I have been trying to understand this code which is supposed to echo each byte received on the AVR's USART interface using interrupt.
#include
#include
#define USART_BAUDRATE 9600
#define BAUD_PRESCALE (((F_CPU / (USART_BAUDRATE * 16UL))) - 1)
int main (void)
{
UCSRB = (1 << RXEN) | (1 << TXEN); // Turn on the transmission and reception circuitry
UCSRC = (1 << URSEL) | (1 << UCSZ0) | (1 << UCSZ1); // Use 8-bit character sizes
UBRRH = (BAUD_PRESCALE >> 8); // Load upper 8-bits of the baud rate value into the high byte of the UBRR register
UBRRL = BAUD_PRESCALE; // Load lower 8-bits of the baud rate value into the low byte of the UBRR register
UCSRB |= (1 << RCXIE); // Enable the USART Recieve Complete interrupt (USART_RXC)
sei(); // Enable the Global Interrupt Enable flag so that interrupts can be processed
for (;;) // Loop forever
{
// Do nothing - echoing is handled by the ISR instead of in the main loop
}
}
ISR(USART_RXC_vect)
{
char ReceivedByte;
ReceivedByte = UDR; // Fetch the received byte value into the variable "ByteReceived"
UDR = ReceivedByte; // Echo back the received byte back to the computer
}
I'm having troubles understanding this part
ISR(USART_RXC_vect)
{
char ReceivedByte;
ReceivedByte = UDR; // Fetch the received byte value into the variable "ByteReceived"
UDR = ReceivedByte; // Echo back the received byte back to the computer
}
Why isnt the UDRE flag checked here to see if indeed new data can be written, without overwriting previous data? Since we do the same thing in the corresponding polling approach:
while ((UCSRA & (1 << RXC)) == 0) {}; // Do nothing until data have been received and is ready to be read from UDR
ReceivedByte = UDR; // Fetch the received byte value into the variable "ByteReceived"
while ((UCSRA & (1 << UDRE)) == 0) {}; // Do nothing until UDR is ready for more data to be written to it
UDR = ReceivedByte; // Echo back the received byte back to the computer
Shouldn't there be a checking for the UDRE flag before the UDR = ReceivedByte;
line inside the ISR
too?
Any insights would be much appreciated.