Re: [PATCH linux v1 0/4] Seven segment display support
From: Greg KH <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Date: 2016-12-14 16:50:13
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linux-arm-kernel, lkml, openbmc
On Wed, Dec 14, 2016 at 02:12:41PM +0100, Neil Armstrong wrote:
On 12/14/2016 01:56 PM, Greg KH wrote:quoted
On Wed, Dec 14, 2016 at 01:45:30PM +0100, Thomas Petazzoni wrote:quoted
Hello, On Tue, 13 Dec 2016 23:55:00 -0800, Jaghathiswari Rankappagounder Natarajan wrote:quoted
Documentation for the binding which provides an interface for adding clock, data and clear signal GPIO lines to control seven segment display. The platform device driver provides an API for displaying on two 7-segment displays, and implements the required bit-banging. The hardware assumed is 74HC164 wired to two 7-segment displays. The character device driver implements the user-space API for letting a user write to two 7-segment displays including any conversion methods necessary to map the user input to two 7-segment displays. Adding clock, data and clear signal GPIO lines in the devicetree to control seven segment display on zaius platform. The platform driver matches on the device tree node; the platform driver also initializes the character device. Tested that the seven segment display works properly by writing to the character device file on a EVB AST2500 board which also has 74HC164 wired to two 7-segment displays.FWIW, I proposed a driver for seven segment displays back in 2013: http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-arm-kernel/2013-January/139986.html And the feedback from Greg KH was: we don't need a driver for that, do it from userspace. See: http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-arm-kernel/2013-January/139992.html So: good luck :-)Did anyone ever write a library for this type of thing? Again, I don't want to see one-off drivers for random devices like this that should be able to all be controlled from userspace in a common manner. Much like we did for fingerprint readers a long long time ago... thanks, greg k-hHi Greg, Actually, it's more than a random interface, a lot of SoCs and boards actually have such displays and it's a pity to use UIO, sysfs gpio bitbanging and all sort of ugly stuff to only print a few characters a simple and clean driver could achieve.
Great, then let's make an API that all devices of this type could use, and not just take individual drivers that all have a custom char or sysfs interface which requires custom userspace code to be able to drive all of the different devices in a common way (i.e. a library would have to be written anyways...) thanks, greg k-h