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

Summary


The USB has become the ubiquitous standard for peripheral connections, and the discoveries are endless. If you are interested, you can explore more about these possibilities. In this chapter, we started to discover the USB by giving you some interesting starting points by showing how the Wandboard (but the same considerations can be done for every GNU/Linux embedded system) can be used as a USB host in order to manage one or more devices, or as a USB device to emulate a USB peripheral. Also, we discovered how to manage a USB peripheral when a dedicated driver is not present by using a raw access to the bus and how to use two legacy gadget drivers or the new configfs mechanism.

In the upcoming chapters, we'll present some peripherals kinds that are not so common as serial ports and USB devices since they are not directly accessible on a normal PC. Only an embedded device permits us to really discover and manage them. In these chapters, we will take a look at the I2C devices.