1# 2 3BTstack implements a set of Bluetooth protocols and profiles. To connect to other Bluetooth devices or to provide a Bluetooth services, BTstack has to be properly configured. 4 5The configuration of BTstack is done both at compile time as well as at run time: 6 7- compile time configuration: 8 - adjust *btstack_config.h* - this file describes the system configuration, used functionality, and also the memory configuration 9 - add necessary source code files to your project 10 11- run time configuration of: 12 - Bluetooth chipset 13 - run loop 14 - HCI transport layer 15 - provided services 16 - packet handlers 17 18In the following, we provide an overview of the configuration 19that is necessary to setup BTstack. From the point when the run loop 20is executed, the application runs as a finite 21state machine, which processes events received from BTstack. BTstack 22groups events logically and provides them via packet handlers. 23We provide their overview here. For the case that there is a need to inspect the data exchanged 24between BTstack and the Bluetooth chipset, we describe how to configure 25packet logging mechanism. Finally, we provide an overview on power management in Bluetooth in general and how to save energy in BTstack. 26 27## Configuration in btstack_config.h {#sec:btstackConfigHowTo} 28The file *btstack_config.h* contains three parts: 29 30- \#define HAVE_* directives [listed here](#sec:haveDirectives). These directives describe available system properties, similar to config.h in a autoconf setup. 31- \#define ENABLE_* directives [listed here](#sec:enableDirectives). These directives list enabled properties, most importantly ENABLE_CLASSIC and ENABLE_BLE. 32- other #define directives for BTstack configuration, most notably static memory, [see next section](#sec:memoryConfigurationHowTo) and [NVM configuration](#sec:nvmConfiguration). 33 34<!-- a name "lst:platformConfiguration"></a--> 35<!-- --> 36 37### HAVE_* directives {#sec:haveDirectives} 38System properties: 39 40\#define | Description 41-----------------------------------|------------------------------------- 42HAVE_MALLOC | Use dynamic memory 43HAVE_AES128 | Use platform AES128 engine - not needed usually 44HAVE_BTSTACK_STDIN | STDIN is available for CLI interface 45HAVE_MBEDTLS_ECC_P256 | mbedTLS provides NIST P-256 operations e.g. for LE Secure Connections 46 47Embedded platform properties: 48 49\#define | Description 50-----------------------------------|------------------------------------ 51HAVE_EMBEDDED_TIME_MS | System provides time in milliseconds 52HAVE_EMBEDDED_TICK | System provides tick interrupt 53HAVE_HAL_AUDIO | Audio HAL is available 54HAVE_HAL_AUDIO_SINK_STEREO_ONLY | Duplicate samples for mono playback 55 56FreeRTOS platform properties: 57 58\#define | Description 59-----------------------------------|------------------------------------ 60HAVE_FREERTOS_INCLUDE_PREFIX | FreeRTOS headers are in 'freertos' folder (e.g. ESP32's esp-idf) 61 62POSIX platform properties: 63 64\#define | Description 65-----------------------------------|------------------------------------ 66HAVE_POSIX_FILE_IO | POSIX File i/o used for hci dump 67HAVE_POSIX_TIME | System provides time function 68LINK_KEY_PATH | Path to stored link keys 69LE_DEVICE_DB_PATH | Path to stored LE device information 70<!-- a name "lst:btstackFeatureConfiguration"></a--> 71<!-- --> 72 73### ENABLE_* directives {#sec:enableDirectives} 74BTstack properties: 75 76\#define | Description 77---------------------------------|--------------------------------------------- 78ENABLE_CLASSIC | Enable Classic related code in HCI and L2CAP 79ENABLE_BLE | Enable BLE related code in HCI and L2CAP 80ENABLE_EHCILL | Enable eHCILL low power mode on TI CC256x/WL18xx chipsets 81ENABLE_H5 | Enable support for SLIP mode in `btstack_uart.h` drivers for HCI H5 ('Three-Wire Mode') 82ENABLE_LOG_DEBUG | Enable log_debug messages 83ENABLE_LOG_ERROR | Enable log_error messages 84ENABLE_LOG_INFO | Enable log_info messages 85ENABLE_SCO_OVER_HCI | Enable SCO over HCI for chipsets (if supported) 86ENABLE_SCO_OVER_PCM | Enable SCO ofer PCM/I2S for chipsets (if supported) 87ENABLE_HFP_WIDE_BAND_SPEECH | Enable support for mSBC codec used in HFP profile for Wide-Band Speech 88ENABLE_HFP_AT_MESSAGES | Enable `HFP_SUBEVENT_AT_MESSAGE_SENT` and `HFP_SUBEVENT_AT_MESSAGE_RECEIVED` events 89ENABLE_LE_PERIPHERAL | Enable support for LE Peripheral Role in HCI and Security Manager 90ENBALE_LE_CENTRAL | Enable support for LE Central Role in HCI and Security Manager 91ENABLE_LE_SECURE_CONNECTIONS | Enable LE Secure Connections 92ENABLE_LE_PROACTIVE_AUTHENTICATION | Enable automatic encryption for bonded devices on re-connect 93ENABLE_GATT_CLIENT_PAIRING | Enable GATT Client to start pairing and retry operation on security error 94ENABLE_MICRO_ECC_FOR_LE_SECURE_CONNECTIONS | Use [micro-ecc library](https://github.com/kmackay/micro-ecc) for ECC operations 95ENABLE_LE_DATA_LENGTH_EXTENSION | Enable LE Data Length Extension support 96ENABLE_LE_EXTENDED_ADVERTISING | Enable extended advertising and scanning 97ENABLE_LE_PERIODIC_ADVERTISING | Enable periodic advertising and scanning 98ENABLE_LE_SIGNED_WRITE | Enable LE Signed Writes in ATT/GATT 99ENABLE_LE_PRIVACY_ADDRESS_RESOLUTION | Enable address resolution for resolvable private addresses in Controller 100ENABLE_CROSS_TRANSPORT_KEY_DERIVATION | Enable Cross-Transport Key Derivation (CTKD) for Secure Connections 101ENABLE_L2CAP_ENHANCED_RETRANSMISSION_MODE | Enable Enhanced Retransmission Mode for L2CAP Channels. Mandatory for AVRCP Browsing 102ENABLE_L2CAP_LE_CREDIT_BASED_FLOW_CONTROL_MODE | Enable LE credit-based flow-control mode for L2CAP channels 103ENABLE_L2CAP_ENHANCED_CREDIT_BASED_FLOW_CONTROL_MODE | Enable Enhanced credit-based flow-control mode for L2CAP Channels 104ENABLE_HCI_CONTROLLER_TO_HOST_FLOW_CONTROL | Enable HCI Controller to Host Flow Control, see below 105ENABLE_HCI_SERIALIZED_CONTROLLER_OPERATIONS | Serialize Inquiry, Remote Name Request, and Create Connection operations 106ENABLE_ATT_DELAYED_RESPONSE | Enable support for delayed ATT operations, see [GATT Server](profiles/#sec:GATTServerProfile) 107ENABLE_BCM_PCM_WBS | Enable support for Wide-Band Speech codec in BCM controller, requires ENABLE_SCO_OVER_PCM 108ENABLE_CC256X_ASSISTED_HFP | Enable support for Assisted HFP mode in CC256x Controller, requires ENABLE_SCO_OVER_PCM 109Enable_RTK_PCM_WBS | Enable support for Wide-Band Speech codec in Realtek controller, requires ENABLE_SCO_OVER_PCM 110ENABLE_CC256X_BAUDRATE_CHANGE_FLOWCONTROL_BUG_WORKAROUND | Enable workaround for bug in CC256x Flow Control during baud rate change, see chipset docs. 111ENABLE_CYPRESS_BAUDRATE_CHANGE_FLOWCONTROL_BUG_WORKAROUND | Enable workaround for bug in CYW2070x Flow Control during baud rate change, similar to CC256x. 112ENABLE_LE_LIMIT_ACL_FRAGMENT_BY_MAX_OCTETS | Force HCI to fragment ACL-LE packets to fit into over-the-air packet 113ENABLE_TLV_FLASH_EXPLICIT_DELETE_FIELD | Enable use of explicit delete field in TLV Flash implemenation - required when flash value cannot be overwritten with zero 114ENABLE_CONTROLLER_WARM_BOOT | Enable stack startup without power cycle (if supported/possible) 115ENABLE_SEGGER_RTT | Use SEGGER RTT for console output and packet log, see [additional options](#sec:rttConfiguration) 116ENABLE_EXPLICIT_CONNECTABLE_MODE_CONTROL | Disable calls to control Connectable Mode by L2CAP 117ENABLE_EXPLICIT_IO_CAPABILITIES_REPLY | Let application trigger sending IO Capabilities (Negative) Reply 118ENABLE_EXPLICIT_LINK_KEY_REPLY | Let application trigger sending Link Key (Negative) Response, allows for asynchronous link key lookup 119ENABLE_EXPLICIT_BR_EDR_SECURITY_MANAGER | Report BR/EDR Security Manager support in L2CAP Information Response 120ENABLE_CLASSIC_OOB_PAIRING | Enable support for classic Out-of-Band (OOB) pairing 121ENABLE_A2DP_EXPLICIT_CONFIG | Let application configure stream endpoint (skip auto-config of SBC endpoint) 122ENABLE_AVDTP_ACCEPTOR_EXPLICIT_START_STREAM_CONFIRMATION | allow accept or reject of stream start on A2DP_SUBEVENT_START_STREAM_REQUESTED 123ENABLE_LE_WHITELIST_TOUCH_AFTER_RESOLVING_LIST_UPDATE | Enable Workaround for Controller bug. 124ENABLE_CONTROLLER_DUMP_PACKETS | Dump number of packets in Controller per type for debugging 125 126Notes: 127 128- ENABLE_MICRO_ECC_FOR_LE_SECURE_CONNECTIONS: Only some Bluetooth 4.2+ controllers (e.g., EM9304, ESP32) support the necessary HCI commands for ECC. Other reason to enable the ECC software implementations are if the Host is much faster or if the micro-ecc library is already provided (e.g., ESP32, WICED, or if the ECC HCI Commands are unreliable. 129 130### HCI Controller to Host Flow Control 131In general, BTstack relies on flow control of the HCI transport, either via Hardware CTS/RTS flow control for UART or regular USB flow control. If this is not possible, e.g on an SoC, BTstack can use HCI Controller to Host Flow Control by defining ENABLE_HCI_CONTROLLER_TO_HOST_FLOW_CONTROL. If enabled, the HCI Transport implementation must be able to buffer the specified packets. In addition, it also need to be able to buffer a few HCI Events. Using a low number of host buffers might result in less throughput. 132 133Host buffer configuration for HCI Controller to Host Flow Control: 134 135\#define | Description 136------------------|------------ 137HCI_HOST_ACL_PACKET_NUM | Max number of ACL packets 138HCI_HOST_ACL_PACKET_LEN | Max size of HCI Host ACL packets 139HCI_HOST_SCO_PACKET_NUM | Max number of ACL packets 140HCI_HOST_SCO_PACKET_LEN | Max size of HCI Host SCO packets 141 142 143### Memory configuration directives {#sec:memoryConfigurationHowTo} 144 145The structs for services, active connections and remote devices can be 146allocated in two different manners: 147 148- statically from an individual memory pool, whose maximal number of 149 elements is defined in the btstack_config.h file. To initialize the static 150 pools, you need to call at runtime *btstack_memory_init* function. An example 151 of memory configuration for a single SPP service with a minimal 152 L2CAP MTU is shown in Listing {@lst:memoryConfigurationSPP}. 153 154- dynamically using the *malloc/free* functions, if HAVE_MALLOC is 155 defined in btstack_config.h file. 156 157For each HCI connection, a buffer of size HCI_ACL_PAYLOAD_SIZE is reserved. For fast data transfer, however, a large ACL buffer of 1021 bytes is recommend. The large ACL buffer is required for 3-DH5 packets to be used. 158 159<!-- a name "lst:memoryConfiguration"></a--> 160<!-- --> 161 162\#define | Description 163--------|------------ 164HCI_ACL_PAYLOAD_SIZE | Max size of HCI ACL payloads 165HCI_INCOMING_PRE_BUFFER_SIZE | Number of bytes reserved before actual data for incoming HCI packets 166MAX_NR_BNEP_CHANNELS | Max number of BNEP channels 167MAX_NR_BNEP_SERVICES | Max number of BNEP services 168MAX_NR_BTSTACK_LINK_KEY_DB_MEMORY_ENTRIES | Max number of link key entries cached in RAM 169MAX_NR_GATT_CLIENTS | Max number of GATT clients 170MAX_NR_HCI_CONNECTIONS | Max number of HCI connections 171MAX_NR_HFP_CONNECTIONS | Max number of HFP connections 172MAX_NR_L2CAP_CHANNELS | Max number of L2CAP connections 173MAX_NR_L2CAP_SERVICES | Max number of L2CAP services 174MAX_NR_RFCOMM_CHANNELS | Max number of RFOMMM connections 175MAX_NR_RFCOMM_MULTIPLEXERS | Max number of RFCOMM multiplexers, with one multiplexer per HCI connection 176MAX_NR_RFCOMM_SERVICES | Max number of RFCOMM services 177MAX_NR_SERVICE_RECORD_ITEMS | Max number of SDP service records 178MAX_NR_SM_LOOKUP_ENTRIES | Max number of items in Security Manager lookup queue 179MAX_NR_WHITELIST_ENTRIES | Max number of items in GAP LE Whitelist to connect to 180MAX_NR_LE_DEVICE_DB_ENTRIES | Max number of items in LE Device DB 181 182 183The memory is set up by calling *btstack_memory_init* function: 184 185 btstack_memory_init(); 186 187<!-- a name "lst:memoryConfigurationSPP"></a--> 188<!-- --> 189 190Here's the memory configuration for a basic SPP server. 191 192 #define HCI_ACL_PAYLOAD_SIZE 52 193 #define MAX_NR_HCI_CONNECTIONS 1 194 #define MAX_NR_L2CAP_SERVICES 2 195 #define MAX_NR_L2CAP_CHANNELS 2 196 #define MAX_NR_RFCOMM_MULTIPLEXERS 1 197 #define MAX_NR_RFCOMM_SERVICES 1 198 #define MAX_NR_RFCOMM_CHANNELS 1 199 #define MAX_NR_BTSTACK_LINK_KEY_DB_MEMORY_ENTRIES 3 200 201Listing: Memory configuration for a basic SPP server. {#lst:memoryConfigurationSPP} 202 203In this example, the size of ACL packets is limited to the minimum of 52 bytes, resulting in an L2CAP MTU of 48 bytes. Only a singleHCI connection can be established at any time. On it, two L2CAP services are provided, which can be active at the same time. Here, these two can be RFCOMM and SDP. Then, memory for one RFCOMM multiplexer is reserved over which one connection can be active. Finally, up to three link keys can be cached in RAM. 204 205<!-- --> 206 207### Non-volatile memory (NVM) directives {#sec:nvmConfiguration} 208 209If implemented, bonding information is stored in Non-volatile memory. For Classic, a single link keys and its type is stored. For LE, the bonding information contains various values (long term key, random number, EDIV, signing counter, identity, ...) Often, this is implemented using Flash memory. Then, the number of stored entries are limited by: 210 211<!-- a name "lst:nvmDefines"></a--> 212<!-- --> 213 214\#define | Description 215--------------------------|------------ 216NVM_NUM_LINK_KEYS | Max number of Classic Link Keys that can be stored 217NVM_NUM_DEVICE_DB_ENTRIES | Max number of LE Device DB entries that can be stored 218NVN_NUM_GATT_SERVER_CCC | Max number of 'Client Characteristic Configuration' values that can be stored by GATT Server 219 220 221### SEGGER Real Time Transfer (RTT) directives {#sec:rttConfiguration} 222 223[SEGGER RTT](https://www.segger.com/products/debug-probes/j-link/technology/about-real-time-transfer/) improves on the use of an UART for debugging with higher throughput and less overhead. In addition, it allows for direct logging in PacketLogger/BlueZ format via the provided JLinkRTTLogger tool. 224 225When enabled with `ENABLE_SEGGER_RTT` and `hci_dump_init()` can be called with an `hci_dunp_segger_stdout_get_instance()` for textual output and `hci_dump_segger_binary_get_instance()` for binary output. With the latter, you can select `HCI_DUMP_BLUEZ` or `HCI_DUMP_PACKETLOGGER`, format. For RTT, the following directives are used to configure the up channel: 226 227\#define | Default | Description 228---------------------------------|--------------------------------|------------------------ 229SEGGER_RTT_PACKETLOG_MODE | SEGGER_RTT_MODE_NO_BLOCK_SKIP | SEGGER_RTT_MODE_NO_BLOCK_SKIP to skip messages if buffer is full, or, SEGGER_RTT_MODE_BLOCK_IF_FIFO_FULL to block 230SEGGER_RTT_PACKETLOG_CHANNEL | 1 | Channel to use for packet log. Channel 0 is used for terminal 231SEGGER_RTT_PACKETLOG_BUFFER_SIZE | 1024 | Size of outgoing ring buffer. Increase if you cannot block but get 'message skipped' warnings. 232 233## Run-time configuration 234 235To allow code-reuse with different platforms 236as well as with new ports, the low-level initialization of BTstack and 237the hardware configuration has been extracted to the various 238*platforms/PLATFORM/main.c* files. The examples only contain the 239platform-independent Bluetooth logic. But let’s have a look at the 240common init code. 241 242Listing [below](#lst:btstackInit) shows a minimal platform setup for an 243embedded system with a Bluetooth chipset connected via UART. 244 245~~~~ {#lst:btstackInit .c caption="{Minimal platform setup for an embedded system}"} 246 247 int main(){ 248 // ... hardware init: watchdoch, IOs, timers, etc... 249 250 // setup BTstack memory pools 251 btstack_memory_init(); 252 253 // select embedded run loop 254 btstack_run_loop_init(btstack_run_loop_embedded_get_instance()); 255 256 // enable logging 257 hci_dump_init(hci_dump_embedded_stdout_get_instance()); 258 259 260 // init HCI 261 hci_transport_t * transport = hci_transport_h4_instance(); 262 hci_init(transport, NULL); 263 264 // setup example 265 btstack_main(argc, argv); 266 267 // go 268 btstack_run_loop_execute(); 269 } 270 271~~~~ 272 273First, BTstack’s memory pools are set up. Then, the standard run loop 274implementation for embedded systems is selected. 275 276The call to *hci_dump_init* configures BTstack to output all Bluetooth 277packets and its own debug and error message using printf with BTstack's 278millisecond tiomestamps.s as tim. 279The Python 280script *tools/create_packet_log.py* can be used to convert the console 281output into a Bluetooth PacketLogger format that can be opened by the OS 282X PacketLogger tool as well as by Wireshark for further inspection. When 283asking for help, please always include a log created with HCI dump. 284 285The *hci_init* function sets up HCI to use the HCI H4 Transport 286implementation. It doesn’t provide a special transport configuration nor 287a special implementation for a particular Bluetooth chipset. It makes 288use of the *remote_device_db_memory* implementation that allows for 289re-connects without a new pairing but doesn’t persist the bonding 290information. 291 292Finally, it calls *btstack_main()* of the actual example before 293executing the run loop. 294 295 296## Source tree structure {#sec:sourceTreeHowTo} 297 298The source tree has been organized to easily setup new projects. 299 300Path | Description 301--------------------|--------------- 302chipset | Support for individual Bluetooth Controller chipsets 303doc | Sources for BTstack documentation 304example | Example applications available for all ports 305platform | Support for special OSs and/or MCU architectures 306port | Complete port for a MCU + Chipset combinations 307src | Bluetooth stack implementation 308test | Unit and PTS tests 309tool | Helper tools for BTstack 310 311The core of BTstack, including all protocol and profiles, is in *src/*. 312 313Support for a particular platform is provided by the *platform/* subfolder. For most embedded ports, *platform/embedded/* provides *btstack_run_loop_embedded* and the *hci_transport_h4_embedded* implementation that require *hal_cpu.h*, *hal_led.h*, and *hal_uart_dma.h* plus *hal_tick.h* or *hal_time_ms* to be implemented by the user. 314 315To accommodate a particular Bluetooth chipset, the *chipset/* subfolders provide various btstack_chipset_* implementations. 316Please have a look at the existing ports in *port/*. 317 318## Run loop configuration {#sec:runLoopHowTo} 319 320To initialize BTstack you need to [initialize the memory](#sec:memoryConfigurationHowTo) 321and [the run loop](#sec:runLoopHowTo) respectively, then setup HCI and all needed higher 322level protocols. 323 324BTstack uses the concept of a run loop to handle incoming data and to schedule work. 325The run loop handles events from two different types of sources: data 326sources and timers. Data sources represent communication interfaces like 327an UART or an USB driver. Timers are used by BTstack to implement 328various Bluetooth-related timeouts. They can also be used to handle 329periodic events. In addition, most implementations also allow to trigger a poll 330of the data sources from interrupt context, or, execute a function from a different 331thread. 332 333Data sources and timers are represented by the *btstack_data_source_t* and 334*btstack_timer_source_t* structs respectively. Each of these structs contain 335at least a linked list node and a pointer to a callback function. All active timers 336and data sources are kept in link lists. While the list of data sources 337is unsorted, the timers are sorted by expiration timeout for efficient 338processing. Data sources need to be configured upon what event they are called back. 339They can be configured to be polled (*DATA_SOURCE_CALLBACK_POLL*), on read ready (*DATA_SOURCE_CALLBACK_READ*), 340or on write ready (*DATA_SOURCE_CALLBACK_WRITE*). 341 342Timers are single shot: a timer will be removed from the timer list 343before its event handler callback is executed. If you need a periodic 344timer, you can re-register the same timer source in the callback 345function, as shown in Listing [PeriodicTimerHandler]. Note that BTstack 346expects to get called periodically to keep its time, see Section 347[on time abstraction](#sec:timeAbstractionPorting) for more on the 348tick hardware abstraction. 349 350BTstack provides different run loop implementations that implement the *btstack_run_loop_t* interface: 351 352- CoreFoundation: implementation for iOS and OS X applications 353- Embedded: the main implementation for embedded systems, especially without an RTOS. 354- FreeRTOS: implementation to run BTstack on a dedicated FreeRTOS thread 355- POSIX: implementation for POSIX systems based on the select() call. 356- Qt: implementation for the Qt applications 357- WICED: implementation for the Broadcom WICED SDK RTOS abstraction that wraps FreeRTOS or ThreadX. 358- Windows: implementation for Windows based on Event objects and WaitForMultipleObjects() call. 359 360Depending on the platform, data sources are either polled (embedded, FreeRTOS), or the platform provides a way 361to wait for a data source to become ready for read or write (CoreFoundation, POSIX, Qt, Windows), or, 362are not used as the HCI transport driver and the run loop is implemented in a different way (WICED). 363In any case, the callbacks must be explicitly enabled with the *btstack_run_loop_enable_data_source_callbacks(..)* function. 364 365In your code, you'll have to configure the run loop before you start it 366as shown in Listing [listing:btstackInit]. The application can register 367data sources as well as timers, e.g., for periodical sampling of sensors, or 368for communication over the UART. 369 370The run loop is set up by calling *btstack_run_loop_init* function and providing 371an instance of the actual run loop. E.g. for the embedded platform, it is: 372 373<!-- --> 374 375 btstack_run_loop_init(btstack_run_loop_embedded_get_instance()); 376 377If the run loop allows to trigger polling of data sources from interrupt context, 378*btstack_run_loop_poll_data_sources_from_irq*. 379 380On multi-threaded environments, e.g., FreeRTOS, POSIX, WINDOWS, 381*btstack_run_loop_execute_code_on_main_thread* can be used to schedule a callback on the main loop. 382 383The complete Run loop API is provided [here](appendix/apis/#sec:runLoopAPIAppendix). 384 385 386### Run Loop Embedded 387 388In the embedded run loop implementation, data sources are constantly polled and 389the system is put to sleep if no IRQ happens during the poll of all data sources. 390 391The complete run loop cycle looks like this: first, the callback 392function of all registered data sources are called in a round robin way. 393Then, the callback functions of timers that are ready are executed. 394Finally, it will be checked if another run loop iteration has been 395requested by an interrupt handler. If not, the run loop will put the MCU 396into sleep mode. 397 398Incoming data over the UART, USB, or timer ticks will generate an 399interrupt and wake up the microcontroller. In order to avoid the 400situation where a data source becomes ready just before the run loop 401enters sleep mode, an interrupt-driven data source has to call the 402*btstack_run_loop_poll_data_sources_from_irq* function. The call to 403*btstack_run_loop_poll_data_sources_from_irq* sets an 404internal flag that is checked in the critical section just before 405entering sleep mode causing another run loop cycle. 406 407To enable the use of timers, make sure that you defined HAVE_EMBEDDED_TICK or HAVE_EMBEDDED_TIME_MS in the 408config file. 409 410While there is no threading, *btstack_run_loop_poll_data_sources_from_irq* allows to reduce stack size by 411scheduling a continuation. 412 413### Run Loop FreeRTOS 414 415The FreeRTOS run loop is used on a dedicated FreeRTOS thread and it uses a FreeRTOS queue to schedule callbacks on the run loop. 416In each iteration: 417 418- all data sources are polled 419- all scheduled callbacks are executed 420- all expired timers are called 421- finally, it gets the next timeout. It then waits for a 'trigger' or the next timeout, if set. 422 423It supports both *btstack_run_loop_poll_data_sources_from_irq* as well as *btstack_run_loop_execute_code_on_main_thread*. 424 425 426### Run Loop POSIX 427 428The data sources are standard File Descriptors. In the run loop execute implementation, 429select() call is used to wait for file descriptors to become ready to read or write, 430while waiting for the next timeout. 431 432To enable the use of timers, make sure that you defined HAVE_POSIX_TIME in the config file. 433 434It supports both *btstack_run_loop_poll_data_sources_from_irq* as well as *btstack_run_loop_execute_code_on_main_thread*. 435 436 437### Run loop CoreFoundation (OS X/iOS) 438 439This run loop directly maps BTstack's data source and timer source with CoreFoundation objects. 440It supports ready to read and write similar to the POSIX implementation. The call to 441*btstack_run_loop_execute()* then just calls *CFRunLoopRun()*. 442 443To enable the use of timers, make sure that you defined HAVE_POSIX_TIME in the config file. 444 445It currently only supports *btstack_run_loop_execute_code_on_main_thread*. 446 447 448### Run Lop Qt 449 450This run loop directly maps BTstack's data source and timer source with Qt Core objects. 451It supports ready to read and write similar to the POSIX implementation. 452 453To enable the use of timers, make sure that you defined HAVE_POSIX_TIME in the config file. 454 455It supports both *btstack_run_loop_poll_data_sources_from_irq* as well as *btstack_run_loop_execute_code_on_main_thread*. 456 457 458### Run loop Windows 459 460The data sources are Event objects. In the run loop implementation WaitForMultipleObjects() call 461is all is used to wait for the Event object to become ready while waiting for the next timeout. 462 463It supports both *btstack_run_loop_poll_data_sources_from_irq* as well as *btstack_run_loop_execute_code_on_main_thread*. 464 465 466### Run loop WICED 467 468WICED SDK API does not provide asynchronous read and write to the UART and no direct way to wait for 469one or more peripherals to become ready. Therefore, BTstack does not provide direct support for data sources. 470Instead, the run loop provides a message queue that allows to schedule functions calls on its thread via 471*btstack_run_loop_wiced_execute_code_on_main_thread()*. 472 473The HCI transport H4 implementation then uses two lightweight threads to do the 474blocking read and write operations. When a read or write is complete on 475the helper threads, a callback to BTstack is scheduled. 476 477It currently only supports *btstack_run_loop_execute_code_on_main_thread*. 478 479 480## HCI Transport configuration 481 482The HCI initialization has to adapt BTstack to the used platform. The first 483call is to *hci_init()* and requires information about the HCI Transport to use. 484The arguments are: 485 486- *HCI Transport implementation*: On embedded systems, a Bluetooth 487 module can be connected via USB or an UART port. On embedded, BTstack implements HCI UART Transport Layer (H4) and H4 with eHCILL support, a lightweight low-power variant by Texas Instruments. For POSIX, there is an implementation for HCI H4, HCI H5 and H2 libUSB, and for WICED HCI H4 WICED. 488 These are accessed by linking the appropriate file, e.g., 489 [platform/embedded/hci_transport_h4_embedded.c]() 490 and then getting a pointer to HCI Transport implementation. 491 For more information on adapting HCI Transport to different 492 environments, see [here](porting/#sec:hciTransportPorting). 493 494<!-- --> 495 496 hci_transport_t * transport = hci_transport_h4_instance(); 497 498- *HCI Transport configuration*: As the configuration of the UART used 499 in the H4 transport interface are not standardized, it has to be 500 provided by the main application to BTstack. In addition to the 501 initial UART baud rate, the main baud rate can be specified. The HCI 502 layer of BTstack will change the init baud rate to the main one 503 after the basic setup of the Bluetooth module. A baud rate change 504 has to be done in a coordinated way at both HCI and hardware level. 505 For example, on the CC256x, the HCI command to change the baud rate 506 is sent first, then it is necessary to wait for the confirmation event 507 from the Bluetooth module. Only now, can the UART baud rate changed. 508 509<!-- --> 510 511 hci_uart_config_t* config = &hci_uart_config; 512 513After these are ready, HCI is initialized like this: 514 515 hci_init(transport, config); 516 517 518In addition to these, most UART-based Bluetooth chipset require some 519special logic for correct initialization that is not covered by the 520Bluetooth specification. In particular, this covers: 521 522- setting the baudrate 523- setting the BD ADDR for devices without an internal persistent storage 524- upload of some firmware patches. 525 526This is provided by the various *btstack_chipset_t* implementation in the *chipset/* subfolders. 527As an example, the *bstack_chipset_cc256x_instance* function returns a pointer to a chipset struct 528suitable for the CC256x chipset. 529 530<!-- --> 531 532 btstack_chipset_t * chipset = btstack_chipset_cc256x_instance(); 533 hci_set_chipset(chipset); 534 535 536In some setups, the hardware setup provides explicit control of Bluetooth power and sleep modes. 537In this case, a *btstack_control_t* struct can be set with *hci_set_control*. 538 539Finally, the HCI implementation requires some form of persistent storage for link keys generated 540during either legacy pairing or the Secure Simple Pairing (SSP). This commonly requires platform 541specific code to access the MCU’s EEPROM of Flash storage. For the 542first steps, BTstack provides a (non) persistent store in memory. 543For more see [here](porting/#sec:persistentStoragePorting). 544 545<!-- --> 546 547 btstack_link_key_db_t * link_key_db = &btstack_link_key_db_memory_instance(); 548 btstack_set_link_key_db(link_key_db); 549 550 551The higher layers only rely on BTstack and are initialized by calling 552the respective *\*_init* function. These init functions register 553themselves with the underlying layer. In addition, the application can 554register packet handlers to get events and data as explained in the 555following section. 556 557 558## Services {#sec:servicesHowTo} 559 560One important construct of BTstack is *service*. A service represents a 561server side component that handles incoming connections. So far, BTstack 562provides L2CAP, BNEP, and RFCOMM services. An L2CAP service handles incoming 563connections for an L2CAP channel and is registered with its protocol 564service multiplexer ID (PSM). Similarly, an RFCOMM service handles 565incoming RFCOMM connections and is registered with the RFCOMM channel 566ID. Outgoing connections require no special registration, they are 567created by the application when needed. 568 569 570## Packet handlers configuration {#sec:packetHandlersHowTo} 571 572 573After the hardware and BTstack are set up, the run loop is entered. From 574now on everything is event driven. The application calls BTstack 575functions, which in turn may send commands to the Bluetooth module. The 576resulting events are delivered back to the application. Instead of 577writing a single callback handler for each possible event (as it is done 578in some other Bluetooth stacks), BTstack groups events logically and 579provides them over a single generic interface. Appendix 580[Events and Errors](generated/appendix/#sec:eventsAndErrorsAppendix) 581summarizes the parameters and event 582codes of L2CAP and RFCOMM events, as well as possible errors and the 583corresponding error codes. 584 585Here is summarized list of packet handlers that an application might 586use: 587 588- HCI event handler - allows to observer HCI, GAP, and general BTstack events. 589 590- L2CAP packet handler - handles LE Connection parameter requeset updates 591 592- L2CAP service packet handler - handles incoming L2CAP connections, 593 i.e., channels initiated by the remote. 594 595- L2CAP channel packet handler - handles outgoing L2CAP connections, 596 i.e., channels initiated internally. 597 598- RFCOMM service packet handler - handles incoming RFCOMM connections, 599 i.e., channels initiated by the remote. 600 601- RFCOMM channel packet handler - handles outgoing RFCOMM connections, 602 i.e., channels initiated internally. 603 604These handlers are registered with the functions listed in Table 605{@tbl:registeringFunction}. 606 607 608Packet Handler | Registering Function 609-------------------------------|-------------------------------------- 610HCI packet handler | hci_add_event_handler 611L2CAP packet handler | l2cap_register_packet_handler 612L2CAP service packet handler | l2cap_register_service 613L2CAP channel packet handler | l2cap_create_channel 614RFCOMM service packet handler | rfcomm_register_service and rfcomm_register_service_with_initial_credits 615RFCOMM channel packet handler | rfcomm_create_channel and rfcomm_create_channel_with_initial_credits 616 617 618Table: Functions for registering packet handlers. {#tbl:registeringFunction} 619 620HCI, GAP, and general BTstack events are delivered to the packet handler 621specified by *hci_add_event_handler* function. In L2CAP, 622BTstack discriminates incoming and outgoing connections, i.e., event and 623data packets are delivered to different packet handlers. Outgoing 624connections are used access remote services, incoming connections are 625used to provide services. For incoming connections, the packet handler 626specified by *l2cap_register_service* is used. For outgoing 627connections, the handler provided by *l2cap_create_channel* 628is used. RFCOMM and BNEP are similar. 629 630The application can register a single shared packet handler for all 631protocols and services, or use separate packet handlers for each 632protocol layer and service. A shared packet handler is often used for 633stack initialization and connection management. 634 635Separate packet handlers can be used for each L2CAP service and outgoing 636connection. For example, to connect with a Bluetooth HID keyboard, your 637application could use three packet handlers: one to handle HCI events 638during discovery of a keyboard registered by 639*l2cap_register_packet_handler*; one that will be registered to an 640outgoing L2CAP channel to connect to keyboard and to receive keyboard 641data registered by *l2cap_create_channel*; after that 642keyboard can reconnect by itself. For this, you need to register L2CAP 643services for the HID Control and HID Interrupt PSMs using 644*l2cap_register_service*. In this call, you’ll also specify 645a packet handler to accept and receive keyboard data. 646 647All events names have the form MODULE_EVENT_NAME now, e.g., *gap_event_-advertising_report*. 648To facilitate working with 649events and get rid of manually calculating offsets into packets, BTstack provides 650auto-generated getters for all fields of all events in *src/hci_event.h*. All 651functions are defined as static inline, so they are not wasting any program memory 652if not used. If used, the memory footprint should be identical to accessing the 653field directly via offsets into the packet. For example, to access fields address_type 654and address from the *gap_event_advertising_report* event use following getters: 655 656<!-- --> 657 uint8_t address type = gap_event_advertising_report_get_address_type(event); 658 bd_addr_t address; 659 gap_event_advertising_report_get_address(event, address); 660 661 662## Bluetooth HCI Packet Logs {#sec:packetlogsHowTo} 663 664If things don't work as expected, having a look at the data exchanged 665between BTstack and the Bluetooth chipset often helps. 666 667For this, BTstack provides a configurable packet logging mechanism via hci_dump.h and the following implementations: 668 669 void hci_dump_init(const hci_dump_t * hci_dump_implementation); 670 671Platform | File | Description 672---------|------------------------------|------------ 673POSIX | `hci_dump_posix_fs.c` | HCI log file for Apple PacketLogger and Wireshark 674POSIX | `hci_dump_posix_stdout.c` | Console output via printf 675Embedded | `hci_dump_embedded_stdout.c` | Console output via printf 676Embedded | `hci_dump_segger_stdout.c` | Console output via SEGGER RTT 677Embedded | `hci_dump_segger_binary.c` | HCI log file for Apple PacketLogger via SEGGER RTT 678 679 680On POSIX systems, you can call *hci_dump_init* with a *hci_dump_posix_fs_get_instance()* and 681configure the path and output format with *hci_dump_posix_fs_open(const char * path, hci_dump_format_t format)* 682where format can be *HCI_DUMP_BLUEZ* or *HCI_DUMP_PACKETLOGGER*. 683The resulting file can be analyzed with Wireshark or the Apple's PacketLogger tool. 684 685On embedded systems without a file system, you either log to an UART console via printf or use SEGGER RTT. 686For printf output you pass *hci_dump_embedded_stdout_get_instance()* to *hci_dump_init()*. 687With RTT, you can choose between textual output similar to printf, and binary output. 688For textual output, you can provide the *hci_dump_segger_stdout_get_instance()*. 689 690It will log all HCI packets to the UART console via printf or RTT Terminal. 691If you capture the console output, incl. your own debug messages, you can use 692the create_packet_log.py tool in the tools folder to convert a text output into a 693PacketLogger file. 694 695For less overhead and higher logging speed, you can directly log in binary format by 696passing *hci_dump_segger_rtt_binary_get_instance()* and selecting the output format by 697calling *hci_dump_segger_rtt_binary_open(hci_dump_format_t format)* with the same format as above. 698 699 700In addition to the HCI packets, you can also enable BTstack's debug information by adding 701 702 #define ENABLE_LOG_INFO 703 #define ENABLE_LOG_ERROR 704 705to the btstack_config.h and recompiling your application. 706 707## Bluetooth Power Control {#sec:powerControl} 708 709In most BTstack examples, the device is set to be discoverable and connectable. In this mode, even when there's no active connection, the Bluetooth Controller will periodically activate its receiver in order to listen for inquiries or connecting requests from another device. 710The ability to be discoverable requires more energy than the ability to be connected. Being discoverable also announces the device to anybody in the area. Therefore, it is a good idea to pause listening for inquiries when not needed. Other devices that have your Bluetooth address can still connect to your device. 711 712To enable/disable discoverability, you can call: 713 714 /** 715 * @brief Allows to control if device is discoverable. OFF by default. 716 */ 717 void gap_discoverable_control(uint8_t enable); 718 719If you don't need to become connected from other devices for a longer period of time, you can also disable the listening to connection requests. 720 721To enable/disable connectability, you can call: 722 723 /** 724 * @brief Override page scan mode. Page scan mode enabled by l2cap when services are registered 725 * @note Might be used to reduce power consumption while Bluetooth module stays powered but no (new) 726 * connections are expected 727 */ 728 void gap_connectable_control(uint8_t enable); 729 730For Bluetooth Low Energy, the radio is periodically used to broadcast advertisements that are used for both discovery and connection establishment. 731 732To enable/disable advertisements, you can call: 733 734 /** 735 * @brief Enable/Disable Advertisements. OFF by default. 736 * @param enabled 737 */ 738 void gap_advertisements_enable(int enabled); 739 740If a Bluetooth Controller is neither discoverable nor connectable, it does not need to periodically turn on its radio and it only needs to respond to commands from the Host. In this case, the Bluetooth Controller is free to enter some kind of deep sleep where the power consumption is minimal. 741 742Finally, if that's not sufficient for your application, you could request BTstack to shutdown the Bluetooth Controller. For this, the "on" and "off" functions in the btstack_control_t struct must be implemented. To shutdown the Bluetooth Controller, you can call: 743 744 /** 745 * @brief Requests the change of BTstack power mode. 746 */ 747 int hci_power_control(HCI_POWER_MODE mode); 748 749with mode set to *HCI_POWER_OFF*. When needed later, Bluetooth can be started again via by calling it with mode *HCI_POWER_ON*, as seen in all examples. 750