Addresses confusion: I2C manager component install only when others need I2C too.

See #115
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Rop Gonggrijp 2021-10-15 15:38:16 +02:00
parent 83eba9b04c
commit db3d00e374

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@ -8,9 +8,11 @@
### I2C Manager support
`lvgl_esp32_drivers` integrates [I2C Manager](https://github.com/ropg/i2c_manager), which is used in case you select a touch sensor or screen that uses the I2C bus. If you're just using LVGL you don't need to do anything special.
`lvgl_esp32_drivers` integrates [I2C Manager](https://github.com/ropg/i2c_manager), which is used in case you select a touch sensor or screen that uses the I2C bus.
I2C Manager can help if you are in a situation where you want to avoid "bus conflicts" on the I2C bus. Suppose you use LVGL with a touch sensor that uses I2C, and your device also has another I2C device that needs to be read frequently, such as a 3D-accelerometer. ESP-IDF is not inherently "thread-safe". So if you read that from another task than the one LVGL uses to read the touch data, you need some kind of mechanism to keep these communications from interfering.
I2C Manager is also available as a separate ESP-IDF component and can help if you are in a situation where you want to avoid "bus conflicts" on the I2C bus. **If in your application nothing outside of LVGL needs to talk to the I2C bus, you can stop reading here.**
Suppose you use LVGL with a touch sensor that uses I2C, and your device also has another I2C device that needs to be read frequently, such as a 3D-accelerometer. ESP-IDF is not inherently "thread-safe". So if you read that from another task than the one LVGL uses to read the touch data, you need some kind of mechanism to keep these communications from interfering.
If you have (or write) a driver for that 3D-accelerometer that can use I2C Manager (or the I2C HAL and i2cdev abstraction layers that I2C Manager is compatible with) then put I2C Manager in your components directory by cloning the repository from below and in your main program do: