* Prevents section type conflict errors if (say) const & non-const data
is put into the same section (ie with DRAM_ATTR)
* Allows linker --gc-sections to remove unused custom sections
New unity component can be used for testing other applications.
Upstream version of Unity is included as a submodule.
Utilities specific to ESP-IDF unit tests (partitions, leak checking
setup/teardown functions, etc) are kept only in unit-test-app.
Kconfig options are added to allow disabling certain Unity features.
Problem:
The new API esp_bt_mem_release() that was added freed BTDM data to heap from esp_bt_controller_mem_release().
Now with the BT memory optimization commit ee787085f9,
the BTDM data is optimized and reduced to only 32 bytes which is not sufficient amount to be added to heap.
So, using the API leads to assert saying that the region is too small.
Solution:
Modify heap_caps_add_region_with_caps to return ESP_ERR_INVALID_SIZE in case the range is too small to create a new heap.
Do not assert if return value is ESP_ERR_INVALID_SIZE
This also fixes using API esp_bt_controller_mem_release() with ESP_BT_MODE_BTDM
Signed-off-by: Hrishikesh Dhayagude <hrishi@espressif.com>
No longer necessary to keep all reserved addresses in 'soc'.
Means 'soc' does not need to know about 'bt', for example.
Also means that Bluetooth can be enabled in config without any memory being reserved for BT
controller. Only if code calling the BT controller is linked in, will this memory be reserved...
heap_caps_malloc will fail to poison a block in IRAM with size not
divisible by 4. The proper fix will be to make poisoning code
smarter, or to disallow allocations from IRAM with size not aligned
by 4.
Moved useful functions from wrapped assert functions, because option `CONFIG_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_DISABLED=y` will remove this functions.
Closes https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/issues/2068
* Philosophical: "explicit is better than implicit".
* Practical: Allows useful errors if invalid directories given in components as the defaults aren't
always used. Also trims the -I path from a number of components that have no actual include
directory.
* Simplifies knowing which components will be header-only and which won't
When splitting a memory block, check if the next block is free.
If it is, then just extend it upwards instead of creating a new block.
This fixes a bug where when shrinking existing allocations would result in irreversible free space fragmentation.
When testing on the host, test all the poisoning configurations.