On 24/05/2019 02:36:42+0530, Jeffrin Thalakkottoor wrote: > On Thu, May 23, 2019 at 11:17 PM Alexandre Belloni > <alexandre.belloni@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Your user probably doesn't have access to the rtc device file. > anyway thanks related > Following is the result with sudo.... > ------------------------x--------------------------------------x---------------------------- > $sudo ./rtctest > [sudo] password for jeffrin: > [==========] Running 7 tests from 2 test cases. > [ RUN ] rtc.date_read > rtctest.c:49:rtc.date_read:Current RTC date/time is 23/05/2019 20:49:49. > [ OK ] rtc.date_read > [ RUN ] rtc.uie_read > [ OK ] rtc.uie_read > [ RUN ] rtc.uie_select > [ OK ] rtc.uie_select > [ RUN ] rtc.alarm_alm_set > rtctest.c:137:rtc.alarm_alm_set:Alarm time now set to 20:49:58. > rtctest.c:156:rtc.alarm_alm_set:data: 1a0 > [ OK ] rtc.alarm_alm_set > [ RUN ] rtc.alarm_wkalm_set > rtctest.c:195:rtc.alarm_wkalm_set:Alarm time now set to 23/05/2019 20:50:01. > [ OK ] rtc.alarm_wkalm_set > [ RUN ] rtc.alarm_alm_set_minute > rtctest.c:239:rtc.alarm_alm_set_minute:Alarm time now set to 20:51:00. > Alarm clock > $rtctest.c:258:rtc.alarm_alm_set_minute:data: 1a0 > I just sent a fix for that timeout issue. -- Alexandre Belloni, Bootlin Embedded Linux and Kernel engineering https://bootlin.com