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author | Uwe Hermann <uwe@hermann-uwe.de> | 2012-07-21 20:37:41 +0200 |
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committer | Uwe Hermann <uwe@hermann-uwe.de> | 2012-07-21 21:47:54 +0200 |
commit | 19dd61efcc1fe07c6a66f48f74b7926607f3a541 (patch) | |
tree | 4669d8fe41fde631107882af32cf615557c23dc7 /sigrokdecode.h.in | |
parent | 5d7c5bcca4f770280cd4b58a8ea383fe97cf4a32 (diff) | |
download | libsigrokdecode-19dd61efcc1fe07c6a66f48f74b7926607f3a541.tar.gz libsigrokdecode-19dd61efcc1fe07c6a66f48f74b7926607f3a541.zip |
srd: Rename onewire_transport to maxim_ds28ea00.
It doesn't make sense to have one "generic" onewire_transport PD, as
this layer is very much device-specific and such a generic PD would
have to contain an accumulation of all possible features and commands
and handling code of all existing (now and in the future) 1-Wire
devices, which is neither possible nor useful nor elegant.
There are (for example) 1-Wire thermometers, RTCs, EEPROMs,
special-purpose security chips with passwords/keys, battery monitoring
chips, and many many others. They all have a different set of features,
commands and command codes, RAM areas/sizes/partitioning/contents,
protocols, and so on.
Thus, the layering for 1-Wire PD stacks should look like this:
onewire_link -> onewire_network -> <specificdevice>
Examples:
onewire_link -> onewire_network -> maxim_ds28ea00 (special thermometer)
onewire_link -> onewire_network -> maxim_ds2431 (1kbit EEPROM)
onewire_link -> onewire_network -> maxim_ds2417 (RTC)
onewire_link -> onewire_network -> maxim_ds2762 (battery monitor)
onewire_link -> onewire_network -> maxim_ds1961s (SHA-1 eCash iButton)
and so on...
So, renaming onewire_transport to maxim_ds28ea00. The non-DS28EA00
specific code will be dropped and/or moved to other PDs on top of
onewire_network later.
Diffstat (limited to 'sigrokdecode.h.in')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions