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The GL-AR300M series have an internal header for I2C.
Provide DTS definitions for the i2c-gpio driver.
The I2C drivers; kmod-i2c-core, kmod-i2c-gpio
consume ~20 kB of flash and can be loaded as modules,
Default clock measured ~11.4 ms period, ~88 kHz
The board has two sets of (unpopulated) headers. While facing the
back of the board (looking into the Ethernet jacks), and looking from
the top, the one on the left edge of the baord with four holes is the
I2C header. It appears to be labeled J8 on "GL-AR300M-V1.4.0" boards.
| (Patch antenna)
|
|
| O GND
| O SDA / GPIO 17
| O SCL / GPIO 16
| ⊡ 3V3 (square land)
|
| (Ethernet jacks)
https://docs.gl-inet.com/en/3/hardware/ar300m/#pcb-pinout states
"Note: I2C is not working in some early version of the router."
Signed-off-by: Jeff Kletsky <git-commits@allycomm.com>
|
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|---|---|---|
| .github | ||
| config | ||
| include | ||
| package | ||
| scripts | ||
| target | ||
| toolchain | ||
| tools | ||
| .gitattributes | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| BSDmakefile | ||
| Config.in | ||
| feeds.conf.default | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| Makefile | ||
| README | ||
| rules.mk | ||
_______ ________ __
| |.-----.-----.-----.| | | |.----.| |_
| - || _ | -__| || | | || _|| _|
|_______|| __|_____|__|__||________||__| |____|
|__| W I R E L E S S F R E E D O M
-----------------------------------------------------
This is the buildsystem for the OpenWrt Linux distribution.
To build your own firmware you need a Linux, BSD or MacOSX system (case
sensitive filesystem required). Cygwin is unsupported because of the lack
of a case sensitive file system.
You need gcc, binutils, bzip2, flex, python3.5+, perl, make, find, grep, diff,
unzip, gawk, getopt, subversion, libz-dev and libc headers installed.
1. Run "./scripts/feeds update -a" to obtain all the latest package definitions
defined in feeds.conf / feeds.conf.default
2. Run "./scripts/feeds install -a" to install symlinks for all obtained
packages into package/feeds/
3. Run "make menuconfig" to select your preferred configuration for the
toolchain, target system & firmware packages.
4. Run "make" to build your firmware. This will download all sources, build
the cross-compile toolchain and then cross-compile the Linux kernel & all
chosen applications for your target system.
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