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Peter Meerwald authored
Integration time is in seconds; it controls the measurement time and influences the gain of a sensor. There are two typical ways that scaling is implemented in a device: 1) input amplifier, 2) reference to the ADC is changed. These both result in the accuracy of the ADC varying (by applying its sampling over a more relevant range). Integration time is a way of dealing with noise inherent in the analog sensor itself. In the case of a light sensor, a mixture of photon noise and device specific noise. Photon noise is dealt with by either improving the efficiency of the sensor, (more photons actually captured) which is not easily varied dynamically, or by integrating the measurement over a longer time period. Note that this can also be thought of as an averaging of a number of individual samples and is infact sometimes implemented this way. Altering integration time implies that the duration of a measurement changes, a fact the device's user may be interested in. Hence it makes sense to distinguish between integration time and simple scale. In some devices both types of control are present and whilst they will have similar effects on the amplitude of the reading, their effect on the noise of the measurements will differ considerably. Used by adjd_s311, tsl4531, tcs3472 The following drivers have similar controls (and could be adapted): * tsl2563 (integration time is controlled via CALIBSCALE among other things) * tsl2583 (has integration_time device_attr, but driver doesn't use channels yet) * tsl2x7x (has integration_time attr) Signed-off-by: Peter Meerwald <pmeerw@pmeerw.net> Cc: Jon Brenner <jon.brenner@ams.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
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