Skip to content

Azure RTOS ThreadX is an advanced real-time operating system (RTOS) designed specifically for deeply embedded applications.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

amgross/threadx

 
 

Repository files navigation

cortex_m0 cortex_m3 cortex_m4 cortex_m7

Azure RTOS ThreadX

This advanced real-time operating system (RTOS) is designed specifically for deeply embedded applications. Among the multiple benefits it provides are advanced scheduling facilities, message passing, interrupt management, and messaging services. Azure RTOS ThreadX has many advanced features, including picokernel architecture, preemption threshold, event chaining, and a rich set of system services.

Documentation

Documentation for this library can be found here: http://docs.microsoft.com/azure/rtos/threadx

Understanding inter-component dependencies

The main components of Azure RTOS are each provided in their own repository, but there are dependencies between them--shown in the following graph--that are important to understand when setting up your builds.

dependency graph

Building and using the library

Prerequisites

Install the following tools:

Cloning the repo

$ git clone https://github.com/azure-rtos/threadx.git

Building as a static library

Each component of Azure RTOS comes with a composible 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 command add_subdirectory().

While the typical usage pattern is to include threadx 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.

$ cmake -Bbuild -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=cmake/cortex_m4.cmake -GNinja .

$ cmake --build ./build

NOTE: You will have to take the dependency graph above into account when building anything other than threadx itself.

Repository Structure and Usage

Branches & Releases

The 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.

Releases

Each official release (preview or GA) will be tagged to mark the commit and push it into the Github releases tab, e.g. v6.0-rel.

Directory layout

- cmake
- common
  - inc
  - src
- ports
  - cortex_m0/gnu
    - inc
    - src
  - cortex_m3/gnu
    - inc
    - src
  - cortex_m4/gnu
    - inc
    - src
  - cortex_m7/gnu
    - inc
    - src
- samples

Security

Azure RTOS 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.

Contribution, feedback and issues

If you encounter any bugs, have suggestions for new features or if you would like to become an active contributor to this project please follow the instructions provided in the contribution guideline for the corresponding repo.

For general support, please post a question to Stack Overflow using the threadx and azure-rtos tags.

About

Azure RTOS ThreadX is an advanced real-time operating system (RTOS) designed specifically for deeply embedded applications.

Resources

License

Security policy

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Assembly 52.0%
  • C 36.7%
  • Batchfile 7.3%
  • C++ 3.0%
  • Makefile 0.4%
  • PowerShell 0.4%
  • CMake 0.2%