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GNU/Linux Rapid Embedded Programming

You're reading from   GNU/Linux Rapid Embedded Programming Your one-stop solution to embedded programming on GNU/Linux

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786461803
Length 732 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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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing the Developing System FREE CHAPTER 2. Managing the System Console 3. C Compiler, Device Drivers, and Useful Developing Techniques 4. Quick Programming with Scripts and System Daemons 5. Setting Up an Embedded OS 6. General Purposes Input Output signals – GPIO 7. Serial Ports and TTY Devices - TTY 8. Universal Serial Bus - USB 9. Inter-Integrated Circuits - I2C 10. Serial Peripheral Interface - SPI 11. 1-Wire - W1 12. Ethernet Network Device - ETH 13. Wireless Network Device - WLAN 14. Controller Area Network - CAN 15. Sound Devices - SND 16. Video devices - V4L 17. Analog-to-Digital Converters - ADC 18. Pulse-Width Modulation - PWM 19. Miscellaneous Devices

Chapter 14. Controller Area Network - CAN

After looking at the most frequently used buses to exchange data with a remote device (or a remote computer), we should take a look at another communication bus that is widely used in the automotive industry (but is also used in many other contexts), that is, the CAN bus.

Originally implemented for multiplex electrical wiring within automobiles, this bus has been specifically designed to allow microcontrollers, computers, and devices to communicate with each other in applications without a host computer by having a message-based protocol. This bus is not as famous as the Ethernet or Wi-Fi. However, in the embedded world, it is used, and it is not rare to find SoCs that support it by default. That's why, we have dedicated a complete chapter to this bus.

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