Book Image

GNU/Linux Rapid Embedded Programming

By : Rodolfo Giometti
Book Image

GNU/Linux Rapid Embedded Programming

By: Rodolfo Giometti

Overview of this book

Embedded computers have become very complex in the last few years and developers need to easily manage them by focusing on how to solve a problem without wasting time in finding supported peripherals or learning how to manage them. The main challenge with experienced embedded programmers and engineers is really how long it takes to turn an idea into reality, and we show you exactly how to do it. This book shows how to interact with external environments through specific peripherals used in the industry. We will use the latest Linux kernel release 4.4.x and Debian/Ubuntu distributions (with embedded distributions like OpenWrt and Yocto). The book will present popular boards in the industry that are user-friendly to base the rest of the projects on - BeagleBone Black, SAMA5D3 Xplained, Wandboard and system-on-chip manufacturers. Readers will be able to take their first steps in programming the embedded platforms, using C, Bash, and Python/PHP languages in order to get access to the external peripherals. More about using and programming device driver and accessing the peripherals will be covered to lay a strong foundation. The readers will learn how to read/write data from/to the external environment by using both C programs or a scripting language (Bash/PHP/Python) and how to configure a device driver for a specific hardware. After finishing this book, the readers will be able to gain a good knowledge level and understanding of writing, configuring, and managing drivers, controlling and monitoring applications with the help of efficient/quick programming and will be able to apply these skills into real-world projects.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
GNU/Linux Rapid Embedded Programming
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

The SPI bus in Linux


As in the I2C case, the SPI bus has the concept of master and slave device too. Again, regarding the SPI master device, there is nothing special to do here since the proper driver is already up and running in our embedded kits' default kernel configurations (as seen earlier). However, to be connected with SPI devices, we can have several possibilities: external memories, I/O extenders, sensors, serial ports, and so on (the list can be very long!).

As seen earlier, we can also have a generic spidev driver to get access to the raw bus functionalities, but this time, we have no prebuild tools to manage it! The only things we can do is write our own program, maybe take some basic tools provided into the kernel's tree (see the next section for an example) as examples to manage our device through the spidev driver.

Note

For further information on the API in Linux for SPI, we can take a look at the Documentation/spi/spidev file in Linux's sources repository.