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authorSergey Vlasov <sigprof@gmail.com>2022-08-12 00:37:41 +0300
committerGitHub <noreply@github.com>2022-08-11 22:37:41 +0100
commit9e443621796a150b244d49a784b77c744ea04d94 (patch)
tree3c5c5e1fa1421d2ceaabd375c8b2cba9eab09bc3 /keyboards/gboards/gergo
parent8c4269f98e107a9c98127464e6870798b1734a61 (diff)
downloadqmk_firmware-9e443621796a150b244d49a784b77c744ea04d94.tar.gz
qmk_firmware-9e443621796a150b244d49a784b77c744ea04d94.zip
Add minimal STM32F103C6 support (#17853)
Unfortunately, the crippled versions of “Bluepill” boards with STM32F103C6xx chips instead of STM32F103C8xx are now sold all over the place, sometimes advertised in a confusing way to make the difference not noticeable until too late. Add minimal support for these MCUs in the common “Bluepill with stm32duino” configuration, so that it could be possible to make something useful from those boards (although fitting QMK into the available 24 KiB of flash may be rather hard). (In fact, I'm not sure whether the “STM32” part of the chip name is actually correct for those boards of uncertain origin, so the onekey board name is `bluepill_f103c6`; another reason for that name is to match the existing `blackpill_f401` and `blackpill_f411`.) The EEPROM emulation support is not included on purpose, because enabling it without having a working firmware size check would be irresponsible with such flash size (the chance that someone would build a firmware where the EEPROM backing store ends up overlapping some firmware code is really high). Other than that, enabling the EEPROM emulation code is mostly trivial (the `wear_leveling` driver with the `embedded_flash` backing store even works without any custom configuration, although its code is significantly larger than the `vendor` driver, which may also be important for such flash size).
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