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NAME

       pinout - GPIO Zero pinout tool

       A utility for querying GPIO pin-out information.

SYNOPSIS

          pinout [-h] [-r REVISION] [-c] [-m] [-x]

DESCRIPTION

       A  utility  for  querying Raspberry Pi GPIO pin-out information. Running pinout on its own
       will output a board diagram, and GPIO header diagram for the current Raspberry Pi.  It  is
       also  possible  to  manually  specify a revision of Pi, or (by Configuring Remote GPIO) to
       output information about a remote Pi.

OPTIONS

       -h, --help
              Show a help message and exit

       -r REVISION, --revision REVISION
              Specifies a particular  Raspberry  Pi  board  revision  code.  The  default  is  to
              autodetect revision of current device by reading /proc/cpuinfo

       -c, --color
              Force  colored  output (by default, the output will include ANSI color codes if run
              in a color-capable terminal). See also pinout --monochrome

       -m, --monochrome
              Force monochrome output. See also pinout --color

       -x, --xyz
              Open pinout.xyz <https://pinout.xyz/> in the default web browser

EXAMPLES

       To output information about the current Raspberry Pi:

          $ pinout

       For a Raspberry Pi model 3B, this will output something like the following:

          Description        : Raspberry Pi 3B rev 1.2
          Revision           : a02082
          SoC                : BCM2837
          RAM                : 1GB
          Storage            : MicroSD
          USB ports          : 4 (of which 0 USB3)
          Ethernet ports     : 1 (100Mbps max. speed)
          Wi-fi              : True
          Bluetooth          : True
          Camera ports (CSI) : 1
          Display ports (DSI): 1

          ,--------------------------------.
          | oooooooooooooooooooo J8     +====
          | 1ooooooooooooooooooo        | USB
          |                             +====
          |      Pi Model 3B  V1.2         |
          | |D      +---+               +====
          | |S      |SoC|               | USB
          | |I      +---+               +====
          | |0               C|            |
          |                  S|       +======
          |                  I| |A|   |   Net
          | pwr      |HDMI|  0| |u|   +======
          `-| |------|    |-----|x|--------'

          J8:
             3V3  (1) (2)  5V
           GPIO2  (3) (4)  5V
           GPIO3  (5) (6)  GND
           GPIO4  (7) (8)  GPIO14
             GND  (9) (10) GPIO15
          GPIO17 (11) (12) GPIO18
          GPIO27 (13) (14) GND
          GPIO22 (15) (16) GPIO23
             3V3 (17) (18) GPIO24
          GPIO10 (19) (20) GND
           GPIO9 (21) (22) GPIO25
          GPIO11 (23) (24) GPIO8
             GND (25) (26) GPIO7
           GPIO0 (27) (28) GPIO1
           GPIO5 (29) (30) GND
           GPIO6 (31) (32) GPIO12
          GPIO13 (33) (34) GND
          GPIO19 (35) (36) GPIO16
          GPIO26 (37) (38) GPIO20
             GND (39) (40) GPIO21

          For further information, please refer to https://pinout.xyz/

       By default, if stdout is a console that supports color, ANSI codes will be used to produce
       color output. Output can be forced to be --monochrome:

          $ pinout --monochrome

       Or  forced  to  be --color, in case you are redirecting to something capable of supporting
       ANSI codes:

          $ pinout --color | less -SR

       To manually specify the revision of Pi  you  want  to  query,  use  --revision.  The  tool
       understands              both             old-style             revision             codes
       <https://www.raspberrypi.com/documentation/computers/raspberry-pi.html#raspberry-pi-
       revision-codes> (such as for the model B):

          $ pinout -r 000d

       Or                      new-style                      revision                      codes
       <https://www.raspberrypi.com/documentation/computers/raspberry-pi.html#raspberry-pi-
       revision-codes> (such as for the Pi Zero W):

          $ pinout -r 9000c1
       [image]

       You can also use the tool with Configuring Remote GPIO to query remote Raspberry Pi's:

          $ GPIOZERO_PIN_FACTORY=pigpio PIGPIO_ADDR=other_pi pinout

       Or  run the tool directly on a PC using the mock pin implementation (although in this case
       you'll almost certainly want to specify the Pi revision manually):

          $ GPIOZERO_PIN_FACTORY=mock pinout -r a22042

SEE ALSO

       pintest(1), remote-gpio(7), gpiozero-env(7)

AUTHOR

       Ben Nuttall

COPYRIGHT

       2015-2024 Ben Nuttall