| Kernel driver ds1621 |
| ==================== |
| |
| Supported chips: |
| * Dallas Semiconductor DS1621 |
| Prefix: 'ds1621' |
| Addresses scanned: I2C 0x48 - 0x4f |
| Datasheet: Publicly available at the Dallas Semiconductor website |
| http://www.dalsemi.com/ |
| * Dallas Semiconductor DS1625 |
| Prefix: 'ds1621' |
| Addresses scanned: I2C 0x48 - 0x4f |
| Datasheet: Publicly available at the Dallas Semiconductor website |
| http://www.dalsemi.com/ |
| |
| Authors: |
| Christian W. Zuckschwerdt <zany@triq.net> |
| valuable contributions by Jan M. Sendler <sendler@sendler.de> |
| ported to 2.6 by Aurelien Jarno <aurelien@aurel32.net> |
| with the help of Jean Delvare <khali@linux-fr.org> |
| |
| Module Parameters |
| ------------------ |
| |
| * polarity int |
| Output's polarity: 0 = active high, 1 = active low |
| |
| Description |
| ----------- |
| |
| The DS1621 is a (one instance) digital thermometer and thermostat. It has |
| both high and low temperature limits which can be user defined (i.e. |
| programmed into non-volatile on-chip registers). Temperature range is -55 |
| degree Celsius to +125 in 0.5 increments. You may convert this into a |
| Fahrenheit range of -67 to +257 degrees with 0.9 steps. If polarity |
| parameter is not provided, original value is used. |
| |
| As for the thermostat, behavior can also be programmed using the polarity |
| toggle. On the one hand ("heater"), the thermostat output of the chip, |
| Tout, will trigger when the low limit temperature is met or underrun and |
| stays high until the high limit is met or exceeded. On the other hand |
| ("cooler"), vice versa. That way "heater" equals "active low", whereas |
| "conditioner" equals "active high". Please note that the DS1621 data sheet |
| is somewhat misleading in this point since setting the polarity bit does |
| not simply invert Tout. |
| |
| A second thing is that, during extensive testing, Tout showed a tolerance |
| of up to +/- 0.5 degrees even when compared against precise temperature |
| readings. Be sure to have a high vs. low temperature limit gap of al least |
| 1.0 degree Celsius to avoid Tout "bouncing", though! |
| |
| As for alarms, you can read the alarm status of the DS1621 via the 'alarms' |
| /sys file interface. The result consists mainly of bit 6 and 5 of the |
| configuration register of the chip; bit 6 (0x40 or 64) is the high alarm |
| bit and bit 5 (0x20 or 32) the low one. These bits are set when the high or |
| low limits are met or exceeded and are reset by the module as soon as the |
| respective temperature ranges are left. |
| |
| The alarm registers are in no way suitable to find out about the actual |
| status of Tout. They will only tell you about its history, whether or not |
| any of the limits have ever been met or exceeded since last power-up or |
| reset. Be aware: When testing, it showed that the status of Tout can change |
| with neither of the alarms set. |
| |
| Temperature conversion of the DS1621 takes up to 1000ms; internal access to |
| non-volatile registers may last for 10ms or below. |
| |
| High Accuracy Temperature Reading |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| As said before, the temperature issued via the 9-bit i2c-bus data is |
| somewhat arbitrary. Internally, the temperature conversion is of a |
| different kind that is explained (not so...) well in the DS1621 data sheet. |
| To cut the long story short: Inside the DS1621 there are two oscillators, |
| both of them biassed by a temperature coefficient. |
| |
| Higher resolution of the temperature reading can be achieved using the |
| internal projection, which means taking account of REG_COUNT and REG_SLOPE |
| (the driver manages them): |
| |
| Taken from Dallas Semiconductors App Note 068: 'Increasing Temperature |
| Resolution on the DS1620' and App Note 105: 'High Resolution Temperature |
| Measurement with Dallas Direct-to-Digital Temperature Sensors' |
| |
| - Read the 9-bit temperature and strip the LSB (Truncate the .5 degs) |
| - The resulting value is TEMP_READ. |
| - Then, read REG_COUNT. |
| - And then, REG_SLOPE. |
| |
| TEMP = TEMP_READ - 0.25 + ((REG_SLOPE - REG_COUNT) / REG_SLOPE) |
| |
| Note that this is what the DONE bit in the DS1621 configuration register is |
| good for: Internally, one temperature conversion takes up to 1000ms. Before |
| that conversion is complete you will not be able to read valid things out |
| of REG_COUNT and REG_SLOPE. The DONE bit, as you may have guessed by now, |
| tells you whether the conversion is complete ("done", in plain English) and |
| thus, whether the values you read are good or not. |
| |
| The DS1621 has two modes of operation: "Continuous" conversion, which can |
| be understood as the default stand-alone mode where the chip gets the |
| temperature and controls external devices via its Tout pin or tells other |
| i2c's about it if they care. The other mode is called "1SHOT", that means |
| that it only figures out about the temperature when it is explicitly told |
| to do so; this can be seen as power saving mode. |
| |
| Now if you want to read REG_COUNT and REG_SLOPE, you have to either stop |
| the continuous conversions until the contents of these registers are valid, |
| or, in 1SHOT mode, you have to have one conversion made. |