If CONFIG_SPI_STATS is enabled, the device state for all SPI controller
drivers must contain the SPI stats. This space is allocated by calling
Z_SPI_INIT_FN as part of the device definition; this is done automatically
when using SPI_DEVICE_DT_DEFINE instead of DEVICE_DT_DEFINE. If space for
statistics is not properly allocated but CONFIG_SPI_STATS is enabled, an
unexpected write to memory outside of the stats region may occur on a SPI
transfer. This commit uses SPI_DEVICE_DT_DEFINE or
SPI_DEVICE_DT_INST_DEFINE for all in-tree SPI controller drivers.
Signed-off-by: Dane Wagner <dane.wagner@gmail.com>
For code clarity, this commit adjusts the use of `return` statements
in functions with a void return type as follows:
- Transform `return foo();` into separate statements:
`foo();`
`return;`
- Remove unnecessary `return` statements when
they don't affect control flow.
Signed-off-by: Pisit Sawangvonganan <pisit@ndrsolution.com>
Add spi_cs_is_gpio(_dt) helpers to check whether SPI CS is controlled by
GPIO or not. This both improves code readability and isolates SPI
internals.
Signed-off-by: Gerard Marull-Paretas <gerard.marull@nordicsemi.no>
As of today it is not possible to use SPI dt-spec macros in C++,
something known and documented. The main reason is because `cs` property
is initialized using a compound literal, something not supported in C++.
This PR takes another approach, that is to not make `cs` a pointer but a
struct member. This way, we can perform a regular initialization, at the
cost of using extra memory for unused delay/pin/flags if `cs` is not
used.
Fixes#56572
Signed-off-by: Gerard Marull-Paretas <gerard.marull@nordicsemi.no>