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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-06 01:02:30 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-06 01:02:30 +0000 |
commit | 76cb841cb886eef6b3bee341a2266c76578724ad (patch) | |
tree | f5892e5ba6cc11949952a6ce4ecbe6d516d6ce58 /Documentation/i2c/i2c-stub | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | linux-76cb841cb886eef6b3bee341a2266c76578724ad.tar.xz linux-76cb841cb886eef6b3bee341a2266c76578724ad.zip |
Adding upstream version 4.19.249.upstream/4.19.249
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/i2c/i2c-stub | 64 |
1 files changed, 64 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/i2c/i2c-stub b/Documentation/i2c/i2c-stub new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a16924fbd --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/i2c/i2c-stub @@ -0,0 +1,64 @@ +MODULE: i2c-stub + +DESCRIPTION: + +This module is a very simple fake I2C/SMBus driver. It implements six +types of SMBus commands: write quick, (r/w) byte, (r/w) byte data, (r/w) +word data, (r/w) I2C block data, and (r/w) SMBus block data. + +You need to provide chip addresses as a module parameter when loading this +driver, which will then only react to SMBus commands to these addresses. + +No hardware is needed nor associated with this module. It will accept write +quick commands to the specified addresses; it will respond to the other +commands (also to the specified addresses) by reading from or writing to +arrays in memory. It will also spam the kernel logs for every command it +handles. + +A pointer register with auto-increment is implemented for all byte +operations. This allows for continuous byte reads like those supported by +EEPROMs, among others. + +SMBus block command support is disabled by default, and must be enabled +explicitly by setting the respective bits (0x03000000) in the functionality +module parameter. + +SMBus block commands must be written to configure an SMBus command for +SMBus block operations. Writes can be partial. Block read commands always +return the number of bytes selected with the largest write so far. + +The typical use-case is like this: + 1. load this module + 2. use i2cset (from the i2c-tools project) to pre-load some data + 3. load the target chip driver module + 4. observe its behavior in the kernel log + +There's a script named i2c-stub-from-dump in the i2c-tools package which +can load register values automatically from a chip dump. + +PARAMETERS: + +int chip_addr[10]: + The SMBus addresses to emulate chips at. + +unsigned long functionality: + Functionality override, to disable some commands. See I2C_FUNC_* + constants in <linux/i2c.h> for the suitable values. For example, + value 0x1f0000 would only enable the quick, byte and byte data + commands. + +u8 bank_reg[10] +u8 bank_mask[10] +u8 bank_start[10] +u8 bank_end[10]: + Optional bank settings. They tell which bits in which register + select the active bank, as well as the range of banked registers. + +CAVEATS: + +If your target driver polls some byte or word waiting for it to change, the +stub could lock it up. Use i2cset to unlock it. + +If you spam it hard enough, printk can be lossy. This module really wants +something like relayfs. + |