I am writing a C program for a 8051 architecture chip and the SDCC compiler.
I have a structure called FilterStructure;
my code looks like this...
#define NAME_SIZE 8
typedef struct {
char Name[NAME_SIZE];
} FilterStructure;
void ReadFilterName(U8 WheelID, U8 Filter, FilterStructure* NameStructure);
int main (void)
{
FilterStructure testStruct;
ReadFilterName('A', 3, &testFilter);
...
...
return 0;
}
void ReadFilterName(U8 WheelID, U8 Filter, FilterStructure* NameStructure)
{
int StartOfName = 0;
int i = 0;
///... do some stuff...
for(i = 0; i < 8; i++)
{
NameStructure->Name[i] = FLASH_ByteRead(StartOfName + i);
}
return;
}
For some reason I get a link error "?ASlink-Error-Could not get 29 consecutive bytes in internal RAM for area DSEG"
If I comment out the line that says FilterStructure testStruct;
the error goes away.
What does this error mean? Do I need to discard the structure when I am done with it?
The message means that your local variable testStruct
couldn't be allocated in RAM (or DSEG that should be DATA SEGMENT of your binary), since your memory manager couldn't find 29 consecutive bytes to allocate it.
This is strange since your struct should be 8 bytes long.. but btw it's nothing to do with discarding the structure, this seems a memory management problem.. I don't know 8051 specs so well but it should be quite limited right?
EDIT: looking at 8051 specs it seems it just has 128 bytes of RAM. This can cause the problem because the variable, declared as a local, is allocated in internal RAM while you should try to allocate it on an external RAM chip if it's possible (using the address/data bus of the chip), but I'm not sure since this kind of microcontroller shouldn't be used to do these things.