| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ |
| .. sectionauthor:: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org> |
| |
| Design Details |
| ============== |
| |
| This README contains high-level information about driver model, a unified |
| way of declaring and accessing drivers in U-Boot. The original work was done |
| by: |
| |
| * Marek Vasut <marex@denx.de> |
| * Pavel Herrmann <morpheus.ibis@gmail.com> |
| * Viktor Křivák <viktor.krivak@gmail.com> |
| * Tomas Hlavacek <tmshlvck@gmail.com> |
| |
| This has been both simplified and extended into the current implementation |
| by: |
| |
| * Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org> |
| |
| |
| Terminology |
| ----------- |
| |
| Uclass |
| a group of devices which operate in the same way. A uclass provides |
| a way of accessing individual devices within the group, but always |
| using the same interface. For example a GPIO uclass provides |
| operations for get/set value. An I2C uclass may have 10 I2C ports, |
| 4 with one driver, and 6 with another. |
| |
| Driver |
| some code which talks to a peripheral and presents a higher-level |
| interface to it. |
| |
| Device |
| an instance of a driver, tied to a particular port or peripheral. |
| |
| |
| How to try it |
| ------------- |
| |
| Build U-Boot sandbox and run it:: |
| |
| make sandbox_defconfig |
| make |
| ./u-boot -d u-boot.dtb |
| |
| (type 'reset' to exit U-Boot) |
| |
| |
| There is a uclass called 'demo'. This uclass handles |
| saying hello, and reporting its status. There are two drivers in this |
| uclass: |
| |
| - simple: Just prints a message for hello, doesn't implement status |
| - shape: Prints shapes and reports number of characters printed as status |
| |
| The demo class is pretty simple, but not trivial. The intention is that it |
| can be used for testing, so it will implement all driver model features and |
| provide good code coverage of them. It does have multiple drivers, it |
| handles parameter data and plat (data which tells the driver how |
| to operate on a particular platform) and it uses private driver data. |
| |
| To try it, see the example session below:: |
| |
| =>demo hello 1 |
| Hello '@' from 07981110: red 4 |
| =>demo status 2 |
| Status: 0 |
| =>demo hello 2 |
| g |
| r@ |
| e@@ |
| e@@@ |
| n@@@@ |
| g@@@@@ |
| =>demo status 2 |
| Status: 21 |
| =>demo hello 4 ^ |
| y^^^ |
| e^^^^^ |
| l^^^^^^^ |
| l^^^^^^^ |
| o^^^^^ |
| w^^^ |
| =>demo status 4 |
| Status: 36 |
| => |
| |
| |
| Running the tests |
| ----------------- |
| |
| The intent with driver model is that the core portion has 100% test coverage |
| in sandbox, and every uclass has its own test. As a move towards this, tests |
| are provided in test/dm. To run them, try:: |
| |
| ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox --build -k ut_dm -v |
| |
| You should see something like this:: |
| |
| (venv)$ ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox --build -k ut_dm -v |
| +make O=/root/u-boot/build-sandbox -s sandbox_defconfig |
| +make O=/root/u-boot/build-sandbox -s -j8 |
| ============================= test session starts ============================== |
| platform linux2 -- Python 2.7.5, pytest-2.9.0, py-1.4.31, pluggy-0.3.1 -- /root/u-boot/venv/bin/python |
| cachedir: .cache |
| rootdir: /root/u-boot, inifile: |
| collected 199 items |
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| test/py/tests/test_ut.py::test_ut_dm_init PASSED |
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| |
| ======================= 84 tests deselected by '-kut_dm' ======================= |
| ================== 115 passed, 84 deselected in 3.77 seconds =================== |
| |
| What is going on? |
| ----------------- |
| |
| Let's start at the top. The demo command is in cmd/demo.c. It does |
| the usual command processing and then: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| struct udevice *demo_dev; |
| |
| ret = uclass_get_device(UCLASS_DEMO, devnum, &demo_dev); |
| |
| UCLASS_DEMO means the class of devices which implement 'demo'. Other |
| classes might be MMC, or GPIO, hashing or serial. The idea is that the |
| devices in the class all share a particular way of working. The class |
| presents a unified view of all these devices to U-Boot. |
| |
| This function looks up a device for the demo uclass. Given a device |
| number we can find the device because all devices have registered with |
| the UCLASS_DEMO uclass. |
| |
| The device is automatically activated ready for use by uclass_get_device(). |
| |
| Now that we have the device we can do things like: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| return demo_hello(demo_dev, ch); |
| |
| This function is in the demo uclass. It takes care of calling the 'hello' |
| method of the relevant driver. Bearing in mind that there are two drivers, |
| this particular device may use one or other of them. |
| |
| The code for demo_hello() is in drivers/demo/demo-uclass.c: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| int demo_hello(struct udevice *dev, int ch) |
| { |
| const struct demo_ops *ops = device_get_ops(dev); |
| |
| if (!ops->hello) |
| return -ENOSYS; |
| |
| return ops->hello(dev, ch); |
| } |
| |
| As you can see it just calls the relevant driver method. One of these is |
| in drivers/demo/demo-simple.c: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| static int simple_hello(struct udevice *dev, int ch) |
| { |
| const struct dm_demo_pdata *pdata = dev_get_plat(dev); |
| |
| printf("Hello from %08x: %s %d\n", map_to_sysmem(dev), |
| pdata->colour, pdata->sides); |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| |
| So that is a trip from top (command execution) to bottom (driver action) |
| but it leaves a lot of topics to address. |
| |
| |
| Declaring Drivers |
| ----------------- |
| |
| A driver declaration looks something like this (see |
| drivers/demo/demo-shape.c): |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| static const struct demo_ops shape_ops = { |
| .hello = shape_hello, |
| .status = shape_status, |
| }; |
| |
| U_BOOT_DRIVER(demo_shape_drv) = { |
| .name = "demo_shape_drv", |
| .id = UCLASS_DEMO, |
| .ops = &shape_ops, |
| .priv_data_size = sizeof(struct shape_data), |
| }; |
| |
| |
| This driver has two methods (hello and status) and requires a bit of |
| private data (accessible through dev_get_priv(dev) once the driver has |
| been probed). It is a member of UCLASS_DEMO so will register itself |
| there. |
| |
| In U_BOOT_DRIVER it is also possible to specify special methods for bind |
| and unbind, and these are called at appropriate times. For many drivers |
| it is hoped that only 'probe' and 'remove' will be needed. |
| |
| The U_BOOT_DRIVER macro creates a data structure accessible from C, |
| so driver model can find the drivers that are available. |
| |
| The methods a device can provide are documented in the device.h header. |
| Briefly, they are: |
| |
| * bind - make the driver model aware of a device (bind it to its driver) |
| * unbind - make the driver model forget the device |
| * of_to_plat - convert device tree data to plat - see later |
| * probe - make a device ready for use |
| * remove - remove a device so it cannot be used until probed again |
| |
| The sequence to get a device to work is bind, of_to_plat (if using |
| device tree) and probe. |
| |
| |
| Platform Data |
| ------------- |
| |
| Note: platform data is the old way of doing things. It is |
| basically a C structure which is passed to drivers to tell them about |
| platform-specific settings like the address of its registers, bus |
| speed, etc. Device tree is now the preferred way of handling this. |
| Unless you have a good reason not to use device tree (the main one |
| being you need serial support in SPL and don't have enough SRAM for |
| the cut-down device tree and libfdt libraries) you should stay away |
| from platform data. |
| |
| Platform data is like Linux platform data, if you are familiar with that. |
| It provides the board-specific information to start up a device. |
| |
| Why is this information not just stored in the device driver itself? The |
| idea is that the device driver is generic, and can in principle operate on |
| any board that has that type of device. For example, with modern |
| highly-complex SoCs it is common for the IP to come from an IP vendor, and |
| therefore (for example) the MMC controller may be the same on chips from |
| different vendors. It makes no sense to write independent drivers for the |
| MMC controller on each vendor's SoC, when they are all almost the same. |
| Similarly, we may have 6 UARTs in an SoC, all of which are mostly the same, |
| but lie at different addresses in the address space. |
| |
| Using the UART example, we have a single driver and it is instantiated 6 |
| times by supplying 6 lots of platform data. Each lot of platform data |
| gives the driver name and a pointer to a structure containing information |
| about this instance - e.g. the address of the register space. It may be that |
| one of the UARTS supports RS-485 operation - this can be added as a flag in |
| the platform data, which is set for this one port and clear for the rest. |
| |
| Think of your driver as a generic piece of code which knows how to talk to |
| a device, but needs to know where it is, any variant/option information and |
| so on. Platform data provides this link between the generic piece of code |
| and the specific way it is bound on a particular board. |
| |
| Examples of platform data include: |
| |
| - The base address of the IP block's register space |
| - Configuration options, like: |
| - the SPI polarity and maximum speed for a SPI controller |
| - the I2C speed to use for an I2C device |
| - the number of GPIOs available in a GPIO device |
| |
| Where does the platform data come from? It is either held in a structure |
| which is compiled into U-Boot, or it can be parsed from the Device Tree |
| (see 'Device Tree' below). |
| |
| For an example of how it can be compiled in, see demo-pdata.c which |
| sets up a table of driver names and their associated platform data. |
| The data can be interpreted by the drivers however they like - it is |
| basically a communication scheme between the board-specific code and |
| the generic drivers, which are intended to work on any board. |
| |
| Drivers can access their data via dev->info->plat. Here is |
| the declaration for the platform data, which would normally appear |
| in the board file. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| static const struct dm_demo_pdata red_square = { |
| .colour = "red", |
| .sides = 4. |
| }; |
| |
| static const struct driver_info info[] = { |
| { |
| .name = "demo_shape_drv", |
| .plat = &red_square, |
| }, |
| }; |
| |
| demo1 = driver_bind(root, &info[0]); |
| |
| |
| Device Tree |
| ----------- |
| |
| While plat is useful, a more flexible way of providing device data is |
| by using device tree. In U-Boot you should use this where possible. Avoid |
| sending patches which make use of the U_BOOT_DRVINFO() macro unless strictly |
| necessary. |
| |
| With device tree we replace the above code with the following device tree |
| fragment: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| red-square { |
| compatible = "demo-shape"; |
| colour = "red"; |
| sides = <4>; |
| }; |
| |
| This means that instead of having lots of U_BOOT_DRVINFO() declarations in |
| the board file, we put these in the device tree. This approach allows a lot |
| more generality, since the same board file can support many types of boards |
| (e,g. with the same SoC) just by using different device trees. An added |
| benefit is that the Linux device tree can be used, thus further simplifying |
| the task of board-bring up either for U-Boot or Linux devs (whoever gets to |
| the board first!). |
| |
| The easiest way to make this work it to add a few members to the driver: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| .plat_auto = sizeof(struct dm_test_pdata), |
| .of_to_plat = testfdt_of_to_plat, |
| |
| The 'auto' feature allowed space for the plat to be allocated |
| and zeroed before the driver's of_to_plat() method is called. The |
| of_to_plat() method, which the driver write supplies, should parse |
| the device tree node for this device and place it in dev->plat. Thus |
| when the probe method is called later (to set up the device ready for use) |
| the platform data will be present. |
| |
| Note that both methods are optional. If you provide an of_to_plat |
| method then it will be called first (during activation). If you provide a |
| probe method it will be called next. See Driver Lifecycle below for more |
| details. |
| |
| If you don't want to have the plat automatically allocated then you |
| can leave out plat_auto. In this case you can use malloc |
| in your of_to_plat (or probe) method to allocate the required memory, |
| and you should free it in the remove method. |
| |
| The driver model tree is intended to mirror that of the device tree. The |
| root driver is at device tree offset 0 (the root node, '/'), and its |
| children are the children of the root node. |
| |
| In order for a device tree to be valid, the content must be correct with |
| respect to either device tree specification |
| (https://www.devicetree.org/specifications/) or the device tree bindings that |
| are found in the doc/device-tree-bindings directory. When not U-Boot specific |
| the bindings in this directory tend to come from the Linux Kernel. As such |
| certain design decisions may have been made already for us in terms of how |
| specific devices are described and bound. In most circumstances we wish to |
| retain compatibility without additional changes being made to the device tree |
| source files. |
| |
| Declaring Uclasses |
| ------------------ |
| |
| The demo uclass is declared like this: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| UCLASS_DRIVER(demo) = { |
| .id = UCLASS_DEMO, |
| }; |
| |
| It is also possible to specify special methods for probe, etc. The uclass |
| numbering comes from include/dm/uclass-id.h. To add a new uclass, add to the |
| end of the enum there, then declare your uclass as above. |
| |
| |
| Device Sequence Numbers |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| U-Boot numbers devices from 0 in many situations, such as in the command |
| line for I2C and SPI buses, and the device names for serial ports (serial0, |
| serial1, ...). Driver model supports this numbering and permits devices |
| to be locating by their 'sequence'. This numbering uniquely identifies a |
| device in its uclass, so no two devices within a particular uclass can have |
| the same sequence number. |
| |
| Sequence numbers start from 0 but gaps are permitted. For example, a board |
| may have I2C buses 1, 4, 5 but no 0, 2 or 3. The choice of how devices are |
| numbered is up to a particular board, and may be set by the SoC in some |
| cases. While it might be tempting to automatically renumber the devices |
| where there are gaps in the sequence, this can lead to confusion and is |
| not the way that U-Boot works. |
| |
| Where a device gets its sequence number is controlled by the DM_SEQ_ALIAS |
| Kconfig option, which can have a different value in U-Boot proper and SPL. |
| If this option is not set, aliases are ignored. |
| |
| Even if CONFIG_DM_SEQ_ALIAS is enabled, the uclass must still have the |
| DM_UC_FLAG_SEQ_ALIAS flag set, for its devices to be sequenced by aliases. |
| |
| With those options set, devices with an alias (e.g. "serial2") will get that |
| sequence number (e.g. 2). Other devices get the next available number after all |
| aliases and all existing numbers. This means that if there is just a single |
| alias "serial2", unaliased serial devices will be assigned 3 or more, with 0 and |
| 1 being unused. |
| |
| If CONFIG_DM_SEQ_ALIAS or DM_UC_FLAG_SEQ_ALIAS are not set, all devices will get |
| sequence numbers in a simple ordering starting from 0. To find the next number |
| to allocate, driver model scans through to find the maximum existing number, |
| then uses the next one. It does not attempt to fill in gaps. |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| aliases { |
| serial2 = "/serial@22230000"; |
| }; |
| |
| This indicates that in the uclass called "serial", the named node |
| ("/serial@22230000") will be given sequence number 2. Any command or driver |
| which requests serial device 2 will obtain this device. |
| |
| More commonly you can use node references, which expand to the full path: |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| aliases { |
| serial2 = &serial_2; |
| }; |
| ... |
| serial_2: serial@22230000 { |
| ... |
| }; |
| |
| The alias resolves to the same string in this case, but this version is |
| easier to read. |
| |
| Device sequence numbers are resolved when a device is bound and the number does |
| not change for the life of the device. |
| |
| There are some situations where the uclass must allocate sequence numbers, |
| since a strictly increase sequence (with devicetree nodes bound first) is not |
| suitable. An example of this is the PCI bus. In this case, you can set the |
| uclass DM_UC_FLAG_NO_AUTO_SEQ flag. With this flag set, only devices with an |
| alias will be assigned a number by driver model. The rest is left to the uclass |
| to sort out, e.g. when enumerating the bus. |
| |
| Note that changing the sequence number for a device (e.g. in a driver) is not |
| permitted. If it is felt to be necessary, ask on the mailing list. |
| |
| Bus Drivers |
| ----------- |
| |
| A common use of driver model is to implement a bus, a device which provides |
| access to other devices. Example of buses include SPI and I2C. Typically |
| the bus provides some sort of transport or translation that makes it |
| possible to talk to the devices on the bus. |
| |
| Driver model provides some useful features to help with implementing buses. |
| Firstly, a bus can request that its children store some 'parent data' which |
| can be used to keep track of child state. Secondly, the bus can define |
| methods which are called when a child is probed or removed. This is similar |
| to the methods the uclass driver provides. Thirdly, per-child platform data |
| can be provided to specify things like the child's address on the bus. This |
| persists across child probe()/remove() cycles. |
| |
| For consistency and ease of implementation, the bus uclass can specify the |
| per-child platform data, so that it can be the same for all children of buses |
| in that uclass. There are also uclass methods which can be called when |
| children are bound and probed. |
| |
| Here an explanation of how a bus fits with a uclass may be useful. Consider |
| a USB bus with several devices attached to it, each from a different (made |
| up) uclass:: |
| |
| xhci_usb (UCLASS_USB) |
| eth (UCLASS_ETH) |
| camera (UCLASS_CAMERA) |
| flash (UCLASS_FLASH_STORAGE) |
| |
| Each of the devices is connected to a different address on the USB bus. |
| The bus device wants to store this address and some other information such |
| as the bus speed for each device. |
| |
| To achieve this, the bus device can use dev->parent_plat in each of its |
| three children. This can be auto-allocated if the bus driver (or bus uclass) |
| has a non-zero value for per_child_plat_auto. If not, then |
| the bus device or uclass can allocate the space itself before the child |
| device is probed. |
| |
| Also the bus driver can define the child_pre_probe() and child_post_remove() |
| methods to allow it to do some processing before the child is activated or |
| after it is deactivated. |
| |
| Similarly the bus uclass can define the child_post_bind() method to obtain |
| the per-child platform data from the device tree and set it up for the child. |
| The bus uclass can also provide a child_pre_probe() method. Very often it is |
| the bus uclass that controls these features, since it avoids each driver |
| having to do the same processing. Of course the driver can still tweak and |
| override these activities. |
| |
| Note that the information that controls this behaviour is in the bus's |
| driver, not the child's. In fact it is possible that child has no knowledge |
| that it is connected to a bus. The same child device may even be used on two |
| different bus types. As an example. the 'flash' device shown above may also |
| be connected on a SATA bus or standalone with no bus:: |
| |
| xhci_usb (UCLASS_USB) |
| flash (UCLASS_FLASH_STORAGE) - parent data/methods defined by USB bus |
| |
| sata (UCLASS_AHCI) |
| flash (UCLASS_FLASH_STORAGE) - parent data/methods defined by SATA bus |
| |
| flash (UCLASS_FLASH_STORAGE) - no parent data/methods (not on a bus) |
| |
| Above you can see that the driver for xhci_usb/sata controls the child's |
| bus methods. In the third example the device is not on a bus, and therefore |
| will not have these methods at all. Consider the case where the flash |
| device defines child methods. These would be used for *its* children, and |
| would be quite separate from the methods defined by the driver for the bus |
| that the flash device is connetced to. The act of attaching a device to a |
| parent device which is a bus, causes the device to start behaving like a |
| bus device, regardless of its own views on the matter. |
| |
| The uclass for the device can also contain data private to that uclass. |
| But note that each device on the bus may be a member of a different |
| uclass, and this data has nothing to do with the child data for each child |
| on the bus. It is the bus' uclass that controls the child with respect to |
| the bus. |
| |
| |
| Driver Lifecycle |
| ---------------- |
| |
| Here are the stages that a device goes through in driver model. Note that all |
| methods mentioned here are optional - e.g. if there is no probe() method for |
| a device then it will not be called. A simple device may have very few |
| methods actually defined. |
| |
| Bind stage |
| ^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| U-Boot discovers devices using one of these two methods: |
| |
| - Scan the U_BOOT_DRVINFO() definitions. U-Boot looks up the name specified |
| by each, to find the appropriate U_BOOT_DRIVER() definition. In this case, |
| there is no path by which driver_data may be provided, but the U_BOOT_DRVINFO() |
| may provide plat. |
| |
| - Scan through the device tree definitions. U-Boot looks at top-level |
| nodes in the the device tree. It looks at the compatible string in each node |
| and uses the of_match table of the U_BOOT_DRIVER() structure to find the |
| right driver for each node. In this case, the of_match table may provide a |
| driver_data value, but plat cannot be provided until later. |
| |
| For each device that is discovered, U-Boot then calls device_bind() to create a |
| new device, initializes various core fields of the device object such as name, |
| uclass & driver, initializes any optional fields of the device object that are |
| applicable such as of_offset, driver_data & plat, and finally calls the |
| driver's bind() method if one is defined. |
| |
| At this point all the devices are known, and bound to their drivers. There |
| is a 'struct udevice' allocated for all devices. However, nothing has been |
| activated (except for the root device). Each bound device that was created |
| from a U_BOOT_DRVINFO() declaration will hold the plat pointer specified |
| in that declaration. For a bound device created from the device tree, |
| plat will be NULL, but of_offset will be the offset of the device tree |
| node that caused the device to be created. The uclass is set correctly for |
| the device. |
| |
| The device's sequence number is assigned, either the requested one or the next |
| available one (after all aliases are processed) if nothing particular is |
| requested. |
| |
| The device's bind() method is permitted to perform simple actions, but |
| should not scan the device tree node, not initialise hardware, nor set up |
| structures or allocate memory. All of these tasks should be left for |
| the probe() method. |
| |
| Note that compared to Linux, U-Boot's driver model has a separate step of |
| probe/remove which is independent of bind/unbind. This is partly because in |
| U-Boot it may be expensive to probe devices and we don't want to do it until |
| they are needed, or perhaps until after relocation. |
| |
| Reading ofdata |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Most devices have data in the device tree which they can read to find out the |
| base address of hardware registers and parameters relating to driver |
| operation. This is called 'ofdata' (Open-Firmware data). |
| |
| The device's of_to_plat() implemnents allocation and reading of |
| plat. A parent's ofdata is always read before a child. |
| |
| The steps are: |
| |
| 1. If priv_auto is non-zero, then the device-private space |
| is allocated for the device and zeroed. It will be accessible as |
| dev->priv. The driver can put anything it likes in there, but should use |
| it for run-time information, not platform data (which should be static |
| and known before the device is probed). |
| |
| 2. If plat_auto is non-zero, then the platform data space |
| is allocated. This is only useful for device tree operation, since |
| otherwise you would have to specify the platform data in the |
| U_BOOT_DRVINFO() declaration. The space is allocated for the device and |
| zeroed. It will be accessible as dev->plat. |
| |
| 3. If the device's uclass specifies a non-zero per_device_auto, |
| then this space is allocated and zeroed also. It is allocated for and |
| stored in the device, but it is uclass data. owned by the uclass driver. |
| It is possible for the device to access it. |
| |
| 4. If the device's immediate parent specifies a per_child_auto |
| then this space is allocated. This is intended for use by the parent |
| device to keep track of things related to the child. For example a USB |
| flash stick attached to a USB host controller would likely use this |
| space. The controller can hold information about the USB state of each |
| of its children. |
| |
| 5. If the driver provides an of_to_plat() method, then this is |
| called to convert the device tree data into platform data. This should |
| do various calls like dev_read_u32(dev, ...) to access the node and store |
| the resulting information into dev->plat. After this point, the device |
| works the same way whether it was bound using a device tree node or |
| U_BOOT_DRVINFO() structure. In either case, the platform data is now stored |
| in the plat structure. Typically you will use the |
| plat_auto feature to specify the size of the platform data |
| structure, and U-Boot will automatically allocate and zero it for you before |
| entry to of_to_plat(). But if not, you can allocate it yourself in |
| of_to_plat(). Note that it is preferable to do all the device tree |
| decoding in of_to_plat() rather than in probe(). (Apart from the |
| ugliness of mixing configuration and run-time data, one day it is possible |
| that U-Boot will cache platform data for devices which are regularly |
| de/activated). |
| |
| 6. The device is marked 'plat valid'. |
| |
| Note that ofdata reading is always done (for a child and all its parents) |
| before probing starts. Thus devices go through two distinct states when |
| probing: reading platform data and actually touching the hardware to bring |
| the device up. |
| |
| Having probing separate from ofdata-reading helps deal with of-platdata, where |
| the probe() method is common to both DT/of-platdata operation, but the |
| of_to_plat() method is implemented differently. |
| |
| Another case has come up where this separate is useful. Generation of ACPI |
| tables uses the of-platdata but does not want to probe the device. Probing |
| would cause U-Boot to violate one of its design principles, viz that it |
| should only probe devices that are used. For ACPI we want to generate a |
| table for each device, even if U-Boot does not use it. In fact it may not |
| even be possible to probe the device - e.g. an SD card which is not |
| present will cause an error on probe, yet we still must tell Linux about |
| the SD card connector in case it is used while Linux is running. |
| |
| It is important that the of_to_plat() method does not actually probe |
| the device itself. However there are cases where other devices must be probed |
| in the of_to_plat() method. An example is where a device requires a |
| GPIO for it to operate. To select a GPIO obviously requires that the GPIO |
| device is probed. This is OK when used by common, core devices such as GPIO, |
| clock, interrupts, reset and the like. |
| |
| If your device relies on its parent setting up a suitable address space, so |
| that dev_read_addr() works correctly, then make sure that the parent device |
| has its setup code in of_to_plat(). If it has it in the probe method, |
| then you cannot call dev_read_addr() from the child device's |
| of_to_plat() method. Move it to probe() instead. Buses like PCI can |
| fall afoul of this rule. |
| |
| Activation/probe |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| To save resources devices in U-Boot are probed lazily. U-Boot is a bootloader, |
| not an operating system. Many devices are never used during an U-Boot run, and |
| probing them takes time, requires memory, may add delays to the main loop, etc. |
| |
| The device should be probed by the uclass code or generic device code (e.g. |
| device_find_global_by_ofnode()). Uclasses differ but two common use cases can be |
| seen: |
| |
| 1. The uclass is asked to look up a specific device, such as SPI bus 0, |
| first chip select - in this case the returned device should be |
| activated. |
| |
| 2. The uclass is asked to perform a specific function on any device that |
| supports it, eg. reset the board using any sysreset that can be found - |
| for this case the core uclass code provides iterators that activate |
| each device before returning it, and the uclass typically implements a |
| walk function that iterates over all devices of the uclass and tries |
| to perform the requested function on each in turn until succesful. |
| |
| To activate a device U-Boot first reads ofdata as above and then follows these |
| steps (see device_probe()): |
| |
| 1. All parent devices are probed. It is not possible to activate a device |
| unless its predecessors (all the way up to the root device) are activated. |
| This means (for example) that an I2C driver will require that its bus |
| be activated. |
| |
| 2. The device's probe() method is called. This should do anything that |
| is required by the device to get it going. This could include checking |
| that the hardware is actually present, setting up clocks for the |
| hardware and setting up hardware registers to initial values. The code |
| in probe() can access: |
| |
| - platform data in dev->plat (for configuration) |
| - private data in dev->priv (for run-time state) |
| - uclass data in dev->uclass_priv (for things the uclass stores |
| about this device) |
| |
| Note: If you don't use priv_auto then you will need to |
| allocate the priv space here yourself. The same applies also to |
| plat_auto. Remember to free them in the remove() method. |
| |
| 3. The device is marked 'activated' |
| |
| 4. The uclass's post_probe() method is called, if one exists. This may |
| cause the uclass to do some housekeeping to record the device as |
| activated and 'known' by the uclass. |
| |
| Running stage |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The device is now activated and can be used. From now until it is removed |
| all of the above structures are accessible. The device appears in the |
| uclass's list of devices (so if the device is in UCLASS_GPIO it will appear |
| as a device in the GPIO uclass). This is the 'running' state of the device. |
| |
| Removal stage |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| When the device is no-longer required, you can call device_remove() to |
| remove it. This performs the probe steps in reverse: |
| |
| 1. The uclass's pre_remove() method is called, if one exists. This may |
| cause the uclass to do some housekeeping to record the device as |
| deactivated and no-longer 'known' by the uclass. |
| |
| 2. All the device's children are removed. It is not permitted to have |
| an active child device with a non-active parent. This means that |
| device_remove() is called for all the children recursively at this point. |
| |
| 3. The device's remove() method is called. At this stage nothing has been |
| deallocated so platform data, private data and the uclass data will all |
| still be present. This is where the hardware can be shut down. It is |
| intended that the device be completely inactive at this point, For U-Boot |
| to be sure that no hardware is running, it should be enough to remove |
| all devices. |
| |
| 4. The device memory is freed (platform data, private data, uclass data, |
| parent data). |
| |
| Note: Because the platform data for a U_BOOT_DRVINFO() is defined with a |
| static pointer, it is not de-allocated during the remove() method. For |
| a device instantiated using the device tree data, the platform data will |
| be dynamically allocated, and thus needs to be deallocated during the |
| remove() method, either: |
| |
| - if the plat_auto is non-zero, the deallocation happens automatically |
| within the driver model core in the unbind stage; or |
| |
| - when plat_auto is 0, both the allocation (in probe() |
| or preferably of_to_plat()) and the deallocation in remove() |
| are the responsibility of the driver author. |
| |
| 5. The device is marked inactive. Note that it is still bound, so the |
| device structure itself is not freed at this point. Should the device be |
| activated again, then the cycle starts again at step 2 above. |
| |
| Unbind stage |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The device is unbound. This is the step that actually destroys the device. |
| If a parent has children these will be destroyed first. After this point |
| the device does not exist and its memory has be deallocated. |
| |
| |
| Special cases for removal |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| Some devices need to do clean-up before the OS is called. For example, a USB |
| driver may want to stop the bus. This can be done in the remove() method. |
| Some special flags are used to determine whether to remove the device: |
| |
| DM_FLAG_OS_PREPARE - indicates that the device needs to get ready for OS |
| boot. The device will be removed just before the OS is booted |
| DM_REMOVE_ACTIVE_DMA - indicates that the device uses DMA. This is |
| effectively the same as DM_FLAG_OS_PREPARE, so the device is removed |
| before the OS is booted |
| DM_FLAG_VITAL - indicates that the device is 'vital' to the operation of |
| other devices. It is possible to remove this device after all regular |
| devices are removed. This is useful e.g. for a clock, which need to |
| be active during the device-removal phase. |
| |
| The dm_remove_devices_flags() function can be used to remove devices based on |
| their driver flags. |
| |
| |
| Error codes |
| ----------- |
| |
| Driver model tries to use errors codes in a consistent way, as follows: |
| |
| \-EAGAIN |
| Try later, e.g. dependencies not ready |
| |
| \-EINVAL |
| Invalid argument, such as `dev_read_...()` failed or any other |
| devicetree-related access. Also used when a driver method is passed an |
| argument it considers invalid or does not support. |
| |
| \-EIO |
| Failed to perform an I/O operation. This is used when a local device |
| (i.e. part of the SOC) does not work as expected. Use -EREMOTEIO for |
| failures to talk to a separate device, e.g. over an I2C or SPI |
| channel. |
| |
| \-ENODEV |
| Do not bind the device. This should not be used to indicate an |
| error probing the device or for any other purpose, lest driver model get |
| confused. Using `-ENODEV` inside a driver method makes no sense, since |
| clearly there is a device. |
| |
| \-ENOENT |
| Entry or object not found. This is used when a device, file or directory |
| cannot be found (e.g. when looked up by name), It can also indicate a |
| missing devicetree subnode. |
| |
| \-ENOMEM |
| Out of memory |
| |
| \-ENOSPC |
| Ran out of space (e.g. in a buffer or limited-size array) |
| |
| \-ENOSYS |
| Function not implemented. This is returned by uclasses where the driver does |
| not implement a particular method. It can also be returned by drivers when |
| a particular sub-method is not implemented. This is widely checked in the |
| wider code base, where a feature may or may not be compiled into U-Boot. It |
| indicates that the feature is not available, but this is often just normal |
| operation. Please do not use -ENOSUPP. If an incorrect or unknown argument |
| is provided to a method (e.g. an unknown clock ID), return -EINVAL. |
| |
| \-ENXIO |
| Couldn't find device/address. This is used when a device or address |
| could not be obtained or is not valid. It is often used to indicate a |
| different type of problem, if -ENOENT is already used for something else in |
| the driver. |
| |
| \-EPERM |
| This is -1 so some older code may use it as a generic error. This indicates |
| that an operation is not permitted, e.g. a security violation or policy |
| constraint. It is returned internally when binding devices before relocation, |
| if the device is not marked for pre-relocation use. |
| |
| \-EPFNOSUPPORT |
| Missing uclass. This is deliberately an uncommon error code so that it can |
| easily be distinguished. If you see this very early in U-Boot, it means that |
| a device exists with a particular uclass but the uclass does not (mostly |
| likely because it is not compiled in). Enable DEBUG in uclass.c or lists.c |
| to see which uclass ID or driver is causing the problem. |
| |
| \-EREMOTEIO |
| This indicates an error in talking to a peripheral over a comms link, such |
| as I2C or SPI. It might indicate that the device is not present or is not |
| responding as expected. |
| |
| \-ETIMEDOUT |
| Hardware access or some other operation has timed out. This is used where |
| there is an expected time of response and that was exceeded by enough of |
| a margin that there is probably something wrong. |
| |
| |
| Less common ones: |
| |
| \-ECOMM |
| Not widely used, but similar to -EREMOTEIO. Can be useful as a secondary |
| error to distinguish the problem from -EREMOTEIO. |
| |
| \-EKEYREJECTED |
| Attempt to remove a device which does not match the removal flags. See |
| device_remove(). |
| |
| \-EILSEQ |
| Devicetree read failure, specifically trying to read a string index which |
| does not exist, in a string-listg property |
| |
| \-ENOEXEC |
| Attempt to use a uclass method on a device not in that uclass. This is |
| seldom checked at present, since it is generally a programming error and a |
| waste of code space. A DEBUG-only check would be useful here. |
| |
| \-ENODATA |
| Devicetree read error, where a property exists but has no data associated |
| with it |
| |
| \-EOVERFLOW |
| Devicetree read error, where the property is longer than expected |
| |
| \-EPROBE_DEFER |
| Attempt to remove a non-vital device when the removal flags indicate that |
| only vital devices should be removed |
| |
| \-ERANGE |
| Returned by regmap functions when arguments are out of range. This can be |
| useful for disinguishing regmap errors from other errors obtained while |
| probing devices. |
| |
| Drivers should use the same conventions so that things function as expected. |
| In particular, if a driver fails to probe, or a uclass operation fails, the |
| error code is the primary way to indicate what actually happened. |
| |
| Printing error messages in drivers is discouraged due to code size bloat and |
| since it can result in messages appearing in normal operation. For example, if |
| a command tries two different devices and uses whichever one probes correctly, |
| we don't want an error message displayed, even if the command itself might show |
| a warning or informational message. Ideally, messages in drivers should only be |
| displayed when debugging, e.g. by using log_debug() although in extreme cases |
| log_warning() or log_error() may be used. |
| |
| Error messages can be logged using `log_msg_ret()`, so that enabling |
| `CONFIG_LOG` and `CONFIG_LOG_ERROR_RETURN` shows a trace of error codes returned |
| through the call stack. That can be a handy way of quickly figuring out where |
| an error occurred. Get into the habit of return errors with |
| `return log_msg_ret("here", ret)` instead of just `return ret`. The string |
| just needs to be long enough to find in a single function, since a log record |
| stores (and can print with `CONFIG_LOGF_FUNC`) the function where it was |
| generated. |
| |
| |
| Data Structures |
| --------------- |
| |
| Driver model uses a doubly-linked list as the basic data structure. Some |
| nodes have several lists running through them. Creating a more efficient |
| data structure might be worthwhile in some rare cases, once we understand |
| what the bottlenecks are. |
| |
| |
| Tag Support |
| ----------- |
| |
| It is sometimes useful for a subsystem to associate its own private |
| data (or object) to a DM device, i.e. struct udevice, to support |
| additional features. |
| |
| Tag support in driver model will give us the ability to do so dynamically |
| instead of modifying "udevice" data structure. In the initial release, we |
| will support two type of attributes: |
| |
| - a pointer with dm_tag_set_ptr(), and |
| - an unsigned long with dm_tag_set_val() |
| |
| For example, UEFI subsystem utilizes the feature to maintain efi_disk |
| objects depending on linked udevice's lifecycle. |
| |
| While the current implementation is quite simple, it will get evolved |
| as the feature is more extensively used in U-Boot subsystems. |
| |
| |
| Changes since v1 |
| ---------------- |
| |
| For the record, this implementation uses a very similar approach to the |
| original patches, but makes at least the following changes: |
| |
| - Tried to aggressively remove boilerplate, so that for most drivers there |
| is little or no 'driver model' code to write. |
| - Moved some data from code into data structure - e.g. store a pointer to |
| the driver operations structure in the driver, rather than passing it |
| to the driver bind function. |
| - Rename some structures to make them more similar to Linux (struct udevice |
| instead of struct instance, struct plat, etc.) |
| - Change the name 'core' to 'uclass', meaning U-Boot class. It seems that |
| this concept relates to a class of drivers (or a subsystem). We shouldn't |
| use 'class' since it is a C++ reserved word, so U-Boot class (uclass) seems |
| better than 'core'. |
| - Remove 'struct driver_instance' and just use a single 'struct udevice'. |
| This removes a level of indirection that doesn't seem necessary. |
| - Built in device tree support, to avoid the need for plat |
| - Removed the concept of driver relocation, and just make it possible for |
| the new driver (created after relocation) to access the old driver data. |
| I feel that relocation is a very special case and will only apply to a few |
| drivers, many of which can/will just re-init anyway. So the overhead of |
| dealing with this might not be worth it. |
| - Implemented a GPIO system, trying to keep it simple |
| |
| |
| Pre-Relocation Support |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| For pre-relocation we simply call the driver model init function. Only |
| drivers marked with DM_FLAG_PRE_RELOC or the device tree 'u-boot,dm-pre-reloc' |
| property are initialised prior to relocation. This helps to reduce the driver |
| model overhead. This flag applies to SPL and TPL as well, if device tree is |
| enabled (CONFIG_OF_CONTROL) there. |
| |
| Note when device tree is enabled, the device tree 'u-boot,dm-pre-reloc' |
| property can provide better control granularity on which device is bound |
| before relocation. While with DM_FLAG_PRE_RELOC flag of the driver all |
| devices with the same driver are bound, which requires allocation a large |
| amount of memory. When device tree is not used, DM_FLAG_PRE_RELOC is the |
| only way for statically declared devices via U_BOOT_DRVINFO() to be bound |
| prior to relocation. |
| |
| It is possible to limit this to specific relocation steps, by using |
| the more specialized 'u-boot,dm-spl' and 'u-boot,dm-tpl' flags |
| in the device tree node. For U-Boot proper you can use 'u-boot,dm-pre-proper' |
| which means that it will be processed (and a driver bound) in U-Boot proper |
| prior to relocation, but will not be available in SPL or TPL. |
| |
| To reduce the size of SPL and TPL, only the nodes with pre-relocation properties |
| ('u-boot,dm-pre-reloc', 'u-boot,dm-spl' or 'u-boot,dm-tpl') are keept in their |
| device trees (see README.SPL for details); the remaining nodes are always bound. |
| |
| Then post relocation we throw that away and re-init driver model again. |
| For drivers which require some sort of continuity between pre- and |
| post-relocation devices, we can provide access to the pre-relocation |
| device pointers, but this is not currently implemented (the root device |
| pointer is saved but not made available through the driver model API). |
| |
| |
| SPL Support |
| ----------- |
| |
| Driver model can operate in SPL. Its efficient implementation and small code |
| size provide for a small overhead which is acceptable for all but the most |
| constrained systems. |
| |
| To enable driver model in SPL, define CONFIG_SPL_DM. You might want to |
| consider the following option also. See the main README for more details. |
| |
| - CONFIG_SPL_SYS_MALLOC_SIMPLE |
| - CONFIG_DM_WARN |
| - CONFIG_DM_DEVICE_REMOVE |
| - CONFIG_DM_STDIO |
| |
| |
| Enabling Driver Model |
| --------------------- |
| |
| Driver model is being brought into U-Boot gradually. As each subsystems gets |
| support, a uclass is created and a CONFIG to enable use of driver model for |
| that subsystem. |
| |
| For example CONFIG_DM_SERIAL enables driver model for serial. With that |
| defined, the old serial support is not enabled, and your serial driver must |
| conform to driver model. With that undefined, the old serial support is |
| enabled and driver model is not available for serial. This means that when |
| you convert a driver, you must either convert all its boards, or provide for |
| the driver to be compiled both with and without driver model (generally this |
| is not very hard). |
| |
| See the main README for full details of the available driver model CONFIG |
| options. |
| |
| |
| Things to punt for later |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| Uclasses are statically numbered at compile time. It would be possible to |
| change this to dynamic numbering, but then we would require some sort of |
| lookup service, perhaps searching by name. This is slightly less efficient |
| so has been left out for now. One small advantage of dynamic numbering might |
| be fewer merge conflicts in uclass-id.h. |