On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 3:24 AM Ardelean, Alexandru <alexandru.Ardelean@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Mon, 2019-09-16 at 20:50 -0300, Daniel Junho wrote: > > [External] > > > > Hello everybody. > > > > I am still learning about kernel developing. I would like to try to > > develop a device driver for the AD7928 [1], from Analog Device. > > > > Can someone give some words to guide me? > > > > I was thinking about forking the analog kernel repo [2] but I don't > > know to which branch should I commit to when doing a pull request. Or > > if this is the correct way for the devices from Analog. > > > > Hey, > > Thanks for the interest in writing the driver for this. > > In some cases, some new parts may have an existing driver available already > that can be re-used partially or completely. > > You're in luck. > There is driver seems to be partially implemented via > drivers/iio/adc/ad7923.c > > I've done only a minor/quick check but the control register bits are > compatible for the AD7928 as well. > > Typically, you can extend that driver and add the new parts and test them. > > So, my suggestion would be: > 1. Get an eval-board or a AD7928 part; depending on the case we could help > with this > 2. Try to set it up with a Raspberry Pi with the eval board > a. it looks to me that you need a 7V-9V power-supply > b. you can hook the SPI to the test-points on the eval board > 3. Write a basic device-tree overlay ; you can adapt something from other > examples. > Look here: > https://github.com/analogdevicesinc/linux/blob/rpi-4.19.y/arch/arm/boot/dts/overlays/Makefile > Usually rpi-adXXX.dts are ADI parts. > 4. Enable the driver for the kernel. > If using the ADI kernel, there's a guide here for RPi. > https://wiki.analog.com/resources/tools-software/linux-build/generic/raspberrypi > Check the branch that matches your Raspbian image (rpi-4.19.y is the > latest) > 5. Build the kernel > 6. Write it to the SD-card image > 7. Test > 8. Modify & repeat > > Thanks > Alex > > > [1] https://www.analog.com/en/products/ad7928.html > > [2] https://github.com/analogdevicesinc/linux > > > > Daniel Junho Hi Alex. It seems that using AD7923 will be the best choice. They are very similar. Thank you for your reply and suggestion. I don't have an EVB, but at work, we have a board with the AD7928 using a user driver. So I will try to use it for this development, at least for now. I believe that will be fun =) Daniel Junho