- Introduction
- Getting Started
- Implement Comm Interface with MCU Platforms
- Adding Support for New Cellular Modems
- Integrate FreeRTOS Cellular Interface with Application
- Building Unit Tests
- Generating Documentation
- Contributing
The Cellular Interface library implement a simple unified Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) that hide the complexity of AT commands. The cellular modems to be interchangeable with the popular options built upon TCP stack and exposes a socket-like interface to C programmers.
Most cellular modems implement more or less the AT commands defined by the 3GPP TS v27.007 standard. This project provides an implementation of such standard AT commands in a reusable common component. The three Cellular libraries in this project all take advantage of that common code. The library for each modem only implements the vendor-specific AT commands, then exposes the complete Cellular API.
The common component that implements the 3GPP TS v27.007 standard has been written in compliance of the following code quality criteria:
- GNU Complexity scores are not over 8.
- MISRA coding standard. Any deviations from the MISRA C:2012 guidelines are
documented in source code comments marked by "
coverity
".
FreeRTOS Cellular Interface v1.4.0 Source Code is part of the FreeRTOS 202406.00 LTS release.
To clone using HTTPS:
git clone https://github.com/FreeRTOS/FreeRTOS-Cellular-Interface.git
Using SSH:
git clone [email protected]/FreeRTOS/FreeRTOS-Cellular-Interface.git
At the root of this repository are these folders:
- source : reusable common code that implements the standard AT commands defined by 3GPP TS v27.007.
- docs : documentations.
- test : unit test and cbmc.
- tools : tools for Coverity static analysis and CMock.
The FreeRTOS Cellular Interface runs on MCUs. It uses an abstracted interface - the Comm Interface, to communicate with cellular modems. A Comm Interface must be implemented as well on the MCU platform. The most common implementations of the Comm Interface are over UART hardware, but it can be implemented over other physical interfaces such as SPI as well. The documentation of the Comm Interface is found within the Cellular API References. These are example implementations of the Comm Interface:
- FreeRTOS Windows Simulator Comm Interface
- FreeRTOS Common IO UART Comm Interface
- STM32 L475 Discovery Board Comm Interface
- Sierra Sensor Hub Board Comm Interface
The FreeRTOS Cellular Interface uses kernel APIs for task synchronization and memory management.
FreeRTOS Cellular Interface now supports AT commands, TCP offloaded Cellular abstraction Layer. In order to add support for a new cellular modem, the developer can use the common component that has already implemented the 3GPP standard AT commands.
In order to port the common component:
- Implement the cellular modem porting interface defined in cellular_common_portable.h (Document).
- Implement the subset of Cellular Library APIs that use vendor-specific (non-3GPP) AT commands. The APIs to be implemented are the ones not marked with an "o" in this table.
- Implement Cellular Library callback functions that handle vendor-specific (non-3GPP) Unsolicited Result Code (URC). The URC handlers to be implemented are the ones not marked with an "o" in this table.
The Cellular Common APIs document provides detail information required in each steps. It is recommended that you start by cloning the implementation of one of the existing modems, then make modifications where your modem's vendor-specific (non-3GPP) AT commands are different.
Current Example Implementations:
Once comm interface and cellular module implementation are ready, we can start to integrate FreeRTOS Cellular Interface. The following diagram depicts the relationship of these software components:
Follow these steps to integrate FreeRTOS Cellular Interface into your project:
- Clone this repository into your project.
- Clone one of the reference cellular module implementations ( BG96 / HL7802 / SARA-R4 ) or create your own cellular module implementation in your project.
- Implement comm interface.
- Build these software components with your application and execute.
We also provide Demos for FreeRTOS-Cellular-Interface on Windows Simulator as references for these three cellular modems example implementations.
By default, the submodules in this repository are configured with update=none
in .gitmodules to avoid increasing clone time and disk space
usage of other repositories (like
FreeRTOS that submodules this
repository).
To build unit tests, the submodule dependency of CMock is required. Use the following command to clone the submodule:
git submodule update --checkout --init --recursive test/unit-test/CMock
- For building the unit tests, CMake 3.13.0 or later and a C90 compiler.
- For running unit tests, Ruby 2.0.0 or later is additionally required for the CMock test framework (that we use).
- For running the coverage target, gcov and lcov are additionally required.
-
Go to the root directory of this repository. (Make sure that the CMock submodule is cloned as described above.)
-
Run the cmake command:
cmake -S test -B build
-
Run this command to build the library and unit tests:
make -C build all
-
The generated test executables will be present in
build/bin/tests
folder. -
Run
cd build && ctest
to execute all tests and view the test run summary.
To learn more about CBMC and proofs specifically, review the training material here.
The test/cbmc/proofs
directory contains CBMC proofs.
In order to run these proofs you will need to install CBMC and other tools by following the instructions here.
Please refer to the demos of the Cellular Interface library here using FreeRTOS on the Windows simulator platform. These can be used as reference examples for the library API.
The Doxygen references were created using Doxygen version 1.9.6. To generate the Doxygen pages, please run the following command from the root of this repository:
doxygen docs/doxygen/config.doxyfile
See CONTRIBUTING.md for information on contributing.