| The 1-wire (w1) subsystem |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| The 1-wire bus is a simple master-slave bus that communicates via a single |
| signal wire (plus ground, so two wires). |
| |
| Devices communicate on the bus by pulling the signal to ground via an open |
| drain output and by sampling the logic level of the signal line. |
| |
| The w1 subsystem provides the framework for managing w1 masters and |
| communication with slaves. |
| |
| All w1 slave devices must be connected to a w1 bus master device. |
| |
| Example w1 master devices: |
| DS9490 usb device |
| W1-over-GPIO |
| DS2482 (i2c to w1 bridge) |
| Emulated devices, such as a RS232 converter, parallel port adapter, etc |
| |
| |
| What does the w1 subsystem do? |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| When a w1 master driver registers with the w1 subsystem, the following occurs: |
| |
| - sysfs entries for that w1 master are created |
| - the w1 bus is periodically searched for new slave devices |
| |
| When a device is found on the bus, w1 core tries to load the driver for its family |
| and check if it is loaded. If so, the family driver is attached to the slave. |
| If there is no driver for the family, default one is assigned, which allows to perform |
| almost any kind of operations. Each logical operation is a transaction |
| in nature, which can contain several (two or one) low-level operations. |
| Let's see how one can read EEPROM context: |
| 1. one must write control buffer, i.e. buffer containing command byte |
| and two byte address. At this step bus is reset and appropriate device |
| is selected using either W1_SKIP_ROM or W1_MATCH_ROM command. |
| Then provided control buffer is being written to the wire. |
| 2. reading. This will issue reading eeprom response. |
| |
| It is possible that between 1. and 2. w1 master thread will reset bus for searching |
| and slave device will be even removed, but in this case 0xff will |
| be read, since no device was selected. |
| |
| |
| W1 device families |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| Slave devices are handled by a driver written for a family of w1 devices. |
| |
| A family driver populates a struct w1_family_ops (see w1_family.h) and |
| registers with the w1 subsystem. |
| |
| Current family drivers: |
| w1_therm - (ds18?20 thermal sensor family driver) |
| provides temperature reading function which is bound to ->rbin() method |
| of the above w1_family_ops structure. |
| |
| w1_smem - driver for simple 64bit memory cell provides ID reading method. |
| |
| You can call above methods by reading appropriate sysfs files. |
| |
| |
| What does a w1 master driver need to implement? |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| The driver for w1 bus master must provide at minimum two functions. |
| |
| Emulated devices must provide the ability to set the output signal level |
| (write_bit) and sample the signal level (read_bit). |
| |
| Devices that support the 1-wire natively must provide the ability to write and |
| sample a bit (touch_bit) and reset the bus (reset_bus). |
| |
| Most hardware provides higher-level functions that offload w1 handling. |
| See struct w1_bus_master definition in w1.h for details. |
| |
| |
| w1 master sysfs interface |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| <xx-xxxxxxxxxxxxx> - A directory for a found device. The format is family-serial |
| bus - (standard) symlink to the w1 bus |
| driver - (standard) symlink to the w1 driver |
| w1_master_add - (rw) manually register a slave device |
| w1_master_attempts - (ro) the number of times a search was attempted |
| w1_master_max_slave_count |
| - (rw) maximum number of slaves to search for at a time |
| w1_master_name - (ro) the name of the device (w1_bus_masterX) |
| w1_master_pullup - (rw) 5V strong pullup 0 enabled, 1 disabled |
| w1_master_remove - (rw) manually remove a slave device |
| w1_master_search - (rw) the number of searches left to do, |
| -1=continual (default) |
| w1_master_slave_count |
| - (ro) the number of slaves found |
| w1_master_slaves - (ro) the names of the slaves, one per line |
| w1_master_timeout - (ro) the delay in seconds between searches |
| w1_master_timeout_us |
| - (ro) the delay in microseconds beetwen searches |
| |
| If you have a w1 bus that never changes (you don't add or remove devices), |
| you can set the module parameter search_count to a small positive number |
| for an initially small number of bus searches. Alternatively it could be |
| set to zero, then manually add the slave device serial numbers by |
| w1_master_add device file. The w1_master_add and w1_master_remove files |
| generally only make sense when searching is disabled, as a search will |
| redetect manually removed devices that are present and timeout manually |
| added devices that aren't on the bus. |
| |
| Bus searches occur at an interval, specified as a summ of timeout and |
| timeout_us module parameters (either of which may be 0) for as long as |
| w1_master_search remains greater than 0 or is -1. Each search attempt |
| decrements w1_master_search by 1 (down to 0) and increments |
| w1_master_attempts by 1. |
| |
| w1 slave sysfs interface |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| bus - (standard) symlink to the w1 bus |
| driver - (standard) symlink to the w1 driver |
| name - the device name, usually the same as the directory name |
| w1_slave - (optional) a binary file whose meaning depends on the |
| family driver |
| rw - (optional) created for slave devices which do not have |
| appropriate family driver. Allows to read/write binary data. |