Skip to Content
Linux Device Drivers, Second Edition
book

Linux Device Drivers, Second Edition

by Jonathan Corbet, Alessandro Rubini
June 2001
Intermediate to advanced
592 pages
19h 20m
English
O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Content preview from Linux Device Drivers, Second Edition

Preparing the Parallel Port

Although the parallel interface is simple, it can trigger interrupts. This capability is used by the printer to notify the lp driver that it is ready to accept the next character in the buffer.

Like most devices, the parallel port doesn’t actually generate interrupts before it’s instructed to do so; the parallel standard states that setting bit 4 of port 2 (0x37a, 0x27a, or whatever) enables interrupt reporting. A simple outb call to set the bit is performed by short at module initialization.

Once interrupts are enabled, the parallel interface generates an interrupt whenever the electrical signal at pin 10 (the so-called ACK bit) changes from low to high. The simplest way to force the interface to generate interrupts (short of hooking up a printer to the port) is to connect pins 9 and 10 of the parallel connector. A short length of wire inserted into the appropriate holes in the parallel port connector on the back of your system will create this connection. The pinout of the parallel port is shown in Figure 8-1.

Pin 9 is the most significant bit of the parallel data byte. If you write binary data to /dev/short0, you’ll generate several interrupts. Writing ASCII text to the port won’t generate interrupts, though, because the most significant bit won’t be set.

If you’d rather avoid soldering, but you do have a printer at hand, you can run the sample interrupt handler using a real printer, as shown later. Note, however, that the probing functions ...

Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
and much more.
Start your free trial

You might also like

Linux Device Drivers, 3rd Edition

Linux Device Drivers, 3rd Edition

Jonathan Corbet, Alessandro Rubini, Greg Kroah-Hartman

Publisher Resources

ISBN: 0596000081Supplemental ContentCatalog PageErrata