| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130 | #include "BlueSCSI_platform.h"#include "BlueSCSI_log.h"#include "BlueSCSI_config.h"#include <SdFat.h>#include <scsi.h>#include <assert.h>extern "C" {const char *g_platform_name = PLATFORM_NAME;/***************//* GPIO init   *//***************/void platform_init(){    /* Initialize SCSI and SD card pins to required modes.     * SCSI pins should be inactive / input at this point.     */}void platform_late_init(){    /* This function can usually be left empty.     * It can be used for initialization code that should not run in bootloader.     */}void platform_disable_led(void){    /* This function disables the LED on the BlueSCSI board    *  Generally by switching the pin from output to input.    */}/*****************************************//* Debug logging and watchdor            *//*****************************************/// This function is called for every log message.// It can e.g. write the log to serial port in real time.// It can also be left empty to use only the debug log file on SD card.void platform_log(const char *s){}// This function can be used to periodically reset watchdog timer for crash handling.// It can also be left empty if the platform does not use a watchdog timer.void platform_reset_watchdog(){}// Poll function that is called every few milliseconds.// Can be left empty or used for platform-specific processing.void platform_poll(){}// Called periodically to get the state of any buttons installed on the platform.// If none are installed the below function is fine.uint8_t platform_get_buttons(){    return 0;}/**********************************************//* Mapping from data bytes to GPIO BOP values *//**********************************************//* A lookup table is the fastest way to calculate parity and convert the IO pin mapping for * data bus. The method below uses the BOP register of GD32, this is called BSRR on STM32. * If there are no other pins on the same port, you can also use direct writes to the GPIO. */#define PARITY(n) ((1 ^ (n) ^ ((n)>>1) ^ ((n)>>2) ^ ((n)>>3) ^ ((n)>>4) ^ ((n)>>5) ^ ((n)>>6) ^ ((n)>>7)) & 1)#define X(n) (\    ((n & 0x01) ? (SCSI_OUT_DB0 << 16) : SCSI_OUT_DB0) | \    ((n & 0x02) ? (SCSI_OUT_DB1 << 16) : SCSI_OUT_DB1) | \    ((n & 0x04) ? (SCSI_OUT_DB2 << 16) : SCSI_OUT_DB2) | \    ((n & 0x08) ? (SCSI_OUT_DB3 << 16) : SCSI_OUT_DB3) | \    ((n & 0x10) ? (SCSI_OUT_DB4 << 16) : SCSI_OUT_DB4) | \    ((n & 0x20) ? (SCSI_OUT_DB5 << 16) : SCSI_OUT_DB5) | \    ((n & 0x40) ? (SCSI_OUT_DB6 << 16) : SCSI_OUT_DB6) | \    ((n & 0x80) ? (SCSI_OUT_DB7 << 16) : SCSI_OUT_DB7) | \    (PARITY(n)  ? (SCSI_OUT_DBP << 16) : SCSI_OUT_DBP) | \    (SCSI_OUT_REQ) \)const uint32_t g_scsi_out_byte_to_bop[256] ={    X(0x00), X(0x01), X(0x02), X(0x03), X(0x04), X(0x05), X(0x06), X(0x07), X(0x08), X(0x09), X(0x0a), X(0x0b), X(0x0c), X(0x0d), X(0x0e), X(0x0f),    X(0x10), X(0x11), X(0x12), X(0x13), X(0x14), X(0x15), X(0x16), X(0x17), X(0x18), X(0x19), X(0x1a), X(0x1b), X(0x1c), X(0x1d), X(0x1e), X(0x1f),    X(0x20), X(0x21), X(0x22), X(0x23), X(0x24), X(0x25), X(0x26), X(0x27), X(0x28), X(0x29), X(0x2a), X(0x2b), X(0x2c), X(0x2d), X(0x2e), X(0x2f),    X(0x30), X(0x31), X(0x32), X(0x33), X(0x34), X(0x35), X(0x36), X(0x37), X(0x38), X(0x39), X(0x3a), X(0x3b), X(0x3c), X(0x3d), X(0x3e), X(0x3f),    X(0x40), X(0x41), X(0x42), X(0x43), X(0x44), X(0x45), X(0x46), X(0x47), X(0x48), X(0x49), X(0x4a), X(0x4b), X(0x4c), X(0x4d), X(0x4e), X(0x4f),    X(0x50), X(0x51), X(0x52), X(0x53), X(0x54), X(0x55), X(0x56), X(0x57), X(0x58), X(0x59), X(0x5a), X(0x5b), X(0x5c), X(0x5d), X(0x5e), X(0x5f),    X(0x60), X(0x61), X(0x62), X(0x63), X(0x64), X(0x65), X(0x66), X(0x67), X(0x68), X(0x69), X(0x6a), X(0x6b), X(0x6c), X(0x6d), X(0x6e), X(0x6f),    X(0x70), X(0x71), X(0x72), X(0x73), X(0x74), X(0x75), X(0x76), X(0x77), X(0x78), X(0x79), X(0x7a), X(0x7b), X(0x7c), X(0x7d), X(0x7e), X(0x7f),    X(0x80), X(0x81), X(0x82), X(0x83), X(0x84), X(0x85), X(0x86), X(0x87), X(0x88), X(0x89), X(0x8a), X(0x8b), X(0x8c), X(0x8d), X(0x8e), X(0x8f),    X(0x90), X(0x91), X(0x92), X(0x93), X(0x94), X(0x95), X(0x96), X(0x97), X(0x98), X(0x99), X(0x9a), X(0x9b), X(0x9c), X(0x9d), X(0x9e), X(0x9f),    X(0xa0), X(0xa1), X(0xa2), X(0xa3), X(0xa4), X(0xa5), X(0xa6), X(0xa7), X(0xa8), X(0xa9), X(0xaa), X(0xab), X(0xac), X(0xad), X(0xae), X(0xaf),    X(0xb0), X(0xb1), X(0xb2), X(0xb3), X(0xb4), X(0xb5), X(0xb6), X(0xb7), X(0xb8), X(0xb9), X(0xba), X(0xbb), X(0xbc), X(0xbd), X(0xbe), X(0xbf),    X(0xc0), X(0xc1), X(0xc2), X(0xc3), X(0xc4), X(0xc5), X(0xc6), X(0xc7), X(0xc8), X(0xc9), X(0xca), X(0xcb), X(0xcc), X(0xcd), X(0xce), X(0xcf),    X(0xd0), X(0xd1), X(0xd2), X(0xd3), X(0xd4), X(0xd5), X(0xd6), X(0xd7), X(0xd8), X(0xd9), X(0xda), X(0xdb), X(0xdc), X(0xdd), X(0xde), X(0xdf),    X(0xe0), X(0xe1), X(0xe2), X(0xe3), X(0xe4), X(0xe5), X(0xe6), X(0xe7), X(0xe8), X(0xe9), X(0xea), X(0xeb), X(0xec), X(0xed), X(0xee), X(0xef),    X(0xf0), X(0xf1), X(0xf2), X(0xf3), X(0xf4), X(0xf5), X(0xf6), X(0xf7), X(0xf8), X(0xf9), X(0xfa), X(0xfb), X(0xfc), X(0xfd), X(0xfe), X(0xff)};#undef X} /* extern "C" *//* The SdFat library is used for SD card access. * You can set the configuration here. * Refer to SdFat examples for usage on various CPUs. */SdSpiConfig g_sd_spi_config(0, DEDICATED_SPI, SD_SCK_MHZ(25));void platform_set_sd_callback(sd_callback_t func, const uint8_t *buffer){    /* This function can be left empty.     * If the platform supports DMA for SD card transfers, this function     * can be used to set a callback that is invoked while waiting for DMA     * to finish. In that way the SD card and SCSI transfers can execute     * simultaneously.     */}
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