## Summary
Adds Xteink X3 hardware support to CrossPoint Reader. The X3 uses the
same SSD1677 e-ink controller as the X4 but with a different panel
(792x528 vs 800x480), different button layout, and an I2C fuel gauge
(BQ27220) instead of ADC-based battery reading.
All X3-specific behavior is gated by runtime device detection — X4
behavior is unchanged.
Depends on community-sdk X3 support: open-x4-epaper/community-sdk#19
(merged).
## Changes
### HAL Layer
**HalGPIO** (`lib/hal/HalGPIO.cpp/.h`)
- I2C-based device fingerprinting at boot: probes for BQ27220 fuel
gauge, DS3231 RTC, and QMI8658 IMU to distinguish X3 from X4
- Detection result cached in NVS for fast subsequent boots
- Exposes `deviceIsX3()` / `deviceIsX4()` helpers used throughout the
codebase
- X3 button mapping (7 GPIOs vs X4's layout)
- USB connection detection and wake classification for X3
**HalDisplay** (`lib/hal/HalDisplay.cpp/.h`)
- Calls `einkDisplay.setDisplayX3()` before init when X3 is detected
- Requests display resync after power button / flash wake events
- Runtime display dimension accessors (`getDisplayWidth()`,
`getDisplayHeight()`, `getBufferSize()`)
- Exposed as global `display` instance for use by image converters
**HalPowerManager** (`lib/hal/HalPowerManager.cpp/.h`)
- X3 battery reading via I2C fuel gauge (BQ27220 at 0x55, SOC register)
- X3 power button uses GPIO hold for deep sleep
### Display & Rendering
**GfxRenderer** (`lib/GfxRenderer/GfxRenderer.cpp/.h`)
- Buffer size and display dimensions are now runtime values (not
compile-time constants) to support both panel sizes
- X3 anti-aliasing tuning: only the darker grayscale level is applied to
avoid washed-out text on the X3 panel. X4 retains both levels via
`deviceIsX4()` gate
**Image Converters** (`lib/JpegToBmpConverter`, `lib/PngToBmpConverter`)
- Cover image prescale target uses runtime display dimensions from HAL
instead of hardcoded 800x480
### UI Themes
**BaseTheme / LyraTheme** (`src/components/themes/`)
- X3 button position mapping for the different physical layout
- Adjusted UI element positioning for 792x528 viewport
### Boot & Init
**main.cpp**
- X3 hardware detection logging
- Adjusted init sequence for X3 (no `HalSystem::begin()` dependency on
X3 path)
**HomeActivity**
- Uses runtime `renderer.getBufferSize()` instead of static
`GfxRenderer::getBufferSize()`
FYI I did not add support for the gyro page turner. That can be it's own
PR.
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?** All praise goes to @didacta for his
PR #537. Just picked up the reviewer comments to contain the changes as
suggested (there was no response for more than 6 weeks, so I wanted to
reanimate this feature).
Just one addition: should recognize usb cable plug ins / retractions and
update the icon immediately
* **What changes are included?**
## Additional Context
see #537
---
### AI Usage
While CrossPoint doesn't have restrictions on AI tools in contributing,
please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**< NO >**_
## Summary
Continue my experiment from
https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader/pull/801
This PR add the ability to lower the CPU frequency on extended idle
period (currently set to 3 seconds). By default, the esp32c3 CPU is set
to 160MHz, and now on idle, we can reduce it to just 10MHz.
Note that while this functionality is already provided by [esp power
management](https://docs.espressif.com/projects/esp-idf/en/v4.3/esp32c3/api-reference/system/power_management.html),
the current Arduino build lacks of this, and enabling it is just too
complicated (not worth the effort compared to this PR)
Update: more info in
https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader/pull/852#issuecomment-3904562827
## Testing
Pre-condition for each test case: the battery is charged to 100%, and is
left plugged in after fully charged for an extra 1 hour.
The table below shows how much battery is **used** for a given duration:
| case / duration | 6 hrs | 12 hrs |
| --- | --- | --- |
| `delay(10)` | 26% | 48% |
| `delay(50)`, PR
https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader/pull/801 | 20% |
Not tested |
| `delay(50)` + low CPU freq (This PR) | Not tested | 25% |
| `delay(10)` + low CPU freq (1) | Not tested | Not tested |
(1) I decided not to test this case because it may not make sense. The
problem is that CPU frequency vs power consumption do not follow a
linear relationship, see
[this](https://www.arrow.com/en/research-and-events/articles/esp32-power-consumption-can-be-reduced-with-sleep-modes)
as an example. So, tight loop (10ms) + lower CPU freq significantly
impact battery life, because the active CPU time is now much higher
compared to the wall time.
**So in conclusion, this PR improves ~150% to ~200% battery use time per
charge.**
The projected battery life is now: ~36-48 hrs of reading time (normal
reading, no wifi)
---
### AI Usage
While CrossPoint doesn't have restrictions on AI tools in contributing,
please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? **NO**
## Summary
Extracted some changes from
https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader/pull/500 to make
reviewing easier
This PR adds HAL (Hardware Abstraction Layer) for display and GPIO
components, making it easier to write a stub or an emulated
implementation of the hardware.
SD card HAL will be added via another PR, because it's a bit more
tricky.
---
### AI Usage
While CrossPoint doesn't have restrictions on AI tools in contributing,
please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? **NO**