This ensures the every characteristic has a value attribute declared
with the same UUID since the old macro did not declare the value the
application would normally have to declare one itself using a different
UUID which is not allowed.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Some device include a temperature sensor, usually used as a
companion for helping in drift compensation, that measure the
die temperature. This temperature IS NOT related to the the
ambient temperature, hence a clean separation between the two
is required.
This commit introduces a clean separation between the two
types of temperature leaving the old deprecated definition
still there.
The list of current drivers that read the die (and not the ambient)
temperature is the following:
- adxl362
- bma280
- bmg160
- bmi160
- fxos8700
- lis3mdl
- lsm6ds0
- lsm6dsl
- lsm9ds0
- mpu6050
Signed-off-by: Armando Visconti <armando.visconti@st.com>
Based on the discussion in #5693, the reason why humidity was defined
in milli-percent was likely following Linux which defines it as such
in its sensor subsystem:
http://elixir.free-electrons.com/linux/latest/source/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-iio#L263
However, Linux defines temperature in milli-degrees either, but
Zephyr uses degrees (similarly for most other quantities). Typical
sensor resolution/precision for humidity is also on the order of 1%.
One of the existing drivers, th02.c, already returned values in
percents, and few apps showed it without conversion and/or units,
leading to confusing output to user like "54500".
So, switching units to percents, and update all the drivers and
sample apps.
For few drivers, there was also optimized conversion arithmetics
to avoid u64_t operations. (There're probably more places to
optimize it, and temperature conversion could use such optimization
too, but that's left for another patch.)
Fixes: #5693
Signed-off-by: Paul Sokolovsky <paul.sokolovsky@linaro.org>
Remove build_only and add harness type needed for the sample/test to
allow running with sanitycheck and on devices once we have harness
support.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Introducing CMake is an important step in a larger effort to make
Zephyr easy to use for application developers working on different
platforms with different development environment needs.
Simplified, this change retains Kconfig as-is, and replaces all
Makefiles with CMakeLists.txt. The DSL-like Make language that KBuild
offers is replaced by a set of CMake extentions. These extentions have
either provided simple one-to-one translations of KBuild features or
introduced new concepts that replace KBuild concepts.
This is a breaking change for existing test infrastructure and build
scripts that are maintained out-of-tree. But for FW itself, no porting
should be necessary.
For users that just want to continue their work with minimal
disruption the following should suffice:
Install CMake 3.8.2+
Port any out-of-tree Makefiles to CMake.
Learn the absolute minimum about the new command line interface:
$ cd samples/hello_world
$ mkdir build && cd build
$ cmake -DBOARD=nrf52_pca10040 ..
$ cd build
$ make
PR: zephyrproject-rtos#4692
docs: http://docs.zephyrproject.org/getting_started/getting_started.html
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Boe <sebastian.boe@nordicsemi.no>
The API name space for Bluetooth is bt_* and BT_* so it makes sense to
align the Kconfig name space with this. The additional benefit is that
this also makes the names shorter. It is also in line with what Linux
uses for Bluetooth Kconfig entries.
Some Bluetooth-related Networking Kconfig defines are renamed as well
in order to be consistent, such as NET_L2_BLUETOOTH.
Signed-off-by: Johan Hedberg <johan.hedberg@intel.com>
This will prepare test cases and samples with metadata and information
that will be consumed by the sanitycheck script which will be changed to
parse YAML files instead of ini.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>