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GNU/Linux Rapid Embedded Programming

You're reading from  GNU/Linux Rapid Embedded Programming

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786461803
Pages 732 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Rodolfo Giometti Rodolfo Giometti
Profile icon Rodolfo Giometti

Table of Contents (26) Chapters

GNU/Linux Rapid Embedded Programming
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Installing the Developing System Managing the System Console C Compiler, Device Drivers, and Useful Developing Techniques Quick Programming with Scripts and System Daemons Setting Up an Embedded OS General Purposes Input Output signals – GPIO Serial Ports and TTY Devices - TTY Universal Serial Bus - USB Inter-Integrated Circuits - I2C Serial Peripheral Interface - SPI 1-Wire - W1 Ethernet Network Device - ETH Wireless Network Device - WLAN Controller Area Network - CAN Sound Devices - SND Video devices - V4L Analog-to-Digital Converters - ADC Pulse-Width Modulation - PWM Miscellaneous Devices

GPIOs in Linux


In a Linux system, GPIO lines can be managed through the sysfs using simple Bash commands; this is the easiest technique we can use to get access to these peripherals. In the following examples, we are going to use the Wandboard but we can redo them on the other systems too but using different GPIO lines, of course.

The sysfs interface to manage the GPIOs are under the /sys/class/gpio/ directory, and if we take a look at its content, we can see the following files:

root@wb:~# ls /sys/class/gpio/
export     gpiochip128  gpiochip192  gpiochip64  unexport
gpiochip0  gpiochip160  gpiochip32   gpiochip96

Files named gpiochip0, gpiochip32, and so on are related to the GPIO controller chips that are the entities that actually manage a GPIOs group. In our case, the Wandboard groups GPIOs by 32 and then each gpiochip takes its name according to the first managed GPIO number. So, gpiochip0 manages GPIOs from 0 to 31, gpiochip32 manages GPIOs from 32 to 63, and so on.

If we take a look...

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