| This is a summary of the most important conventions for use of fault |
| codes in the I2C/SMBus stack. |
| |
| |
| A "Fault" is not always an "Error" |
| ---------------------------------- |
| Not all fault reports imply errors; "page faults" should be a familiar |
| example. Software often retries idempotent operations after transient |
| faults. There may be fancier recovery schemes that are appropriate in |
| some cases, such as re-initializing (and maybe resetting). After such |
| recovery, triggered by a fault report, there is no error. |
| |
| In a similar way, sometimes a "fault" code just reports one defined |
| result for an operation ... it doesn't indicate that anything is wrong |
| at all, just that the outcome wasn't on the "golden path". |
| |
| In short, your I2C driver code may need to know these codes in order |
| to respond correctly. Other code may need to rely on YOUR code reporting |
| the right fault code, so that it can (in turn) behave correctly. |
| |
| |
| I2C and SMBus fault codes |
| ------------------------- |
| These are returned as negative numbers from most calls, with zero or |
| some positive number indicating a non-fault return. The specific |
| numbers associated with these symbols differ between architectures, |
| though most Linux systems use <asm-generic/errno*.h> numbering. |
| |
| Note that the descriptions here are not exhaustive. There are other |
| codes that may be returned, and other cases where these codes should |
| be returned. However, drivers should not return other codes for these |
| cases (unless the hardware doesn't provide unique fault reports). |
| |
| Also, codes returned by adapter probe methods follow rules which are |
| specific to their host bus (such as PCI, or the platform bus). |
| |
| |
| EAGAIN |
| Returned by I2C adapters when they lose arbitration in master |
| transmit mode: some other master was transmitting different |
| data at the same time. |
| |
| Also returned when trying to invoke an I2C operation in an |
| atomic context, when some task is already using that I2C bus |
| to execute some other operation. |
| |
| EBADMSG |
| Returned by SMBus logic when an invalid Packet Error Code byte |
| is received. This code is a CRC covering all bytes in the |
| transaction, and is sent before the terminating STOP. This |
| fault is only reported on read transactions; the SMBus slave |
| may have a way to report PEC mismatches on writes from the |
| host. Note that even if PECs are in use, you should not rely |
| on these as the only way to detect incorrect data transfers. |
| |
| EBUSY |
| Returned by SMBus adapters when the bus was busy for longer |
| than allowed. This usually indicates some device (maybe the |
| SMBus adapter) needs some fault recovery (such as resetting), |
| or that the reset was attempted but failed. |
| |
| EINVAL |
| This rather vague error means an invalid parameter has been |
| detected before any I/O operation was started. Use a more |
| specific fault code when you can. |
| |
| EIO |
| This rather vague error means something went wrong when |
| performing an I/O operation. Use a more specific fault |
| code when you can. |
| |
| ENODEV |
| Returned by driver probe() methods. This is a bit more |
| specific than ENXIO, implying the problem isn't with the |
| address, but with the device found there. Driver probes |
| may verify the device returns *correct* responses, and |
| return this as appropriate. (The driver core will warn |
| about probe faults other than ENXIO and ENODEV.) |
| |
| ENOMEM |
| Returned by any component that can't allocate memory when |
| it needs to do so. |
| |
| ENXIO |
| Returned by I2C adapters to indicate that the address phase |
| of a transfer didn't get an ACK. While it might just mean |
| an I2C device was temporarily not responding, usually it |
| means there's nothing listening at that address. |
| |
| Returned by driver probe() methods to indicate that they |
| found no device to bind to. (ENODEV may also be used.) |
| |
| EOPNOTSUPP |
| Returned by an adapter when asked to perform an operation |
| that it doesn't, or can't, support. |
| |
| For example, this would be returned when an adapter that |
| doesn't support SMBus block transfers is asked to execute |
| one. In that case, the driver making that request should |
| have verified that functionality was supported before it |
| made that block transfer request. |
| |
| Similarly, if an I2C adapter can't execute all legal I2C |
| messages, it should return this when asked to perform a |
| transaction it can't. (These limitations can't be seen in |
| the adapter's functionality mask, since the assumption is |
| that if an adapter supports I2C it supports all of I2C.) |
| |
| EPROTO |
| Returned when slave does not conform to the relevant I2C |
| or SMBus (or chip-specific) protocol specifications. One |
| case is when the length of an SMBus block data response |
| (from the SMBus slave) is outside the range 1-32 bytes. |
| |
| ETIMEDOUT |
| This is returned by drivers when an operation took too much |
| time, and was aborted before it completed. |
| |
| SMBus adapters may return it when an operation took more |
| time than allowed by the SMBus specification; for example, |
| when a slave stretches clocks too far. I2C has no such |
| timeouts, but it's normal for I2C adapters to impose some |
| arbitrary limits (much longer than SMBus!) too. |
| |