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This patch introduces an example application to demonstrate how to use GPIO driver APIs to manipulate interrupt pins. The application uses default galileo pinmux initialization and sets the GPIO 5 (IO2) as output pin and GPIO 6 (IO3) as interrupt. It toggles the output pin stat at every half second in order to emulate an interrupt. This triggers an interrupt and the application callback is called.
74 lines
2.4 KiB
Plaintext
74 lines
2.4 KiB
Plaintext
Galileo Specific Examples
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=======================
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This directory contains galileo-specific example applications to illustrate
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how to use galileo APIs.
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In order to build a application, you should set the EXAMPLE environment
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variable to the name of the application you want to build. For instance, if
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you want to build gpio-output application, run the following command:
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$ make TARGET=galileo EXAMPLE=gpio-output
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============
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= GPIO =
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============
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GPIO Output
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===========
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This application shows how to use the GPIO driver APIs to manipulate output
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pins. This application sets the GPIO 4 pin as output pin and toggles its
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state at every half second.
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For a visual effect, you should wire shield pin IO1 to a led in a protoboard.
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Once the application is running, you should see a blinking LED.
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GPIO Input
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==========
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This application shows how to use the GPIO driver APIs to manipulate input
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pins. This application uses default galileo pinmux initialization and sets
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the GPIO 5 (IO2) as output pin and GPIO 6 (IO3) as input. It toggles the
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output pin state at every half second and checks the value on input pin.
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GPIO Interrupt
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==============
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This application shows how to use the GPIO driver APIs to manipulate interrupt
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pins. This application uses default galileo pinmux initialization and sets
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the GPIO 5 (IO2) as output pin and GPIO 6 (IO3) as interrupt. It toggles the
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output pin stat at every half second in order to emulate an interrupt. This
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triggers an interrupt and the application callback is called. You can confirm
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that though the UART output.
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=======
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= I2C =
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=======
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I2C LSM9DS0
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===========
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This application shows how to use I2C driver APIs to configure I2C Master
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controller and communicate with LSM9DS0 sensor. At every 5 seconds, the
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application reads the "who am I" register from gyroscope sensor and prints if
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the register value matches the expected value described in the spec [1].
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According to the sensor spec, to read the value in "who am I" register, we
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should first perform an i2c write operation to select the register we want
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to read from and then we perform the i2c read operation to actually read
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the register contents.
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The wiring setup is as follows (left column from Galileo and right column from LSM9DS0):
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- 3.3v and Vin
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- GND and GND
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- GND and SDOG
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- 3.3v and CSG
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- SDA and SDA
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- SCL and SCL
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==============
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= References =
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==============
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[1] http://www.st.com/st-web-ui/static/active/en/resource/technical/document/datasheet/DM00087365.pdf
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