Hi Sean, > > The ir-spi is a simple device driver which supports the > > connection between an IR LED and the MOSI line of an SPI device. > > > > The driver, indeed, uses the SPI framework to stream the raw data > > provided by userspace through a character device. The chardev is > > handled by the LIRC framework and its functionality basically > > provides: > > > > - raw write: data to be sent to the SPI and then streamed to the > > MOSI line; > > - set frequency: sets the frequency whith which the data should > > be sent; > > - set length: sets the data length. This information is > > optional, if the length is set, then userspace should send raw > > data only with that length; while if the length is set to '0', > > then the driver will figure out himself the length of the data > > based on the length of the data written on the character > > device. > > The latter is not recommended, though, as the driver, at > > any write, allocates and deallocates a buffer where the data > > from userspace are stored. > > > > The driver provides three feedback commands: > > > > - get length: reads the length set and (as mentioned), if the > > length is '0' it will be calculated at any write > > - get frequency: the driver reports the frequency. If userpace > > doesn't set the frequency, the driver will use a default value > > of 38000Hz. > > This interface is not compatible with other lirc devices; there is no > way of determining whether this is a regular lirc device or this new > flavour you've invented. except of the set length and get length which I'm using a bit freely because I am dealing with devices that exchange always the same amount of data, so that I don't need (in my case) to pre-allocate or overallocate or runtime allocate. I don't understand what else I invented :) This is a simple driver which is driving an LED connected through SPI and userspace writes raw data in it (LIRC_CAN_SEND_RAW). > Also I don't see what justifies this new interface. This can be > implemented in rc-core in less lines of code and it will be entirely > compatible with existing user-space. Also here I'm getting a bit confused. When I started writing this, I didn't even know of the existence of a remote controlling framework, but then I run across this: "LIRC is a package that allows you to decode and send infra-red signals of many (but not all) commonly used remote controls. " taken from lirc.org: my case is exactly falling into this description. Am I missing anything? Thanks, Andi -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html