Ensure SourceMixin descendents shut down the source prior to closing.
Furthermore, make sure devices are closed before pin factory shuts down,
and that pins have a strong reference to their owning factory (to
prevent losing the factory before the pins).
Some fairly major changes to ensure that the Pin.when_changed property
doesn't keep references to the objects owning the callbacks that are
assigned. This is vaguely tricky given that ordinary weakref's can't be
used with bound methods (which are ephemeral), so I've back-ported
weakref.WeakMethod from Py3.4.
This solves a whole pile of things like Button instances not
disappearing when they're deleted, and makes composite devices
containing Buttons much easier to construct as we don't need to worry
about partially constructed things not getting deleted.
Ensure LEDCollection cleans up upon construction failure, rename some
internals to be a bit more obvious, rename PinGPIOUnsupported to
PinUnsupported, and some other stuff I've forgotten!
Sorry! Dave's messing around with the pin implementations again.
Hopefully the last time. The pin_factory is now really a factory object
which can be asked to produce individual pins or pin-based interfaces
like SPI (which can be supported properly via pigpio).
While the tests work well on a PC or Travis, the Pi (where I ought to be
running them!) has some issues with the timing tests. Need to relax the
tolerance of the "assert_states_and_times" method to 0.05 seconds
otherwise it periodically fails even on something reasonably quick like
a Pi 2 (less failures on a Pi 3 but still occasionally).
Also reduced default fps to 25; if the default timing occasionally fails
on a Pi 2 it's evidently too fast for a Pi 1 and shouldn't be the
default; 25 also doesn't look any different to me on a pulsing LED.
There's also a bunch of miscellaneous fixes in here; last minute typos
and chart re-gens for the 1.2 release.
Me and my big mouth. No sooner do I declare the base classes "relatively
stable" than I go and mess around with it all again. Anyway, this is the
long promised set of utilities to make source/values more interesting.
It includes a few interesting little utility functions, a whole bunch of
examples and introduces the notion of "pseudo" devices with no (obvious)
hardware representation like a time-of-day device.
This necessitated making the event system a little more generic (it's
not exclusive the GPIO devices after all; no reason we can't use it on
composite devices in future) and by this point the mixins have gotten
large enough to justify their own module.
The pseudo-devices are a bit spartan and basic at the moment but I'm
sure there'll be plenty of future ideas...