hal_bb_gpio - Driver for beaglebone GPIO pins
loadrt hal_bb_gpio user_leds=#,... input_pins=#,... output_pins=#,... |
The user_leds loadrt parameter controls which LEDs are available to HAL. Valid range: 0..3. These LEDs are next to the ethernet jack and the LinuxCNC numbers match the silkscreen on beaglbone black. Empirically, these seem to be OR’d with whatever function is assigned to the LED in Linux.
bb_gpio.userledN
bit in
bb_gpio.userledN-invert bit in
The associated LED is lit if userledN xor userledN-invert is TRUE.
The input_pins loadrt parameter controls which physical I/O pins are available to HAL as input pins. The numbering is "800+N" for pin N on connector P8, and "900+N" for pin N on connector P9. For example, "803" means connector P8 pin 3, which is also described in BeagleBone documentation as "gpmc_ad6".
Specifying pins that are otherwise in use by the system may have undesirable side effects, such as crashing rtapi_app or the whole system.
bb_gpio.pN.in-NN
bit out
bb_gpio.pN.in-NN-invert bit
in
in-NN is a snapshot of the value of the corresponding physical pin XOR the value of the corresponding in-NN-invert pin.
The input_pins loadrt parameter controls which physical I/O pins are available to HAL as input pins. The numbering is "800+N" for pin N on connector P8, and "900+N" for pin N on connector P9.
Specifying pins that are otherwise in use by the system may have undesirable side effects, such as crashing rtapi_app or the whole system.
bb_gpio.pN.out-NN
bit out
bb_gpio.pN.out-NN-invert bit
in
The corresponding physical pin is driven with the result of in-NN xor in-NN-invert.
None
bb_gpio.read
Update HAL pins from physical pins.
bb_gpio.write
Update physical pins from HAL pins.
GPL