About six months ago, I made a post on reddit highlighting the launch of Espressif's llvm xtensa fork, not too long after, I had a working rustc toolchain capable of generating xtensa assembly. At this point I had to put this project to the side to finish my final year of university. Funnily enough I didn't stray too far, my final year project used Rust to create a 'smartwatch' (I may write about this in the future, if anyone is interested).

Since then I have seen a few posts utilising my fork to run Rust on the ESP32 (see this great write up by ctron, if you haven't already), most of which are building on top of esp-idf which is written in C. In this post I'll be discussing the steps I took to generate valid binaries for the xtensa architecture with rustc and then write some no_std code to build a blinky program for the ESP32 only using Rust!

Hacking the compiler

In March of 2019, Espressif released their first run at an llvm fork to support the xtensa architecure. Shortly after I got to work bootstrapping Rust to use this newly created fork. Prior to this project, I'd had no experience with the compiler, fortunately I came across the RISCV PR which gave me a rough idea of what was required. After many build attempts I finally got it working; I was now able to generate xtensa assembly from Rust source code!

The next step was to assemble and link the generated assembly. The llvm fork in it's current state cannot perform object generation, so we must use an external assembler. Luckily Rust allows us to do so by specifying the linker_flavor as gcc and providing a path to the linker with the linker target option, in this case xtensa-esp32-elf-gcc . After that I created a few built-in targets (which you can see here); xtensa-esp32-none-elf for the ESP32; xtensa-esp8266-none-elf for the ESP8266; finally the xtensa-unknown-none-elf target for a generic xtensa target.

Blinky code

Now lets try and get a ESP32 board to blink the onboard LED using just Rust. First off, we need our basic program structure. The xtensa_lx6_rt crate does most of the heavy lifting in this respect, we simply need to define an entry point and the panic handler. Some of this may look vaguely familiar if you have any experience with cortex-m development on Rust, I've tried to mirror the API as best as I can.

#![ no_std ] #![ no_main ] use xtensa_lx6_rt as _; use core::panic::PanicInfo; /// Entry point - called by xtensa_lx6_rt after initialisation #[ no_mangle ] fn main () -> ! { loop {} } /// Simple panic handler #[ panic_handler ] fn panic ( _info : &PanicInfo) -> ! { loop {} }

Now lets add some register definitions for the peripherals we want to use. For our blinky program, we will need to control the GPIO peripheral. In the ESP32 (and most modern processors) peripherals are mapped to memory adresses, commonly refered to as memory mapped peripherals. To control a peripheral we simply need to write values to the right addresses in memory, with respect to the reference manual supplied by the chip manufacturer.

/// GPIO output enable reg const GPIO_ENABLE_W1TS_REG : u32 = 0x3FF44024 ; /// GPIO output set register const GPIO_OUT_W1TS_REG : u32 = 0x3FF44008 ; /// GPIO output clear register const GPIO_OUT_W1TC_REG : u32 = 0x3FF4400C ; /// The GPIO hooked up to the onboard LED const BLINKY_GPIO : u32 = 2 ; /// GPIO function mode const GPIO_FUNCX_OUT_BASE : u32 = 0x3FF44530 ; const GPIO_FUNCX_OUT_SEL_CFG : u32 = GPIO_FUNCX_OUT_BASE + ( BLINKY_GPIO * 4 );

Using these definitions it should be possible to change the gpio for your board by changing the BLINKY_GPIO ; for my board (NODEMCU ESP-32S) it was GPIO2.

Initialisation

Next lets setup the pin as a GPIO output. For the ESP32, this is a two step process . Firstly, its simply a case of setting a bit in the GPIO ouput enable register. Secondly the pin has to be configured in GPIO mode. There are not enough pins for all the possible peripherals in the chip, to combat this each pin can have multiple function modes. In the case of the ESP32, each pin has up to 256 different functions, although not all are mapped. To put the pin in GPIO mode, we need to put in mode 256 (0x100), we do this by writing to the function select register. After issuing those two register writes, we should be able to turn on the GPIO by setting the relevant bit inside the GPIO set register .

#[ no_mangle ] fn main () -> ! { // configure the pin as an output unsafe { core::ptr::write_volatile( GPIO_ENABLE_W1TS_REG as *mut _, 0x1 << BLINKY_GPIO ); // 0x100 makes this pin a simple gpio pin - see the technical reference for more info core::ptr::write_volatile( GPIO_FUNCX_OUT_SEL_CFG as *mut _, 0x100 ); } // turn on the LED unsafe { core::ptr::write_volatile( GPIO_OUT_W1TS_REG as *mut _, 0x1 << idx); } loop {} }

Delaying

For the next stage of our blinky program, we need a way to delay; a simple approach could use for loop like so.

pub fn delay ( clocks : u32 ) { let dummy_var: u32 = 0 ; for _ in 0 ..clocks { unsafe { core::ptr::read_volatile(&dummy_var) }; } }

We add the volatile read so that the compiler doesn't optimise our delay away. The problem with this approach is that depending of the optimisation level, the number of clock cycles each iteration of the loop changes. We need a cycle accurate way of delaying, fortunately the ESP32 has an internal clock counting register which can be accessed with the read special register rsr instruction. Now are delay function looks like this.

/// cycle accurate delay using the cycle counter register pub fn delay ( clocks : u32 ) { // NOTE: does not account for rollover // ommitted: the asm to read the ccount let target = get_ccount () + clocks; loop { if get_ccount () > target { break ; } } }

Now we have cycle accurate counting we can delay for one second by waiting for the number of cycles the processor will do in one second. The default clock speed on most ESP boards is 40mhz, hence waiting for 40 million cycles equates to a one second delay.

Bringing the snippets together and cleaning up the code into functions, we now have main that looks like this.

#[ no_mangle ] fn main () -> ! { // configure the pin as an output configure_pin_as_output ( BLINKY_GPIO ); loop { set_led ( BLINKY_GPIO , true ); delay ( CORE_HZ ); set_led ( BLINKY_GPIO , false ); delay ( CORE_HZ ); } }

After flashing to the board, and firing up our JTAG debugger , we are greeted with a blinking LED!

The full source can be found in the the xtensa quickstart repo if you wish to try it for yourself.

Now I know what most of you are thinking at this point, it's not very Rusty; it contains bundles of unsafe and there are no real abstractions here, and you are right; but it's something to get the ball rolling.

Limitations

There are a few small teething issues, but by far the biggest being issue is that the fork struggles with generating debug info; the external assembler does not support CFI directives something that all llvm targets need to support. CFI directives can easily be removed with some preprocessing, but does of course add an extra step. After pushing past that issue, I was still getting relocation linker errors. I opened an issue to document my findings in the hopes it can be sorted in the next iteration of the llvm fork.

Future work

Once the debuginfo issue is sorted, I hope to start developing an ecosystem of HAL's and drivers similar to the stm32-rs and nrf-rs; I've already started the esp-rs organization which is where xtensa-lx6-rt currently resides. Espressif has started the upstream process, the first ten patches are now in review, there should be an update coming to their fork moving from the older llvm6 to llvm8 (and hopefully some other additions and fixes too!).