In file included from ../../libraries/AP_IOMCU/AP_IOMCU.cpp:8:0:
../../libraries/AP_IOMCU/AP_IOMCU.h:10:5: warning: "HAL_WITH_IO_MCU" is not defined [-Wundef]
#if HAL_WITH_IO_MCU
^
../../libraries/AP_IOMCU/AP_IOMCU.cpp:10:5: warning: "HAL_WITH_IO_MCU" is not defined [-Wundef]
#if HAL_WITH_IO_MCU
^
And so on.
this allows a driver to request a bus speed for a device, and whether
the device should be in SMBUS mode. It also allows a min timeout to be
specified, to allow for slow devices
For AC3.5 and higher version, serial uartA-USBconsole cannot work. Maybe the code before "setup" has been changed. Ensure that the uartA can be initialized
/var/lib/<project> is more in line to where projects save their data.
Also, remove APM from dir name as it should had been done some time
ago.
This is only the default (and recommended for any new board). Existing
boards that want to adopt the default can remove their defines.
The protocol defines bits for controlling possible LEDs. On Aero the ESC
firmware simply ignores these bits and blink with a fixed frequency.
Add logic to be able to blink the ESC if not flashed with the Aero
version of the firmware.
On Linux (and in most of posix-like systems) the baudrate set in struct
termios via cfset[io]speed is actually the index of the standard
baudrates, it's not the baudrate per se (hence the use of B* macros).
On Linux it's possible to set the baudrate by passing the baudrate
itself to TCSETS2 ioctl. Unfortunately it's not possible to include
asm/termbits.h and termios.h in the same compilation unit, so we need to
split it. Here we split into a Linux and a NuttX implementation.