Alessandro Rubini | 022c674 | 2013-06-18 23:47:24 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | FMC Device |
| 2 | ********** |
| 3 | |
| 4 | Within the Linux bus framework, the FMC device is created and |
| 5 | registered by the carrier driver. For example, the PCI driver for the |
| 6 | SPEC card fills a data structure for each SPEC that it drives, and |
| 7 | registers an associated FMC device for each card. The SVEC driver can |
| 8 | do exactly the same for the VME carrier (actually, it should do it |
| 9 | twice, because the SVEC carries two FMC mezzanines). Similarly, an |
| 10 | Etherbone driver will be able to register its own FMC devices, offering |
| 11 | communication primitives through frame exchange. |
| 12 | |
| 13 | The contents of the EEPROM within the FMC are used for identification |
| 14 | purposes, i.e. for matching the device with its own driver. For this |
| 15 | reason the device structure includes a complete copy of the EEPROM |
| 16 | (actually, the carrier driver may choose whether or not to return it - |
| 17 | for example we most likely won't have the whole EEPROM available for |
| 18 | Etherbone devices. |
| 19 | |
| 20 | The following listing shows the current structure defining a device. |
| 21 | Please note that all the machinery is in place but some details may |
| 22 | still change in the future. For this reason, there is a version field |
| 23 | at the beginning of the structure. As usual, the minor number will |
| 24 | change for compatible changes (like a new flag) and the major number |
| 25 | will increase when an incompatible change happens (for example, a |
| 26 | change in layout of some fmc data structures). Device writers should |
| 27 | just set it to the value FMC_VERSION, and be ready to get back -EINVAL |
| 28 | at registration time. |
| 29 | |
| 30 | struct fmc_device { |
| 31 | unsigned long version; |
| 32 | unsigned long flags; |
| 33 | struct module *owner; /* char device must pin it */ |
| 34 | struct fmc_fru_id id; /* for EEPROM-based match */ |
| 35 | struct fmc_operations *op; /* carrier-provided */ |
| 36 | int irq; /* according to host bus. 0 == none */ |
| 37 | int eeprom_len; /* Usually 8kB, may be less */ |
| 38 | int eeprom_addr; /* 0x50, 0x52 etc */ |
| 39 | uint8_t *eeprom; /* Full contents or leading part */ |
| 40 | char *carrier_name; /* "SPEC" or similar, for special use */ |
| 41 | void *carrier_data; /* "struct spec *" or equivalent */ |
| 42 | __iomem void *fpga_base; /* May be NULL (Etherbone) */ |
| 43 | __iomem void *slot_base; /* Set by the driver */ |
| 44 | struct fmc_device **devarray; /* Allocated by the bus */ |
| 45 | int slot_id; /* Index in the slot array */ |
| 46 | int nr_slots; /* Number of slots in this carrier */ |
| 47 | unsigned long memlen; /* Used for the char device */ |
| 48 | struct device dev; /* For Linux use */ |
| 49 | struct device *hwdev; /* The underlying hardware device */ |
| 50 | unsigned long sdbfs_entry; |
| 51 | struct sdb_array *sdb; |
| 52 | uint32_t device_id; /* Filled by the device */ |
| 53 | char *mezzanine_name; /* Defaults to ``fmc'' */ |
| 54 | void *mezzanine_data; |
| 55 | }; |
| 56 | |
| 57 | The meaning of most fields is summarized in the code comment above. |
| 58 | |
| 59 | The following fields must be filled by the carrier driver before |
| 60 | registration: |
| 61 | |
| 62 | * version: must be set to FMC_VERSION. |
| 63 | |
| 64 | * owner: set to MODULE_OWNER. |
| 65 | |
| 66 | * op: the operations to act on the device. |
| 67 | |
| 68 | * irq: number for the mezzanine; may be zero. |
| 69 | |
| 70 | * eeprom_len: length of the following array. |
| 71 | |
| 72 | * eeprom_addr: 0x50 for first mezzanine and so on. |
| 73 | |
| 74 | * eeprom: the full content of the I2C EEPROM. |
| 75 | |
| 76 | * carrier_name. |
| 77 | |
| 78 | * carrier_data: a unique pointer for the carrier. |
| 79 | |
| 80 | * fpga_base: the I/O memory address (may be NULL). |
| 81 | |
| 82 | * slot_id: the index of this slot (starting from zero). |
| 83 | |
| 84 | * memlen: if fpga_base is valid, the length of I/O memory. |
| 85 | |
| 86 | * hwdev: to be used in some dev_err() calls. |
| 87 | |
| 88 | * device_id: a slot-specific unique integer number. |
| 89 | |
| 90 | |
| 91 | Please note that the carrier should read its own EEPROM memory before |
| 92 | registering the device, as well as fill all other fields listed above. |
| 93 | |
| 94 | The following fields should not be assigned, because they are filled |
| 95 | later by either the bus or the device driver: |
| 96 | |
| 97 | * flags. |
| 98 | |
| 99 | * fru_id: filled by the bus, parsing the eeprom. |
| 100 | |
| 101 | * slot_base: filled and used by the driver, if useful to it. |
| 102 | |
| 103 | * devarray: an array og all mezzanines driven by a singe FPGA. |
| 104 | |
| 105 | * nr_slots: set by the core at registration time. |
| 106 | |
| 107 | * dev: used by Linux. |
| 108 | |
| 109 | * sdb: FPGA contents, scanned according to driver's directions. |
| 110 | |
| 111 | * sdbfs_entry: SDB entry point in EEPROM: autodetected. |
| 112 | |
| 113 | * mezzanine_data: available for the driver. |
| 114 | |
| 115 | * mezzanine_name: filled by fmc-bus during identification. |
| 116 | |
| 117 | |
| 118 | Note: mezzanine_data may be redundant, because Linux offers the drvdata |
| 119 | approach, so the field may be removed in later versions of this bus |
| 120 | implementation. |
| 121 | |
| 122 | As I write this, she SPEC carrier is already completely functional in |
| 123 | the fmc-bus environment, and is a good reference to look at. |
| 124 | |
| 125 | |
| 126 | The API Offered by Carriers |
| 127 | =========================== |
| 128 | |
| 129 | The carrier provides a number of methods by means of the |
| 130 | `fmc_operations' structure, which currently is defined like this |
| 131 | (again, it is a moving target, please refer to the header rather than |
| 132 | this document): |
| 133 | |
| 134 | struct fmc_operations { |
| 135 | uint32_t (*readl)(struct fmc_device *fmc, int offset); |
| 136 | void (*writel)(struct fmc_device *fmc, uint32_t value, int offset); |
| 137 | int (*reprogram)(struct fmc_device *f, struct fmc_driver *d, char *gw); |
| 138 | int (*validate)(struct fmc_device *fmc, struct fmc_driver *drv); |
| 139 | int (*irq_request)(struct fmc_device *fmc, irq_handler_t h, |
| 140 | char *name, int flags); |
| 141 | void (*irq_ack)(struct fmc_device *fmc); |
| 142 | int (*irq_free)(struct fmc_device *fmc); |
| 143 | int (*gpio_config)(struct fmc_device *fmc, struct fmc_gpio *gpio, |
| 144 | int ngpio); |
| 145 | int (*read_ee)(struct fmc_device *fmc, int pos, void *d, int l); |
| 146 | int (*write_ee)(struct fmc_device *fmc, int pos, const void *d, int l); |
| 147 | }; |
| 148 | |
| 149 | The individual methods perform the following tasks: |
| 150 | |
| 151 | `readl' |
| 152 | `writel' |
| 153 | These functions access FPGA registers by whatever means the |
| 154 | carrier offers. They are not expected to fail, and most of the time |
| 155 | they will just make a memory access to the host bus. If the |
| 156 | carrier provides a fpga_base pointer, the driver may use direct |
| 157 | access through that pointer. For this reason the header offers the |
| 158 | inline functions fmc_readl and fmc_writel that access fpga_base if |
| 159 | the respective method is NULL. A driver that wants to be portable |
| 160 | and efficient should use fmc_readl and fmc_writel. For Etherbone, |
| 161 | or other non-local carriers, error-management is still to be |
| 162 | defined. |
| 163 | |
| 164 | `validate' |
| 165 | Module parameters are used to manage different applications for |
| 166 | two or more boards of the same kind. Validation is based on the |
| 167 | busid module parameter, if provided, and returns the matching |
| 168 | index in the associated array. See *note Module Parameters:: in in |
| 169 | doubt. If no match is found, `-ENOENT' is returned; if the user |
| 170 | didn't pass `busid=', all devices will pass validation. The value |
| 171 | returned by the validate method can be used as index into other |
| 172 | parameters (for example, some drivers use the `lm32=' parameter in |
| 173 | this way). Such "generic parameters" are documented in *note |
| 174 | Module Parameters::, below. The validate method is used by |
| 175 | `fmc-trivial.ko', described in *note fmc-trivial::. |
| 176 | |
| 177 | `reprogram' |
| 178 | The carrier enumerates FMC devices by loading a standard (or |
| 179 | golden) FPGA binary that allows EEPROM access. Each driver, then, |
| 180 | will need to reprogram the FPGA by calling this function. If the |
| 181 | name argument is NULL, the carrier should reprogram the golden |
| 182 | binary. If the gateware name has been overridden through module |
| 183 | parameters (in a carrier-specific way) the file loaded will match |
| 184 | the parameters. Per-device gateware names can be specified using |
| 185 | the `gateware=' parameter, see *note Module Parameters::. Note: |
| 186 | Clients should call rhe new helper, fmc_reprogram, which both |
| 187 | calls this method and parse the SDB tree of the FPGA. |
| 188 | |
| 189 | `irq_request' |
| 190 | `irq_ack' |
| 191 | `irq_free' |
| 192 | Interrupt management is carrier-specific, so it is abstracted as |
| 193 | operations. The interrupt number is listed in the device |
| 194 | structure, and for the mezzanine driver the number is only |
| 195 | informative. The handler will receive the fmc pointer as dev_id; |
| 196 | the flags argument is passed to the Linux request_irq function, |
| 197 | but fmc-specific flags may be added in the future. You'll most |
| 198 | likely want to pass the `IRQF_SHARED' flag. |
| 199 | |
| 200 | `gpio_config' |
| 201 | The method allows to configure a GPIO pin in the carrier, and read |
| 202 | its current value if it is configured as input. See *note The GPIO |
| 203 | Abstraction:: for details. |
| 204 | |
| 205 | `read_ee' |
| 206 | `write_ee' |
| 207 | Read or write the EEPROM. The functions are expected to be only |
| 208 | called before reprogramming and the carrier should refuse them |
| 209 | with `ENODEV' after reprogramming. The offset is expected to be |
| 210 | within 8kB (the current size), but addresses up to 1MB are |
| 211 | reserved to fit bigger I2C devices in the future. Carriers may |
| 212 | offer access to other internal flash memories using these same |
| 213 | methods: for example the SPEC driver may define that its carrier |
| 214 | I2C memory is seen at offset 1M and the internal SPI flash is seen |
| 215 | at offset 16M. This multiplexing of several flash memories in the |
Masanari Iida | ac20ad1 | 2013-08-20 05:53:49 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 216 | same address space is carrier-specific and should only be used |
Alessandro Rubini | 022c674 | 2013-06-18 23:47:24 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 217 | by a driver that has verified the `carrier_name' field. |
| 218 | |
| 219 | |
| 220 | |
| 221 | The GPIO Abstraction |
| 222 | ==================== |
| 223 | |
| 224 | Support for GPIO pins in the fmc-bus environment is not very |
| 225 | straightforward and deserves special discussion. |
| 226 | |
| 227 | While the general idea of a carrier-independent driver seems to fly, |
| 228 | configuration of specific signals within the carrier needs at least |
| 229 | some knowledge of the carrier itself. For this reason, the specific |
| 230 | driver can request to configure carrier-specific GPIO pins, numbered |
| 231 | from 0 to at most 4095. Configuration is performed by passing a |
| 232 | pointer to an array of struct fmc_gpio items, as well as the length of |
| 233 | the array. This is the data structure: |
| 234 | |
| 235 | struct fmc_gpio { |
| 236 | char *carrier_name; |
| 237 | int gpio; |
| 238 | int _gpio; /* internal use by the carrier */ |
| 239 | int mode; /* GPIOF_DIR_OUT etc, from <linux/gpio.h> */ |
| 240 | int irqmode; /* IRQF_TRIGGER_LOW and so on */ |
| 241 | }; |
| 242 | |
| 243 | By specifying a carrier_name for each pin, the driver may access |
| 244 | different pins in different carriers. The gpio_config method is |
| 245 | expected to return the number of pins successfully configured, ignoring |
| 246 | requests for other carriers. However, if no pin is configured (because |
| 247 | no structure at all refers to the current carrier_name), the operation |
| 248 | returns an error so the caller will know that it is running under a |
| 249 | yet-unsupported carrier. |
| 250 | |
| 251 | So, for example, a driver that has been developed and tested on both |
| 252 | the SPEC and the SVEC may request configuration of two different GPIO |
| 253 | pins, and expect one such configuration to succeed - if none succeeds |
| 254 | it most likely means that the current carrier is a still-unknown one. |
| 255 | |
| 256 | If, however, your GPIO pin has a specific known role, you can pass a |
| 257 | special number in the gpio field, using one of the following macros: |
| 258 | |
| 259 | #define FMC_GPIO_RAW(x) (x) /* 4096 of them */ |
| 260 | #define FMC_GPIO_IRQ(x) ((x) + 0x1000) /* 256 of them */ |
| 261 | #define FMC_GPIO_LED(x) ((x) + 0x1100) /* 256 of them */ |
| 262 | #define FMC_GPIO_KEY(x) ((x) + 0x1200) /* 256 of them */ |
| 263 | #define FMC_GPIO_TP(x) ((x) + 0x1300) /* 256 of them */ |
| 264 | #define FMC_GPIO_USER(x) ((x) + 0x1400) /* 256 of them */ |
| 265 | |
| 266 | Use of virtual GPIO numbers (anything but FMC_GPIO_RAW) is allowed |
| 267 | provided the carrier_name field in the data structure is left |
| 268 | unspecified (NULL). Each carrier is responsible for providing a mapping |
| 269 | between virtual and physical GPIO numbers. The carrier may then use the |
| 270 | _gpio field to cache the result of this mapping. |
| 271 | |
| 272 | All carriers must map their I/O lines to the sets above starting from |
| 273 | zero. The SPEC, for example, maps interrupt pins 0 and 1, and test |
| 274 | points 0 through 3 (even if the test points on the PCB are called |
| 275 | 5,6,7,8). |
| 276 | |
| 277 | If, for example, a driver requires a free LED and a test point (for a |
| 278 | scope probe to be plugged at some point during development) it may ask |
| 279 | for FMC_GPIO_LED(0) and FMC_GPIO_TP(0). Each carrier will provide |
| 280 | suitable GPIO pins. Clearly, the person running the drivers will know |
| 281 | the order used by the specific carrier driver in assigning leds and |
| 282 | testpoints, so to make a carrier-dependent use of the diagnostic tools. |
| 283 | |
| 284 | In theory, some form of autodetection should be possible: a driver like |
| 285 | the wr-nic (which uses IRQ(1) on the SPEC card) should configure |
| 286 | IRQ(0), make a test with software-generated interrupts and configure |
| 287 | IRQ(1) if the test fails. This probing step should be used because even |
| 288 | if the wr-nic gateware is known to use IRQ1 on the SPEC, the driver |
| 289 | should be carrier-independent and thus use IRQ(0) as a first bet - |
| 290 | actually, the knowledge that IRQ0 may fail is carrier-dependent |
| 291 | information, but using it doesn't make the driver unsuitable for other |
| 292 | carriers. |
| 293 | |
| 294 | The return value of gpio_config is defined as follows: |
| 295 | |
| 296 | * If no pin in the array can be used by the carrier, `-ENODEV'. |
| 297 | |
| 298 | * If at least one virtual GPIO number cannot be mapped, `-ENOENT'. |
| 299 | |
| 300 | * On success, 0 or positive. The value returned is the number of |
| 301 | high input bits (if no input is configured, the value for success |
| 302 | is 0). |
| 303 | |
| 304 | While I admit the procedure is not completely straightforward, it |
| 305 | allows configuration, input and output with a single carrier operation. |
| 306 | Given the typical use case of FMC devices, GPIO operations are not |
| 307 | expected to ever by in hot paths, and GPIO access so fare has only been |
| 308 | used to configure the interrupt pin, mode and polarity. Especially |
| 309 | reading inputs is not expected to be common. If your device has GPIO |
| 310 | capabilities in the hot path, you should consider using the kernel's |
| 311 | GPIO mechanisms. |