i2c: Documentation: fix device matching description

The matching process described for new style clients in
Documentation/i2c/writing-clients is classed as out-of-date
as it requires the presence of an .id_table entry in the
driver's i2c_driver entry.

Signed-off-by: Ben Dooks <ben-linux@fluff.org>
Signed-off-by: Jean Delvare <khali@linux-fr.org>
This commit is contained in:
Ben Dooks 2008-07-01 22:38:18 +02:00 committed by Jean Delvare
parent e1441b9a41
commit 2260e63a2f

View File

@ -25,12 +25,23 @@ routines, and should be zero-initialized except for fields with data you
provide. A client structure holds device-specific information like the
driver model device node, and its I2C address.
/* iff driver uses driver model ("new style") binding model: */
static struct i2c_device_id foo_idtable[] = {
{ "foo", my_id_for_foo },
{ "bar", my_id_for_bar },
{ }
};
MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(i2c, foo_idtable);
static struct i2c_driver foo_driver = {
.driver = {
.name = "foo",
},
/* iff driver uses driver model ("new style") binding model: */
.id_table = foo_ids,
.probe = foo_probe,
.remove = foo_remove,
@ -173,10 +184,9 @@ handle may be used during foo_probe(). If foo_probe() reports success
(zero not a negative status code) it may save the handle and use it until
foo_remove() returns. That binding model is used by most Linux drivers.
Drivers match devices when i2c_client.driver_name and the driver name are
the same; this approach is used in several other busses that don't have
device typing support in the hardware. The driver and module name should
match, so hotplug/coldplug mechanisms will modprobe the driver.
The probe function is called when an entry in the id_table name field
matches the device's name. It is passed the entry that was matched so
the driver knows which one in the table matched.
Device Creation (Standard driver model)