NAME¶
i2cget - read from I2C/SMBus chip registers
SYNOPSIS¶
i2cget [
-f] [
-y]
i2cbus chip-address
[
data-address [
mode]]
i2cget -V
DESCRIPTION¶
i2cget is a small helper program to read registers visible through the I2C bus
(or SMBus).
OPTIONS¶
- -V
- Display the version and exit.
- -f
- Force access to the device even if it is already busy. By default, i2cget
will refuse to access a device which is already under the control of a
kernel driver. Using this flag is dangerous, it can seriously confuse the
kernel driver in question. It can also cause i2cget to return an invalid
value. So use at your own risk and only if you know what you're
doing.
- -y
- Disable interactive mode. By default, i2cget will wait for a confirmation
from the user before messing with the I2C bus. When this flag is used, it
will perform the operation directly. This is mainly meant to be used in
scripts. Use with caution.
There are two required options to i2cget.
i2cbus indicates the number or
name of the I2C bus to be scanned. This number should correspond to one of the
busses listed by
i2cdetect -l.
chip-address specifies the
address of the chip on that bus, and is an integer between 0x03 and 0x77.
data-address specifies the address on that chip to read from, and is an
integer between 0x00 and 0xFF. If omitted, the currently active register will
be read (if that makes sense for the considered chip).
The
mode parameter, if specified, is one of the letters
b,
w or
c, corresponding to a read byte data, a read word data or a
write byte/read byte transaction, respectively. A
p can also be
appended to the
mode parameter to enable PEC. If the
mode
parameter is omitted, i2cget defaults to a read byte data transaction, unless
data-address is also omitted, in which case the default (and only
valid) transaction is a single read byte.
WARNING¶
i2cget can be extremely dangerous if used improperly. I2C and SMBus are designed
in such a way that an SMBus read transaction can be seen as a write
transaction by certain chips. This is particularly true if setting
mode
to
cp (write byte/read byte with PEC). Be extremely careful using this
program.
SEE ALSO¶
i2cdump(8),
i2cset(8)
AUTHOR¶
Jean Delvare
This manual page was strongly inspired from those written by David Z Maze for
i2cset.