Linux offers the high-level i2c-dev driver to directly access the
i2c bus(ses) on the system. This system device is used to get rid
of the (rather silly) radio chip kernel module for ypr0 target and
correctly enables radio access also for the ypr1 target.
fm-radio chip is located on i2c-0 bus on the ypr0 target while it
is located on i2c-1 bus on the ypr1 target.
Power-up (RST) pin is also handled for both targets, which is wired
to another GPIO of the i.MX 37 platform.
Additionally, this patch simplifies the RDS low-level handling by
exploiting the Si4709 debug interface which comes with a mutex
protection as free bonus.
Change-Id: I839282bec4a27ad0ad8403c5a8dd86963b77e1bf
As per title this patch aims at splitting common target
code and specific target code in a better way to
support future ports within the same environment
(e.g. Samsung YP-R1 where the Linux and the SoC
are the same, with differences in hardware devices
handling)
Change-Id: I67b4918c46403b184d3d8f42ab5aae7d01037fd0
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/409
Reviewed-by: Thomas Martitz <kugel@rockbox.org>
Tested-by: Thomas Martitz <kugel@rockbox.org>
2013-03-06 00:21:22 +01:00
Renamed from firmware/target/hosted/ypr0/radio-ypr0.h (Browse further)