4.1.5 - Digital I/O [UE9 Datasheet]
The DIO can be read and written using AddRequest, Go/GoOne, and GetResult/GetNextResult. eGet or eAddGoGet could also be used.
There are eight IOTypes used to write or read digital I/O information:
LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_BIT //Also sets direction to input. x1 is unused and can be set to 0.
LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_BIT_DIR // x1 is unused and can be set to 0.
LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_BIT_STATE // x1 is unused and can be set to 0.
LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_PORT //Also sets directions to input. x1 is number of bits.
LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_PORT_DIR //x1 is number of bits.
LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_PORT_STATE //x1 is number of bits.
LJ_ioPUT_DIGITAL_BIT //Also sets direction to output. x1 is unused and can be set to 0.
LJ_ioPUT_DIGITAL_PORT //Also sets directions to output. x1 is number of bits.
DIR is short for direction. 0=input and 1=output. The general bit and port IOTypes automatically control direction, but the _DIR and _STATE ones do not. These can be used to read the current condition of digital I/O without changing the current condition. Note that the _STATE reads are actually doing a read using the input circuitry, not reading the state value last written. When you use LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_BIT_STATE or LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_PORT_STATE on a line set to output, it leaves it set as output, but it is doing an actual state read based on the voltage(s) on the pin(s). So if you set a line to output-high, but then something external is driving it low, it might read low. When a request is done with one of the port IOTypes, the Channel parameter is used to specify the starting bit number, and the x1 parameter is used to specify the number of applicable bits. The bit numbers corresponding to different I/O are:
0-7 FIO0-FIO7
8-15 EIO0-EIO7
16-19 CIO0-CIO3
20-22 MIO0-MIO2
Note that the GetResult function does not have an x1 parameter. That means that if two (or more) port requests are added with the same IOType and Channel, but different x1, the result retrieved by GetResult would be undefined. The GetFirstResult/GetNextResult commands do have the x1 parameter, and thus can handle retrieving responses from multiple port requests with the same IOType and Channel. Following is example pseudocode for various digital I/O operations:
//Request a read from FIO2.
AddRequest (lngHandle, LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_BIT, 2, 0, 0, 0);
//Request a read from EIO0-CIO1 (10-bits starting
//from digital channel #8).
AddRequest (lngHandle, LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_PORT, 8, 0, 10, 0);
//Set FIO3 to output-high.
AddRequest (lngHandle, LJ_ioPUT_DIGITAL_BIT, 3, 1, 0, 0);
//Set CIO2-MIO2 (5-bits starting from digital channel #18)
//to b10100 (=d20). That is CIO2=0, CIO3=0, MIO0=1,
//MIO1=0, and MIO2=1.
AddRequest (lngHandle, LJ_ioPUT_DIGITAL_PORT, 18, 20, 5, 0);
//Execute the requests.
GoOne (lngHandle);
//Get the FIO2 read.
GetResult (lngHandle, LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_BIT, 2, &dblValue);
//Get the EIO0-CIO1 read.
GetResult (lngHandle, LJ_ioGET_DIGITAL_PORT, 8, &dblValue);