zoukankan      html  css  js  c++  java
  • Formatted print to circular buffer xprintf

    http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14926294/formatted-print-to-circular-buffer

    I'm writing embedded code for STM32F3 mc (STM32F3-Discovery). I need to output some data to UART and I'm using DMA for this as this allows me to concentrate on sensors reading and data processing rather than on waiting for byte transmission completion. The issue however is that I have to combine:

    1. Formatted output (i.e. some from of printf)
    2. A number of consecutive prints (that occur before previous print has finished)

    So I'm thinking about a circular buffer. But I don't think I know how to make sprintf to respect the end of buffer and continue writing to the beginning of the buffer. I can of course create another temporary buffer, print there, and copy byte-by-byte, but it doesn't look elegant to me.

    One solution could be to implement your own sprintf which is able to work with ring buffers. Unfortunately this won't help you out regarding a more basic problem: What would you do if your ringbuffer is full and you invokesprintf?

    If your memory situation can afford it, I'd suggest another solution for this problem:

    The idea is based on two linked lists of buffers (one list for the free buffers, one list as transmit queue). The buffers are equally sized so they can store a worst case length string. The buffers build a simple heap where allocation/deallocation is only dequeuing/enqueuing an element either from the free or from the transmission list.

    Having equally sized buffers guarantees you don't suffer from outer fragmentation effects like "checkerboarding" while allocating memory dynamically. Building your own heap for this job would also give you full control over the total buffer size available for transmission tasks.

    I could imagine this running as follows:

    1. You allocate a buffer from the free list to render the data into.
    2. Use your render functions (suchas sprintf) to render the data in the buffer
    3. Append the data to be sent to the transmission queue (and trigger a transmission if necessary)

    For the DMA transfer you handle the transfer end IRQ. There you move the buffer just transferred to the "free list" and setup the transfer for next buffer in the queue.

    This solution won't be the memory efficientiest but the runtime efficiency is good as you only write to the memory once and the allocation/deallocation is only fetching/storing a pointer somewhere. Of course you'll have to make sure that you don't get race conditions between your application and the IRQ for allocation/deallocation.

    Maybe this idea gives you an inspiration to solve your requirements.

    One way you could approximate it is to allocate your printf buffer as 2x the size of your ringbuffer, and then use the first half as your ring buffer. Detect an overflow, copy the overflow in the latter half back to the front (the ring portion). Something like this:

     1 void xprintf(const char *format, ...)
     2 {
     3   int written;
     4   va_list args;
     5   va_start(args, format);
     6   written = vsnprintf(buffer, HALF_BUFFER_SIZE, format, args);
     7   va_end(args);
    8 if (buffer + written > bufferStart + HALF_BUFFER_SIZE) 9 { // time to wrap 10 int overflow = (buffer + written) - (bufferStart + HALF_BUFFER_SIZE); 11 memmove(bufferStart, bufferStart + HALF_BUFFER_SIZE, overflow; 12 buffer = bufferStart + overflow; 13 } 14 }

  • 相关阅读:
    读书笔记_Effective_C++_条款三十一:将文件间的编译依存关系降至最低(第三部分)
    Spring Boot进阶系列一
    职场进阶之七种武器
    大龄IT程序员的救赎之道
    Web Service
    生产者消费者问题
    SpringBoot集成Apache Shiro
    简单模拟医院叫号系统
    IT小团队管理者的突围之道
    内部推荐
  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/shangdawei/p/3022924.html
Copyright © 2011-2022 走看看