| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| ======================= |
| I2C Address Translators |
| ======================= |
| |
| Author: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net> |
| Author: Tomi Valkeinen <tomi.valkeinen@ideasonboard.com> |
| |
| Description |
| ----------- |
| |
| An I2C Address Translator (ATR) is a device with an I2C slave parent |
| ("upstream") port and N I2C master child ("downstream") ports, and |
| forwards transactions from upstream to the appropriate downstream port |
| with a modified slave address. The address used on the parent bus is |
| called the "alias" and is (potentially) different from the physical |
| slave address of the child bus. Address translation is done by the |
| hardware. |
| |
| An ATR looks similar to an i2c-mux except: |
| - the address on the parent and child busses can be different |
| - there is normally no need to select the child port; the alias used on the |
| parent bus implies it |
| |
| The ATR functionality can be provided by a chip with many other features. |
| The kernel i2c-atr provides a helper to implement an ATR within a driver. |
| |
| The ATR creates a new I2C "child" adapter on each child bus. Adding |
| devices on the child bus ends up in invoking the driver code to select |
| an available alias. Maintaining an appropriate pool of available aliases |
| and picking one for each new device is up to the driver implementer. The |
| ATR maintains a table of currently assigned alias and uses it to modify |
| all I2C transactions directed to devices on the child buses. |
| |
| A typical example follows. |
| |
| Topology:: |
| |
| Slave X @ 0x10 |
| .-----. | |
| .-----. | |---+---- B |
| | CPU |--A--| ATR | |
| `-----' | |---+---- C |
| `-----' | |
| Slave Y @ 0x10 |
| |
| Alias table: |
| |
| A, B and C are three physical I2C busses, electrically independent from |
| each other. The ATR receives the transactions initiated on bus A and |
| propagates them on bus B or bus C or none depending on the device address |
| in the transaction and based on the alias table. |
| |
| Alias table: |
| |
| .. table:: |
| |
| =============== ===== |
| Client Alias |
| =============== ===== |
| X (bus B, 0x10) 0x20 |
| Y (bus C, 0x10) 0x30 |
| =============== ===== |
| |
| Transaction: |
| |
| - Slave X driver requests a transaction (on adapter B), slave address 0x10 |
| - ATR driver finds slave X is on bus B and has alias 0x20, rewrites |
| messages with address 0x20, forwards to adapter A |
| - Physical I2C transaction on bus A, slave address 0x20 |
| - ATR chip detects transaction on address 0x20, finds it in table, |
| propagates transaction on bus B with address translated to 0x10, |
| keeps clock streched on bus A waiting for reply |
| - Slave X chip (on bus B) detects transaction at its own physical |
| address 0x10 and replies normally |
| - ATR chip stops clock stretching and forwards reply on bus A, |
| with address translated back to 0x20 |
| - ATR driver receives the reply, rewrites messages with address 0x10 |
| as they were initially |
| - Slave X driver gets back the msgs[], with reply and address 0x10 |
| |
| Usage: |
| |
| 1. In the driver (typically in the probe function) add an ATR by |
| calling i2c_atr_new() passing attach/detach callbacks |
| 2. When the attach callback is called pick an appropriate alias, |
| configure it in the chip and return the chosen alias in the |
| alias_id parameter |
| 3. When the detach callback is called, deconfigure the alias from |
| the chip and put the alias back in the pool for later usage |
| |
| I2C ATR functions and data structures |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/i2c-atr.h |