Hi Jean-Baptiste and Stepan,

Thanks so much for the replies and the advice. I've dug a bit deeper into this 
and added a few printk statements to the driver, as suggested by Stepan. It 
looks like the device is getting recognized correctly as ICM20602 and the 
buffer is being filled with 14 bytes as expected.

But I've identified some strange behaviour regarding the temperature channeI. 
If I manually enable all 7 scan elements and read 14 bytes from the device 
file, the readings appear correct and change accordingly when I move the chip 
around. However, if I set in_temp_en set to 0 (with everything else still 
enabled) and read 12 bytes, the buffer doesn't seem to acknowledge this change 
and shift the gyro values up, instead getting only the first 12 bytes (accel_x, 
accel_y, accel_z, temp, gyro_x, gyro_y), without gyro_z. So this is why it 
looks as if temp is replacing gyro_x.
I made a pastebin here with some of the (unconverted) values I got while 
testing these cases: https://pastebin.com/BYVqDNch

Attempting the same reads with my C++ program via libiio always results in only 
the first 12 bytes being read, as for some strange reason libiio fails to 
enable the temperature channel, so iio_device_get_sample_size() is always 12 
and it's actually gyro_z that I can't get to.

I'll try to look through the code that is supposed to enable a channel and see 
why it's not succeeding via libiio. Do you have any clue as to which bit of 
code does the adjustment of the buffer values according to which channels are 
enabled? Is this done in the driver or deeper in the kernel?

Thanks once again for the help!
Best regards,
Andreea

On Wednesday, May 22, 2019 16:33 CEST, Jean-Baptiste Maneyrol 
<jmaney...@invensense.com> wrote:

> Hello,
>
> I had a look inside the driver to verify the buffer implementation. It looks 
> correct to me. I don't see where the problem can come from. I am sorry I 
> don't have a setup currently to test in live.
>
> For sure you can have a different result by reading the buffer through the 
> char device file compared to reading the raw sysfs entry. The buffer is 
> taking the data from the FIFO and the raw sysfs from the sensor data 
> registers.
>
> You can perhaps test value 1 by 1 in the buffer, and verify the correctness 
> of every attributes. If you can also send a complete buffer log that would be 
> helpful.
> Every data is 2 bytes long and in the following order: accel_x, accel_y, 
> accel_z, temp, gyro_x, gyro_y, gyro_z
>
> Best regards,
> JB Maneyrol
>
> From: Andreea Lutac <andreea.lu...@fixposition.ch>
> Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2019 12:40
> Cc: Jean-Baptiste Maneyrol; stev...@skydio.com; ji...@kernel.org; 
> knaac...@gmx.de; l...@metafoo.de; pme...@pmeerw.net; 
> linux-...@vger.kernel.org; linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
> Subject: ICM20602 buffer issues with the inv_mpu6050 driver
>  
> Hello,
>
> I've been trying to get some data samples from the ICM20602 IMU using the 
> mpu6050 driver which recently added support for it, but I'm encountering an 
> issue with the ordering of the data in the FIFO.
> According to the specs of the device, if the accel and gyro XYZ channels are 
> enabled, then the hardware FIFO is filled with 14 bytes corresponding to the 
> following channels: accel_x, accel_y, accel_z, temp, anglvel_x, anglvel_y, 
> anglvel_z. However, when reading out the buffer, the value I get for 
> anglvel_x seems to actually be the temperature. This  occurs both when 
> reading with iio_channel_read (via libiio) and also if I read directly from 
> /dev/iio:device with only in_anglvel_x_en set. But in_anglvel_x_raw reports 
> correct values, which made me suspect that maybe somewhere in the driver this 
> interleaved temp channel is not accounted for in the buffer structure.
>
> I had a look at the driver code and inv_mpu6050_read_fifo() in particular, 
> but I can't identify anything amiss. I've applied the recent patch that added 
> the extra 2 temperature bytes ( ), but the problem persists. So far I've 
> tried changing the size of the data buffer, defined in inv_mpu_iio.h:
>
> /* 6 + 6 round up and plus 8 */
> #define INV_MPU6050_OUTPUT_DATA_SIZE     24
>
> from 24 to 32, according to the intuition that 24 corresponds to readings 
> without temperature (i.e. 6 bytes for accel, rounded up to 8 + 6 bytes for 
> gyro, rounded up to 8 + 8 bytes for the timestamp = 24) and thus another 8 
> bytes would be needed, but that doesn't seem to have solved it.
>
> I'm quite new to driver development though, so I think there might be 
> something I'm not getting. I would be really grateful if anyone could shed 
> some light over what's happening here or give some advice as to what I could 
> be doing wrong.
>
> Best regards,
> Andreea Lutac
>

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