On 10/05/2013 10:21 AM, Christophe Leroy wrote: > This patch adds support for iio_consumer to Analog Devices AD7923 ADC driver. > > Signed-off-by: Christophe Leroy <christophe.leroy@xxxxxx> > Verified-by: Patrick Vasseur <patrick.vasseur@xxxxxx> > > diff -urN a/drivers/iio/adc/ad7923.c b/drivers/iio/adc/ad7923.c > --- a/drivers/iio/adc/ad7923.c 1970-01-01 01:00:00.000000000 +0100 > +++ b/drivers/iio/adc/ad7923.c 2013-02-12 15:16:29.000000000 +0100 > @@ -19,11 +19,15 @@ > #include <linux/interrupt.h> > > #include <linux/iio/iio.h> > +#include <linux/iio/driver.h> > +#include <linux/iio/machine.h> The fact that you need to include machine.h here should ring some alarm bells. machine.h is meant to be included by machine or board drivers, not by device drivers. > #include <linux/iio/sysfs.h> > #include <linux/iio/buffer.h> > #include <linux/iio/trigger_consumer.h> > #include <linux/iio/triggered_buffer.h> > > +#define AD7923_NAME "ad7923" > + > #define AD7923_WRITE_CR (1 << 11) /* write control register */ > #define AD7923_RANGE (1 << 1) /* range to REFin */ > #define AD7923_CODING (1 << 0) /* coding is straight binary */ > @@ -96,6 +100,7 @@ > .storagebits = 16, \ > .endianness = IIO_BE, \ > }, \ > + .datasheet_name = #index, \ The names for the pins in the datasheet are VINx > } > > #define DECLARE_AD7923_CHANNELS(name, bits) \ > @@ -195,6 +200,31 @@ > return IRQ_HANDLED; > } > > +/* default maps used by iio consumer */ > +static struct iio_map ad7923_default_iio_maps[] = { > + { > + .consumer_dev_name = AD7923_NAME, The consumer_dev_name field is the dev_name() of the device that is going to consume data from the channel. This device provides data on the channel. > + .consumer_channel = "channel_0", > + .adc_channel_label = "0", > + }, > + { > + .consumer_dev_name = AD7923_NAME, > + .consumer_channel = "channel_1", > + .adc_channel_label = "1", > + }, > + { > + .consumer_dev_name = AD7923_NAME, > + .consumer_channel = "channel_2", > + .adc_channel_label = "2", > + }, > + { > + .consumer_dev_name = AD7923_NAME, > + .consumer_channel = "channel_3", > + .adc_channel_label = "3", > + }, > + { } > +}; This is a mapping between channel names of the provider between the channel names of the consumer. So it is specific to a certain combination of consumer and provider and usually depend on how things are physically wired on your board. As such there can be no generic mapping and this needs to go into your machine/board driver. The mapping is usually passed to the IIO driver via its platform data. So e.g. imagine you have a provider like this driver and you have a consumer that has a "voltage" channel. And on your board channel 3 of the ADC is what you want to route to that consumer. Then your mapping would look like this: { .consumer_dev_name = "your_consumer_device.1", .consumer_channel = "voltage", .adc_channel_label = "AIN3", } And in your consumer driver you'd do: channel = iio_channel_get(dev, "voltage"); - Lars -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-iio" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html