Omega2S+ can't read GPIO pin 26
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Product being used : Omega2S+
Firmware version : 0.3.3 b247
Description of the issue and context:
GPIO pin 26 always returns LOW, unlike all other GPIO pins (also including pin 27 also in the
SD-card reader block of pins).# omega2-ctrl gpiomux get Group i2c - [i2c] gpio Group uart0 - uart [gpio] Group uart1 - uart [gpio] pwm01 Group uart2 - uart [gpio] pwm23 Group pwm0 - pwm [gpio] Group pwm1 - pwm [gpio] Group refclk - refclk [gpio] Group spi_s - spi_s [gpio] pwm01_uart2 Group spi_cs1 - spi_cs1 [gpio] refclk Group i2s - i2s [gpio] pcm Group ephy - ephy [gpio] Group wled - wled [gpio] # gpioctl dirin 26 Using gpio pin 26. # gpioctl dirin 27 Using gpio pin 27. # gpioctl get 26 Using gpio pin 26. Pin 26 is LOW # gpioctl get 27 Using gpio pin 27. Pin 27 is HIGH
Expected Behavior
Pin 26 is wired similar to 27 and should be HIGH.
Observed Behavior
Pin 26 is LOW.
Steps to reproduce the issue
Connection:
3.3V --> R100K --> Omega2S+ pin 26 | GND --> C10p --/
What kind of help are you looking for?
I've been searching without luck what I need to do to make sure the software knows to use
pins 22-29 for the SD-card reader as GPIO pins. Or; what I need to uninstall to make
sure those pins are never disturbed by SD-card related software/drivers.My only guess is that pin 26 reads low because it's somehow used as SD.CLK.
If you can please help me get pin 26 as a plain GPIO pin, very much appreciated.
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@magge Thank you for posting your question with all of the required detail.
I can't test this right now, perhaps someone else can, however my first thought is that the mmc kmods may be messing with the gpio. A quick and easy test is to delete (move) the mmc kmods , then reboot and test again. You could of course use rmmod but that fails so this is a quick and dirty test.
The kmods are in /lib/modules/4.14.81/ the two files are mmc_block.ko and mmc_core.ko
If that resolves your issue then you can build your kernel and firmware without mmc support.
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@crispyoz Thanks!
Somehow it can still load those modules even when I moved the files into /root/backup and even added .bak on their filename (and rebooted).
# lsmod | grep mmc mmc_block 21446 0 mmc_core 88573 2 mmc_block,sdhci # ls -l /lib/modules/4.14.81/ | grep mmc #
I will try to read up on building a kernel without mmc...
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@magge The magic of *nix Quite bizaare, it/they must be in another location but you can also remove /etc/modules.d/mmc which deals with the loading of those modules. Use the command "which mmc_block.ko" and "which mmc_core.ko" to see where they may be living a clandestine life.
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Was not able to avoid
mmc_core
andmmd_block
loading on boot. I think they are maybe loaded from the read-only/rom
, seems it's the only place they are left now...# find / | grep mmc_core /overlay/upper/root/backup/mmc_core.ko.bak /overlay/upper/lib/modules/4.14.81/mmc_core.ko /rom/lib/modules/4.14.81/mmc_core.ko /root/backup/mmc_core.ko.bak
However I figured out that
mmc_core
was not possible tormmod
because of dependent modules, but removing all deps first allows also removingmmc_core
.
Still getting pin 26 as low though, so maybe this is not about SD after all...# rmmod sdhci_pltfm # rmmod sdhci # rmmod mmc_block # rmmod mmc_core # lsmod | grep mmc # gpioctl dirin 26 Using gpio pin 26. # gpioctl get 26 Using gpio pin 26. Pin 26 is LOW
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@magge Can I just check your nomenclature, you're referring to "PIN 26" which is GPIO 0 on the Omega2S. GPIO 26 is pin 57.
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@crispyoz Sorry, yes I am referring to GPIO-26 or SD.CLK. I have been looking at this diagram https://miro.medium.com/max/1100/0*TL9bMpprfW5sp_b_ .
You are right that it's pin 57, I guess.That being said I have found 2 solutions:
1:
Themmc_core
,mmc_block
,sdhci*
kmods are the ones causing interference. Building a custom firmware without them fixes the problem!2:
Theomega2-ctrl gpiomux
could also have fixed this if it was updated for the Omega2S+ (S meaning SD card, right?).
One of the MT7688 (https://cdn.hackaday.io/files/279051193887520/MT7688_Datasheet_v1_4.pdf) registers that this tool writes (GPIO1_MODE
) actually hasSD_MODE
(bits 11:10) which allows controlling what the pins are used for!I have not found a nice way to read the register and bitwise-and/or with the only the bits we want to set, however we can write the whole register as shown below. This sets all modes in
GPIO1_MODE
to GPIO except for I2C, which is what I need in this particular case, including the invisibleSD_MODE
...# devmem 0x10000060 32 0x55055554 # omega2-ctrl gpiomux get Group i2c - [i2c] gpio Group uart0 - uart [gpio] Group uart1 - uart [gpio] pwm01 Group uart2 - uart [gpio] pwm23 Group pwm0 - pwm [gpio] Group pwm1 - pwm [gpio] Group refclk - refclk [gpio] Group spi_s - spi_s [gpio] pwm01_uart2 Group spi_cs1 - spi_cs1 [gpio] refclk Group i2s - i2s [gpio] pcm Group ephy - ephy [gpio] Group wled - wled [gpio]
Setting the gpio mux correctly allows it to work even with the standard kmods running.
# lsmod | grep mmc mmc_block 21446 0 mmc_core 88573 3 mmc_block,sdhci,mtk_sd # gpioctl dirin 26 Using gpio pin 26. # gpioctl get 26 Using gpio pin 26. Pin 26 is LOW # devmem 0x10000060 32 0x55055554 # gpioctl get 26 Using gpio pin 26. Pin 26 is HIGH
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@magge It's good you have it working by removing those modules.
The "S" in Omega2S+ is for Surface Mount, the standard Omega2+ is the socket mounted version.
The code for omega2-ctrl https://github.com/OnionIoT/omega2-ctrl, look at giomux.c/h you can see how it works by modifying the registers on the SoC.
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@crispyoz Thanks for all your help!