smbmsg(8)

NAME

smbmsg - send or receive messages over an SMBus

SYNOPSIS

smbmsg [-f dev] -p
smbmsg [-f dev] -s slave [-F fmt] [-c cmd] [-w]  [-i  incnt]
[-o outcnt]
       [outdata ...]

DESCRIPTION

The smbmsg utility can be used to send or receive messages
over an SMBus,
see smbus(4).
The smbmsg utility has two different modi of operation. The
first form
shown in the synopsis can be used to ``probe'' the devices
on the SMBus.
This is done by sending each valid device address one re
ceive byte, and
one quick read message, respectively. Devices that respond
to these
requests will by displayed by their device address, followed
by the
strings `r', `w', or `rw', for devices that are readable,
writeable, or
both, readable and writeable, respectively. The only valid
additional
option for this modus of operation (besides the -p option
that choses the
modus) is -f dev. See below for a description.
Note that probing the bus is risky, since individual devices
could perform unwanted actions upon receiving one of the mentioned
messages. For
example, if a particular SMBus device considers any write
operation
issued to it as a request to power off the system, the prob
ing would
trigger this action.
The second form shown in the synopsis can be used to send or
receive
arbitrary messages to or from individual devices. This
might be useful
to explore individual devices on the SMBus, or maybe even to
write short
shell scripts performing maintenance operations on the bus.
Any data values on the command-line are integer values in
the range 0
through 255 for byte values, or 0 through 65535 for word
values. They
can be specified using standard `C' notation (prefix 0 for
octal interpretation, or 0x for hexadecimal interpretation).
Since the low-order bit of the device address of SMBus de
vices selects
between read and write operations, only even-numbered slave
addresses can
exist on the bus.
The options are as follows:
-F fmt Specify the printf(3) format to be used for
displaying
input data. This option is ignored in mes
sages that do
not read any input from the SMBus device.
The format
defaults to `0x%02x' for byte input opera
tions, and to
`0x%04x' for word input operations. For
multi-byte
input (block read), the same format is used
for each
individual byte read from the SMBus.
-c cmd This is the value of the command byte to be
issued as
part of the SMBus message.
-f dev This specifies that dev should be used as
the connection
to the SMBus, rather than the default of
/dev/smb0.
-i incnt An SMBus message should be generated to
read incnt bytes
from the device.
-o outcnt An SMBus message should be generated to
write outcnt
bytes to the device. The data values to
write are
expected to follow all of the options (and
their arguments) on the command-line, where the num
ber of data
bytes must match the outcnt value.
-p This selects the probe bus modus of opera
tion.
-s slave The slave parameter specifies which SMBus
device to con
nect to. This option also selects the
transfer messages
from/to device modus of operation, where a
slave address
is mandatory.
-w This option specifies that IO operations
are word opera
tions, rather than byte operations. Either
incnt, or
outcnt (or both) must be equal 2 in this
case. Note
that the SMBus byte order is defined to be
little-endian
(low byte first, high byte follows).
Not all argument combinations make sense in order to form
valid SMBus
messages. If no -c cmd option has been provided, the fol
lowing messages
can be issued:

message incnt outcnt
quick read 0 quick write - 0
receive byte 1 send byte - 1
Note in particular that specifying 0 as a count value has a
different
meaning than omitting the respective option entirely.
If a command value has been given using the -c cmd option,
the following
messages can be generated:

message -w incnt outcnt
read byte no 1 write byte no - 1
read word yes 2 write word yes - 2
process call yes 2 2
block read no >= 2 block write no - >= 2

FILES

/dev/smb0 The default device to connect to, unless -f
dev has been
provided.
EXIT STATUS
Exit status is 0 on success, or according to sysexits(3) in
case of failure.

EXAMPLES

Typical usage examples of the smbmsg command include:
smbmsg -f /dev/smb1 -p
Probe all devices on the SMBus attached to /dev/smb1.

smbmsg -s 0x70 -i 1
Issue a receive byte message to the device at address 0x70,
and display
the received byte using the default format.

smbmsg -s 0x70 -c 0xff -i 1 -F %d
Issue a read byte message to the device at slave address
0x70, using 255
(0xff) as the command-byte to send to the device, and dis
play the result
using the custom format `%d'.

smbmsg -s 0xa0 -c 0 -o 1 0x80
Send a write byte message to the slave device at address
0xa0, using 0 as
the command-byte value, and 0x80 as the byte to send (after
the command).
Assuming this might be a Philips PCF8583 real-time clock,
this would stop
the clock.

smbmsg -s 0xa0 -c 1 -i 6 -F %02x
Send a block read command to device at address 0xa0, and
read 6 bytes
from it, using hexadecimal display. Again, assuming a
PCF8583 RTC, this
would display the fractions of second, seconds, minutes,
hours,
year/date, and weekday/month values. Since this RTC uses
BCD notation,
the actual values displayed were decimal then.

smbmsg -s 0xa0 -c 2 -o 5 0x00 0x07 0x22 0x16 0x05
Send a block write command to device at address 0xa0. For
the PCF8583
RTC, this would set the clock to Sunday (2004%4)-05-16
22:07:00.

DIAGNOSTICS

Diagnostic messages issued are supposed to be self-explana
tory.

SEE ALSO

printf(3), sysexits(3), smb(4), smbus(4)

The SMBus specification, http://www.smbus.org/specs/.

HISTORY

The smbmsg utility first appeared in FreeBSD 5.3.

AUTHORS

The smbmsg utility and this manual page were written by Jorg
Wunsch.
BSD May 16, 2004
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