.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+: cedit command ============= Synopis ------- :: cedit load cedit run cedit write_fdt cedit read_fdt cedit write_env [-v] cedit read_env [-v] cedit write_cmos [-v] [dev] Description ----------- The *cedit* command is used to load a configuration-editor description and allow the user to interact with it. It makes use of the expo subsystem. The description is in the form of a devicetree file, as documented at :ref:`expo_format`. See :doc:`../../develop/cedit` for information about the configuration editor. cedit load ~~~~~~~~~~ Loads a configuration-editor description from a file. It creates a new cedit structure ready for use. Initially no settings are read, so default values are used for each object. cedit run ~~~~~~~~~ Runs the default configuration-editor event loop. This is very simple, just accepting character input and moving through the objects under user control. The implementation is at `cedit_run()`. cedit write_fdt ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Writes the current user settings to a devicetree file. For each menu item the selected ID and its text string are written. cedit read_fdt ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Reads the user settings from a devicetree file and updates the cedit with those settings. cedit read_env ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Reads the settings from the environment variables. For each menu item ``, cedit looks for a variable called `c.` with the ID of the selected menu item. The `-v` flag enables verbose mode, where each variable is printed after it is read. cedit write_env ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Writes the settings to environment variables. For each menu item the selected ID and its text string are written, similar to: setenv c. setenv c.-str The `-v` flag enables verbose mode, where each variable is printed before it is set. cedit write_cmos ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Writes the settings to locations in the CMOS RAM. The locations used are specified by the schema. See `expo_format_`. The `-v` flag enables verbose mode, which shows which CMOS locations were updated. Normally the first RTC device is used to hold the data. You can specify a different device by name using the `dev` parameter. Example ------- :: => cedit load hostfs - fred.dtb => cedit run => cedit write_fdt hostfs - settings.dtb That results in:: / { cedit-values { cpu-speed = <0x00000006>; cpu-speed-str = "2 GHz"; power-loss = <0x0000000a>; power-loss-str = "Always Off"; }; } => cedit read_fdt hostfs - settings.dtb This shows settings being stored in the environment:: => cedit write_env -v c.cpu-speed=7 c.cpu-speed-str=2.5 GHz c.power-loss=12 c.power-loss-str=Memory => print ... c.cpu-speed=6 c.cpu-speed-str=2 GHz c.power-loss=10 c.power-loss-str=Always Off ... => cedit read_env -v c.cpu-speed=7 c.power-loss=12 This shows writing to CMOS RAM. Notice that the bytes at 80 and 84 change:: => rtc read 80 8 00000080: 00 00 00 00 00 2f 2a 08 ...../*. => cedit write_cmos -v Write 2 bytes from offset 80 to 84 => rtc read 80 8 00000080: 01 00 00 00 08 2f 2a 08 ...../*. => cedit read_cmos -v Read 2 bytes from offset 80 to 84 Here is an example with the device specified:: => cedit write_cmos rtc@43 =>