- AV16/32 (6)
- builtin (1)
- Chapter 1 (2)
- Chapter 12 (3)
- Chapter 14 (1)
- chapter 2 (1)
- Chapter 3 (1)
- Chapter 4 (1)
- Chapter 5 (4)
- Configuration (1)
- Events (2)
- Flying (4)
- I2C (5)
- Linux (2)
- MPLAB 8.00 (5)
- mplab c30 v3.02 (11)
- PIC24 (2)
- PIC32 (11)
- Tips and Tricks (15)
- Tools (11)
- Warnings (2)
- 5. January 2009: Tremor
- 27. December 2008: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year
- 19. November 2008: Bending the laws of physics
- 13. November 2008: Electronica 2008
- 6. November 2008: Deep Blue PIC32
- 4. November 2008: MIPS DSP Libraries
- 1. November 2008: Inexplicably Working Errata
- 26. October 2008: PIC32, Harvard or Von Neumann
- 22. October 2008: Back online, Excuses and the Blues Brothers
- 28. July 2008: Not a dsPIC!
Blogroll
PIC24
PIC32
freeRTOS for the PIC24 and PIC32
Today was my second day at the Masters 2008. After attending a number of excellent PIC32 classes (taught by the same architects and engineers that designed the chip and its libraries and tools) I sneaked out and went looking for a hands on class introducing the freeRTOS port for the PIC24 and PIC32.
freeRTOS is one of the few Real Time Operating Systems that have been ported to a large selection of microcontrollers commonly used in embedded control applications. Previous PIC architectures had been supported in the past but of course the PIC24 and PIC32 are now part of the list.
The integration with the MPLAB C30 and C32 compilers is quite natural and even the MPLAB IDE recognizes the tool and allows you to inspect the list of active tasks and perform some basic debugging.
If you are like me, looking for a way to run multiple software libraries (Graphics, USB, TCP/IP etc ), you are most probably looking for a small and inexpensive RTOS that can help you manage the complexity.
Check out the freeRTOS web site, it might just be what the doctor ordered!
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