## User Accessible GPIOs (J12) Helios4 provides 12 GPIOs on header J12 which can be used for user application. Those GPIOs are provided via an 16-bit IO Expander [PCA9655E](http://www.onsemi.com/PowerSolutions/product.do?id=PCA9655E) connected to I2C bus 0. ![J12 Pinout](/img/gpio/gpio_pinout_j12.png) ### Pinout Table | Pin | Port | Remarks | |------------|----------|---------| | 1 | - | 3.3V supply | | 2 | IO0_2 | | | 3 | IO0_3 | | | 4 | IO0_4 | | | 5 | IO0_7 | | | 6 | IO1_0 | | | 7 | IO1_1 | | | 8 | IO1_2 | | | 9 | IO1_3 | | | 10 | IO1_4 | | | 11 | IO1_5 | | | 12 | IO1_6 | | | 13 | IO1_7 | | | 14 | - | GND | !!! warning Ports **IO0_0**, **IO0_1**, **IO0_5**, and **IO0_6** are reserved for system use. !!! important It is not advisable to access the I2C IO Expander directly using I2C utilities. ## Accessing GPIOs under Linux If the kernel supports debugfs (*CONFIG_DEBUG_FS=y*), list of GPIOs can be retrieved with the following command ```bash sudo cat /sys/kernel/debug/gpio ``` Look for the **gpiochip2: GPIOs XXX-YYY** section, whereas **XXX** is first GPIO number and **YYY** is last GPIO number of IO expander. ``` gpiochip2: GPIOs 496-511, parent: i2c/0-0020, pca9555, can sleep: gpio-496 ( |board-rev-0 ) in lo gpio-497 ( |board-rev-1 ) in lo gpio-498 ( |(null) ) out hi gpio-499 ( |(null) ) in hi gpio-500 ( |(null) ) in hi gpio-501 ( |usb-overcurrent-stat) in hi gpio-502 ( |USB-PWR ) out hi gpio-503 ( |(null) ) in hi gpio-504 ( |(null) ) in hi gpio-505 ( |(null) ) in hi gpio-506 ( |(null) ) in hi gpio-507 ( |(null) ) in hi gpio-508 ( |(null) ) in hi gpio-509 ( |(null) ) in hi gpio-510 ( |(null) ) in hi gpio-511 ( |(null) ) in hi ``` Another way to get first GPIO number of the IO expander ``` cat /sys/bus/i2c/devices/0-0020/gpio/gpiochip*/base ``` Therefore the mapping between header J12 Pins and Sysfs GPIO numbers will be as described in the following table ### GPIO Table | Pin | Sysfs GPIO number | Remarks | |----|-----|---------| | 1 | - | 3.3V supply | | 2 | 498 | | | 3 | 499 | | | 4 | 500 | | | 5 | 503 | | | 6 | 504 | | | 7 | 505 | | | 8 | 506 | | | 9 | 507 | | | 10 | 508 | | | 11 | 509 | | | 12 | 510 | | | 13 | 511 | | | 14 | - | GND | !!! note The mapping table is unlikely to change between Kernel version. ### GPIO Control **1.** Export the GPIO number you want to use ``` echo N | sudo tee -a /sys/class/gpio/export ``` **2.** Set the direction, "out" for Output or "in" for Input ``` echo DIRECTION | sudo tee -a /sys/class/gpio/gpioN/direction ``` **3.** Now you can read or change the GPIO value To read GPIO value ``` cat /sys/class/gpio/gpioN/value ``` To change GPIO value (only if GPIO set as Output) ``` echo VALUE | sudo tee -a /sys/class/gpio/gpioN/value ``` !!! notes Pay attention to the path, /sys/class/gpio/gpio**N**/ where **N** is the GPIO number. #### Example Set IO1_7 (pin 13) output as high ``` echo 511 | sudo tee -a /sys/class/gpio/export echo "out" | sudo tee -a /sys/class/gpio/gpio511/direction echo 1 | sudo tee -a /sys/class/gpio/gpio511/value ```