zephyr/scripts/dts
Yong Cong Sin df2c0681d3 devicetree: encode multi-level interrupt number in C devicetree magic
The multi-level encoding of the interrupt number currently
happens in the `gen_defines.py`, which is called in the
`dts.cmake` module after `kconfig.cmake`. However, the number
of bits used by each level is defined in Kconfig and this means
that `gen_defines.py` will not be able to get that information
during build.

To fix this, do the multi-level encoding in C devicetree macro
magic instead of the python script. This ticks one of a
long-standing TODO item from the `gen_defines.py`.

Signed-off-by: Yong Cong Sin <ycsin@meta.com>
2023-10-30 11:43:39 -04:00
..
python-devicetree edtlib: link child nodes to parent for nodes with child-bindings 2023-10-25 18:39:31 -07:00
README.txt
gen_defines.py devicetree: encode multi-level interrupt number in C devicetree magic 2023-10-30 11:43:39 -04:00
gen_driver_kconfig_dts.py scripts: dts: gen_driver_kconfig_dts: Skip empty yaml files 2023-02-19 20:46:44 -05:00
gen_dts_cmake.py treewide: Disable automatic argparse argument shortening 2023-01-26 20:12:36 +09:00

README.txt

This directory used to contain the edtlib.py and dtlib.py libraries
and tests, alongside the gen_defines.py script that uses them for
converting DTS to the C macros used by Zephyr.

The libraries and tests have now been moved to the 'python-devicetree'
subdirectory.

We are now in the process of extracting edtlib and dtlib into a
standalone source code library that we intend to share with other
projects.

Links related to the work making this standalone:

    https://pypi.org/project/devicetree/
    https://python-devicetree.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
    https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/python-devicetree

The 'python-devicetree' subdirectory you find here next to this
README.txt matches the standalone python-devicetree repository linked
above.

For now, the 'main' copy will continue to be hosted here in the zephyr
repository. We will mirror changes into the standalone repository as
needed; you can just ignore it for now.

Code in the zephyr repository which needs these libraries will import
devicetree.edtlib from now on, but the code will continue to be found
by manipulating sys.path for now.

Eventually, as APIs stabilize, the python-devicetree code in this
repository will disappear, and a standalone repository will be the
'main' one.