You don't need fancy kernel to userspace communication. A userspace application has access to GPIOs using Sysfs. Read about it in Documentation/gpio.txt
.
First, export a GPIO pin like this (the actual number depends on your setup):
# echo 23 > /sys/class/gpio/export
This will export GPIO pin #23, and thus create /sys/class/gpio/gpio23
.
Set its direction:
# echo in > /sys/class/gpio/gpio23/direction
If the hardware GPIO controller supports interrupts generation, the driver should also support it and you will see /sys/class/gpio/gpio23/edge
. Write either rising
, falling
or both
to this file to indicate the signal edge(s) that will create a "userspace interrupt". Now, to get interrupted, use the poll(2)
system call on /sys/class/gpio/gpio23/value
. Then, when the poll
call unblocks, read the new value (/sys/class/gpio/gpio23/value
), which will be '0'
or '1'
(ASCII).