Rafael J. Wysocki | bd85626 | 2017-02-20 15:28:13 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | .. |struct dev_pm_domain| replace:: :c:type:`struct dev_pm_domain <dev_pm_domain>` |
| 2 | .. |struct generic_pm_domain| replace:: :c:type:`struct generic_pm_domain <generic_pm_domain>` |
| 3 | |
Lukas Wunner | aad80040 | 2016-12-04 13:10:04 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 4 | ============ |
| 5 | Device links |
| 6 | ============ |
| 7 | |
| 8 | By default, the driver core only enforces dependencies between devices |
| 9 | that are borne out of a parent/child relationship within the device |
| 10 | hierarchy: When suspending, resuming or shutting down the system, devices |
| 11 | are ordered based on this relationship, i.e. children are always suspended |
| 12 | before their parent, and the parent is always resumed before its children. |
| 13 | |
| 14 | Sometimes there is a need to represent device dependencies beyond the |
| 15 | mere parent/child relationship, e.g. between siblings, and have the |
| 16 | driver core automatically take care of them. |
| 17 | |
| 18 | Secondly, the driver core by default does not enforce any driver presence |
| 19 | dependencies, i.e. that one device must be bound to a driver before |
| 20 | another one can probe or function correctly. |
| 21 | |
| 22 | Often these two dependency types come together, so a device depends on |
| 23 | another one both with regards to driver presence *and* with regards to |
| 24 | suspend/resume and shutdown ordering. |
| 25 | |
| 26 | Device links allow representation of such dependencies in the driver core. |
| 27 | |
| 28 | In its standard form, a device link combines *both* dependency types: |
| 29 | It guarantees correct suspend/resume and shutdown ordering between a |
| 30 | "supplier" device and its "consumer" devices, and it guarantees driver |
| 31 | presence on the supplier. The consumer devices are not probed before the |
| 32 | supplier is bound to a driver, and they're unbound before the supplier |
| 33 | is unbound. |
| 34 | |
| 35 | When driver presence on the supplier is irrelevant and only correct |
| 36 | suspend/resume and shutdown ordering is needed, the device link may |
| 37 | simply be set up with the ``DL_FLAG_STATELESS`` flag. In other words, |
| 38 | enforcing driver presence on the supplier is optional. |
| 39 | |
| 40 | Another optional feature is runtime PM integration: By setting the |
| 41 | ``DL_FLAG_PM_RUNTIME`` flag on addition of the device link, the PM core |
| 42 | is instructed to runtime resume the supplier and keep it active |
| 43 | whenever and for as long as the consumer is runtime resumed. |
| 44 | |
| 45 | Usage |
| 46 | ===== |
| 47 | |
| 48 | The earliest point in time when device links can be added is after |
| 49 | :c:func:`device_add()` has been called for the supplier and |
| 50 | :c:func:`device_initialize()` has been called for the consumer. |
| 51 | |
| 52 | It is legal to add them later, but care must be taken that the system |
| 53 | remains in a consistent state: E.g. a device link cannot be added in |
| 54 | the midst of a suspend/resume transition, so either commencement of |
| 55 | such a transition needs to be prevented with :c:func:`lock_system_sleep()`, |
| 56 | or the device link needs to be added from a function which is guaranteed |
| 57 | not to run in parallel to a suspend/resume transition, such as from a |
| 58 | device ``->probe`` callback or a boot-time PCI quirk. |
| 59 | |
| 60 | Another example for an inconsistent state would be a device link that |
| 61 | represents a driver presence dependency, yet is added from the consumer's |
| 62 | ``->probe`` callback while the supplier hasn't probed yet: Had the driver |
| 63 | core known about the device link earlier, it wouldn't have probed the |
| 64 | consumer in the first place. The onus is thus on the consumer to check |
| 65 | presence of the supplier after adding the link, and defer probing on |
| 66 | non-presence. |
| 67 | |
| 68 | If a device link is added in the ``->probe`` callback of the supplier or |
| 69 | consumer driver, it is typically deleted in its ``->remove`` callback for |
| 70 | symmetry. That way, if the driver is compiled as a module, the device |
| 71 | link is added on module load and orderly deleted on unload. The same |
| 72 | restrictions that apply to device link addition (e.g. exclusion of a |
| 73 | parallel suspend/resume transition) apply equally to deletion. |
| 74 | |
| 75 | Several flags may be specified on device link addition, two of which |
| 76 | have already been mentioned above: ``DL_FLAG_STATELESS`` to express that no |
| 77 | driver presence dependency is needed (but only correct suspend/resume and |
| 78 | shutdown ordering) and ``DL_FLAG_PM_RUNTIME`` to express that runtime PM |
| 79 | integration is desired. |
| 80 | |
| 81 | Two other flags are specifically targeted at use cases where the device |
| 82 | link is added from the consumer's ``->probe`` callback: ``DL_FLAG_RPM_ACTIVE`` |
| 83 | can be specified to runtime resume the supplier upon addition of the |
| 84 | device link. ``DL_FLAG_AUTOREMOVE`` causes the device link to be automatically |
| 85 | purged when the consumer fails to probe or later unbinds. This obviates |
| 86 | the need to explicitly delete the link in the ``->remove`` callback or in |
| 87 | the error path of the ``->probe`` callback. |
| 88 | |
| 89 | Limitations |
| 90 | =========== |
| 91 | |
| 92 | Driver authors should be aware that a driver presence dependency (i.e. when |
| 93 | ``DL_FLAG_STATELESS`` is not specified on link addition) may cause probing of |
| 94 | the consumer to be deferred indefinitely. This can become a problem if the |
| 95 | consumer is required to probe before a certain initcall level is reached. |
| 96 | Worse, if the supplier driver is blacklisted or missing, the consumer will |
| 97 | never be probed. |
| 98 | |
| 99 | Sometimes drivers depend on optional resources. They are able to operate |
| 100 | in a degraded mode (reduced feature set or performance) when those resources |
| 101 | are not present. An example is an SPI controller that can use a DMA engine |
| 102 | or work in PIO mode. The controller can determine presence of the optional |
| 103 | resources at probe time but on non-presence there is no way to know whether |
| 104 | they will become available in the near future (due to a supplier driver |
| 105 | probing) or never. Consequently it cannot be determined whether to defer |
| 106 | probing or not. It would be possible to notify drivers when optional |
| 107 | resources become available after probing, but it would come at a high cost |
| 108 | for drivers as switching between modes of operation at runtime based on the |
| 109 | availability of such resources would be much more complex than a mechanism |
| 110 | based on probe deferral. In any case optional resources are beyond the |
| 111 | scope of device links. |
| 112 | |
| 113 | Examples |
| 114 | ======== |
| 115 | |
| 116 | * An MMU device exists alongside a busmaster device, both are in the same |
| 117 | power domain. The MMU implements DMA address translation for the busmaster |
| 118 | device and shall be runtime resumed and kept active whenever and as long |
| 119 | as the busmaster device is active. The busmaster device's driver shall |
| 120 | not bind before the MMU is bound. To achieve this, a device link with |
| 121 | runtime PM integration is added from the busmaster device (consumer) |
| 122 | to the MMU device (supplier). The effect with regards to runtime PM |
| 123 | is the same as if the MMU was the parent of the master device. |
| 124 | |
| 125 | The fact that both devices share the same power domain would normally |
Rafael J. Wysocki | bd85626 | 2017-02-20 15:28:13 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 126 | suggest usage of a |struct dev_pm_domain| or |struct generic_pm_domain|, |
| 127 | however these are not independent devices that happen to share a power |
| 128 | switch, but rather the MMU device serves the busmaster device and is |
| 129 | useless without it. A device link creates a synthetic hierarchical |
| 130 | relationship between the devices and is thus more apt. |
Lukas Wunner | aad80040 | 2016-12-04 13:10:04 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 131 | |
| 132 | * A Thunderbolt host controller comprises a number of PCIe hotplug ports |
| 133 | and an NHI device to manage the PCIe switch. On resume from system sleep, |
| 134 | the NHI device needs to re-establish PCI tunnels to attached devices |
| 135 | before the hotplug ports can resume. If the hotplug ports were children |
| 136 | of the NHI, this resume order would automatically be enforced by the |
| 137 | PM core, but unfortunately they're aunts. The solution is to add |
| 138 | device links from the hotplug ports (consumers) to the NHI device |
| 139 | (supplier). A driver presence dependency is not necessary for this |
| 140 | use case. |
| 141 | |
| 142 | * Discrete GPUs in hybrid graphics laptops often feature an HDA controller |
| 143 | for HDMI/DP audio. In the device hierarchy the HDA controller is a sibling |
| 144 | of the VGA device, yet both share the same power domain and the HDA |
| 145 | controller is only ever needed when an HDMI/DP display is attached to the |
| 146 | VGA device. A device link from the HDA controller (consumer) to the |
| 147 | VGA device (supplier) aptly represents this relationship. |
| 148 | |
| 149 | * ACPI allows definition of a device start order by way of _DEP objects. |
| 150 | A classical example is when ACPI power management methods on one device |
| 151 | are implemented in terms of I\ :sup:`2`\ C accesses and require a specific |
| 152 | I\ :sup:`2`\ C controller to be present and functional for the power |
| 153 | management of the device in question to work. |
| 154 | |
| 155 | * In some SoCs a functional dependency exists from display, video codec and |
| 156 | video processing IP cores on transparent memory access IP cores that handle |
| 157 | burst access and compression/decompression. |
| 158 | |
| 159 | Alternatives |
| 160 | ============ |
| 161 | |
Rafael J. Wysocki | bd85626 | 2017-02-20 15:28:13 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 162 | * A |struct dev_pm_domain| can be used to override the bus, |
Lukas Wunner | aad80040 | 2016-12-04 13:10:04 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 163 | class or device type callbacks. It is intended for devices sharing |
| 164 | a single on/off switch, however it does not guarantee a specific |
| 165 | suspend/resume ordering, this needs to be implemented separately. |
| 166 | It also does not by itself track the runtime PM status of the involved |
| 167 | devices and turn off the power switch only when all of them are runtime |
| 168 | suspended. Furthermore it cannot be used to enforce a specific shutdown |
| 169 | ordering or a driver presence dependency. |
| 170 | |
Rafael J. Wysocki | bd85626 | 2017-02-20 15:28:13 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 171 | * A |struct generic_pm_domain| is a lot more heavyweight than a |
Lukas Wunner | aad80040 | 2016-12-04 13:10:04 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 172 | device link and does not allow for shutdown ordering or driver presence |
| 173 | dependencies. It also cannot be used on ACPI systems. |
| 174 | |
| 175 | Implementation |
| 176 | ============== |
| 177 | |
| 178 | The device hierarchy, which -- as the name implies -- is a tree, |
| 179 | becomes a directed acyclic graph once device links are added. |
| 180 | |
| 181 | Ordering of these devices during suspend/resume is determined by the |
| 182 | dpm_list. During shutdown it is determined by the devices_kset. With |
| 183 | no device links present, the two lists are a flattened, one-dimensional |
| 184 | representations of the device tree such that a device is placed behind |
| 185 | all its ancestors. That is achieved by traversing the ACPI namespace |
| 186 | or OpenFirmware device tree top-down and appending devices to the lists |
| 187 | as they are discovered. |
| 188 | |
| 189 | Once device links are added, the lists need to satisfy the additional |
| 190 | constraint that a device is placed behind all its suppliers, recursively. |
| 191 | To ensure this, upon addition of the device link the consumer and the |
| 192 | entire sub-graph below it (all children and consumers of the consumer) |
| 193 | are moved to the end of the list. (Call to :c:func:`device_reorder_to_tail()` |
| 194 | from :c:func:`device_link_add()`.) |
| 195 | |
| 196 | To prevent introduction of dependency loops into the graph, it is |
| 197 | verified upon device link addition that the supplier is not dependent |
| 198 | on the consumer or any children or consumers of the consumer. |
| 199 | (Call to :c:func:`device_is_dependent()` from :c:func:`device_link_add()`.) |
| 200 | If that constraint is violated, :c:func:`device_link_add()` will return |
| 201 | ``NULL`` and a ``WARNING`` will be logged. |
| 202 | |
| 203 | Notably this also prevents the addition of a device link from a parent |
| 204 | device to a child. However the converse is allowed, i.e. a device link |
| 205 | from a child to a parent. Since the driver core already guarantees |
| 206 | correct suspend/resume and shutdown ordering between parent and child, |
| 207 | such a device link only makes sense if a driver presence dependency is |
| 208 | needed on top of that. In this case driver authors should weigh |
| 209 | carefully if a device link is at all the right tool for the purpose. |
| 210 | A more suitable approach might be to simply use deferred probing or |
| 211 | add a device flag causing the parent driver to be probed before the |
| 212 | child one. |
| 213 | |
| 214 | State machine |
| 215 | ============= |
| 216 | |
| 217 | .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/device.h |
| 218 | :functions: device_link_state |
| 219 | |
| 220 | :: |
| 221 | |
| 222 | .=============================. |
| 223 | | | |
| 224 | v | |
| 225 | DORMANT <=> AVAILABLE <=> CONSUMER_PROBE => ACTIVE |
| 226 | ^ | |
| 227 | | | |
| 228 | '============ SUPPLIER_UNBIND <============' |
| 229 | |
| 230 | * The initial state of a device link is automatically determined by |
| 231 | :c:func:`device_link_add()` based on the driver presence on the supplier |
| 232 | and consumer. If the link is created before any devices are probed, it |
| 233 | is set to ``DL_STATE_DORMANT``. |
| 234 | |
| 235 | * When a supplier device is bound to a driver, links to its consumers |
| 236 | progress to ``DL_STATE_AVAILABLE``. |
| 237 | (Call to :c:func:`device_links_driver_bound()` from |
| 238 | :c:func:`driver_bound()`.) |
| 239 | |
| 240 | * Before a consumer device is probed, presence of supplier drivers is |
| 241 | verified by checking that links to suppliers are in ``DL_STATE_AVAILABLE`` |
| 242 | state. The state of the links is updated to ``DL_STATE_CONSUMER_PROBE``. |
| 243 | (Call to :c:func:`device_links_check_suppliers()` from |
| 244 | :c:func:`really_probe()`.) |
| 245 | This prevents the supplier from unbinding. |
| 246 | (Call to :c:func:`wait_for_device_probe()` from |
| 247 | :c:func:`device_links_unbind_consumers()`.) |
| 248 | |
| 249 | * If the probe fails, links to suppliers revert back to ``DL_STATE_AVAILABLE``. |
| 250 | (Call to :c:func:`device_links_no_driver()` from :c:func:`really_probe()`.) |
| 251 | |
| 252 | * If the probe succeeds, links to suppliers progress to ``DL_STATE_ACTIVE``. |
| 253 | (Call to :c:func:`device_links_driver_bound()` from :c:func:`driver_bound()`.) |
| 254 | |
| 255 | * When the consumer's driver is later on removed, links to suppliers revert |
| 256 | back to ``DL_STATE_AVAILABLE``. |
| 257 | (Call to :c:func:`__device_links_no_driver()` from |
| 258 | :c:func:`device_links_driver_cleanup()`, which in turn is called from |
| 259 | :c:func:`__device_release_driver()`.) |
| 260 | |
| 261 | * Before a supplier's driver is removed, links to consumers that are not |
| 262 | bound to a driver are updated to ``DL_STATE_SUPPLIER_UNBIND``. |
| 263 | (Call to :c:func:`device_links_busy()` from |
| 264 | :c:func:`__device_release_driver()`.) |
| 265 | This prevents the consumers from binding. |
| 266 | (Call to :c:func:`device_links_check_suppliers()` from |
| 267 | :c:func:`really_probe()`.) |
| 268 | Consumers that are bound are freed from their driver; consumers that are |
| 269 | probing are waited for until they are done. |
| 270 | (Call to :c:func:`device_links_unbind_consumers()` from |
| 271 | :c:func:`__device_release_driver()`.) |
| 272 | Once all links to consumers are in ``DL_STATE_SUPPLIER_UNBIND`` state, |
| 273 | the supplier driver is released and the links revert to ``DL_STATE_DORMANT``. |
| 274 | (Call to :c:func:`device_links_driver_cleanup()` from |
| 275 | :c:func:`__device_release_driver()`.) |
| 276 | |
| 277 | API |
| 278 | === |
| 279 | |
| 280 | .. kernel-doc:: drivers/base/core.c |
| 281 | :functions: device_link_add device_link_del |