i2cset man page on CentOS

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I2CSET(8)							     I2CSET(8)

NAME
       i2cset - set I2C registers

SYNOPSIS
       i2cset [-f] [-y] i2cbus chip-address data-address value [mode] [mask]
       i2cset -V


DESCRIPTION
       i2cset  is  a small helper program to set registers visible through the
       I2C bus.

OPTIONS
       -V     Display the version and exit.

       -f     Force access to the device  even	if  it	is  already  busy.  By
	      default,	i2cset will refuse to access a device which is already
	      under the control of a kernel driver. Using this flag is danger‐
	      ous,  it can seriously confuse the kernel driver in question. It
	      can also cause i2cset to silently write to the  wrong  register.
	      So use at your own risk and only if you know what you're doing.

       -y     Disable  interactive  mode.  By  default, i2cset will wait for a
	      confirmation from the user before messing with the I2C bus. When
	      this  flag is used, it will perform the operation directly. This
	      is mainly meant to be used in scripts.

       There are four required options to i2cset. i2cbus indicates the	number
       of  the I2C bus to be scanned.  This number should correspond to one of
       the busses listed by i2cdetect -l. chip-address specifies  the  address
       of  the	chip  on  that	bus,  and is an integer between 0x00 and 0x7F.
       data-address specifies the address on that chip to write to, and is  an
       integer	between	 0x00  and  0xFF.  value is the value to write to that
       location on the chip.

       The mode parameter, if specified, is one of the letters b or w,	corre‐
       sponding	 to  a	write  size of a single byte or a 16-bit word, respec‐
       tively. A p can also be appended to the mode parameter to  enable  PEC.
       If  the mode parameter is omitted, i2cset defaults to byte mode without
       PEC. The value provided must be within range  for  the  specified  data
       type (0x00-0xFF for bytes, 0x0000-0xFFFF for words).

       The mask parameter, if specified, describes which bits of value will be
       actually written to data-address. Bits set to 1 in the mask  are	 taken
       from value, while bits set to 0 will be read from data-address and thus
       preserved by the operation.

WARNING
       i2cset can be extremely dangerous if used improperly.  It  can  confuse
       your I2C bus, cause data loss, or have more serious side effects. Writ‐
       ing to a serial EEPROM on a memory DIMM (chip  addresses	 between  0x50
       and  0x57) may DESTROY your memory, leaving your system unbootable!  Be
       extremely careful using this program.

SEE ALSO
       i2cdump(8), isaset(8)

AUTHOR
       Frodo  Looijaard,  Mark	D.  Studebaker,	 and  the   lm_sensors	 group
       http://www.lm-sensors.org/  This	 manual page was originally written by
       David Z Maze <dmaze@debian.org> for the Debian GNU/Linux system. It was
       then  reviewed by the lm_sensors team and is now part of the lm_sensors
       source distribution.

				   June 2007			     I2CSET(8)
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