zephyr/samples/synchronization/microkernel
Anas Nashif 81125feb06 samples: synchronization: reduce stack size used
This will allow this sample to run on systems with less than 8K SRAM.

Change-Id: Id3a1c826cfade09f91bc3b0dba3c98e386f5ab06
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
2016-04-25 19:17:06 +00:00
..
src move sample apps to top level directory under samples/ 2016-02-11 13:08:44 -05:00
Makefile move sample apps to top level directory under samples/ 2016-02-11 13:08:44 -05:00
README.txt move sample apps to top level directory under samples/ 2016-02-11 13:08:44 -05:00
prj.conf samples/tests: remove old message about standard security 2016-03-07 16:07:35 +00:00
prj.mdef samples: synchronization: reduce stack size used 2016-04-25 19:17:06 +00:00
testcase.ini move sample apps to top level directory under samples/ 2016-02-11 13:08:44 -05:00

README.txt

Title: Synchronisation

Description:

A simple application that demonstates basic sanity of the microkernel.
Two tasks (A and B) take turns printing a greeting message to the console,
and use sleep requests and semaphores to control the rate at which messages
are generated. This demonstrates that microkernel scheduling, communication,
and timing are operating correctly.

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Building and Running Project:

This microkernel project outputs to the console.  It can be built and executed
on QEMU as follows:

    make qemu

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Troubleshooting:

Problems caused by out-dated project information can be addressed by
issuing one of the following commands then rebuilding the project:

    make clean          # discard results of previous builds
                        # but keep existing configuration info
or
    make pristine       # discard results of previous builds
                        # and restore pre-defined configuration info

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sample Output:

taskA: Hello World!
taskB: Hello World!
taskA: Hello World!
taskB: Hello World!
taskA: Hello World!
taskB: Hello World!
taskA: Hello World!
taskB: Hello World!
taskA: Hello World!
taskB: Hello World!

<repeats endlessly>