or is notified by the
* callack that input is waiting, but then the input buffer overflows
* or someone else grabs the input before UartGets() is called.
*
* Characters are stored in <dest> and are null-terminated, and
* include the newline if present.
*
* Returns the number of characters read (not counting the terminating
* null). */
int UartGets(char* dest, int size);
/* Callback handler prototype, called when the UART has input. */
typedef void (*UartHasInputCallback)(void);
/* Registers an input callback handler, replacing any existing
* callback handler. If callback==NULL, disables callbacks.
*
* Callback will be called whenever the UART receives character <c>.
* If c<0, callback will be called when the UART receives any
* character. */
void UartRegisterHasInputCallback(UartHasInputCallback callback, int c);
/* TODO: what to do about input overflow? That is, what if the input
* buffer fills with 'A', and we're still waiting for a newline? Do
* we drop the oldest output, flush the whole thing, or call the input
* callback with a message code? Alternately, should the callback be able
* to specify a buffer-full-threshold where it gets called?
*
* Simplest just to flush the input buffer on overflow. */
/* YJLOU: are you talking about the UartRegisterHasInputCallback()?
* If yes, this is not a problem because for every input key, we can drop it
* if there is no callback registered for it.
* Else if you are talking about the UartGets() function, I think you can add
* the third return critiria: internal key buffer reaches full.
*/
/* TODO: getc(), putc() equivalents? */
/* TODO: input handler assumes debug input new lines are '\n'-delimited? */
#endif /* __CROS_EC_UART_H */
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