| ========================== |
| EFI Real Time Clock driver |
| ========================== |
| |
| S. Eranian <eranian@hpl.hp.com> |
| |
| March 2000 |
| |
| 1. Introduction |
| =============== |
| |
| This document describes the efirtc.c driver has provided for |
| the IA-64 platform. |
| |
| The purpose of this driver is to supply an API for kernel and user applications |
| to get access to the Time Service offered by EFI version 0.92. |
| |
| EFI provides 4 calls one can make once the OS is booted: GetTime(), |
| SetTime(), GetWakeupTime(), SetWakeupTime() which are all supported by this |
| driver. We describe those calls as well the design of the driver in the |
| following sections. |
| |
| 2. Design Decisions |
| =================== |
| |
| The original ideas was to provide a very simple driver to get access to, |
| at first, the time of day service. This is required in order to access, in a |
| portable way, the CMOS clock. A program like /sbin/hwclock uses such a clock |
| to initialize the system view of the time during boot. |
| |
| Because we wanted to minimize the impact on existing user-level apps using |
| the CMOS clock, we decided to expose an API that was very similar to the one |
| used today with the legacy RTC driver (driver/char/rtc.c). However, because |
| EFI provides a simpler services, not all ioctl() are available. Also |
| new ioctl()s have been introduced for things that EFI provides but not the |
| legacy. |
| |
| EFI uses a slightly different way of representing the time, noticeably |
| the reference date is different. Year is the using the full 4-digit format. |
| The Epoch is January 1st 1998. For backward compatibility reasons we don't |
| expose this new way of representing time. Instead we use something very |
| similar to the struct tm, i.e. struct rtc_time, as used by hwclock. |
| One of the reasons for doing it this way is to allow for EFI to still evolve |
| without necessarily impacting any of the user applications. The decoupling |
| enables flexibility and permits writing wrapper code is ncase things change. |
| |
| The driver exposes two interfaces, one via the device file and a set of |
| ioctl()s. The other is read-only via the /proc filesystem. |
| |
| As of today we don't offer a /proc/sys interface. |
| |
| To allow for a uniform interface between the legacy RTC and EFI time service, |
| we have created the include/linux/rtc.h header file to contain only the |
| "public" API of the two drivers. The specifics of the legacy RTC are still |
| in include/linux/mc146818rtc.h. |
| |
| |
| 3. Time of day service |
| ====================== |
| |
| The part of the driver gives access to the time of day service of EFI. |
| Two ioctl()s, compatible with the legacy RTC calls: |
| |
| Read the CMOS clock:: |
| |
| ioctl(d, RTC_RD_TIME, &rtc); |
| |
| Write the CMOS clock:: |
| |
| ioctl(d, RTC_SET_TIME, &rtc); |
| |
| The rtc is a pointer to a data structure defined in rtc.h which is close |
| to a struct tm:: |
| |
| struct rtc_time { |
| int tm_sec; |
| int tm_min; |
| int tm_hour; |
| int tm_mday; |
| int tm_mon; |
| int tm_year; |
| int tm_wday; |
| int tm_yday; |
| int tm_isdst; |
| }; |
| |
| The driver takes care of converting back an forth between the EFI time and |
| this format. |
| |
| Those two ioctl()s can be exercised with the hwclock command: |
| |
| For reading:: |
| |
| # /sbin/hwclock --show |
| Mon Mar 6 15:32:32 2000 -0.910248 seconds |
| |
| For setting:: |
| |
| # /sbin/hwclock --systohc |
| |
| Root privileges are required to be able to set the time of day. |
| |
| 4. Wakeup Alarm service |
| ======================= |
| |
| EFI provides an API by which one can program when a machine should wakeup, |
| i.e. reboot. This is very different from the alarm provided by the legacy |
| RTC which is some kind of interval timer alarm. For this reason we don't use |
| the same ioctl()s to get access to the service. Instead we have |
| introduced 2 news ioctl()s to the interface of an RTC. |
| |
| We have added 2 new ioctl()s that are specific to the EFI driver: |
| |
| Read the current state of the alarm:: |
| |
| ioctl(d, RTC_WKALM_RD, &wkt) |
| |
| Set the alarm or change its status:: |
| |
| ioctl(d, RTC_WKALM_SET, &wkt) |
| |
| The wkt structure encapsulates a struct rtc_time + 2 extra fields to get |
| status information:: |
| |
| struct rtc_wkalrm { |
| |
| unsigned char enabled; /* =1 if alarm is enabled */ |
| unsigned char pending; /* =1 if alarm is pending */ |
| |
| struct rtc_time time; |
| } |
| |
| As of today, none of the existing user-level apps supports this feature. |
| However writing such a program should be hard by simply using those two |
| ioctl(). |
| |
| Root privileges are required to be able to set the alarm. |
| |
| 5. References |
| ============= |
| |
| Checkout the following Web site for more information on EFI: |
| |
| http://developer.intel.com/technology/efi/ |