PINOUT(1) | gpiozero | PINOUT(1) |
pinout - GPIO Zero pinout tool
A utility for querying GPIO pin-out information.
pinout [-h] [-r REVISION] [-c] [-m] [-x]
A utility for querying Raspberry Pi GPIO pin-out information. Running pinout on its own will output a board diagram, and GPIO header diagram for the current Raspberry Pi. It is also possible to manually specify a revision of Pi, or (by Configuring Remote GPIO) to output information about a remote Pi.
To output information about the current Raspberry Pi:
$ pinout
For a Raspberry Pi model 3B, this will output something like the following:
Description : Raspberry Pi 3B rev 1.2 Revision : a02082 SoC : BCM2837 RAM : 1GB Storage : MicroSD USB ports : 4 (of which 0 USB3) Ethernet ports : 1 (100Mbps max. speed) Wi-fi : True Bluetooth : True Camera ports (CSI) : 1 Display ports (DSI): 1 ,--------------------------------. | oooooooooooooooooooo J8 +==== | 1ooooooooooooooooooo | USB | +==== | Pi Model 3B V1.2 | | |D +---+ +==== | |S |SoC| | USB | |I +---+ +==== | |0 C| | | S| +====== | I| |A| | Net | pwr |HDMI| 0| |u| +====== `-| |------| |-----|x|--------' J8: 3V3 (1) (2) 5V GPIO2 (3) (4) 5V GPIO3 (5) (6) GND GPIO4 (7) (8) GPIO14 GND (9) (10) GPIO15 GPIO17 (11) (12) GPIO18 GPIO27 (13) (14) GND GPIO22 (15) (16) GPIO23 3V3 (17) (18) GPIO24 GPIO10 (19) (20) GND GPIO9 (21) (22) GPIO25 GPIO11 (23) (24) GPIO8 GND (25) (26) GPIO7 GPIO0 (27) (28) GPIO1 GPIO5 (29) (30) GND GPIO6 (31) (32) GPIO12 GPIO13 (33) (34) GND GPIO19 (35) (36) GPIO16 GPIO26 (37) (38) GPIO20 GND (39) (40) GPIO21 For further information, please refer to https://pinout.xyz/
By default, if stdout is a console that supports color, ANSI codes will be used to produce color output. Output can be forced to be --monochrome:
$ pinout --monochrome
Or forced to be --color, in case you are redirecting to something capable of supporting ANSI codes:
$ pinout --color | less -SR
To manually specify the revision of Pi you want to query, use --revision. The tool understands both old-style revision codes <https://www.raspberrypi.com/documentation/computers/raspberry-pi.html#raspberry-pi-revision-codes> (such as for the model B):
$ pinout -r 000d
Or new-style revision codes <https://www.raspberrypi.com/documentation/computers/raspberry-pi.html#raspberry-pi-revision-codes> (such as for the Pi Zero W):
$ pinout -r 9000c1
You can also use the tool with Configuring Remote GPIO to query remote Raspberry Pi's:
$ GPIOZERO_PIN_FACTORY=pigpio PIGPIO_ADDR=other_pi pinout
Or run the tool directly on a PC using the mock pin implementation (although in this case you'll almost certainly want to specify the Pi revision manually):
$ GPIOZERO_PIN_FACTORY=mock pinout -r a22042
pintest(1), remote-gpio(7), gpiozero-env(7)
Ben Nuttall
2015-2024 Ben Nuttall
February 15, 2024 | 2.0.1 |