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Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001/*
2 * transport_class.c - implementation of generic transport classes
3 * using attribute_containers
4 *
5 * Copyright (c) 2005 - James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@steeleye.com>
6 *
7 * This file is licensed under GPLv2
8 *
9 * The basic idea here is to allow any "device controller" (which
James Bottomleyebd8bb72005-08-15 16:13:19 -050010 * would most often be a Host Bus Adapter to use the services of one
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070011 * or more tranport classes for performing transport specific
12 * services. Transport specific services are things that the generic
13 * command layer doesn't want to know about (speed settings, line
14 * condidtioning, etc), but which the user might be interested in.
15 * Thus, the HBA's use the routines exported by the transport classes
16 * to perform these functions. The transport classes export certain
17 * values to the user via sysfs using attribute containers.
18 *
19 * Note: because not every HBA will care about every transport
20 * attribute, there's a many to one relationship that goes like this:
21 *
22 * transport class<-----attribute container<----class device
23 *
24 * Usually the attribute container is per-HBA, but the design doesn't
25 * mandate that. Although most of the services will be specific to
26 * the actual external storage connection used by the HBA, the generic
27 * transport class is framed entirely in terms of generic devices to
28 * allow it to be used by any physical HBA in the system.
29 */
30#include <linux/attribute_container.h>
31#include <linux/transport_class.h>
32
33/**
34 * transport_class_register - register an initial transport class
35 *
36 * @tclass: a pointer to the transport class structure to be initialised
37 *
38 * The transport class contains an embedded class which is used to
39 * identify it. The caller should initialise this structure with
40 * zeros and then generic class must have been initialised with the
41 * actual transport class unique name. There's a macro
42 * DECLARE_TRANSPORT_CLASS() to do this (declared classes still must
43 * be registered).
44 *
45 * Returns 0 on success or error on failure.
46 */
47int transport_class_register(struct transport_class *tclass)
48{
49 return class_register(&tclass->class);
50}
51EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(transport_class_register);
52
53/**
54 * transport_class_unregister - unregister a previously registered class
55 *
56 * @tclass: The transport class to unregister
57 *
58 * Must be called prior to deallocating the memory for the transport
59 * class.
60 */
61void transport_class_unregister(struct transport_class *tclass)
62{
63 class_unregister(&tclass->class);
64}
65EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(transport_class_unregister);
66
James Bottomleyd0a7e572005-08-14 17:09:01 -050067static int anon_transport_dummy_function(struct transport_container *tc,
68 struct device *dev,
69 struct class_device *cdev)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070070{
71 /* do nothing */
72 return 0;
73}
74
75/**
76 * anon_transport_class_register - register an anonymous class
77 *
78 * @atc: The anon transport class to register
79 *
80 * The anonymous transport class contains both a transport class and a
81 * container. The idea of an anonymous class is that it never
82 * actually has any device attributes associated with it (and thus
83 * saves on container storage). So it can only be used for triggering
84 * events. Use prezero and then use DECLARE_ANON_TRANSPORT_CLASS() to
85 * initialise the anon transport class storage.
86 */
87int anon_transport_class_register(struct anon_transport_class *atc)
88{
89 int error;
90 atc->container.class = &atc->tclass.class;
91 attribute_container_set_no_classdevs(&atc->container);
92 error = attribute_container_register(&atc->container);
93 if (error)
94 return error;
95 atc->tclass.setup = anon_transport_dummy_function;
96 atc->tclass.remove = anon_transport_dummy_function;
97 return 0;
98}
99EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(anon_transport_class_register);
100
101/**
102 * anon_transport_class_unregister - unregister an anon class
103 *
104 * @atc: Pointer to the anon transport class to unregister
105 *
106 * Must be called prior to deallocating the memory for the anon
107 * transport class.
108 */
109void anon_transport_class_unregister(struct anon_transport_class *atc)
110{
111 attribute_container_unregister(&atc->container);
112}
113EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(anon_transport_class_unregister);
114
115static int transport_setup_classdev(struct attribute_container *cont,
116 struct device *dev,
117 struct class_device *classdev)
118{
119 struct transport_class *tclass = class_to_transport_class(cont->class);
James Bottomleyd0a7e572005-08-14 17:09:01 -0500120 struct transport_container *tcont = attribute_container_to_transport_container(cont);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700121
122 if (tclass->setup)
James Bottomleyd0a7e572005-08-14 17:09:01 -0500123 tclass->setup(tcont, dev, classdev);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700124
125 return 0;
126}
127
128/**
129 * transport_setup_device - declare a new dev for transport class association
130 * but don't make it visible yet.
131 *
132 * @dev: the generic device representing the entity being added
133 *
134 * Usually, dev represents some component in the HBA system (either
135 * the HBA itself or a device remote across the HBA bus). This
136 * routine is simply a trigger point to see if any set of transport
137 * classes wishes to associate with the added device. This allocates
138 * storage for the class device and initialises it, but does not yet
139 * add it to the system or add attributes to it (you do this with
140 * transport_add_device). If you have no need for a separate setup
141 * and add operations, use transport_register_device (see
142 * transport_class.h).
143 */
144
145void transport_setup_device(struct device *dev)
146{
147 attribute_container_add_device(dev, transport_setup_classdev);
148}
149EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(transport_setup_device);
150
151static int transport_add_class_device(struct attribute_container *cont,
152 struct device *dev,
153 struct class_device *classdev)
154{
155 int error = attribute_container_add_class_device(classdev);
156 struct transport_container *tcont =
157 attribute_container_to_transport_container(cont);
158
159 if (!error && tcont->statistics)
160 error = sysfs_create_group(&classdev->kobj, tcont->statistics);
161
162 return error;
163}
164
165
166/**
167 * transport_add_device - declare a new dev for transport class association
168 *
169 * @dev: the generic device representing the entity being added
170 *
171 * Usually, dev represents some component in the HBA system (either
172 * the HBA itself or a device remote across the HBA bus). This
173 * routine is simply a trigger point used to add the device to the
174 * system and register attributes for it.
175 */
176
177void transport_add_device(struct device *dev)
178{
179 attribute_container_device_trigger(dev, transport_add_class_device);
180}
181EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(transport_add_device);
182
183static int transport_configure(struct attribute_container *cont,
James Bottomleyd0a7e572005-08-14 17:09:01 -0500184 struct device *dev,
185 struct class_device *cdev)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700186{
187 struct transport_class *tclass = class_to_transport_class(cont->class);
James Bottomleyd0a7e572005-08-14 17:09:01 -0500188 struct transport_container *tcont = attribute_container_to_transport_container(cont);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700189
190 if (tclass->configure)
James Bottomleyd0a7e572005-08-14 17:09:01 -0500191 tclass->configure(tcont, dev, cdev);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700192
193 return 0;
194}
195
196/**
197 * transport_configure_device - configure an already set up device
198 *
199 * @dev: generic device representing device to be configured
200 *
201 * The idea of configure is simply to provide a point within the setup
202 * process to allow the transport class to extract information from a
203 * device after it has been setup. This is used in SCSI because we
204 * have to have a setup device to begin using the HBA, but after we
205 * send the initial inquiry, we use configure to extract the device
206 * parameters. The device need not have been added to be configured.
207 */
208void transport_configure_device(struct device *dev)
209{
James Bottomleyd0a7e572005-08-14 17:09:01 -0500210 attribute_container_device_trigger(dev, transport_configure);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700211}
212EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(transport_configure_device);
213
214static int transport_remove_classdev(struct attribute_container *cont,
215 struct device *dev,
216 struct class_device *classdev)
217{
218 struct transport_container *tcont =
219 attribute_container_to_transport_container(cont);
220 struct transport_class *tclass = class_to_transport_class(cont->class);
221
222 if (tclass->remove)
James Bottomleyd0a7e572005-08-14 17:09:01 -0500223 tclass->remove(tcont, dev, classdev);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700224
225 if (tclass->remove != anon_transport_dummy_function) {
226 if (tcont->statistics)
227 sysfs_remove_group(&classdev->kobj, tcont->statistics);
228 attribute_container_class_device_del(classdev);
229 }
230
231 return 0;
232}
233
234
235/**
236 * transport_remove_device - remove the visibility of a device
237 *
238 * @dev: generic device to remove
239 *
240 * This call removes the visibility of the device (to the user from
241 * sysfs), but does not destroy it. To eliminate a device entirely
242 * you must also call transport_destroy_device. If you don't need to
243 * do remove and destroy as separate operations, use
244 * transport_unregister_device() (see transport_class.h) which will
245 * perform both calls for you.
246 */
247void transport_remove_device(struct device *dev)
248{
249 attribute_container_device_trigger(dev, transport_remove_classdev);
250}
251EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(transport_remove_device);
252
253static void transport_destroy_classdev(struct attribute_container *cont,
254 struct device *dev,
255 struct class_device *classdev)
256{
257 struct transport_class *tclass = class_to_transport_class(cont->class);
258
259 if (tclass->remove != anon_transport_dummy_function)
260 class_device_put(classdev);
261}
262
263
264/**
265 * transport_destroy_device - destroy a removed device
266 *
267 * @dev: device to eliminate from the transport class.
268 *
269 * This call triggers the elimination of storage associated with the
270 * transport classdev. Note: all it really does is relinquish a
271 * reference to the classdev. The memory will not be freed until the
272 * last reference goes to zero. Note also that the classdev retains a
273 * reference count on dev, so dev too will remain for as long as the
274 * transport class device remains around.
275 */
276void transport_destroy_device(struct device *dev)
277{
278 attribute_container_remove_device(dev, transport_destroy_classdev);
279}
280EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(transport_destroy_device);