Difference between revisions of "SPI"

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When loaded this driver will create a ''/dev/spidev2.0'' node to read/write on SPI bus from userspace.
 
When loaded this driver will create a ''/dev/spidev2.0'' node to read/write on SPI bus from userspace.
 
<pre class="apf">
 
<pre class="apf">
BIOS> modprobe spidev
+
# modprobe spidev
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
  

Revision as of 16:30, 2 June 2016

This page will summarize the informations to use the SPI bus on APF boards.

Overview

SPI (Serial Peripheral Interface) is a 4-wire full-duplex serial bus. Wires used in SPI are :

  • MOSI, Master Output Slave Input : send data to slave.
  • MISO, Master Input Slave Output : receive data from slave.
  • SCLK, : Serial Clock signal used to synchronise the transmission. (In imx27 (apf27) maximum frequency of SCLK is 22.167MHz in master mode and 16.625 in slave mode.
  • SSx, Slave Select : used to select the slave for communication with master.

On APF27, the i.MX27 contains 3 SPI devices that can be configured in master (slave is not supported by linux). APF9328 (i.MXL) contains 2 SPI.

Linux configuration

APF27Dev with 2.6.29 kernel

SPI is used by some kernel drivers, then selecting them will naturally activate the corresponding SPI. To use the SPI from user space you have to unsure that correct SPI is selected in «make linux-menuconfig»:

    Device Drivers  --->
        [*] SPI support  --->
            ...
            <*>   Freescale iMX SPI controller 
            [*]     CSPI1
            [*]     CSPI2
            [*]     CSPI3
            ...

And special user device (spidev) option must be selected too :

    Device Drivers  --->
        [*] SPI support  --->
            ...
            *** SPI Protocol Masters ***
            <M>   User mode SPI device driver support
            ...

By default, on APF27Dev, spidev device uses the bus number 2 (spi2.0) and PortB17 as chip select. To change this (for expert), the structure spi_board_info must be modified in platform file apf27-dev.c (in directory buildroot/output/build/linux-2.6.29.6/arch/arm/mach-mx2/) :

#ifdef CONFIG_SPI_SPIDEV
	{
		.modalias		= "spidev",
		.controller_data	= &spidev_hw, /* for chip select */
		.max_speed_hz		= 8000000, /* 8MHz */
		.bus_num		= 1, /* SPI2 */
		.mode			= SPI_MODE_1,
		.chip_select		= 2,
		.platform_data		= &apf27_spidev_config,
	},
#endif /* CONFIG_SPI_SPIDEV */
...
#ifdef CONFIG_SPI_SPIDEV
#define SPIDEV_CS (GPIO_PORTB | 17)
...

For more details on spidev usage, see kernel documentation.

Usage

When loaded this driver will create a /dev/spidev2.0 node to read/write on SPI bus from userspace.

# modprobe spidev

Linux user space C code

To write/read on SPI via spidev driver from your program, use ioctl as described in spidev documentation.

Linux kernel provides a test tool, to compile and use it:

$ mkdir spitest
$ cd spitest
$ cp buildroot/output/build/linux-x.x.x/Documentation/spi/spidev_test.c .
$ ../buildroot/output/host/usr/bin/arm-linux-gcc -o spidev_test spidev_test.c
$ scp spidev_test root@192.168.1.22:/root/
# ./spidev_test -D /dev/spidev2.0 -s 8000000

A simple library named as_spi has also been written for Armadeus Project.

Tested SPI chips

Links