When I manually wire a pull up resistor, I still am not able to detect a 
high signal using the methods I listed, though I can verify with a 
multimeter that P9.13 is high. 

On Monday, May 11, 2020 at 3:17:36 PM UTC-6, John Allwine wrote:
>
> I'm trying to configure P9.13 on the Beaglebone AI as an input pull up, 
> but am not having any success. In the System Manual 
> <https://github.com/beagleboard/beaglebone-ai/wiki/System-Reference-Manual#p9.11-p9.13>
>  
> it lists P9.13a as not being bound to a GPIO port, but P9.13b is bound to 
> GPIO6_12. This is the device tree overlay I'm using 
> <https://github.com/PocketNC/BeagleBoard-DeviceTrees/blob/pocketnc-ai-test/src/arm/am5729-beagleboneai-pocketnc-pro.dts#L56>
>  with 
> line 56 showing how I'm attempting to configure P9.13b (and P9.13a the line 
> above it). Am I doing something wrong in my device tree overlay? I've had 
> success configuring many other pins, but P9.13 is giving me trouble for 
> some reason.
>
> I'm testing it a couple ways:
> 1) with sysfs
> echo 172 > /sys/class/gpio/export
> cat /sys/class/gpio/gpio172/value
>
> 2) with libgpio
> gpioget gpiochip5 12
>
> Both return a value of 0, when I'd expect it to be 1 (I don't have 
> anything wired to it). Any idea what I'm doing wrong?
>

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