VoodooI2C is a project consisting of macOS kernel extensions that add support for I2C bus devices. The project is split into two main components: the core extension and various other satellite extensions.
The core is the VoodooI2C.kext
kernel extension. This kext is intended to be installed by anyone whose computer requires some form of I2C support. It consists of I2C controller drivers and is responsible for publishing device nubs to the IOService plane.
The satellites are a collection of various kernel extensions that implement support for a specific type of I2C device. An example of a satellite kext is VoodooI2CHID.kext
which adds support for I2C-HID devices. Usually a user will install one satellite kext per class of I2C device.
The following Intel I2C controllers are fully supported:
INT33C2
andINT33C3
- Haswell eraINT3432
andINT3433
- Broadwell erapci8086,9d60
,pci8086,9d61
,pci8086,9d62
andpci8086,9d63
- Skylake erapci8086,a160
andpci8086,a161
- Kaby Lake erapci8086,9de8
andpci8086,9de9
- Cannon Lake/Whiskey Lake erapci8086,a368
,pci8086,a369
,pci8086,a36a
andpci8086,a36b
- Coffee Lake erapci8086,2e8
andpci8086,2e9
- Comet Lake era
The following device classes are fully supported:
- I2C-HID devices
- ELAN devices
- FTE devices
Note that there is sometimes an overlap between device classes. For example, some ELAN devices may also be I2C-HID devices.
The latest version is and can be downloaded on the release page.
Please check the compatibility page on the VoodooI2C wiki to find out if your device is compatible. If it is not on the list but you still suspect VoodooI2C may work for you, contact us on our Gitter page.
Please visit the documentation site for further information how to install and troubleshoot VoodooI2C.
This program is protected by the GPL license. Please refer to the LICENSE.txt
file for more information
We are looking for competent C++, OS X kernel, Linux kernel, I2C, HID etc developers to help improve this project! Here are the guidelines for contributing:
- Fork this repository and clone to your local machine
- Create a new feature branch and add commits
- Push your feature branch to your fork
- Submit a pull request upstream