Provided by: libiio-utils_0.26-2_amd64 

NAME
iio_attr - list IIO devices, and read/write device attributes
SYNOPSIS
iio_attr [ options ] -d [device] [attr] [value]
iio_attr [ options ] -c [device] [channel] [attr] [value]
iio_attr [ options ] -D [device] [attr] [value]
iio_attr [ options ] -C [attr]
iio_attr -S <arg>
iio_attr -h
DESCRIPTION
iio_attr is a utility for displaying information about local or remote IIO devices. By providing an
optional value, iio_attr will attempt to write the new value to the attribute.
COMMANDS
The iio_attr utility has a few main options, which control what the main utility of the application is.
-d, --device-attr
Read and Write IIO device attributes
-c --channel-attr
Read and Write IIO channel attributes
-B --buffer-attr
Read and Write IIO Buffer attributes
-C --context-attr
Read and Write IIO Context attributes
-D --debug-attr
Read and Write IIO Debug attributes
-h, --help
Tells iio_attr to display some help, and then quit.
-V, --version
Prints the version information for this particular copy of iio_attr and the version of the libiio
library it is using. This is useful for knowing if the version of the library and iio_attr on your
system are up to date. This is also useful when reporting bugs.
-S, --scan [backends]
Scan for available IIO contexts, optional arg of specific backend(s) 'ip', 'usb' or 'ip:usb'.
Specific options for USB include Vendor ID, Product ID to limit scanning to specific devices
'usb=0456,b673'. vid,pid are hexadecimal numbers (no prefix needed), "*" (match any for pid only)
If no argument is given, it checks all that are available.
OPTIONS
-u, --uri
The Uniform Resource Identifier (uri) for connecting to devices, can be one of:
ip:[address]
network address, either numeric (192.168.0.1) or network hostname
ip: blank, if compiled with zeroconf support, will find an IIO device on network
usb:[device:port:instance]
normally returned from iio_attr -S
serial:[port],[baud],[settings]
which are controlled, and need to match the iiod (or tinyiiod) on the other end of the
serial port.
[port] is something like '/dev/ttyUSB0' on Linux, and 'COM4' on Windows.
[baud] is is normally one of 110, 300, 600, 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, 14400, 19200, 38400,
57600, 115200 [default], 128000 or 256000, but can vary system to system.
[settings]
would normally be configured as '8n1' this is controlled by:
data_bits:
(5, 6, 7, 8 [default], or 9)
parity_bits:
('n' none [default], 'o' odd, 'e' even, 'm' mark, or 's' space)
stop_bits:
(1 [default, or 2)
flow_control:
('0' none [default], 'x' Xon Xoff, 'r' RTSCTS, or 'd' DTRDSR)
local: with no address part.
-i, --input-channel
Filters channels by input channels only
-o, --output-channel
Filters channels by output channels only
-s, --scan-channel
Filters channels by scan channels only
-I, --ignore-case
When pattern matching devices, channels or attributes, ignore case
-g, --generate-code <arg>
Generate small C or python snippets that emulate what you are doing on the command line. Argument
is a file name 'foo.c' or 'foo.py'
RETURN VALUE
If the specified device is not found, a non-zero exit code is returned.
SEE ALSO
iio_attr(1), iio_info(1), iio_readdev(1), iio_reg(1), iio_writedev(1), libiio(3)
libiio home page: https://wiki.analog.com/resources/tools-software/linux-software/libiio
libiio code: https://github.com/analogdevicesinc/libiio
Doxygen for libiio https://analogdevicesinc.github.io/libiio/
BUGS
All bugs are tracked at: https://github.com/analogdevicesinc/libiio/issues
libiio-0.26 27 January 2025 iio_attr(1)