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need help with simple blinking led delay problem

Altera_Forum
Honored Contributor II
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I'm targeting a DE0-Nano development board, and I've created a NIOS ii/e embedded processor. I want to blink a LED, using the following C code from 'my first nios ii software tutorial': 

# include <stdio.h># include "system.h"# include "altera_avalon_pio_regs.h" 

int main() 

int count = 0; 

int delay; 

while(1)  

IOWR_ALTERA_AVALON_PIO_DATA(LED_PIO_BASE, count & 0x01); 

delay = 0; 

while(delay < 2000000) 

delay++; 

count++; 

}  

return 0; 

 

 

 

When I debug, I can step through and see the LED light, the value 'count' increment, but there is no 'delay' - it skips the 'while(delay...)' statement. 

 

I do not understand - can somebody help?
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Altera_Forum
Honored Contributor II
621 Views

 

--- Quote Start ---  

 

I do not understand - can somebody help? 

--- Quote End ---  

 

 

The compiler is doing you a favor, and eliminating the code, since it appears to do nothing (but waste its time). Try 

 

volatile int delay; 

 

Cheers, 

Dave
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Altera_Forum
Honored Contributor II
621 Views

Dave, 

 

Works! thanks- but now I wonder why 'delay' is not declared in the Altera tutorial as volatile? Is there a better way to do this - a timer implemented in the NIOS processor?
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Altera_Forum
Honored Contributor II
621 Views

 

--- Quote Start ---  

 

but now I wonder why 'delay' is not declared in the Altera tutorial as volatile? 

 

--- Quote End ---  

Possibly because the original author was using a different version of gcc, or had optimization turned off ... or left it out as a lesson to the user :) 

 

 

--- Quote Start ---  

 

Is there a better way to do this - a timer implemented in the NIOS processor? 

--- Quote End ---  

That is one way. Another way is to create an Avalon-MM slave hardware component to generate pulses (a pulse width modulator) and use that to control the LED. 

 

Ultimately it depends what you are trying to learn. 

 

Finding all the different ways to blink LEDs will keep you busy for hours :) 

 

Cheers, 

Dave
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