On Wednesday 02 December 2015 11:07:11 Uwe Kleine-König wrote: > Hello, > > some time ago I worked on the rotary encoder driver to make it support > more than two input lines. This is the (only slightly tested[1]) rebase of > this series on top of 4.4-rc2 (from 4.1). > > It would be great to get some feedback, especially (but not only) for my > change to raumfeld.c. > > Before Ezequiel's patch 3a341a4c30d4 ("Input: rotary-encoder - add > support for quarter-period mode") we had a dt property > "rotary-encoder,half-period" defined. It's presence meant that we had 2 > indents per period; it's absence that there is only 1. Ezequiel > introduced rotary-encoder,steps-per-period instead when adding support > for quarter-period mode (which has 4 indents per period). > > Up to now (i.e. with two inputs) a period has length 4. Now with (say) > four inputs a period has length 16 instead. Now how should this be > modeled in dt? This series implements that I have to pass > > rotary-encoder,steps-per-period = <16>; > > now for "quarter-period mode" (i.e. 4 indents per 4 state changes[2]), > but that feels unnatural. I'd prefer to set a property to <1> instead, > meaning the device has an indent for each state change[2]. half-period > mode would be <2> and full-period mode would be <4>. But I don't have a > nice name for such a property and maybe it's easier to live with > steps-per-period = <16>? What do you think? > > Also note that these patches are not as technically versatile as > possible. With 4 (n) input lines we could detect a quick rotation where the > machine's latency only allows to sample after 7 (2^(n-1)-1) state > changes. Currently this is not implemented, but can be done later. > > Best regards > Uwe >
AFAIUI the rotary encoder driver only handles incremental encoders not absolute encoders. (So in fact the assumed rotary encoder could also be a linear encoder with an incremental interface.) Those encoders almost always have an interface with two outputs (A, B) with a phase shift of 90 degrees between them. So in this case we have 4 steps per period. Sometimes there is only one line for 1 or 2 steps per period. But I have never seen or heard of a device with more than 2 lines (except for the third output which serves as a reference position index marker). Do devices wirh more than two outputs actually exist? Or is the purpose of supporting more than 2 lines something other than connecting an actual encoder to them? Rojhalat -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-input" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html