Add information about RPi drive strength
parent
ad646ac89c
commit
1eaee8ae3a
|
@ -246,6 +246,64 @@ Under the Interface section, you can enable SPI.
|
|||
|
||||
The device for communicating via SPI as at `/dev/spidev0.0`
|
||||
|
||||
RPi Drive Strength
|
||||
------------------
|
||||
Flashrom on the RPi may not be able to detect the SPI flash chip on some
|
||||
systems, even if your wiring and clip are set up perfectly. This may be due to
|
||||
the drive strength of the Raspberry Pi GPIOs, which is 8mA by default. Drive
|
||||
strength is essentially the maximum current the pin can output while also
|
||||
maintaining the minimum high-level voltage. In the case of the Pi, this voltage
|
||||
is 3.0V.
|
||||
|
||||
Similarly, the SPI flash chip has a minimum voltage it will accept as a high
|
||||
logic value. This is commonly 0.7\*VCC for SPI flash, which is 2.31V for 3.3V
|
||||
chips. If the drive strength is too low, the voltage at the pins of the flash
|
||||
chip may fall below this minimum voltage, causing it to register as a low logic
|
||||
value instead of the high value that was sent.
|
||||
|
||||
On many systems, the VCC pin of the SPI flash is shared with other chips on the
|
||||
system, causing them to be powered through the voltage supplied through your
|
||||
programming clip. In this case, parts of the chipset may power up, and it may
|
||||
attempt to set the SPI lines high or low, interfering with the data the Pi is
|
||||
trying to send. If the Pi and chipset are trying to set a pin to different
|
||||
values, the side with a greater drive strength will be able to "pull" the
|
||||
voltage toward the level it wants to set.
|
||||
|
||||
Fortunately, the drive strength of the Raspberry Pi can be increased up to
|
||||
16mA. There are a few tools that can set this, such as the pigs utility from
|
||||
the pigpio project. On the Raspberry Pi OS, the following commands should
|
||||
install pigpio and set the drive strength to 16mA:
|
||||
|
||||
Install pigpio:
|
||||
|
||||
sudo apt install pigpio
|
||||
|
||||
Start the pigpiod daemon, which the pigs utility communicates with to interact
|
||||
with the gpios:
|
||||
|
||||
sudo pigpiod
|
||||
|
||||
Set the drive strength of GPIO group 0, which contains the spi0 pins, to 16mA:
|
||||
|
||||
pigs pads 0 16
|
||||
|
||||
Note that the drive strength hardware works in multiples of 2mA, and pigs will
|
||||
round odd values up to the next multiple of 2. You can check the current drive
|
||||
strength using
|
||||
|
||||
pigs padg 0
|
||||
|
||||
WARNING: If the chipset is very strongly trying to drive a pin to a value
|
||||
opposite that of the Pi, more than 16mA pass through the Pi's GPIO pins, which
|
||||
may damage them as they are only designed for 16mA. The drive strength is NOT a
|
||||
current limit. That said, this is a risk to the Pi regardless of the drive
|
||||
strength. Resistors between the chipset and the flash should protect against
|
||||
this, though not all boards have these.
|
||||
|
||||
See
|
||||
<https://www.raspberrypi.com/documentation/computers/raspberry-pi.html#gpio-pads-control>
|
||||
for more information about the drive strength control on the Pi.
|
||||
|
||||
Caution about RPi
|
||||
-----------------
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue