Difference between revisions of "Example watchdog"

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===Usage Example. Enabling <code>watchdog</code>===
 
===Usage Example. Enabling <code>watchdog</code>===
  
This will enable and activate <code>watchdog</code> but it won't perform a periodic timeout interrupt (see the first usage example). So when you run it the program activates <code>watchdog</code> and then <code>watchdog</code> resets the system.
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This will enable and activate <code>watchdog</code> but it won't perform a periodic timeout interrupt (see the first usage example, above). So when you run it the program activates <code>watchdog</code> and then <code>watchdog</code> resets the system.
  
 
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Revision as of 11:34, 3 January 2014

TODO: {{#todo:Review(01.03.14-11:32->JG+)|Jgreene|oe 4,oe 5,jg,md,Review}}

This is a guide to the watchdog C example project included in the EMAC OE SDK.

A watchdog timer (WDT) is a hardware circuit that can reset the computer system in case of a software fault. This is an example test for the Linux watchdog API.

The watchdog project builds one executable: watchdog-test.

Opening, Building and Uploading the Project Files

stubbooo

Usage and Behavior

A watchdog timer is a hardware circuit that can reset the computer system in case of a software fault. The watchdog-test application can enable, disable, activate, configure and interrupt the watchdog timer.

Hardware Requirements

watchdog will run on any system for which it can be compiled and implements the standard Linux watchdog API.

watchdog Usage

./watchdog-test [-det]
-d
Disable watchdog.
-e
Enable watchdog.
-t
Set the watchdog timeout (to a value specified in code. Default is five seconds).

Usage Example. Activating watchdog with a periodic interrupt

This will activate watchdog and initiate a periodic interrupt to keep it from timing out.

root@som9g20:/tmp# ./watchdog-test 
Watchdog Ticking Away!

We have activated watchdog and now it is counting down to computer reset - or rather it would be if we didn't keep resetting it's timer. That's the LED on the SoM blinking at about 1 Hz. Every second watchdog-test is sending an IOCTL to the watchdog driver, which in turn ticks watchdog to reset its internal timer so it doesn't timeout and trigger a system reset.

Now we will stop interrupting watchdog and let it trigger a computer reset. Hit CTRL-C.

...and the system resets.

Usage Example. Disabling watchdog

root@som9g20:/tmp# ./watchdog-test -d
Watchdog card disabled.

...and the program exits normally.

Usage Example. Enabling watchdog

This will enable and activate watchdog but it won't perform a periodic timeout interrupt (see the first usage example, above). So when you run it the program activates watchdog and then watchdog resets the system.

root@som9g20:/tmp# ./watchdog-test -e
Watchdog card enabled.

...and the system resets.

Usage Example. Setting watchdog timeout

This will activate watchdog and set it to timeout in 5 seconds.

root@som9g20:/tmp# ./watchdog-test -t
Watchdog timeout set to 5 seconds!

...the program exits normally, then 5 seconds elapse, and then the system resets.

Summary

The watchdog C example project demonstrates how to use the watchdog timer. We provide examples of how to enable, disable, activate, configure and interrupt the watchdog hardware circuit.