Operations available on a bus master
struct w1_bus_master { void * data; u8 (* read_bit) (void *); void (* write_bit) (void *, u8); u8 (* touch_bit) (void *, u8); u8 (* read_byte) (void *); void (* write_byte) (void *, u8); u8 (* read_block) (void *, u8 *, int); void (* write_block) (void *, const u8 *, int); u8 (* triplet) (void *, u8); u8 (* reset_bus) (void *); u8 (* set_pullup) (void *, int); void (* search) (void *, struct w1_master *,u8, w1_slave_found_callback); };
data
the first parameter in all the functions below
read_bit
Sample the line level return the level read (0 or 1)
write_bit
Sets the line level
touch_bit
the lowest-level function for devices that really support the 1-wire protocol. touch_bit(0) = write-0 cycle touch_bit(1) = write-1 / read cycle return the bit read (0 or 1)
read_byte
Reads a bytes. Same as 8 touch_bit(1) calls. return the byte read
write_byte
Writes a byte. Same as 8 touch_bit(x) calls.
read_block
Same as a series of read_byte calls return the number of bytes read
write_block
Same as a series of write_byte calls
triplet
Combines two reads and a smart write for ROM searches return bit0=Id bit1=comp_id bit2=dir_taken
reset_bus
long write-0 with a read for the presence pulse detection return -1=Error, 0=Device present, 1=No device present
set_pullup
Put out a strong pull-up pulse of the specified duration. return -1=Error, 0=completed
search
Really nice hardware can handles the different types of ROM search w1_master* is passed to the slave found callback. u8 is search_type, W1_SEARCH or W1_ALARM_SEARCH
read_bit and write_bit are very low level functions and should only be used with hardware that doesn't really support 1-wire operations, like a parallel/serial port. Either define read_bit and write_bit OR define, at minimum, touch_bit and reset_bus.
David Fries <[email protected]>
Author.