Usage, Example – Echelon I/O Model Reference for Smart Transceivers and Neuron Chips User Manual

Page 131

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I/O Model Reference

121

specification denotes the lower-numbered pin of the pair and can be IO_0

through IO_6.

timeout (

pin-

nbr)

Optionally specifies the timeout signal pin, in the range of IO_0 to IO_7. The

Neuron firmware checks the logic level at this pin whenever it is waiting for a
pulse at either the DATA 0 or DATA 1 pins. If a logic level 1 is sensed, the

transfer is terminated.

io-object-name

A user-specified name for the I/O object, in the ANSI C format for variable

identifiers.

Usage

unsigned int

count, input-buffer

[

buffer-size

],

bit-count

;

count

= io_in(

object-name, input-buffer, bit-count

);

Example

// This application is written so that the
// Wiegand input is being polled for a majority
// of the time, breaking out and returning to the
// scheduler only periodically. This makes the
// probability of capturing the first bits of
// the input much higher since the bits arrive
// asynchronously. Timeout is from a hardware oneshot.

unsigned int data[4], breaker, nbits;
IO_2 input wiegand timeout (IO_0) ioCardData;
IO_0 output oneshot invert clock (7) ioPinTimer = 1;

when(TRUE) {
for (breaker=200; breaker; breaker--) {
io_out(ioPinTimer, 19500UL);
// Store 26 bits into data
nbits = io_in(ioCardData, data, 26);
if (nbits) {
. . . // Process data just read
}
}
}




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