Rabbit 2000 Getting Started - page 20
Getting Started Manual
15
The statement at (3) waits for a time delay, in this case 200 ms. The costatement is being
executed on each pass through the big loop. When a
waitfor
condition is encountered
the first time, the current value of
MS_TIMER
is saved and then on each subsequent pass
the saved value is compared to the current value. If a
waitfor
condition is not encoun-
tered, then a jump is made to the end of the costatement (4), and on the next pass of the
loop, when the execution thread reaches the beginning of the costatement, execution
passes directly to the
waitfor
statement. Once 200 ms has passed, the statement after
the waitfor is executed. The costatement has the property that it can wait for long periods
of time, but not use a lot of execution time. Each costatement is a little program with its
own statement pointer that advances in response to conditions. On each pass through the
big loop, as little as one statement in the costatement is executed, starting at the current
position of the costatement’s statement pointer. Consult the Dynamic C Reference Man-
ual for more details.
The second costatement in the program debounces the switch and maintains the variable
vswitch
. Debouncing is performed by making sure that the switch is either on or off for
a long enough period of time to ensure that high-frequency electrical hash generated when
the switch contacts open or close does not affect the state of the switch. The
abort
state-
ment is illustrated at (5). If executed, the internal statement pointer is set back to the first
statement within the costatement, and a jump to the closing brace of the costatement is
made.
At (6) a use for a shadow register is illustrated. A shadow register is used to keep track of
the contents of an I/O port that is write only - it can’t be read back. If every time a write is
made to the port the same bits are set in the shadow register, then the shadow register has
the same data as the port register. In this case a test is made to see the state of the LED and
make it agree with the state of vswitch. This test is not strictly necessary, the output regis-
ter could be set every time to agree with vswitch, but it is placed here to illustrate the con-
cept of a shadow register.
To illustrate the use of snooping, use the watch window to observe
vswitch
while the
program is running. Add the variable
vswitch
to the list of watch expressions. Then
toggle
vswitch
and the LED. Then type
to observe
vswitch
again.
3.4 Advantages of Cooperative Multitasking
Cooperative multitasking, as implemented with language extensions, has the advantage of
being intuitive. Unlike preemptive multitasking, variables can be shared between differ-
ent tasks without having to take elaborate precautions. Sharing variables between tasks is
the greatest cause of bugs in programs that use preemptive multitasking. It might seem
that the biggest problem would be response time because of the big loop time becoming
long as the program grows. Our solution for that is a device caused slicing that is further
described in the Dynamic C Reference Manual.