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Linux Device Drivers Development

You're reading from   Linux Device Drivers Development Develop customized drivers for embedded Linux

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785280009
Length 586 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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John Madieu John Madieu
Author Profile Icon John Madieu
John Madieu
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Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Kernel Development FREE CHAPTER 2. Device Driver Basis 3. Kernel Facilities and Helper Functions 4. Character Device Drivers 5. Platform Device Drivers 6. The Concept of Device Tree 7. I2C Client Drivers 8. SPI Device Drivers 9. Regmap API – A Register Map Abstraction 10. IIO Framework 11. Kernel Memory Management 12. DMA – Direct Memory Access 13. The Linux Device Model 14. Pin Control and GPIO Subsystem 15. GPIO Controller Drivers – gpio_chip 16. Advanced IRQ Management 17. Input Devices Drivers 18. RTC Drivers 19. PWM Drivers 20. Regulator Framework 21. Framebuffer Drivers 22. Network Interface Card Drivers

Representing and addressing devices

Each device is given at least one node in the DT. Some properties are common to many device types, especially devices sitting on a bus known to the kernel (SPI, I2C, platform, MDIO, and so on). These properties are reg, #address-cells, and #size-cells. The purpose of these properties is device addressing on the bus they sit on. That said, the main addressing property is reg, which is a generic property whose meaning depends on the bus the device sits on. The # (sharp) that prefixes size-cell and address-cell can be translated into length.

Each addressable device gets a reg property that is a list of tuples in the form reg = <address0size0 [address1size1] [address2size2] ... >, where each tuple represents an address range used by the device. #size-cells indicates how many 32-bit cells are used to represent size, and may be 0 if size is...

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