1# Eclipse ThreadX LevelX
2
3LevelX provides NAND and NOR flash wear leveling facilities to embedded applications. Since both NAND and NOR flash memory can only be erased a finite number of times, it’s critical to distribute the flash memory use evenly. This is typically called **wear leveling** and is the purpose behind LevelX. LevelX presents to the user an array of logical sectors that are mapped to physical flash memory inside of LevelX. Applications may use LevelX in conjunction with FileX or may read/write logical sectors directly. LevelX is designed for fault tolerance. Flash updates are performed in a multiple-step process that can be interrupted in each step. LevelX automatically recovers to the optimal state during the next operation.
4
5## Getting Started
6
7LevelX as part of Eclipse ThreadX has been integrated to the semiconductor's SDKs and development environment. You can develop using the tools of choice from [STMicroelectronics](https://www.st.com/content/st_com/en/campaigns/x-cube-azrtos-azure-rtos-stm32.html), [NXP](https://www.nxp.com/design/software/embedded-software/azure-rtos-for-nxp-microcontrollers:AZURE-RTOS), [Renesas](https://github.com/renesas/azure-rtos) and [Microchip](https://mu.microchip.com/get-started-simplifying-your-iot-design-with-azure-rtos).
8
9See [Overview of Eclipse ThreadX LevelX](https://github.com/eclipse-threadx/rtos-docs/blob/main/rtos-docs/levelx/index.md) for the high-level overview.
10
11## Repository Structure and Usage
12
13### Directory layout
14
15    .
16    ├── cmake                   # CMakeList files for building the project
17    ├── common                  # Core LevelX files
18    ├── samples                 # Sample codes
19    ├── LICENSE.txt             # License terms
20    ├── LICENSE-HARDWARE.txt    # Licensed hardware from semiconductors
21    ├── CONTRIBUTING.md         # Contribution guidance
22    └── SECURITY.md             # Repo security guidance
23
24### Branches & Releases
25
26The master branch has the most recent code with all new features and bug fixes. It does not represent the latest General Availability (GA) release of the library. Each official release (preview or GA) will be tagged to mark the commit and push it into the Github releases tab, e.g. `v6.2-rel`.
27
28> When you see xx-xx-xxxx, 6.x or x.x in function header, this means the file is not officially released yet. They will be updated in the next release. See example below.
29```
30/**************************************************************************/
31/*                                                                        */
32/*  FUNCTION                                               RELEASE        */
33/*                                                                        */
34/*    _tx_initialize_low_level                          Cortex-M23/GNU    */
35/*                                                           6.x          */
36/*  AUTHOR                                                                */
37/*                                                                        */
38/*    Scott Larson, Microsoft Corporation                                 */
39/*                                                                        */
40/*  DESCRIPTION                                                           */
41/*                                                                        */
42/*    This function is responsible for any low-level processor            */
43/*    initialization, including setting up interrupt vectors, setting     */
44/*    up a periodic timer interrupt source, saving the system stack       */
45/*    pointer for use in ISR processing later, and finding the first      */
46/*    available RAM memory address for tx_application_define.             */
47/*                                                                        */
48/*  INPUT                                                                 */
49/*                                                                        */
50/*    None                                                                */
51/*                                                                        */
52/*  OUTPUT                                                                */
53/*                                                                        */
54/*    None                                                                */
55/*                                                                        */
56/*  CALLS                                                                 */
57/*                                                                        */
58/*    None                                                                */
59/*                                                                        */
60/*  CALLED BY                                                             */
61/*                                                                        */
62/*    _tx_initialize_kernel_enter           ThreadX entry function        */
63/*                                                                        */
64/*  RELEASE HISTORY                                                       */
65/*                                                                        */
66/*    DATE              NAME                      DESCRIPTION             */
67/*                                                                        */
68/*  09-30-2020      Scott Larson            Initial Version 6.1           */
69/*  xx-xx-xxxx      Scott Larson            Include tx_user.h,            */
70/*                                            resulting in version 6.x    */
71/*                                                                        */
72/**************************************************************************/
73```
74
75## Component dependencies
76
77The main components of Eclipse ThreadX are each provided in their own repository, but there are dependencies between them, as shown in the following graph. This is important to understand when setting up your builds.
78
79![dependency graph](docs/deps.png)
80
81> You will have to take the dependency graph above into account when building anything other than ThreadX itself.
82
83### Building and using the library
84
85Instruction for building the LevelX as static library using Arm GNU Toolchain and CMake. If you are using toolchain and IDE from semiconductor, you might follow its own instructions to use Eclipse ThreadX components as explained in the [Getting Started](#getting-started) section.
86
871. Install the following tools:
88
89    * [CMake](https://cmake.org/download/) version 3.0 or later
90    * [Arm GNU Toolchain for arm-none-eabi](https://developer.arm.com/downloads/-/arm-gnu-toolchain-downloads)
91    * [Ninja](https://ninja-build.org/)
92
931. Build the [ThreadX library](https://github.com/azure-rtos/threadx#building-and-using-the-library) as the dependency.
94
951. Cloning the repo.
96
97    ```bash
98    $ git clone --recursive https://github.com/eclipse-threadx/levelx.git
99    ```
100
1011. Define the features and addons you need in `lx_user.h` and build together with the component source code. You can refer to [`lx_user_sample.h`](https://github.com/azure-rtos/levelx/blob/master/common/inc/lx_user_sample.h) as an example.
102
1031. Building as a static library
104
105    Each component of Eclipse ThreadX comes with a composable CMake-based build system that supports many different MCUs and host systems. Integrating any of these components into your device app code is as simple as adding a git submodule and then including it in your build using the CMake `add_subdirectory()`.
106
107    While the typical usage pattern is to include LevelX into your device code source tree to be built & linked with your code, you can compile this project as a standalone static library to confirm your build is set up correctly.
108
109    An example of building the library for Cortex-M4:
110
111    ```bash
112    $ cmake -Bbuild -GNinja -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=cmake/cortex_m4.cmake .
113
114    $ cmake --build ./build
115    ```
116
117## Licensing
118
119License terms for using Eclipse ThreadX are defined in the LICENSE.txt file of this repo. Please refer to this file for all definitive licensing information.
120
121## Resources
122
123The following are references to additional Eclipse ThreadX resources:
124
125- **Product introduction**: https://github.com/eclipse-threadx/rtos-docs
126- **Product issues and bugs, or feature requests**: https://github.com/eclipse-threadx/levelx/issues
127- **TraceX Installer**: https://aka.ms/azrtos-tracex-installer
128
129You can also check [previous questions](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/azure-rtos+levelx) or ask new ones on StackOverflow using the `threadx` and `levelx` tags.
130
131## Security
132
133Eclipse ThreadX provides OEMs with components to secure communication and to create code and data isolation using underlying MCU/MPU hardware protection mechanisms. It is ultimately the responsibility of the device builder to ensure the device fully meets the evolving security requirements associated with its specific use case.
134
135## Contribution
136
137Please follow the instructions provided in the [CONTRIBUTING.md](./CONTRIBUTING.md) for the corresponding repository.
138