Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package i2c defines interface to an I²C bus and an I²C device.
As described in https://periph.io/x/periph/conn#hdr-Concepts, periph.io uses the concepts of Bus, Port and Conn.
In the package i2c, 'Port' is not exposed, since once you know the I²C device address, there's no unconfigured Port to configure.
Instead, the package includes the adapter 'Dev' to directly convert an I²C bus 'i2c.Bus' into a connection 'conn.Conn' by only specifying the device I²C address.
Example ¶
package main import ( "fmt" "log" "periph.io/x/periph/conn/i2c" "periph.io/x/periph/conn/i2c/i2creg" "periph.io/x/periph/host" ) func main() { // Make sure periph is initialized. if _, err := host.Init(); err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } // Use i2creg I²C bus registry to find the first available I²C bus. b, err := i2creg.Open("") if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } defer b.Close() // Dev is a valid conn.Conn. d := &i2c.Dev{Addr: 23, Bus: b} // Send a command 0x10 and expect a 5 bytes reply. write := []byte{0x10} read := make([]byte, 5) if err := d.Tx(write, read); err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } fmt.Printf("%v\n", read) }
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Index ¶
Examples ¶
Constants ¶
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Variables ¶
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Functions ¶
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Types ¶
type Bus ¶
type Bus interface { Tx(addr uint16, w, r []byte) error // SetSpeed changes the bus speed, if supported. // // On linux due to the way the I²C sysfs driver is exposed in userland, // calling this function will likely affect *all* I²C buses on the host. SetSpeed(hz int64) error }
Bus defines the interface a concrete I²C driver must implement.
This interface is consummed by a device driver for a device sitting on a bus.
This interface doesn't implement conn.Conn since a device address must be specified. Use i2cdev.Dev as an adapter to get a conn.Conn compatible object.
type BusCloser ¶
BusCloser is an I²C bus that can be closed.
This interface is meant to be handled by the application and not the device driver. A device driver doesn't "own" a bus, hence it must operate on a Bus, not a BusCloser.
type Dev ¶
Dev is a device on a I²C bus.
It implements conn.Conn.
It saves from repeatedly specifying the device address.
type Pins ¶
type Pins interface { // SCL returns the CLK (clock) pin. SCL() gpio.PinIO // SDA returns the DATA pin. SDA() gpio.PinIO }
Pins defines the pins that an I²C bus interconnect is using on the host.
It is expected that a implementer of Bus also implement Pins but this is not a requirement.
Example ¶
package main import ( "fmt" "log" "periph.io/x/periph/conn/i2c" "periph.io/x/periph/conn/i2c/i2creg" "periph.io/x/periph/host" ) func main() { // Make sure periph is initialized. if _, err := host.Init(); err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } // Use i2creg I²C port registry to find the first available I²C bus. b, err := i2creg.Open("") if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } defer b.Close() // Prints out the gpio pin used. if p, ok := b.(i2c.Pins); ok { fmt.Printf("SDA: %s", p.SDA()) fmt.Printf("SCL: %s", p.SCL()) } }
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Directories ¶
Path | Synopsis |
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Package i2creg defines I²C bus registry to list buses present on the host.
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Package i2creg defines I²C bus registry to list buses present on the host. |
Package i2csmoketest is leveraged by periph-smoketest to verify that an I²C EEPROM device and a DS2483 device can be accessed on an I²C bus.
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Package i2csmoketest is leveraged by periph-smoketest to verify that an I²C EEPROM device and a DS2483 device can be accessed on an I²C bus. |
Package i2ctest is meant to be used to test drivers over a fake I²C bus.
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Package i2ctest is meant to be used to test drivers over a fake I²C bus. |