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- .. currentmodule:: pyb
- .. _pyb.UART:
- class UART -- duplex serial communication bus
- =============================================
- UART implements the standard UART/USART duplex serial communications protocol. At
- the physical level it consists of 2 lines: RX and TX. The unit of communication
- is a character (not to be confused with a string character) which can be 8 or 9
- bits wide.
- UART objects can be created and initialised using::
- from pyb import UART
- uart = UART(1, 9600) # init with given baudrate
- uart.init(9600, bits=8, parity=None, stop=1) # init with given parameters
- Bits can be 7, 8 or 9. Parity can be None, 0 (even) or 1 (odd). Stop can be 1 or 2.
- *Note:* with parity=None, only 8 and 9 bits are supported. With parity enabled,
- only 7 and 8 bits are supported.
- A UART object acts like a `stream` object and reading and writing is done
- using the standard stream methods::
- uart.read(10) # read 10 characters, returns a bytes object
- uart.read() # read all available characters
- uart.readline() # read a line
- uart.readinto(buf) # read and store into the given buffer
- uart.write('abc') # write the 3 characters
- Individual characters can be read/written using::
- uart.readchar() # read 1 character and returns it as an integer
- uart.writechar(42) # write 1 character
- To check if there is anything to be read, use::
- uart.any() # returns the number of characters waiting
- *Note:* The stream functions ``read``, ``write``, etc. are new in MicroPython v1.3.4.
- Earlier versions use ``uart.send`` and ``uart.recv``.
- Constructors
- ------------
- .. class:: pyb.UART(bus, ...)
- Construct a UART object on the given bus. ``bus`` can be 1-6, or 'XA', 'XB', 'YA', or 'YB'.
- With no additional parameters, the UART object is created but not
- initialised (it has the settings from the last initialisation of
- the bus, if any). If extra arguments are given, the bus is initialised.
- See ``init`` for parameters of initialisation.
- The physical pins of the UART busses are:
- - ``UART(4)`` is on ``XA``: ``(TX, RX) = (X1, X2) = (PA0, PA1)``
- - ``UART(1)`` is on ``XB``: ``(TX, RX) = (X9, X10) = (PB6, PB7)``
- - ``UART(6)`` is on ``YA``: ``(TX, RX) = (Y1, Y2) = (PC6, PC7)``
- - ``UART(3)`` is on ``YB``: ``(TX, RX) = (Y9, Y10) = (PB10, PB11)``
- - ``UART(2)`` is on: ``(TX, RX) = (X3, X4) = (PA2, PA3)``
- The Pyboard Lite supports UART(1), UART(2) and UART(6) only. Pins are as above except:
- - ``UART(2)`` is on: ``(TX, RX) = (X1, X2) = (PA2, PA3)``
- Methods
- -------
- .. method:: UART.init(baudrate, bits=8, parity=None, stop=1, \*, timeout=1000, flow=0, timeout_char=0, read_buf_len=64)
- Initialise the UART bus with the given parameters:
- - ``baudrate`` is the clock rate.
- - ``bits`` is the number of bits per character, 7, 8 or 9.
- - ``parity`` is the parity, ``None``, 0 (even) or 1 (odd).
- - ``stop`` is the number of stop bits, 1 or 2.
- - ``flow`` sets the flow control type. Can be 0, ``UART.RTS``, ``UART.CTS``
- or ``UART.RTS | UART.CTS``.
- - ``timeout`` is the timeout in milliseconds to wait for writing/reading the first character.
- - ``timeout_char`` is the timeout in milliseconds to wait between characters while writing or reading.
- - ``read_buf_len`` is the character length of the read buffer (0 to disable).
- This method will raise an exception if the baudrate could not be set within
- 5% of the desired value. The minimum baudrate is dictated by the frequency
- of the bus that the UART is on; UART(1) and UART(6) are APB2, the rest are on
- APB1. The default bus frequencies give a minimum baudrate of 1300 for
- UART(1) and UART(6) and 650 for the others. Use :func:`pyb.freq <pyb.freq>`
- to reduce the bus frequencies to get lower baudrates.
- *Note:* with parity=None, only 8 and 9 bits are supported. With parity enabled,
- only 7 and 8 bits are supported.
- .. method:: UART.deinit()
- Turn off the UART bus.
- .. method:: UART.any()
- Returns the number of bytes waiting (may be 0).
- .. method:: UART.read([nbytes])
- Read characters. If ``nbytes`` is specified then read at most that many bytes.
- If ``nbytes`` are available in the buffer, returns immediately, otherwise returns
- when sufficient characters arrive or the timeout elapses.
- If ``nbytes`` is not given then the method reads as much data as possible. It
- returns after the timeout has elapsed.
- *Note:* for 9 bit characters each character takes two bytes, ``nbytes`` must
- be even, and the number of characters is ``nbytes/2``.
- Return value: a bytes object containing the bytes read in. Returns ``None``
- on timeout.
- .. method:: UART.readchar()
- Receive a single character on the bus.
- Return value: The character read, as an integer. Returns -1 on timeout.
- .. method:: UART.readinto(buf[, nbytes])
- Read bytes into the ``buf``. If ``nbytes`` is specified then read at most
- that many bytes. Otherwise, read at most ``len(buf)`` bytes.
- Return value: number of bytes read and stored into ``buf`` or ``None`` on
- timeout.
- .. method:: UART.readline()
- Read a line, ending in a newline character. If such a line exists, return is
- immediate. If the timeout elapses, all available data is returned regardless
- of whether a newline exists.
- Return value: the line read or ``None`` on timeout if no data is available.
- .. method:: UART.write(buf)
- Write the buffer of bytes to the bus. If characters are 7 or 8 bits wide
- then each byte is one character. If characters are 9 bits wide then two
- bytes are used for each character (little endian), and ``buf`` must contain
- an even number of bytes.
- Return value: number of bytes written. If a timeout occurs and no bytes
- were written returns ``None``.
- .. method:: UART.writechar(char)
- Write a single character on the bus. ``char`` is an integer to write.
- Return value: ``None``. See note below if CTS flow control is used.
- .. method:: UART.sendbreak()
- Send a break condition on the bus. This drives the bus low for a duration
- of 13 bits.
- Return value: ``None``.
- Constants
- ---------
- .. data:: UART.RTS
- UART.CTS
- to select the flow control type.
- Flow Control
- ------------
- On Pyboards V1 and V1.1 ``UART(2)`` and ``UART(3)`` support RTS/CTS hardware flow control
- using the following pins:
- - ``UART(2)`` is on: ``(TX, RX, nRTS, nCTS) = (X3, X4, X2, X1) = (PA2, PA3, PA1, PA0)``
- - ``UART(3)`` is on :``(TX, RX, nRTS, nCTS) = (Y9, Y10, Y7, Y6) = (PB10, PB11, PB14, PB13)``
- On the Pyboard Lite only ``UART(2)`` supports flow control on these pins:
- ``(TX, RX, nRTS, nCTS) = (X1, X2, X4, X3) = (PA2, PA3, PA1, PA0)``
- In the following paragraphs the term "target" refers to the device connected to
- the UART.
- When the UART's ``init()`` method is called with ``flow`` set to one or both of
- ``UART.RTS`` and ``UART.CTS`` the relevant flow control pins are configured.
- ``nRTS`` is an active low output, ``nCTS`` is an active low input with pullup
- enabled. To achieve flow control the Pyboard's ``nCTS`` signal should be connected
- to the target's ``nRTS`` and the Pyboard's ``nRTS`` to the target's ``nCTS``.
- CTS: target controls Pyboard transmitter
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- If CTS flow control is enabled the write behaviour is as follows:
- If the Pyboard's ``UART.write(buf)`` method is called, transmission will stall for
- any periods when ``nCTS`` is ``False``. This will result in a timeout if the entire
- buffer was not transmitted in the timeout period. The method returns the number of
- bytes written, enabling the user to write the remainder of the data if required. In
- the event of a timeout, a character will remain in the UART pending ``nCTS``. The
- number of bytes composing this character will be included in the return value.
- If ``UART.writechar()`` is called when ``nCTS`` is ``False`` the method will time
- out unless the target asserts ``nCTS`` in time. If it times out ``OSError 116``
- will be raised. The character will be transmitted as soon as the target asserts ``nCTS``.
- RTS: Pyboard controls target's transmitter
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- If RTS flow control is enabled, behaviour is as follows:
- If buffered input is used (``read_buf_len`` > 0), incoming characters are buffered.
- If the buffer becomes full, the next character to arrive will cause ``nRTS`` to go
- ``False``: the target should cease transmission. ``nRTS`` will go ``True`` when
- characters are read from the buffer.
- Note that the ``any()`` method returns the number of bytes in the buffer. Assume a
- buffer length of ``N`` bytes. If the buffer becomes full, and another character arrives,
- ``nRTS`` will be set False, and ``any()`` will return the count ``N``. When
- characters are read the additional character will be placed in the buffer and will
- be included in the result of a subsequent ``any()`` call.
- If buffered input is not used (``read_buf_len`` == 0) the arrival of a character will
- cause ``nRTS`` to go ``False`` until the character is read.
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