zephyr/samples/synchronization
Sebastian Bøe 49e7ca957e cmake: set IS_TEST in the samples that were including Makefile.test
For an unknown reason, various samples in KBuild were including
Makefile.test, this had some desired benefits, one of which is that
the popular BOOT_BANNER appears. The CMake-equivalent of including
Makefile.test is setting the flag IS_TEST. This commit reverts the
behaviour of the samples back to how it was pre-cmake.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Boe <sebastian.boe@nordicsemi.no>
2017-11-16 08:26:25 -05:00
..
src kbuild: Removed KBuild 2017-11-08 20:00:22 -05:00
CMakeLists.txt cmake: set IS_TEST in the samples that were including Makefile.test 2017-11-16 08:26:25 -05:00
README.rst samples: misc: Convert doc to CMake 2017-11-12 21:13:23 -05:00
prj.conf
prj_stack_guard.conf
sample.tc
sample.yaml

README.rst

.. _synchronization_sample:

Synchronization Sample
######################

Overview
********

A simple application that demonstrates basic sanity of the kernel.
Two threads (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 kernel scheduling, communication,
and timing are operating correctly.

Building and Running
********************

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

.. zephyr-app-commands::
   :zephyr-app: samples/synchronization
   :board: qemu_x86
   :goals: run
   :compact:

On the supported ARM MCUs the project can be built with the MPU and the Thread
Stack Guard feature enabled:

.. zephyr-app-commands::
   :zephyr-app: samples/synchronization
   :board: v2m_beetle
   :conf: prj_stack_guard.conf
   :goals: build flash
   :compact:

Sample Output
=============

.. code-block:: console

   threadA: Hello World!
   threadB: Hello World!
   threadA: Hello World!
   threadB: Hello World!
   threadA: Hello World!
   threadB: Hello World!
   threadA: Hello World!
   threadB: Hello World!
   threadA: Hello World!
   threadB: Hello World!

   <repeats endlessly>