menu "FreeRTOS" # This is actually also handled in the ESP32 startup code, not only in FreeRTOS. config FREERTOS_UNICORE bool "Run FreeRTOS only on first core" default n help This version of FreeRTOS normally takes control of all cores of the CPU. Select this if you only want to start it on the first core. This is needed when e.g. another process needs complete control over the second core. choice FREERTOS_CORETIMER prompt "Xtensa timer to use as the FreeRTOS tick source" default CONFIG_FREERTOS_CORETIMER_0 help FreeRTOS needs a timer with an associated interrupt to use as the main tick source to increase counters, run timers and do pre-emptive multitasking with. There are multiple timers available to do this, with different interrupt priorities. Check config FREERTOS_CORETIMER_0 bool "Timer 0 (int 6, level 1)" help Select this to use timer 0 config FREERTOS_CORETIMER_1 bool "Timer 1 (int 15, level 3)" help Select this to use timer 1 config FREERTOS_CORETIMER_2 bool "Timer 2 (int 16, level 5)" help Select this to use timer 2 endchoice config FREERTOS_HZ int "Tick rate (Hz)" range 1 10000 default 100 help Select the tick rate at which FreeRTOS does pre-emptive context switching. choice FREERTOS_CHECK_STACKOVERFLOW prompt "Check for stack overflow" default FREERTOS_CHECK_STACKOVERFLOW_QUICK help FreeRTOS can check for stack overflows in threads and trigger an user function called vApplicationStackOverflowHook when this happens. config FREERTOS_CHECK_STACKOVERFLOW_NONE bool "No checking" help Do not check for stack overflows (configCHECK_FOR_STACK_OVERFLOW=0) config FREERTOS_CHECK_STACKOVERFLOW_PTRVAL bool "Check by stack pointer value" help Check for stack overflows on each context switch by checking if the stack pointer is in a valid range. Quick but does not detect stack overflows that happened between context switches (configCHECK_FOR_STACK_OVERFLOW=1) config FREERTOS_CHECK_STACKOVERFLOW_CANARY bool "Check using canary bytes" help Places some magic bytes at the end of the stack area and on each context switch, check if these bytes are still intact. More thorough than just checking the pointer, but also slightly slower. (configCHECK_FOR_STACK_OVERFLOW=2) endchoice config FREERTOS_THREAD_LOCAL_STORAGE_POINTERS int "Amount of thread local storage pointers" range 0 256 default 0 help FreeRTOS has the ability to store per-thread pointers in the task control block. This controls the amount of pointers available; 0 turns off this functionality. #This still needs to be implemented. choice FREERTOS_PANIC prompt "Panic handler behaviour" default FREERTOS_PANIC_PRINT_REBOOT help If FreeRTOS detects unexpected behaviour or an unhandled exception, the panic handler is invoked. Configure the panic handlers action here. config FREERTOS_PANIC_PRINT_HALT bool "Print registers and halt" help Outputs the relevant registers over the serial port and halt the processor. Needs a manual reset to restart. config FREERTOS_PANIC_PRINT_REBOOT bool "Print registers and reboot" help Outputs the relevant registers over the serial port and immediately reset the processor. config FREERTOS_PANIC_SILENT_REBOOT bool "Silent reboot" help Just resets the processor without outputting anything config FREERTOS_PANIC_GDBSTUB bool "Invoke GDBStub" help Invoke gdbstub on the serial port, allowing for gdb to attach to it to do a postmortem of the crash. endchoice config FREERTOS_DEBUG_OCDAWARE bool "Make exception and panic handlers JTAG/OCD aware" default y help The FreeRTOS panic and unhandled exception handers can detect a JTAG OCD debugger and instead of panicking, have the debugger stop on the offending instruction. endmenu