Hi John, On Mon, Mar 21, 2005 at 07:50:31AM +1030, John Steele Scott wrote: > It doesn't show up in Linux, but if you boot into OpenFirmware you might find > it. In OpenFirmware, try "dev /cpus/PowerPC,[EMAIL PROTECTED]" to change to > the CPU node, > and then "words" to show you what commands are available there. If you have > set-dfs-high, you can use "see set-dfs-high" to get some idea of how it > works. This is cool! My forth is a little bit rusty but I was able to read the output nevertheless and it looks quite similar to the stuff in the Linnux driver. I will investigate.
> > Would I expect the return value 5 or 1 for high voltage or does > > reading not work like this. I always get 0, even after I did > > > > pmac_call_feature(PMAC_FTR_WRITE_GPIO, NULL, voltage_gpio, 5) > > I can't remember if this is supposed to work, it's possible that that GPIO is > write-only. In OpenFirmware I can read back the value using the following forth command 1 GPIO@ . The number 1 seems to be the "GPIO channel" whatever this is (if I do not set it I get an error message telling me that the "GPIO channel" must be in the range 0, ..., 63). I will investigate further. All the best, Jochen -- http://seehuhn.de/
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