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diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/iio/triggers.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/iio/triggers.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..f89d37e7dd82 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/iio/triggers.rst @@ -0,0 +1,80 @@ +======== +Triggers +======== + +* struct :c:type:`iio_trigger` — industrial I/O trigger device +* :c:func:`devm_iio_trigger_alloc` — Resource-managed iio_trigger_alloc +* :c:func:`devm_iio_trigger_free` — Resource-managed iio_trigger_free +* :c:func:`devm_iio_trigger_register` — Resource-managed iio_trigger_register +* :c:func:`devm_iio_trigger_unregister` — Resource-managed + iio_trigger_unregister +* :c:func:`iio_trigger_validate_own_device` — Check if a trigger and IIO + device belong to the same device + +In many situations it is useful for a driver to be able to capture data based +on some external event (trigger) as opposed to periodically polling for data. +An IIO trigger can be provided by a device driver that also has an IIO device +based on hardware generated events (e.g. data ready or threshold exceeded) or +provided by a separate driver from an independent interrupt source (e.g. GPIO +line connected to some external system, timer interrupt or user space writing +a specific file in sysfs). A trigger may initiate data capture for a number of +sensors and also it may be completely unrelated to the sensor itself. + +IIO trigger sysfs interface +=========================== + +There are two locations in sysfs related to triggers: + +* :file:`/sys/bus/iio/devices/trigger{Y}/*`, this file is created once an + IIO trigger is registered with the IIO core and corresponds to trigger + with index Y. + Because triggers can be very different depending on type there are few + standard attributes that we can describe here: + + * :file:`name`, trigger name that can be later used for association with a + device. + * :file:`sampling_frequency`, some timer based triggers use this attribute to + specify the frequency for trigger calls. + +* :file:`/sys/bus/iio/devices/iio:device{X}/trigger/*`, this directory is + created once the device supports a triggered buffer. We can associate a + trigger with our device by writing the trigger's name in the + :file:`current_trigger` file. + +IIO trigger setup +================= + +Let's see a simple example of how to setup a trigger to be used by a driver:: + + struct iio_trigger_ops trigger_ops = { + .set_trigger_state = sample_trigger_state, + .validate_device = sample_validate_device, + } + + struct iio_trigger *trig; + + /* first, allocate memory for our trigger */ + trig = iio_trigger_alloc(dev, "trig-%s-%d", name, idx); + + /* setup trigger operations field */ + trig->ops = &trigger_ops; + + /* now register the trigger with the IIO core */ + iio_trigger_register(trig); + +IIO trigger ops +=============== + +* struct :c:type:`iio_trigger_ops` — operations structure for an iio_trigger. + +Notice that a trigger has a set of operations attached: + +* :file:`set_trigger_state`, switch the trigger on/off on demand. +* :file:`validate_device`, function to validate the device when the current + trigger gets changed. + +More details +============ +.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/iio/trigger.h +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/iio/industrialio-trigger.c + :export: |