Book Image

Linux Device Drivers Development

By : John Madieu
Book Image

Linux Device Drivers Development

By: John Madieu

Overview of this book

Linux kernel is a complex, portable, modular and widely used piece of software, running on around 80% of servers and embedded systems in more than half of devices throughout the World. Device drivers play a critical role in how well a Linux system performs. As Linux has turned out to be one of the most popular operating systems used, the interest in developing proprietary device drivers is also increasing steadily. This book will initially help you understand the basics of drivers as well as prepare for the long journey through the Linux Kernel. This book then covers drivers development based on various Linux subsystems such as memory management, PWM, RTC, IIO, IRQ management, and so on. The book also offers a practical approach on direct memory access and network device drivers. By the end of this book, you will be comfortable with the concept of device driver development and will be in a position to write any device driver from scratch using the latest kernel version (v4.13 at the time of writing this book).
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Introduction to Kernel Development

Triggered buffer support

In many data analysis applications, it is useful to be able to capture data based on some external signal (trigger). These triggers might be:

  • A data ready signal
  • An IRQ line connected to some external system (GPIO or something else)
  • On-processor periodic interrupt
  • User space reading/writing a specific file in sysfs

IIO device drivers are completely unrelated to triggers. A trigger may initialize data capture on one or many devices. These triggers are used to fill buffers, exposed to the user space as character devices.

You can develop your own trigger driver, but that is beyond the scope of this book. We will try to focus on existing ones only. These are:

  • iio-trig-interrupt: This provides support for using any IRQ as IIO triggers. In old kernel versions, it used to be iio-trig-gpio. The kernel option to enable this trigger mode is CONFIG_IIO_INTERRUPT_TRIGGER...