| #ifndef _DVB_USB_M920X_H_ |
| #define _DVB_USB_M920X_H_ |
| |
| #define DVB_USB_LOG_PREFIX "m920x" |
| #include "dvb-usb.h" |
| |
| #define deb_rc(args...) dprintk(dvb_usb_m920x_debug,0x01,args) |
| |
| #define M9206_CORE 0x22 |
| #define M9206_RC_STATE 0xff51 |
| #define M9206_RC_KEY 0xff52 |
| #define M9206_RC_INIT1 0xff54 |
| #define M9206_RC_INIT2 0xff55 |
| #define M9206_FW_GO 0xff69 |
| |
| #define M9206_I2C 0x23 |
| #define M9206_FILTER 0x25 |
| #define M9206_FW 0x30 |
| |
| #define M9206_MAX_FILTERS 8 |
| |
| /* |
| sequences found in logs: |
| [index value] |
| 0x80 write addr |
| (0x00 out byte)* |
| 0x40 out byte |
| |
| 0x80 write addr |
| (0x00 out byte)* |
| 0x80 read addr |
| (0x21 in byte)* |
| 0x60 in byte |
| |
| this sequence works: |
| 0x80 read addr |
| (0x21 in byte)* |
| 0x60 in byte |
| |
| Guess at API of the I2C function: |
| I2C operation is done one byte at a time with USB control messages. The |
| index the messages is sent to is made up of a set of flags that control |
| the I2C bus state: |
| 0x80: Send START condition. After a START condition, one would normally |
| always send the 7-bit slave I2C address as the 7 MSB, followed by |
| the read/write bit as the LSB. |
| 0x40: Send STOP condition. This should be set on the last byte of an |
| I2C transaction. |
| 0x20: Read a byte from the slave. As opposed to writing a byte to the |
| slave. The slave will normally not produce any data unless you |
| set the R/W bit to 1 when sending the slave's address after the |
| START condition. |
| 0x01: Respond with ACK, as opposed to a NACK. For a multi-byte read, |
| the master should send an ACK, that is pull SDA low during the 9th |
| clock cycle, after every byte but the last. This flags only makes |
| sense when bit 0x20 is set, indicating a read. |
| |
| What any other bits might mean, or how to get the slave's ACK/NACK |
| response to a write, is unknown. |
| */ |
| |
| struct m9206_state { |
| u16 filters[M9206_MAX_FILTERS]; |
| int filtering_enabled; |
| int rep_count; |
| }; |
| #endif |