Difference between revisions of "MultiMediaCard"
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==Introduction== | ==Introduction== | ||
− | You can use standard MMC/SD cards with your Armadeus board, if you have the corresponding connector attached to your | + | You can use standard MMC/SD cards with your Armadeus board, if you have [[MMC/SD | the corresponding connector attached to your development board.]] |
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==Installation== | ==Installation== |
Revision as of 11:43, 21 October 2007
Instructions to use the MultiMediaCard (MMC/SD) on your Armadeus board
Contents
Introduction
You can use standard MMC/SD cards with your Armadeus board, if you have the corresponding connector attached to your development board.
Installation
when you build your kernel image, then modify your configuration:
[user@toto]$ make xconfig
in Device Drivers->MMC/SD Card support->iMX Support In FileSystems, don't forgt to add support for the filesystem on the MMC and if you activate FAT/VFAT, don't forget to activate Native Language Support (NLS) otherwise you'll get errors like:
Unable to load NLS charset cp437 FAT: codepage cp437 not found
Save your configuration and then rebuild your kernel image:
[user@toto]$ make
now you should have following drivers in your kernel source tree:
drivers/mmc/
Copy mmc_core.ko, imxmmc.ko & mmc_block.ko to your target root filessytem in /lib/modules/ or reflash the generated rootfs.
If not already existing then create MMC block devices:
# mknod /dev/mmcblk0 b 254 0 # mknod /dev/mmcblk0p1 b 254 1
If not already existing then create the mount point (/mnt/mmc):
# mkdir -p /mnt/mmc
Usage
Now the MMC driver is included inside the Linux kernel (no more a module) but if you want to use it as a module you will have to:
# modprobe imxmmc # modprobe mmc_block
Then just mount the MMC, for example (FAT32 formatted card):
# mount -t vfat /dev/mmcblk0p1 /mnt/mmc
You can then access the MMC's files from /mnt/mmc directory