A RetroSearch Logo

Home - News ( United States | United Kingdom | Italy | Germany ) - Football scores

Search Query:

Showing content from https://arduino-pico.readthedocs.io/en/latest/multicore.html below:

Website Navigation


Multicore Processing — Arduino-Pico 4.7.1 documentation

Multicore Processing

The RP2040 chip has 2 cores that can run independently of each other, sharing peripherals and memory with each other. Arduino code will normally execute only on core 0, with the 2nd core sitting idle in a low power state.

By adding a setup1() and loop1() function to your sketch you can make use of the second core. Anything called from within the setup1() or loop1() routines will execute on the second core.

setup() and setup1() will be called at the same time, and the loop() or loop1() will be started as soon as the core’s setup() completes (i.e. not necessarily simultaneously!).

See the Multicore.ino example in the rp2040 example directory for a quick introduction.

Core 1 Operation

By default, core1 (the second core) has no non-user written code running on it. No interrupts, exceptions, or other background processing is done (but the core is still subject to hardware stalls due to on-die memory resource conflicts). When flash erase or write operations (i.e. LittleFS or EEPROM) are called from core0, core1 will be paused.

If rp2040.getCycleCount is needed to operate on the second core, then a periodic (once ever 16M clock cycles) SYSTICK exception will happen behind the scenes. For extremely time-critical operations this may not be desirable and can be disabled by defining a new bool variable to true anywhere in your sketch:

bool core1_disable_systick = true;
Stack Sizes

When the Pico is running in single core mode, core 0 has the full 8KB of stack space available to it. When using multicore setup1/loop1 the 8KB is split into two 4K stacks, one per core. It is possible for core 0’s stack to overwrite core 1’s stack in this case, if you go beyond the 4K limitation.

To allocate a separate 8K stack for core 1, resulting in 8K stacks being available for both cores, simply define the following variable in your sketch and set it to true:

bool core1_separate_stack = true;
Pausing Cores

Sometimes an application needs to pause the other core on chip (i.e. it is writing to flash or needs to stop processing while some other event occurs). In most cases, however, these calls are SHOULD NOT BE USED. To synchronize cross-core operations use normal multiprocessor methods such as circular buffers, global volatile flags, mutexes, and the like. Stopping a core has massive implications and can kill networking and USB communications if done too long or too frequently.

void rp2040.idleOtherCore()

Sends a message to stop the other core (i.e. when called from core 0 it pauses core 1, and vice versa). Waits for the other core to acknowledge before returning.

The other core will have its interrupts disabled and be busy-waiting in an RAM-based routine, so flash and other peripherals can be accessed.

NOTE If you idle core 0 too long, then the USB port can become frozen. This is because core 0 manages the USB and needs to service IRQs in a timely manner (which it can’t do when idled).

void rp2040.resumeOtherCore()

Resumes processing in the other core, where it left off.

void rp2040.restartCore1()

Hard resets Core1 from Core 0 and restarts its operation from setup1(). This can cause unpredictable behavior because globals and the heap are shared between cores and not re-initialized with this call. Use with extreme caution.

Communicating Between Cores

The RP2040 provides a hardware FIFO for communicating between cores, but it is used exclusively for the idle/resume calls described above. Instead, please use the following functions to access a software-managed, multicore safe FIFO. There are two FIFOs, one written to by core 0 and read by core 1, and the other written to by core 1 and read by core 0.

You can (and probably should) use shared memory (such as volatile globals) or other normal multiprocessor communication algorithms to transfer data or work between cores, but for simple tasks these FIFO routines can suffice.

void rp2040.fifo.push(uint32_t)

Pushes a value to the other core. Will block if the FIFO is full.

bool rp2040.fifo.push_nb(uint32_t)

Pushes a value to the other core. If the FIFO is full, returns false immediately and doesn’t block. If the push is successful, returns true.

uint32_t rp2040.fifo.pop()

Reads a value from this core’s FIFO. Blocks until one is available.

bool rp2040.fifo.pop_nb(uint32_t *dest)

Reads a value from this core’s FIFO and places it in dest. Will return true if successful, or false if the pop would block.

int rp2040.fifo.available()

Returns the number of values available to read in this core’s FIFO.


RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue

Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo

HTML: 3.2 | Encoding: UTF-8 | Version: 0.7.4