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Linux Device Driver Development Cookbook

You're reading from   Linux Device Driver Development Cookbook Learn kernel programming and build custom drivers for your embedded Linux applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838558802
Length 356 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Rodolfo Giometti Rodolfo Giometti
Author Profile Icon Rodolfo Giometti
Rodolfo Giometti
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing the Development System FREE CHAPTER 2. A Peek Inside the Kernel 3. Working with Char Drivers 4. Using the Device Tree 5. Managing Interrupts and Concurrency 6. Miscellaneous Kernel Internals 7. Advanced Char Driver Operations 8. Additional Information: Working with Char Drivers 9. Additional Information: Using the Device Tree 10. Additional Information: Managing Interrupts and Concurrency 11. Additional Information: Miscellaneous Kernel Internals 12. Additional Information: Advanced Char Driver Operations 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Waiting for an event

In previous sections, we saw how to manage an interrupt directly in its handler or by deferring the interrupt activities by using tasklets, workqueues, and so on. Also, we saw how to do periodic operations or how to delay an action forward in time; however, a device driver may need to wait for a specific event, such as waiting for some data, waiting for a buffer to become full, or a for a variable to reach a desired value.

Please don't confuse events managed by the notifiers, we saw before, which are kernel related, with generic events for a specific driver.

When there is no data to be read from a peripheral, the reading process must be put on sleep and then awakened when the "data ready" event arrives. Another example is when we start a complex job and we wish to be signaled when it's finished; in this case, we start the job and then we...

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