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Documentation/i2c: whitespace cleanup

This strips trailing whitespace in Documentation/i2c/dev-interface.

Signed-off-by: Sam Hansen <hansens@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
hifive-unleashed-5.1
Sam Hansen 2018-04-13 10:42:55 -07:00 committed by Wolfram Sang
parent 14a8f0d88c
commit 675edea10b
1 changed files with 6 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@ -9,8 +9,8 @@ i2c adapters present on your system at a given time. i2cdetect is part of
the i2c-tools package.
I2C device files are character device files with major device number 89
and a minor device number corresponding to the number assigned as
explained above. They should be called "i2c-%d" (i2c-0, i2c-1, ...,
and a minor device number corresponding to the number assigned as
explained above. They should be called "i2c-%d" (i2c-0, i2c-1, ...,
i2c-10, ...). All 256 minor device numbers are reserved for i2c.
@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ Next thing, open the device file, as follows:
int file;
int adapter_nr = 2; /* probably dynamically determined */
char filename[20];
snprintf(filename, 19, "/dev/i2c-%d", adapter_nr);
file = open(filename, O_RDWR);
if (file < 0) {
@ -72,7 +72,7 @@ the device supports them. Both are illustrated below.
/* res contains the read word */
}
/* Using I2C Write, equivalent of
/* Using I2C Write, equivalent of
i2c_smbus_write_word_data(file, reg, 0x6543) */
buf[0] = reg;
buf[1] = 0x43;
@ -147,7 +147,7 @@ You can do plain i2c transactions by using read(2) and write(2) calls.
You do not need to pass the address byte; instead, set it through
ioctl I2C_SLAVE before you try to access the device.
You can do SMBus level transactions (see documentation file smbus-protocol
You can do SMBus level transactions (see documentation file smbus-protocol
for details) through the following functions:
__s32 i2c_smbus_write_quick(int file, __u8 value);
__s32 i2c_smbus_read_byte(int file);
@ -158,7 +158,7 @@ for details) through the following functions:
__s32 i2c_smbus_write_word_data(int file, __u8 command, __u16 value);
__s32 i2c_smbus_process_call(int file, __u8 command, __u16 value);
__s32 i2c_smbus_read_block_data(int file, __u8 command, __u8 *values);
__s32 i2c_smbus_write_block_data(int file, __u8 command, __u8 length,
__s32 i2c_smbus_write_block_data(int file, __u8 command, __u8 length,
__u8 *values);
All these transactions return -1 on failure; you can read errno to see
what happened. The 'write' transactions return 0 on success; the