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UCX/OS - Microcontroller Executive / OS

UCX/OS is an experimental preemptive unikernel (library OS) for microcontrollers, aimed to be easily ported. The kernel implements a lightweight multitasking environment in a single address space (based on fibers/coroutines and standard setjmp() and longjmp() library calls), using a minimum amount of resources.

Currently, UCX/OS supports the following targets:

RISC-V (32 / 64 bit)

  • RV32I (Qemu)
  • RV64I (Qemu)
  • HF-RISCV (RV32E / RV32I)

ARM (32 bit)

  • Versatilepb
  • STM32F401 / STM32F411 (Black Pill)
  • STM32F407 (Discovery)

MIPS (32 bit)

  • HF-RISC

AVR (8 bit)

  • ATMEGA328p
  • ATMEGA32
  • ATMEGA2560

Supported toolchains

Different toolchains based on GCC and LLVM can be used to build the kernel and applications. If you want to build a cross-compiler from scratch, check the sjohann81/toolchains repository for build scripts.

Features

  • Small footprint (4kB ~ 8kB) for the kernel;
  • Lightweight task model (fibers) where tasks share the same memory region;
  • Preemptive / cooperative scheduling based on a priority round robin (RR) scheduler;
  • Task synchronization using semaphores or pipeline channels;
  • Dynamic memory allocation;
  • Small C library, along with queue and list libraries.

Building example applications

In order to build the examples, a cross compiler toolchain has to be installed in the build machine. This toolchain will be used to assemble and compile the kernel sources, as well as user application sources and to build a single binary image that can be uploaded to a board or run in a simulator. The build process will generate several files in the build/target directory. In order to simplify recurrent application builds, the OS is compiled into a static library (libucxos.a) and application objects are linked with this library in the final build stage.

To build an application, select a supported target and build the kernel. Then, select an application and build it. There is no need to rebuild the kernel if the same chosen target is used, only application sources need to be compiled. For example, to build the 'hello_preempt.c' application for the Versatilepb target, type 'make ucx ARCH=arm/versatilepb' to build the kernel and 'make hello_p' to build the application and link it with the OS library. Check the makefile for different rules to build and run the examples. To build applications on a different target, type 'make veryclean' before rebuilding the kernel again.

For example, to build an application to run on Qemu (32 bit RISC-V) architecture:

  • Verify if both a toolchain for RISC-V (riscv32-unknown-elf) and Qemu (qemu-system-riscv32) are installed;
  • Build the UCX/OS kernel for the target (make ucx ARCH=riscv/riscv32-qemu);
  • Build the application (make hello_p);
  • Run the application (make run_riscv32') and type 'Ctrl+a x' to quit the emulator;

For other emulators, the binary image may need to be passed as a parameter as there are no rules in the makefile to run the application in this case. For boards such as the Arduino Nano (ATMEGA328p), the binary can be uploaded via a serial port. In the last case, plug the board, check the created virtual serial interface name in /dev/ and verify if the SERIAL_DEVICE variable is configured accordingly. To upload the binary to the board, type make load.

Programming model

The programming model is very simple and intented to be generic for the development of embedded applications. Along with basic C library support, task control and synchronization abstractions are provided. A thin layer of software (HAL, shorthand for hardware abstraction layer) is used to generalize basic architecture abstractions, so applications can be compiled for any of the supported targets without change. Any specific functionality besides basic kernel abstractions can also be used, as long as supported by the target architecture and toolchain (for example, abstractions such as port access, timers and other peripherals provided for the AVR target in the AVR-LIBC library). Such additional functionalities are target dependent and their use limits application portability.

Tasks, the stack, setjmp() / longjmp()

Tasks are basic resources managed by the kernel. In this model, tasks are lightweight execution routines that run indefinitely (tasks never finish) and share the same memory region. During bootup, the kernel initializes all tasks and allocates stack memory for each task local storage. Context switches are easily implemented by portable setjmp() and longjmp() library calls. This ensures very fast context switches, as less state storage is needed for each task and also allows the kernel to run even on severely memory constrained architectures.

Scheduling (cooperative / preemptive)

There are two scheduling modes in the kernel. An application can invoke the scheduler cooperatively by making a call to the ucx_task_yield() function. After initialization, this can happen at any moment inside the task loop. In preemptive mode, the kernel invokes the scheduler asynchronously using a periodic interrupt. Selection of the scheduling mode is performed according to the return value of the application app_main() function. When the application returns from this function with a value of 0, the kernel is configured in cooperative mode. If a value of 1 is returned, the kernel is configured in preemptive mode.

A priority round-robin algorithm performs the scheduling of tasks. By default, all tasks are configured with the same priority (TASK_NORMAL_PRIO), thus tasks share processor time proportionally. Priorities of each task can be changed after their inclusion in the system (in the app_main() function) by the ucx_task_priority() function, or configured dynamically (inside the body / during execution of a task) using the same function, according to the application needs. Each task can be configured in one of the following priorities: TASK_CRIT_PRIO (critical), TASK_REALTIME_PRIO (real time), TASK_HIGH_PRIO (high), TASK_ABOVE_PRIO (above normal), TASK_NORMAL_PRIO (normal), TASK_BELOW_PRIO (below normal), TASK_LOW_PRIO (low) and TASK_IDLE_PRIO (lowest).

Stack allocation

Memory used for stack inside a task function is allocated from the heap. The heap is a region of memory that is managed by a memory allocator, which is used by both the kernel and applications. Data stored in the task stack is consisted by local task variables and data structures. The size of the stack is configurable per a task basis and is specified when a task is added to the system. During execution, the stack space will be used for dynamic allocation during function calls, temporary variables and also to keep processor state during interrupts.

Each architecture HAL defines a default value for the stack space in a macro (DEFAULT_STACK_SIZE). Memory constrained architectures, such as the ATMEGA328p have a very limited default stack space of 256 bytes, but other architectures have more (2kB for example). Different tasks may have different stack space sizes, and it is up to the user to specify such value according to the application needs.

Task synchronization (semaphores, pipes, message queues, event queues)

In real world applications, tasks of the same application have some kind of interaction (synchronization / communication). To support this behavior, two basic abstractions are implemented in the kernel - pipelines and semaphores. Pipes are character oriented communication channels and semaphores are traditional counting semaphores with atomic semantics.

Device driver interface

Device drivers are the way to enable portability, customization and hardware support for different targets along with kernel extensions for new functionality. Device drivers can be implemented with a generic interface with operations such as open(), close(), read() and write() or with a custom interface. A typical device driver is saparated in three parts: a) driver interface (API), macros and function wrappers; b) device driver implementation; c) device driver function mapping. An application can create one or more instances of the same driver and it is responsible for the driver configuration and setup.

APIs

Kernel API

System calls are divided in three classes. The task class of system calls are used for task control and information. The system class are used for system information and control. The semaphore class of system calls are used for task synchronization and the pipe class of system calls are used as a basic communication mechanism between tasks. At this moment, system calls are implemented as simple library calls, but this will change in the near future for architectures that suport hardware exceptions and different modes of operation. There is a system call wrapper in place that can be used for as a system call interface, that implements a software interrupt for syscalls and asynchronous callbacks.

Task System Semaphore Pipe Message Queue Event Queue Timer
ucx_task_spawn() ucx_ticks() ucx_sem_create() ucx_pipe_create() ucx_mq_create() ucx_eq_create() ucx_timer_create()
ucx_task_cancel() ucx_uptime() ucx_sem_destroy() ucx_pipe_destroy() ucx_mq_destroy() ucx_eq_destroy() ucx_timer_destroy()
ucx_task_yield() ucx_sem_wait() ucx_pipe_flush() ucx_mq_enqueue() ucx_event_post() ucx_timer_start()
ucx_task_delay() ucx_sem_signal() ucx_pipe_size() ucx_mq_dequeue() ucx_event_poll() ucx_timer_cancel()
ucx_task_suspend() ucx_pipe_read() ucx_mq_items() ucx_event_get()
ucx_task_resume() ucx_pipe_write() ucx_event_dispatch()
ucx_task_priority()
ucx_task_id()
ucx_task_wfi()
ucx_task_count()

Task

Tasks are the basic scheduling resource. An application in UCX/OS is composed of one or more tasks, which are scheduled according to their priorities. Tasks communicate using shared memory and synchronized or by exchanging data through pipes or event queues.

ucx_task_spawn()
  • Spawns a new task with its own priority and stack size. New tasks are spawned with a normal priority and are in TASK_READY state, waiting for scheduling.
ucx_task_cancel()
  • Cancels a previously spawned task and removes kernel allocated data structures.
ucx_task_yield()
  • Yields que processor voluntarily (non-preemptive task reschedule), changing its state TASK_RUNNING to TASK_READY. A task invoking this function gives up execution and calls the scheduler. As a consequence, it is rescheduled to run again in the future.
ucx_task_delay()
  • Puts the current task in a blocked state changing its state to TASK_BLOCKED for a number of ticks (scheduling events). After the delay, the task state is changed to TASK_READY. If the system is initialized as preemptive, the delay is updated on dispatcher interrupts. Otherwise, ucx_task_yield() updates the delay.
ucx_task_suspend()
  • Puts a task in the TASK_SUSPENDED state until another tasks resumes it from this state.
ucx_task_resume()
  • Resumes a task from the TASK_SUSPENDED state, returning it to the TASK_READY state.
ucx_task_priority()
  • Changes a task priority from the default priority. Valid priorities are TASK_IDLE_PRIO, TASK_LOW_PRIO, TASK_BELOW_PRIO, TASK_NORMAL_PRIO (default), TASK_ABOVE_PRIO, TASK_HIGH_PRIO TASK_REALTIME_PRIO and TASK_CRIT_PRIO. These priorities are relative for the task set, according to a priority round-robin scheduler.
ucx_task_id()
  • Returns the current task id number.
ucx_task_wfi()
  • Blocks the current task in a busy wait, until its scheduling quantum expires.
ucx_task_count()
  • Returns the number of tasks in the system.

System

ucx_ticks()
  • Returns the number of executed task dispatches in the system.
ucx_uptime()
  • Returns the system uptime since boot with microsecond resolution.

Semaphore

Semaphore is a basic task synchronization primitive, with Dijkstra's semantics. The implementation of semaphores in the kernel associates a counter and queue for each semaphore instance.

ucx_sem_create()
  • Creates and initializes a semaphore.
ucx_sem_destroy()
  • Destroys a semaphore and frees semaphore data structures.
ucx_sem_wait()
  • Waits on a semaphore. A task can either decrement the semaphore value and pass atomically (semaphore value is > 1 before the call), or block on the semaphore (semaphore value is <= 0 before the call).
ucx_sem_signal()
  • Signals a semaphore. A task can either increment the semaphore value (semaphore value >= 0 before the call), or increment and unblock a waiting task (semaphore value is < 0 before the call).

Pipe

Pipes are basic character oriented communication channels between tasks. Pipes can be used to synchronize and pass data between tasks, and they are implemented using blocking semantics. Each pipe can have a configurable size, essentially acting as a data buffer.

Message Queue

Message queues are simple message oriented communication channels between tasks. Message queues can be used to synchronize and pass simple (such as integers, strings) or structured messages between tasks, and are implemented using non-blocking semantics.

Event Queue

Events are values or callback functions which are put in a queue for future execution. Events callbacks run only once, and must always return. The event API implements the publish/subscribe model, so an event can be delivered to multiple tasks. Events are a feature being developed and are not completely implemented yet.

Timer

Timers are flexible resources that allow the dispatch of events, implemented as callback functions. Software timers can be used to control a large number of events, without the limitations of hardware timers, such as limited a set of timers and different configurations for each timer. Software timers are handled in a single task and callbacks are dispatched in the context of this task. This reduces resource usage, compared to timers implemented as several tasks and using the ucx_task_delay() primitive. Timers can be configured in single shot or auto-reload modes.

Library API

Lists and queues are basic data structures which are provided to applications as an API. Lists are implemented as singly or doubly linked lists with sentinel nodes at both ends, so less operations are needed when adding or removing items. Queues are circular data structures and have a defined size on their creation aligned to the next power of two. This results in an efficient implementation of circular queues, as no modular arithmetic needs to be performed for insertion and removal of items.

List (singly) List (doubly) Queue
list_create() dlist_create() queue_create()
list_destroy() dlist_destroy() queue_destroy()
list_push() dlist_push() queue_count()
list_pushback() dlist_pushback() queue_enqueue()
list_pop() dlist_pop() queue_dequeue()
list_popback() dlist_popback() queue_peek()
list_insert() dlist_insert()
list_remove() dlist_remove()
list_index() dlist_index()
list_foreach() dlist_foreach()

List

(TODO)

Queue

(TODO)

LibC

Below is a table of the implemented functions from the standard C library. These functions are macros which are used as aliases for actual library abstractions. The internal C library implementation is limited and can be bypassed if needed (with function granularity) by removing such macros from the HAL of a specific architecture, thus supporting an external or more adequate implementation. Functions such as printf() are limited implementations which focus on basic functionality, being more compact (smaller code size) versions of the original primitives.

Libc
strcpy() strncpy() strcat() strncat() strcmp()
strncmp() strstr() strlen() strchr() strpbrk()
strsep() strtok() strtok_r() strtol() atoi()
itoa() memcpy() memmove() memcmp() memset()
abs() random() srand() puts() gets()
fgets() getline() printf() sprintf() free()
malloc() calloc() realloc()

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