| Crates.io | iqs7211e |
| lib.rs | iqs7211e |
| version | 0.1.2 |
| created_at | 2025-07-29 16:34:28.191628+00 |
| updated_at | 2025-10-04 07:20:15.871707+00 |
| description | Async I2C driver for the Azoteq IQS7211E capacitive touch and gesture controller |
| homepage | https://github.com/dempfi/iqs7211e |
| repository | https://github.com/dempfi/iqs7211e |
| max_upload_size | |
| id | 1772522 |
| size | 4,791,186 |
iqs7211e is a no_std async driver for the [Azoteq IQS7211E]
capacitive touch and gesture controller. It provides a strongly-typed API
for configuring the sensor over I²C, plus an awaited event API that yields
gestures and one/two-finger snapshots.
embedded-hal and embedded-hal-async 1.01.0Add the crate to your Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
iqs7211e = "0.1.2"
Then initialise the device with an async I²C peripheral and a ready (RDY)
GPIO implementing embedded_hal_async::digital::Wait.
use embedded_hal_async::digital::Wait;
use embedded_hal_async::i2c::I2c;
use iqs7211e::{Config, Iqs7211e, Pinout, Pin};
async fn bring_up<I2C, RDY, E>(i2c: I2C, rdy: RDY) -> Result<Iqs7211e<I2C, RDY>, iqs7211e::Error<E>>
where
I2C: I2c<embedded_hal_async::i2c::SevenBitAddress, Error = E>,
RDY: Wait,
{
let pinout = Pinout::new(
[Pin::RxTx0, Pin::RxTx2, Pin::RxTx4],
[Pin::Tx8, Pin::Tx9],
[Pin::RxTx0],
[Pin::Tx8],
);
let config = Config::default().with_pinout(pinout);
let mut controller = Iqs7211e::new(i2c, rdy, config);
_ = controller.initialize().await?;
Ok(controller)
}
Refer to the API documentation for the full listing of types and helpers.
Use Iqs7211e::next_event() to await gestures, single-touch, or multi-touch updates.
See runnable examples in examples/.
no_std targetsWhen replicating the "Basic Setup" procedure from Azoteq's reference documentation you can let the crate act as a runtime setup assistant.
use embedded_hal_async::digital::Wait;
use embedded_hal_async::i2c::I2c;
use iqs7211e::{Config, Iqs7211e, SetupSnapshot};
async fn tune<I2C, RDY, E>(i2c: I2C, rdy: RDY) -> Result<(), iqs7211e::Error<E>>
where
I2C: I2c<embedded_hal_async::i2c::SevenBitAddress, Error = E>,
RDY: Wait,
{
let config = Config::default(); // set your pin layout, thresholds, etc. before the session starts
let mut controller = Iqs7211e::new(i2c, rdy, config);
let mut session = controller.begin_setup();
session.initialize().await?; // mirrors the GUI "Start streaming" + "Write changes"
session.enter_manual_control().await?; // enables manual control and forces LP1 charge mode
let snapshot: SetupSnapshot = session.snapshot().await?;
let channels = snapshot.rx_count * snapshot.tx_count;
let deltas = &snapshot.trackpad_deltas[..channels];
let bases = &snapshot.trackpad_base_targets[..channels];
// Present the counters however you prefer (defmt logging, rtt, serial, ...)
// e.g. `defmt::info!("{:?}", bases);`
session.finish().await?; // leaves stream/manual modes in a clean state
// Apply the captured values to `controller.config`, then run `initialize()` again
// or bake them into your production configuration.
Ok(())
}
The SetupSnapshot structure exposes the live counters typically recorded
during bring-up:
info mirrors the GUI indicator block (charge mode, ATI status, etc.)trackpad_deltas and trackpad_base_targets read back addresses 0xE200
and 0xE100 flattened to rx_count * tx_count entriesrx_count / tx_count help you reshape the flattened arrays into your
physical matrix layoutalp_* fields expose the ALP channel counts and compensation valuesYou can capture multiple snapshots while manual control is active (for example after tweaking thresholds) and feed the numbers into your own logging or GUI.
The Azoteq documentation splits tuning into intermediate and advanced passes that refine ATI, thresholds, and power behaviour. The driver mirrors those steps so you can script the process instead of relying on the GUI.
For the notes below let channels = snapshot.rx_count * snapshot.tx_count.
Rx/Tx sanity checks – While manual control is enabled, lightly touch the
corners and inspect snapshot.info.tp_movement together with
&snapshot.trackpad_deltas[..channels]. If the active channels do not match the board layout,
revise the pinout configuration and rerun initialize().
ATI iteration – Use snapshot.trackpad_base_targets to determine the
base-target counts (doc section 4.2). Adjust the trackpad ATI settings via
config.auto_tune.tune (adjust target, coarse_divider, coarse_multiplier,
fine_divider) until the reported counts align with the lookup table. After updating
the config values, call initialize() again to write them back and trigger a fresh ATI.
Compensation window – The alp_comp_* fields in the snapshot reflect the compensation
values. Keep them near the centre of the valid range (typically ~512). If the
snapshot shows values drifting to 0 or 1023, adjust
config.auto_tune.tune.compensation_divider and repeat the ATI step.
Threshold tuning – Record the per-channel deltas while pressing the
corners (&snapshot.trackpad_deltas[..channels]) and compute the touch thresholds suggested in
doc section 4.3. Apply the resulting multiplier to
config.channel_output.touch (set/clear multipliers) and reinitialise.
Mode timing – Once the touch performance is acceptable, restore event
mode via SetupSession::finish(), then update the report-rate and timeout
fields in config.timing before the final initialize(). The defaults match
the reference design, but you can tailor them to your power budget by following
section 5 of the guide.
Repeat the capture → adjust → initialise loop until the recorded values match your targets. Because the configuration structure lives in memory, you can serialise it (e.g. JSON, TOML, or Rust constants) once the tuning is complete and feed the same values into production firmware.