September-18th-2020, 07:13 AM
(This post was last modified: September-18th-2020, 07:13 AM by Armin@netPI.)
Ah, now I understand your question.
If you look to this thread here https://forum.hilscher.com/thread-253.html you find the schematics of netPI.
On sheet 4 of this document you find a chip named "PCF8563". This is the realtime clock chip. It is connected to I2C-1 bus of netPI. Also you find printed the I2C address of this chip which is "1010001'b7". So all you need to do is to program this chip over I2C as we do it on netPI with netPI OS.
Find appended the data sheet of this chip.
PCF8563.pdf (Size: 483.84 KB / Downloads: 2)
If you look to this thread here https://forum.hilscher.com/thread-253.html you find the schematics of netPI.
On sheet 4 of this document you find a chip named "PCF8563". This is the realtime clock chip. It is connected to I2C-1 bus of netPI. Also you find printed the I2C address of this chip which is "1010001'b7". So all you need to do is to program this chip over I2C as we do it on netPI with netPI OS.
Find appended the data sheet of this chip.
PCF8563.pdf (Size: 483.84 KB / Downloads: 2)
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