This is the first time I ask a question on stackoverflow.
I tried to access SPI1 on the J3 of my Pandaboard ES. First, I modified the device tree source, omap4-panda-es-b3.dts, by adding
&mcspi1
{
spidev@0
{
compatible = "spidev";
pinctrl-name = "default";
pinctrl-0 = <&spi1_pins>;
spi-max-frequency=<4000000>;
reg = <0>;
};
};
and
spi1_pins: pinmux_spi1_pins {
pinctrl-single,pins = <
0xf2 (PIN_OUTPUT_PULLUP | MUX_MODE0) /* spi1_sclk, gpio134 */
0xf4 (PIN_INPUT_PULLUP | MUX_MODE0) /* spi1_somi, gpio135 */
0xf6 (PIN_OUTPUT_PULLUP | MUX_MODE0) /* spi1_simo, gpio136 */
0xf8 (PIN_OUTPUT_PULLUP | MUX_MODE0) /* spi1_somi, gpio137 */
>;
};
Then, rebuilt the kernel, installed the new kernel and rebooted. The device spidev1.0 showed in the /dev directory as well as /sys/class/spidev.
But when I did "echo 1 > /dev/spi1.0" or ran spi_test from here, nothing came out from the SPI1 pins on the scope. I have double checked the offsets and am sure that they should be correct.
What do I need to do so the SPI1 on the Pandaboard ES works? The output of "uname -a" is
Linux arm 3.17.4-USER1-armv7-x3 #4 SMP Tue Feb 17 19:35:52 CST 2015 armv7l armv7l armv7l GNU/Linux
Thanks
MST