docs/reference/repl.rst: Add information about new raw-paste mode.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
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Damien George 2020-11-30 11:34:23 +11:00
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@ -196,17 +196,105 @@ So you can use the underscore to save the result in a variable. For example:
15
>>>
Raw mode
--------
Raw mode and raw-paste mode
---------------------------
Raw mode is not something that a person would normally use. It is intended for
programmatic use. It essentially behaves like paste mode with echo turned off.
Raw mode (also called raw REPL) is not something that a person would normally use.
It is intended for programmatic use and essentially behaves like paste mode with
echo turned off, and with optional flow control.
Raw mode is entered using Ctrl-A. You then send your python code, followed by
a Ctrl-D. The Ctrl-D will be acknowledged by 'OK' and then the python code will
be compiled and executed. Any output (or errors) will be sent back. Entering
Ctrl-B will leave raw mode and return the the regular (aka friendly) REPL.
The ``tools/pyboard.py`` program uses the raw REPL to execute python files on the
MicroPython board.
Raw-paste mode is an additional mode within the raw REPL that includes flow control,
and which compiles code as it receives it. This makes it more robust for high-speed
transfer of code into the device, and it also uses less RAM when receiving because
it does not need to store a verbatim copy of the code before compiling (unlike
standard raw mode).
Raw-paste mode uses the following protocol:
#. Enter raw REPL as usual via ctrl-A.
#. Write 3 bytes: ``b"\x05A\x01"`` (ie ctrl-E then "A" then ctrl-A).
#. Read 2 bytes to determine if the device entered raw-paste mode:
* If the result is ``b"R\x00"`` then the device understands the command but
doesn't support raw paste.
* If the result is ``b"R\x01"`` then the device does support raw paste and
has entered this mode.
* Otherwise the result should be ``b"ra"`` and the device doesn't support raw
paste and the string ``b"w REPL; CTRL-B to exit\r\n>"`` should be read and
discarded.
#. If the device is in raw-paste mode then continue, otherwise fallback to
standard raw mode.
#. Read 2 bytes, this is the flow control window-size-increment (in bytes)
stored as a 16-bit unsigned little endian integer. The initial value for the
remaining-window-size variable should be set to this number.
#. Write out the code to the device:
* While there are bytes to send, write up to the remaining-window-size worth
of bytes, and decrease the remaining-window-size by the number of bytes
written.
* If the remaining-window-size is 0, or there is a byte waiting to read, read
1 byte. If this byte is ``b"\x01"`` then increase the remaining-window-size
by the window-size-increment from step 5. If this byte is ``b"\x04"`` then
the device wants to end the data reception, and ``b"\x04"`` should be
written to the device and no more code sent after that. (Note: if there is
a byte waiting to be read from the device then it does not need to be read
and acted upon immediately, the device will continue to consume incoming
bytes as long as reamining-window-size is greater than 0.)
#. When all code has been written to the device, write ``b"\x04"`` to indicate
end-of-data.
#. Read from the device until ``b"\x04"`` is received. At this point the device
has received and compiled all of the code that was sent and is executing it.
#. The device outputs any characters produced by the executing code. When (if)
the code finishes ``b"\x04"`` will be output, followed by any exception that
was uncaught, followed again by ``b"\x04"``. It then goes back to the
standard raw REPL and outputs ``b">"``.
For example, starting at a new line at the normal (friendly) REPL, if you write::
b"\x01\x05A\x01print(123)\x04"
Then the device will respond with something like::
b"\r\nraw REPL; CTRL-B to exit\r\n>R\x01\x80\x00\x01\x04123\r\n\x04\x04>"
Broken down over time this looks like::
# Step 1: enter raw REPL
write: b"\x01"
read: b"\r\nraw REPL; CTRL-B to exit\r\n>"
# Step 2-5: enter raw-paste mode
write: b"\x05A\x01"
read: b"R\x01\x80\x00\x01"
# Step 6-8: write out code
write: b"print(123)\x04"
read: b"\x04"
# Step 9: code executes and result is read
read: b"123\r\n\x04\x04>"
In this case the flow control window-size-increment is 128 and there are two
windows worth of data immediately available at the start, one from the initial
window-size-increment value and one from the explicit ``b"\x01"`` value that
is sent. So this means up to 256 bytes can be written to begin with before
waiting or checking for more incoming flow-control characters.
The ``tools/pyboard.py`` program uses the raw REPL, including raw-paste mode, to
execute Python code on a MicroPython-enabled board.