stm32f4xx-hal contains a multi device hardware abstraction on top of the peripheral access API for the STMicro STM32F4 series microcontrollers. The selection of the MCU is done by feature gates, typically specified by board support crates. Currently supported configurations are:
|
|
|
The idea behind this crate is to gloss over the slight differences in the various peripherals available on those MCUs so a HAL can be written for all chips in that same family without having to cut and paste crates for every single model.
rtic1
— support RTICv1 framework.rtic2
— support RTICv2 framework (incompatible withrtic1
, require nightly compiller).defmt
— implementation ofdefmt::Format
for public enums and structures. See defmt.can
— bxCAN peripheral support. See bxcan.i2s
— I2S peripheral support. See stm32_i2s_v12x.usb_fs
orusb_hs
— USB OTG FS/HS peripheral support. See synopsys-usb-otg.fsmc_lcd
— LCD support via FMC/FSMC peripheral. See display-interface.sdio-host
— SDIO peripheral support. See sdio-host.dsihost
— DSI host support. See embedded-display-controller.
Collaboration on this crate is highly welcome as are pull requests!
This crate relies on Adam Greigs fantastic stm32f4 crate to provide appropriate register definitions and implements a partial set of the embedded-hal traits.
Some of the implementation was shamelessly adapted from the stm32f1xx-hal crate originally started by Jorge Aparicio.
Check if the BSP for your board exists in the
stm32-rs page.
If it exists, the stm32f4xx-hal
crate should be already included, so you can
use the bsp as BSP for your project.
Otherwise, create a new Rust project as you usually do with cargo init
. The
"hello world" of embedded development is usually to blink a LED. The code to do
so is available in examples/delay-syst-blinky.rs.
Copy that file to the main.rs
of your project.
You also need to add some dependencies to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
embedded-hal = "0.2"
nb = "1"
cortex-m = "0.7"
cortex-m-rt = "0.7"
# Panic behaviour, see https://crates.io/keywords/panic-impl for alternatives
panic-halt = "0.2"
[dependencies.stm32f4xx-hal]
version = "0.22.1"
features = ["stm32f407"] # replace the model of your microcontroller here
# and add other required features
We also need to tell Rust how to link our executable and how to lay out the
result in memory. To accomplish all this, copy .cargo/config
and memory.x from the stm32f4xx-hal
repository to your project and make sure the sizes match up with the datasheet. Also note that there might be different kinds of memory which are not equal; to be on the safe side only specify the size of the first block at the specified address.
To create empty project faster you could use cargo generate
command. See stm32-template.
$ cargo generate --git https://github.com/burrbull/stm32-template/
Note that you need to know your chip full name.