I2C device driver binding control from user-space in old kernels¶
Note
Note: this section is only relevant if you are handling some old code found in kernel 2.6. If you work with more recent kernels, you can safely skip this section.
Up to kernel 2.6.32, many I2C drivers used helper macros provided by
<linux/i2c.h> which created standard module parameters to let the user
control how the driver would probe I2C buses and attach to devices. These
parameters were known as probe
(to let the driver probe for an extra
address), force
(to forcibly attach the driver to a given device) and
ignore
(to prevent a driver from probing a given address).
With the conversion of the I2C subsystem to the standard device driver binding model, it became clear that these per-module parameters were no longer needed, and that a centralized implementation was possible. The new, sysfs-based interface is described in How to instantiate I2C devices, section “Method 4: Instantiate from user-space”.
Below is a mapping from the old module parameters to the new interface.
Attaching a driver to an I2C device¶
Old method (module parameters):
# modprobe <driver> probe=1,0x2d
# modprobe <driver> force=1,0x2d
# modprobe <driver> force_<device>=1,0x2d
New method (sysfs interface):
# echo <device> 0x2d > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/i2c-1/new_device
Preventing a driver from attaching to an I2C device¶
Old method (module parameters):
# modprobe <driver> ignore=1,0x2f
New method (sysfs interface):
# echo dummy 0x2f > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/i2c-1/new_device
# modprobe <driver>
Of course, it is important to instantiate the dummy
device before loading
the driver. The dummy device will be handled by i2c-core itself, preventing
other drivers from binding to it later on. If there is a real device at the
problematic address, and you want another driver to bind to it, then simply
pass the name of the device in question instead of dummy
.