* Add Per Key functionality for AutoShift (#11536) * LED Matrix: Reactive effect buffers & advanced indicators (#12588) * [Keyboard] kint36: switch to sym_eager_pk debouncing (#12626) * [Keyboard] kint2pp: reduce input latency by ≈10ms (#12625) * LED Matrix: Split (#12633) * [CI] Format code according to conventions (#12650) * feat: infinite timeout for leader key (#6580) * feat: implement leader_no_timeout logic * docs(leader_key): infinite leader timeout docs * Format code according to conventions (#12680) * Update ADC driver for STM32F1xx, STM32F3xx, STM32F4xx (#12403) * Fix default ADC_RESOLUTION for ADCv3 (and ADCv4) Recent ChibiOS update removed ADC_CFGR1_RES_10BIT from the ADCv3 headers (that macro should not have been there, because ADCv3 has CFGR instead of CFGR1). Fix the default value for ADC_RESOLUTION to use ADC_CFGR_RES_10BITS if it is defined (that name is used for ADCv3 and ADCv4). * Update ADC docs to match the actually used resolution ADC driver for ChibiOS actually uses the 10-bit resolution by default (probably to match AVR); fix the documentation accordingly. Also add both ADC_CFGR_RES_10BITS and ADC_CFGR1_RES_10BIT constants (these names differ according to the ADC implementation in the particular MCU). * Fix pinToMux() for B12 and B13 on STM32F3xx Testing on STM32F303CCT6 revealed that the ADC mux values for B12 and B13 pins were wrong. * Add support for all possible analog pins on STM32F1xx Added ADC mux values for pins A0...A7, B0, B1, C0...C5 on STM32F1xx (they are the same at least for STM32F103x8 and larger F103 devices, and also F102, F105, F107 families). Actually tested on STM32F103C8T6 (therefore pins C0...C5 were not tested). Pins F6...F10, which are present on STM32F103x[C-G] in 144-pin packages, cannot be supported at the moment, because those pins are connected only to ADC3, but the ChibiOS ADC driver for STM32F1xx supports only ADC1. * Add support for all possible analog pins on STM32F4xx Added ADC mux values for pins A0...A7, B0, B1, C0...C5 and optionally F3...F10 (if STM32_ADC_USE_ADC3 is enabled). These mux values are apparently the same for all F4xx devices, except some smaller devices may not have ADC3. Actually tested on STM32F401CCU6, STM32F401CEU6, STM32F411CEU6 (using various WeAct “Blackpill” boards); only pins A0...A7, B0, B1 were tested. Pins F3...F10 are inside `#if STM32_ADC_USE_ADC3` because some devices which don't have ADC3 also don't have the GPIOF port, therefore the code which refers to Fx pins does not compile. * Fix STM32F3xx ADC mux table in documentation The ADC driver documentation had some errors in the mux table for STM32F3xx. Fix this table to match the datasheet and the actual code (mux settings for B12 and B13 were also tested on a real STM32F303CCT6 chip). * Add STM32F1xx ADC pins to the documentation * Add STM32F4xx ADC pins to the documentation * Add initial support for tinyuf2 bootloader (when hosted on F411 blackpill) (#12600) * Add support for jumping to tinyuf2 bootloader. Adds blackpill UF2 example. * Update flashing.md * Update chconf.h * Update config.h * Update halconf.h * Update mcuconf.h * eeprom driver: Refactor where eeprom driver initialisation (and EEPROM emulation initialisation) occurs to make it non-target-specific. (#12671) * Add support for MCU = STM32F446 (#12619) * Add support for MCU = STM32F446 * Update platforms/chibios/GENERIC_STM32_F446XE/configs/config.h * Restore mcuconf.h to the one used by RT-STM32F446RE-NUCLEO64 * stm32f446: update mcuconf.h and board.h for 16MHz operation, with USB enabled, and other peripherals disabled. * Format code according to conventions (#12682) * Format code according to conventions (#12687) * Add STM32L433 and L443 support (#12063) * initial L433 commit * change to XC * fix L433 * disable all peripherals * update system and peripheral clocks * 433 change * use its own board files * revert its own board files * l433 specific change * fix stm32l432xx define * remove duplicate #define * fix bootloader jump * move to L443xx and add i2c2, spi2, usart3 to mcuconf.h * move to L443 * move to L443 * fix sdmmc in mcuconf.h * include STM32L443 * add L443 * Include L443 in compatible microcontrollers * Include L443 in compatible microcontrollers * Update config bootloader jump description * Update ChibiOS define reasoning * Update quantum/mcu_selection.mk * fix git conflict * Updated Function96 with V2 files and removed chconf.h and halconf.h (#12613) * Fix bad PR merge for #6580. (#12721) * Change RGB/LED Matrix to use a simple define for USB suspend (#12697) * [CI] Format code according to conventions (#12731) * Fixing transport's led/rgb matrix suspend state logic (#12770) * [CI] Format code according to conventions (#12772) * Fix comment parsing (#12750) * Added OLED fade out support (#12086) * fix some references to bin/qmk that slipped in (#12832) * Resolve a number of warnings in `qmk generate-api` (#12833) * New command: qmk console (#12828) * stash poc * stash * tidy up implementation * Tidy up slightly for review * Tidy up slightly for review * Bodge environment to make tests pass * Refactor away from asyncio due to windows issues * Filter devices * align vid/pid printing * Add hidapi to the installers * start preparing for multiple hid_listeners * udev rules for hid_listen * refactor to move closer to end state * very basic implementation of the threaded model * refactor how vid/pid/index are supplied and parsed * windows improvements * read the report directly when usage page isn't available * add per-device colors, the choice to show names or numbers, and refactor * add timestamps * Add support for showing bootloaders * tweak the color for bootloaders * Align bootloader disconnect with connect color * add support for showing all bootloaders * fix the pyusb check * tweaks * fix exception * hide a stack trace behind -v * add --no-bootloaders option * add documentation for qmk console * Apply suggestions from code review * pyformat * clean up and flesh out KNOWN_BOOTLOADERS * Remove pointless SERIAL_LINK_ENABLE rules (#12846) * Make Swap Hands use PROGMEM (#12284) This converts the array that the Swap Hands feature uses to use PROGMEM, and to read from that array, as such. Since this array never changes at runtime, there is no reason to keep it in memory. Especially for AVR boards, as memory is a precious resource. * Fix another bin/qmk reference (#12856) * [Keymap] Turn OLED off on suspend in soundmonster keymap (#10419) * Fixup build errors on `develop` branch. (#12723) * LED Matrix: Effects! (#12651) * Fix syntax error when compiling for ARM (#12866) * Remove KEYMAP and LAYOUT_kc (#12160) * alias KEYMAP to LAYOUT * remove KEYMAP and LAYOUT_kc * Add setup, clone, and env to the list of commands we allow even with broken modules (#12868) * Rename `point_t` -> `led_point_t` (#12864) * [Keyboard] updated a vendor name / fixed minor keymap issues (#12881) * Add missing LED Matrix suspend code to suspend.c (#12878) * LED Matrix: Documentation (#12685) * Deprecate `send_unicode_hex_string()` (#12602) * Fix spelling mistake regarding LED Matrix in split_common. (#12888) * [Keymap] Fix QWERTY/DVORAK status output for kzar keymap (#12895) * Use milc.subcommand.config instead of qmk.cli.config (#12915) * Use milc.subcommand.config instead * pyformat * remove the config test * Add function to allow repeated blinking of one layer (#12237) * Implement function rgblight_blink_layer_repeat to allow repeated blinking of one layer at a time * Update doc * Rework rgblight blinking according to requested change * optimize storage * Fixup housekeeping from being invoked twice per loop. (#12933) * matrix: wait for row signal to go HIGH for every row (#12945) I noticed this discrepancy (last row of the matrix treated differently than the others) when optimizing the input latency of my keyboard controller, see also https://michael.stapelberg.ch/posts/2021-05-08-keyboard-input-latency-qmk-kinesis/ Before this commit, when tuning the delays I noticed ghost key presses when pressing the F2 key, which is on the last row of the keyboard matrix: the dead_grave key, which is on the first row of the keyboard matrix, would be incorrectly detected as pressed. After this commit, all keyboard matrix rows are interpreted correctly. I suspect that my setup is more susceptible to this nuance than others because I use GPIO_INPUT_PIN_DELAY=0 and hence don’t have another delay that might mask the problem. * ensure we do not conflict with existing keymap aliases (#12976) * Add support for up to 4 IS31FL3733 drivers (#12342) * Convert Encoder callbacks to be boolean functions (#12805) * [Keyboard] Fix Terrazzo build failure (#12977) * Do not hard set config in CPTC files (#11864) * [Keyboard] Corne - Remove legacy revision support (#12226) * [Keymap] Update to Drashna keymap and user code (based on develop) (#12936) * Add Full-duplex serial driver for ARM boards (#9842) * Document LED_MATRIX_FRAMEBUFFER_EFFECTS (#12987) * Backlight: add defines for default level and breathing state (#12560) * Add dire message about LUFA mass storage bootloader (#13014) * [Keyboard] Remove redundant legacy and common headers for crkbd (#13023) Was causing compiler errors on some systems. * Fix keyboards/keymaps for boolean encoder callback changes (#12985) * `backlight.c`: include `eeprom.h` (#13024) * Add changelog for 2021-05-29 Breaking Changes merge (#12939) * Add ChangeLog for 2021-05-29 Breaking Changes Merge: initial version * Add recent develop changes * Sort recent develop changes * Remove sections for ChibiOS changes per tzarc No ChibiOS changes this round. * Add and sort recent develop changes * add notes about keyboard moves/deletions * import changelog for PR 12172 Documents the change to BOOTMAGIC_ENABLE. * update section headings * re-sort changelog * add additional note regarding Bootmagic changes * remove changelog timestamp * update dates in main Breaking Changes docs * fix broken section anchors in previous changelogs * add link to backlight/eeprom patch to changelog * highlight some more changes * link PRs from section headers * Restore standard readme * run: qmk cformat --core-only
6.9 KiB
WS2812 Driver
This driver powers the RGB Lighting and RGB Matrix features.
Currently QMK supports the following addressable LEDs (however, the white LED in RGBW variants is not supported):
WS2811, WS2812, WS2812B, WS2812C, etc.
SK6812, SK6812MINI, SK6805
These LEDs are called "addressable" because instead of using a wire per color, each LED contains a small microchip that understands a special protocol sent over a single wire. The chip passes on the remaining data to the next LED, allowing them to be chained together. In this way, you can easily control the color of the individual LEDs.
Supported Driver Types
AVR | ARM | |
---|---|---|
bit bang | ✔️ | ✔️ |
I2C | ✔️ | |
SPI | ✔️ | |
PWM | ✔️ |
Driver configuration
All drivers
Different versions of the addressable LEDs have differing requirements for the TRST period between frames. The default setting is 280 µs, which should work for most cases, but this can be overridden in your config.h. e.g.:
#define WS2812_TRST_US 80
Byte Order
Some variants of the WS2812 may have their color components in a different physical or logical order. For example, the WS2812B-2020 has physically swapped red and green LEDs, which causes the wrong color to be displayed, because the default order of the bytes sent over the wire is defined as GRB.
In this case, you can change the byte order by defining WS2812_BYTE_ORDER
as one of the following values:
Byte order | Known devices |
---|---|
WS2812_BYTE_ORDER_GRB (default) |
Most WS2812's, SK6812, SK6805 |
WS2812_BYTE_ORDER_RGB |
WS2812B-2020 |
WS2812_BYTE_ORDER_BGR |
TM1812 |
Bitbang
Default driver, the absence of configuration assumes this driver. To configure it, add this to your rules.mk:
WS2812_DRIVER = bitbang
!> This driver is not hardware accelerated and may not be performant on heavily loaded systems.
I2C
Targeting boards where WS2812 support is offloaded to a 2nd MCU. Currently the driver is limited to AVR given the known consumers are ps2avrGB/BMC. To configure it, add this to your rules.mk:
WS2812_DRIVER = i2c
Configure the hardware via your config.h:
#define WS2812_ADDRESS 0xb0 // default: 0xb0
#define WS2812_TIMEOUT 100 // default: 100
SPI
Targeting STM32 boards where WS2812 support is offloaded to an SPI hardware device. The advantage is that the use of DMA offloads processing of the WS2812 protocol from the MCU. RGB_DI_PIN
for this driver is the configured SPI MOSI pin. Due to the nature of repurposing SPI to drive the LEDs, the other SPI pins, MISO and SCK, must remain unused. To configure it, add this to your rules.mk:
WS2812_DRIVER = spi
Configure the hardware via your config.h:
#define WS2812_SPI SPID1 // default: SPID1
#define WS2812_SPI_MOSI_PAL_MODE 5 // Pin "alternate function", see the respective datasheet for the appropriate values for your MCU. default: 5
You must also turn on the SPI feature in your halconf.h and mcuconf.h
Circular Buffer Mode
Some boards may flicker while in the normal buffer mode. To fix this issue, circular buffer mode may be used to rectify the issue.
By default, the circular buffer mode is disabled.
To enable this alternative buffer mode, place this into your config.h
file:
#define WS2812_SPI_USE_CIRCULAR_BUFFER
Setting baudrate with divisor
To adjust the baudrate at which the SPI peripheral is configured, users will need to derive the target baudrate from the clock tree provided by STM32CubeMX.
Only divisors of 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128 and 256 are supported by hardware.
Define | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
WS2812_SPI_DIVISOR |
16 |
SPI source clock peripheral divisor |
Testing Notes
While not an exhaustive list, the following table provides the scenarios that have been partially validated:
SPI1 | SPI2 | SPI3 | |
---|---|---|---|
f072 | ? | B15 ✔️ | N/A |
f103 | A7 ✔️ | B15 ✔️ | N/A |
f303 | A7 ✔️ B5 ✔️ | B15 ✔️ | B5 ✔️ |
Other supported ChibiOS boards and/or pins may function, it will be highly chip and configuration dependent.
PWM
Targeting STM32 boards where WS2812 support is offloaded to an PWM timer and DMA stream. The advantage is that the use of DMA offloads processing of the WS2812 protocol from the MCU. To configure it, add this to your rules.mk:
WS2812_DRIVER = pwm
Configure the hardware via your config.h:
#define WS2812_PWM_DRIVER PWMD2 // default: PWMD2
#define WS2812_PWM_CHANNEL 2 // default: 2
#define WS2812_PWM_PAL_MODE 2 // Pin "alternate function", see the respective datasheet for the appropriate values for your MCU. default: 2
//#define WS2812_PWM_COMPLEMENTARY_OUTPUT // Define for a complementary timer output (TIMx_CHyN); omit for a normal timer output (TIMx_CHy).
#define WS2812_DMA_STREAM STM32_DMA1_STREAM2 // DMA Stream for TIMx_UP, see the respective reference manual for the appropriate values for your MCU.
#define WS2812_DMA_CHANNEL 2 // DMA Channel for TIMx_UP, see the respective reference manual for the appropriate values for your MCU.
#define WS2812_DMAMUX_ID STM32_DMAMUX1_TIM2_UP // DMAMUX configuration for TIMx_UP -- only required if your MCU has a DMAMUX peripheral, see the respective reference manual for the appropriate values for your MCU.
Note that using a complementary timer output (TIMx_CHyN) is possible only for advanced-control timers (TIM1, TIM8, TIM20 on STM32), and the STM32_PWM_USE_ADVANCED
option in mcuconf.h must be set to TRUE
. Complementary outputs of general-purpose timers are not supported due to ChibiOS limitations.
You must also turn on the PWM feature in your halconf.h and mcuconf.h
Testing Notes
While not an exhaustive list, the following table provides the scenarios that have been partially validated:
Status | |
---|---|
f072 | ? |
f103 | ✔️ |
f303 | ✔️ |
f401/f411 | ✔️ |
Other supported ChibiOS boards and/or pins may function, it will be highly chip and configuration dependent.
Push Pull and Open Drain Configuration
The default configuration is a push pull on the defined pin. This can be configured for bitbang, PWM and SPI.
Note: This only applies to STM32 boards.
To configure the RGB_DI_PIN
to open drain configuration add this to your config.h file:
#define WS2812_EXTERNAL_PULLUP