2

I'm programming my A13-OLinuXino-MICRO using the provided pyA13 0.2.2 SPI driver to send data to an LCD. Ideally I would like to send a list containing 320*240*2 (320*240 pixel 16 bits per color) bytes to be written in one continuous write command to be speed efficient. The drivers in spi.c and spi_lib.c had an 8bit tx_len which limited me to 256 bytes so I modified them to 32bit which worked but now I receive an error when I try to pass a list that is more than 4096 values long in my spi.write(data[:]) function. Below is the code I'm using to fill the screen with a solid color that is 16 bits:

def FillScreen(c):
    LCD_SetPos(0, 0, 239, 319)
    ch = c>>8 & 0x00FF
    cl = c & 0x00FF
    d =[]
    for x in range (0,76800):
        d += [ch, cl]
   spi.write(d[:])

This is the error I get when I run the function:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "lcd.py", line 205, in <module>
    FillScreen(0x00FF)
  File "lcd.py", line 200, in FillScreen
    spi.write(d[:])
IOError: [Errno 90] Message too long

The piece of code that is giving me this error is contained in spi.c

/* Send data */
    if(spi_write(fd, tx_buffer, tx_len) < 0){
        return PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError);
    }

Is there any way that I can pass a longer message to the spi.write function? I'm very new to python but quite comfortable with C, go easy on my code please... Also, I have tried looping smaller messages to fill the screen but that takes too long. Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks, Michael

2 Answers 2

0

Look in the notes in the Linux spidev docs - https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/spi/spidev:

- There's a limit on the number of bytes each I/O request can transfer
  to the SPI device.  It defaults to one page, but that can be changed
  using a module parameter.

(You can find out your page size with $ getconf PAGESIZE - I believe it's pretty much always 4096 bytes.)

I haven't tested it, but I think Maxim's answer here should work for you: https://stackoverflow.com/a/16440226/5527382, which is:

The solution is to add following lines to /etc/modprobe.d/local.conf:

options spidev bufsiz=<NEEDED BUFFER SIZE>

The spidev driver defaults to 4096 bytes, then overrides it with the value of that argument if it's provided - https://github.com/beagleboard/linux/blob/4.1/drivers/spi/spidev.c#L92-L94:

static unsigned bufsiz = 4096;
module_param(bufsiz, uint, S_IRUGO);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(bufsiz, "data bytes in biggest supported SPI message");

Putting that line into /etc/modprobe.d/local.conf should pass that argument to the spidev module when it's loaded - you'll want to reboot after making the change to make sure you've reloaded it.

3
  • You can also find out the current max transfer size with cat /sys/module/spidev/parameters/bufsiz
    – Alex Hiam
    Nov 30, 2015 at 13:40
  • Hi Alex, Thank you so much for this useful info!! however I do not have a file called /etc/modprobe.d/local.conf =( My modprobe.d folder contains: fbdev-blacklist.conf alsa-base-blacklist.conf alsa-base.conf 8192cu.conf 8188eu.conf cat /sys/module/spidev/parameters/bufsiz does indeed return 4092... What could you suggest I do to add that option? I tried creating a local.conf file with the option you suggested but that did nothing. Thanks Again
    – Michael L
    Dec 2, 2015 at 0:31
  • I found a solution that seems to work for me right now since I can't figure out how to add the 'options' method described by Alex Haim. Instead I wrote a bash script that edits the /sys/module/spidev/parameters/bufsiz file #!/bin/bash # Spi Bufsiz Script cd /sys/module/spidev/parameters chmod 666 bufsiz echo 65534 > bufsiz
    – Michael L
    Dec 2, 2015 at 21:08
0

I found a solution that seems to work for me right now since I can't figure out how to add the 'options' method described by Alex Haim. Instead I wrote a bash script that edits the /sys/module/spidev/parameters/bufsiz file

#!/bin/bash
# Spi Bufsiz Script

cd /sys/module/spidev/parameters
chmod 666 bufsiz
echo 65534 > bufsiz

This solution was found here.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.