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Revision as of 12:08, 22 July 2014
How to connect a keypad to your Armadeus board
Contents
Introduction
Your Armadeus board allows you to connect a (matrix or not) keypad as input device. Keypads are a collection of switches assembled together to emulate a kind of keyboard to ease user interaction with your system.
Solutions
There are several solutions to connect a keypad to your Armadeus board:
Keypad directly connected to i.MXL/27
One GPIO for one key
This type of keypad generally called "common ground keypad" is the easiest one to build: connect your switch to an i.MX GPIO (with a pullup) on one side and to the ground on the other side . If you need more than 6 keys, this construction is however "GPIO consuming" and you would better use matrix keypads.
Under Test...
Matrix keypads on i.MX27
The i.MX27 has an internal controller that can drive 8x8 keypads (= 64 keys with 16 dedicated pins): Keypad usage on i.MX27. Please consult the i.MX27 Reference Manual (Chapter 25) for more informations.
Matrix keypads on i.MXL
Driver for i.MX GPIO controlled keypads
By default your board supports a direct connection with a 4x4 matrix keypad using the CSI lines: CSI_MCLK, CSI_D0...CSI_D6.
The driver uses the i.MXL GPIO's internal pull-up, therefore your board does not need any additional external resistor.
{add a big picture of the keypad link with APF_DEV_LIGHT} {add a big picture of the keypad link with APF_DEV_FULL} |
Keypad Connection (APF9328_devfull)
CSI signal name | D6 | D5 | D4 | D3 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
X23 pin number | 7 | 8 | 5 | 6 | |
MCLK | 14 | 1 | 2 | 3 | <- |
D0 | 1 | 4 | 5 | 6 | -> |
D1 | 4 | 7 | 8 | 9 | ENTER |
D2 | 3 | * | 0 | _ | ESC |
FPGA solution
Development are also ongoing to connect matrix keypads using the FPGA...
Test
Quick try
- If you have a graphical LCD connected to your board (= virtual terminal), then you should see what you type (if your keypad keys are mapped to alphanumeric keyboard keys).
- If you don't have any virtual terminal, but only the serial console: (event0 may be event1 if you already have a running touchscreen)
# cat /sys/class/input/input0/event0/device/name (check if event0 is really attached to keypad, otherwise, try event1, etc...) MX27 Keypad # cat /dev/input/event0
Then you should see weirds characters when pressing keyboard keys:
�,~~_�,}�}�3T,QToT6,TT�,�;��, � �
- if the test wiped out your console, you can get it back with:
# reset
- if you want to see hexadecimal values of what your are receiving:
# cat /dev/input/event0 | hexdump 0000000 0283 0000 5a09 000e 0004 0004 0051 0007 0000010 0283 0000 5a30 000e 0001 006c 0001 0000 0000020 0283 0000 5a40 000e 0000 0000 .... ....
- If corresponding device node in /dev/input/ is not existing, then:
# cat /sys/class/input/input0/event0/dev 13:64 # mkdir -p /dev/input # mknod /dev/input/event0 c 13 64
Deeper one
- use target/demos/keypad_test/ test tool
Tools
evtest
evtest is a tool already installer on bsp to test keys comming from /dev/eventX. To use it simply launch it with path to device :
# evtest /dev/input/event1 Input driver version is 1.0.1 Input device ID: bus 0x19 vendor 0x1 product 0x1 version 0x100 Input device name: "gpio-keys.5" Supported events: Event type 0 (EV_SYN) Event type 1 (EV_KEY) Event code 21 (KEY_Y) Event code 49 (KEY_N) Properties: Testing ... (interrupt to exit) Event: time 201.720156, type 1 (EV_KEY), code 21 (KEY_Y), value 0 Event: time 201.720156, -------------- SYN_REPORT ------------ Event: time 202.040401, type 1 (EV_KEY), code 21 (KEY_Y), value 1 Event: time 202.040401, -------------- SYN_REPORT ------------ Event: time 202.580177, type 1 (EV_KEY), code 49 (KEY_N), value 0 Event: time 202.580177, -------------- SYN_REPORT ------------ Event: time 202.930185, type 1 (EV_KEY), code 49 (KEY_N), value 1 Event: time 202.930185, -------------- SYN_REPORT ------------ #
kbd
kbd is most advanced package that can be selected in config :
Target packages ---> Hardware handling ---> [*] kbd
TODO
Links
- external links (for exemple: locomo driver model)