Difference between revisions of "How to use I2C"
From IGEP - ISEE Wiki
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To make sure that I2C driver works well, follow the next steps (tested in [http://releases.linaro.org/platform/linaro-m/headless/final/linaro-m-headless-tar-20101108-2.tar.gz Linaro Headless]): | To make sure that I2C driver works well, follow the next steps (tested in [http://releases.linaro.org/platform/linaro-m/headless/final/linaro-m-headless-tar-20101108-2.tar.gz Linaro Headless]): | ||
<pre>sudo apt-get install i2c-tools | <pre>sudo apt-get install i2c-tools | ||
− | i2cdetect -l</pre> | + | i2cdetect -l</pre> |
+ | The result will be similar at that: | ||
+ | <pre>i2c-1 i2c OMAP I2C adapter I2C adapter | ||
+ | i2c-3 i2c OMAP I2C adapter I2C adapter | ||
+ | </pre> | ||
+ | It's important than i2c-3 is enable, because it connect by default to DVI-D. | ||
=Compile= | =Compile= |
Revision as of 17:45, 16 January 2012
Overview
This How-To is meant to be a starting point for people to learn use I2C for IGEP v2 devices as quickly and easily as possible. For this how-to i do a program that reads and decodes EDID information from EEPROM display. This program was tested in Linaro Headless with Kernel 2.6.35.y and Poky Linux distribution.
More information about EDID.
Feedback and Contributing
At any point, if you see a mistake you can contribute to this How-To.
Check I2C Devices
In this How-to i used pre-compiled modules, because: it's quick and it works. All versions of Linux are supported, as long as I2C support is included in the kernel.
To make sure that I2C driver works well, follow the next steps (tested in Linaro Headless):
sudo apt-get install i2c-tools i2cdetect -l
The result will be similar at that:
i2c-1 i2c OMAP I2C adapter I2C adapter i2c-3 i2c OMAP I2C adapter I2C adapter
It's important than i2c-3 is enable, because it connect by default to DVI-D.
Compile
Run program
Under construction