Provided by: libiio-utils_0.25-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       iio_reg - do a low level read or write to SPI or I2C register

SYNOPSIS

       iio_reg [ options ] <device> <register> [<value>]

DESCRIPTION

       iio_reg  is a utility for debugging local or remote IIO devices.  It should not be used by
       normal users, and is normally used by driver developers  during  development,  or  by  end
       users  debugging  a  driver,  or sending in a feature request.  It provides a mechanism to
       read  or  write  SPI  or  I2C  registers  for  IIO  devices.   This  can  be  useful  when
       troubleshooting IIO devices, and understanding how the Linux IIO subsystem is managing the
       device.

OPTIONS

       -h, --help
              Tells iio_reg to display some help, and then quit.

       -V, --version
              Prints the version information for this particular copy of iio_reg and the  version
              of the libiio library it is using. This is useful for knowing if the version of the
              library and iio_reg on your system are  up  to  date.  This  is  also  useful  when
              reporting bugs.

       -S, --scan [backends]
              Scan for available IIO contexts, optional arg of specific backend(s) 'ip', 'usb' or
              'ip:usb'.  Specific options for USB include Vendor ID, Product ID to limit scanning
              to  specific  devices  'usb=0456,b673'.  vid,pid are hexadecimal numbers (no prefix
              needed), "*" (match any for pid only) If no argument is given, it checks  all  that
              are available.

       -u, --uri
              The Uniform Resource Identifier (uri) for connecting to devices, can be one of:

              ip:[address]
                     network address, either numeric (192.168.0.1) or network hostname

              ip:    blank, if compiled with zeroconf support, will find an IIO device on network

              usb:[device:port:instance]
                     normally returned from iio_reg -S

              serial:[port],[baud],[settings]
                     which  are controlled, and need to match the iiod (or tinyiiod) on the other
                     end of the serial port.

                     [port] is something like '/dev/ttyUSB0' on Linux, and 'COM4' on Windows.

                     [baud] is is normally one of 110, 300, 600, 1200, 2400, 4800,  9600,  14400,
                            19200, 38400, 57600, 115200 [default], 128000 or 256000, but can vary
                            system to system.

                     [settings]
                            would normally be configured as '8n1' this is controlled by:

                            data_bits:
                                   (5, 6, 7, 8 [default], or 9)

                            parity_bits:
                                   ('n' none [default], 'o' odd,  'e'  even,  'm'  mark,  or  's'
                                   space)

                            stop_bits:
                                   (1 [default, or 2)

                            flow_control:
                                   ('0' none [default], 'x' Xon Xoff, 'r' RTSCTS, or 'd' DTRDSR)

              local: with no address part.

RETURN VALUE

       If the specified device is not found, a non-zero exit code is returned.

SEE ALSO

       iio_attr(1), iio_info(1), iio_readdev(1), iio_reg(1), iio_writedev(1), libiio(3)

       libiio home page: https://wiki.analog.com/resources/tools-software/linux-software/libiio

       libiio code: https://github.com/analogdevicesinc/libiio

       Doxygen for libiio https://analogdevicesinc.github.io/libiio/

BUGS

       All bugs are tracked at: https://github.com/analogdevicesinc/libiio/issues