embassy-stm32

Crates

git

Versions

stm32u595zj

Flavors

embassy_stm32::interrupt

Trait InterruptExt

Source
pub unsafe trait InterruptExt: InterruptNumber + Copy {
    // Provided methods
    unsafe fn enable(self) { ... }
    fn disable(self) { ... }
    fn is_active(self) -> bool { ... }
    fn is_enabled(self) -> bool { ... }
    fn is_pending(self) -> bool { ... }
    fn pend(self) { ... }
    fn unpend(self) { ... }
    fn get_priority(self) -> Priority { ... }
    fn set_priority(self, prio: Priority) { ... }
    fn set_priority_with_cs(self, _cs: CriticalSection<'_>, prio: Priority) { ... }
}
Expand description

Represents an interrupt type that can be configured by embassy to handle interrupts.

Provided Methods§

Source

unsafe fn enable(self)

Enable the interrupt.

Source

fn disable(self)

Disable the interrupt.

Source

fn is_active(self) -> bool

Check if interrupt is being handled.

Source

fn is_enabled(self) -> bool

Check if interrupt is enabled.

Source

fn is_pending(self) -> bool

Check if interrupt is pending.

Source

fn pend(self)

Set interrupt pending.

Source

fn unpend(self)

Unset interrupt pending.

Source

fn get_priority(self) -> Priority

Get the priority of the interrupt.

Source

fn set_priority(self, prio: Priority)

Set the interrupt priority.

Source

fn set_priority_with_cs(self, _cs: CriticalSection<'_>, prio: Priority)

Set the interrupt priority with an already-acquired critical section

Equivalent to set_priority, except you pass a CriticalSection to prove you’ve already acquired a critical section. This prevents acquiring another one, which saves code size.

Dyn Compatibility§

This trait is not dyn compatible.

In older versions of Rust, dyn compatibility was called "object safety", so this trait is not object safe.

Implementors§

Source§

impl<T> InterruptExt for T
where T: InterruptNumber + Copy,