| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only |
| |
| .. _auxiliary_bus: |
| |
| ============= |
| Auxiliary Bus |
| ============= |
| |
| In some subsystems, the functionality of the core device (PCI/ACPI/other) is |
| too complex for a single device to be managed by a monolithic driver |
| (e.g. Sound Open Firmware), multiple devices might implement a common |
| intersection of functionality (e.g. NICs + RDMA), or a driver may want to |
| export an interface for another subsystem to drive (e.g. SIOV Physical Function |
| export Virtual Function management). A split of the functionality into child- |
| devices representing sub-domains of functionality makes it possible to |
| compartmentalize, layer, and distribute domain-specific concerns via a Linux |
| device-driver model. |
| |
| An example for this kind of requirement is the audio subsystem where a single |
| IP is handling multiple entities such as HDMI, Soundwire, local devices such as |
| mics/speakers etc. The split for the core's functionality can be arbitrary or |
| be defined by the DSP firmware topology and include hooks for test/debug. This |
| allows for the audio core device to be minimal and focused on hardware-specific |
| control and communication. |
| |
| Each auxiliary_device represents a part of its parent functionality. The |
| generic behavior can be extended and specialized as needed by encapsulating an |
| auxiliary_device within other domain-specific structures and the use of .ops |
| callbacks. Devices on the auxiliary bus do not share any structures and the use |
| of a communication channel with the parent is domain-specific. |
| |
| Note that ops are intended as a way to augment instance behavior within a class |
| of auxiliary devices, it is not the mechanism for exporting common |
| infrastructure from the parent. Consider EXPORT_SYMBOL_NS() to convey |
| infrastructure from the parent module to the auxiliary module(s). |
| |
| |
| When Should the Auxiliary Bus Be Used |
| ===================================== |
| |
| The auxiliary bus is to be used when a driver and one or more kernel modules, |
| who share a common header file with the driver, need a mechanism to connect and |
| provide access to a shared object allocated by the auxiliary_device's |
| registering driver. The registering driver for the auxiliary_device(s) and the |
| kernel module(s) registering auxiliary_drivers can be from the same subsystem, |
| or from multiple subsystems. |
| |
| The emphasis here is on a common generic interface that keeps subsystem |
| customization out of the bus infrastructure. |
| |
| One example is a PCI network device that is RDMA-capable and exports a child |
| device to be driven by an auxiliary_driver in the RDMA subsystem. The PCI |
| driver allocates and registers an auxiliary_device for each physical |
| function on the NIC. The RDMA driver registers an auxiliary_driver that claims |
| each of these auxiliary_devices. This conveys data/ops published by the parent |
| PCI device/driver to the RDMA auxiliary_driver. |
| |
| Another use case is for the PCI device to be split out into multiple sub |
| functions. For each sub function an auxiliary_device is created. A PCI sub |
| function driver binds to such devices that creates its own one or more class |
| devices. A PCI sub function auxiliary device is likely to be contained in a |
| struct with additional attributes such as user defined sub function number and |
| optional attributes such as resources and a link to the parent device. These |
| attributes could be used by systemd/udev; and hence should be initialized |
| before a driver binds to an auxiliary_device. |
| |
| A key requirement for utilizing the auxiliary bus is that there is no |
| dependency on a physical bus, device, register accesses or regmap support. |
| These individual devices split from the core cannot live on the platform bus as |
| they are not physical devices that are controlled by DT/ACPI. The same |
| argument applies for not using MFD in this scenario as MFD relies on individual |
| function devices being physical devices. |
| |
| Auxiliary Device |
| ================ |
| |
| An auxiliary_device represents a part of its parent device's functionality. It |
| is given a name that, combined with the registering drivers KBUILD_MODNAME, |
| creates a match_name that is used for driver binding, and an id that combined |
| with the match_name provide a unique name to register with the bus subsystem. |
| |
| Registering an auxiliary_device is a two-step process. First call |
| auxiliary_device_init(), which checks several aspects of the auxiliary_device |
| struct and performs a device_initialize(). After this step completes, any |
| error state must have a call to auxiliary_device_uninit() in its resolution path. |
| The second step in registering an auxiliary_device is to perform a call to |
| auxiliary_device_add(), which sets the name of the device and add the device to |
| the bus. |
| |
| Unregistering an auxiliary_device is also a two-step process to mirror the |
| register process. First call auxiliary_device_delete(), then call |
| auxiliary_device_uninit(). |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| struct auxiliary_device { |
| struct device dev; |
| const char *name; |
| u32 id; |
| }; |
| |
| If two auxiliary_devices both with a match_name "mod.foo" are registered onto |
| the bus, they must have unique id values (e.g. "x" and "y") so that the |
| registered devices names are "mod.foo.x" and "mod.foo.y". If match_name + id |
| are not unique, then the device_add fails and generates an error message. |
| |
| The auxiliary_device.dev.type.release or auxiliary_device.dev.release must be |
| populated with a non-NULL pointer to successfully register the auxiliary_device. |
| |
| The auxiliary_device.dev.parent must also be populated. |
| |
| Auxiliary Device Memory Model and Lifespan |
| ------------------------------------------ |
| |
| The registering driver is the entity that allocates memory for the |
| auxiliary_device and register it on the auxiliary bus. It is important to note |
| that, as opposed to the platform bus, the registering driver is wholly |
| responsible for the management for the memory used for the driver object. |
| |
| A parent object, defined in the shared header file, contains the |
| auxiliary_device. It also contains a pointer to the shared object(s), which |
| also is defined in the shared header. Both the parent object and the shared |
| object(s) are allocated by the registering driver. This layout allows the |
| auxiliary_driver's registering module to perform a container_of() call to go |
| from the pointer to the auxiliary_device, that is passed during the call to the |
| auxiliary_driver's probe function, up to the parent object, and then have |
| access to the shared object(s). |
| |
| The memory for the auxiliary_device is freed only in its release() callback |
| flow as defined by its registering driver. |
| |
| The memory for the shared object(s) must have a lifespan equal to, or greater |
| than, the lifespan of the memory for the auxiliary_device. The auxiliary_driver |
| should only consider that this shared object is valid as long as the |
| auxiliary_device is still registered on the auxiliary bus. It is up to the |
| registering driver to manage (e.g. free or keep available) the memory for the |
| shared object beyond the life of the auxiliary_device. |
| |
| The registering driver must unregister all auxiliary devices before its own |
| driver.remove() is completed. |
| |
| Auxiliary Drivers |
| ================= |
| |
| Auxiliary drivers follow the standard driver model convention, where |
| discovery/enumeration is handled by the core, and drivers |
| provide probe() and remove() methods. They support power management |
| and shutdown notifications using the standard conventions. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| struct auxiliary_driver { |
| int (*probe)(struct auxiliary_device *, |
| const struct auxiliary_device_id *id); |
| void (*remove)(struct auxiliary_device *); |
| void (*shutdown)(struct auxiliary_device *); |
| int (*suspend)(struct auxiliary_device *, pm_message_t); |
| int (*resume)(struct auxiliary_device *); |
| struct device_driver driver; |
| const struct auxiliary_device_id *id_table; |
| }; |
| |
| Auxiliary drivers register themselves with the bus by calling |
| auxiliary_driver_register(). The id_table contains the match_names of auxiliary |
| devices that a driver can bind with. |
| |
| Example Usage |
| ============= |
| |
| Auxiliary devices are created and registered by a subsystem-level core device |
| that needs to break up its functionality into smaller fragments. One way to |
| extend the scope of an auxiliary_device is to encapsulate it within a domain- |
| pecific structure defined by the parent device. This structure contains the |
| auxiliary_device and any associated shared data/callbacks needed to establish |
| the connection with the parent. |
| |
| An example is: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| struct foo { |
| struct auxiliary_device auxdev; |
| void (*connect)(struct auxiliary_device *auxdev); |
| void (*disconnect)(struct auxiliary_device *auxdev); |
| void *data; |
| }; |
| |
| The parent device then registers the auxiliary_device by calling |
| auxiliary_device_init(), and then auxiliary_device_add(), with the pointer to |
| the auxdev member of the above structure. The parent provides a name for the |
| auxiliary_device that, combined with the parent's KBUILD_MODNAME, creates a |
| match_name that is be used for matching and binding with a driver. |
| |
| Whenever an auxiliary_driver is registered, based on the match_name, the |
| auxiliary_driver's probe() is invoked for the matching devices. The |
| auxiliary_driver can also be encapsulated inside custom drivers that make the |
| core device's functionality extensible by adding additional domain-specific ops |
| as follows: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| struct my_ops { |
| void (*send)(struct auxiliary_device *auxdev); |
| void (*receive)(struct auxiliary_device *auxdev); |
| }; |
| |
| |
| struct my_driver { |
| struct auxiliary_driver auxiliary_drv; |
| const struct my_ops ops; |
| }; |
| |
| An example of this type of usage is: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| const struct auxiliary_device_id my_auxiliary_id_table[] = { |
| { .name = "foo_mod.foo_dev" }, |
| { }, |
| }; |
| |
| const struct my_ops my_custom_ops = { |
| .send = my_tx, |
| .receive = my_rx, |
| }; |
| |
| const struct my_driver my_drv = { |
| .auxiliary_drv = { |
| .name = "myauxiliarydrv", |
| .id_table = my_auxiliary_id_table, |
| .probe = my_probe, |
| .remove = my_remove, |
| .shutdown = my_shutdown, |
| }, |
| .ops = my_custom_ops, |
| }; |