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From: Vanalme Filip <F.Vanalme@TELEVIC.com>
To: "barebox@lists.infradead.org" <barebox@lists.infradead.org>
Subject: PMIC device driver
Date: Wed, 16 Feb 2011 13:20:36 +0100	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <6EE7D1502C48E44E92DCADF9DD3E0DB9017FF3B00817@SRV-VS06.TELEVIC.COM> (raw)

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Vanalme Filip
> Sent: woensdag 16 februari 2011 9:38
> To: 'barebox@lists.infradead.org'
> Subject: PMIC device driver
> 
> Up till now, I could not start up the network on my i.mx27PDK board. After
> measuring on the device, I could see that power was missing for the PHY. Good
> reason, of course, for not starting up...
> To enable the missing power, I have to adjust some registers in the PMIC device
> (mc13783).
> If I look into the mc13783.c file, I could see that this has similarities with Linux
> device drivers. So, to access the PMIC, I guess I have to do an open("/dev/pmic")
> and then a read or write. However, when I look to the pmic_read() and pmic_write()
> function, they have, besides the device pointer, buffer pointer and buffer size, an
> offset parameter that indicate the register within the PMIC to read/write. On the
> other hand, the standard read and write functions only take 3 parameters (device,
> buffer, buffersize). How do I pass that offset to these functions ? How do I use the
> PMIC device driver ?
> (Maybe this is a general Linux device driver question, but I'm not that familiar with
> device drivers, so...)
> 
> Is it the best way to do it like this (open, read, write), or do I better call those
> functions directly ? (I have to set the PMIC registers in the "late_init" function of
> the barebox startup sequence)
> 
> Filip Vanalme
> 

[Filip] Think I found how it works. I have to use the normal read, write and lseek functions to read/write PMIC registers. The 'offset' and 'flag' parameters in read and write functions are for internal use only. Correct. When reading, an internal index is incremented. A following read starts where the previous ended. With lseek, one can move that index to address the correct register. Right ?

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             reply	other threads:[~2011-02-16 12:20 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2011-02-16 12:20 Vanalme Filip [this message]
2011-02-16 20:34 ` Marc Reilly
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2011-02-16  8:37 Vanalme Filip

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