| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0-only OR BSD-2-Clause) |
| |
| ============ |
| Devlink Info |
| ============ |
| |
| The ``devlink-info`` mechanism enables device drivers to report device |
| (hardware and firmware) information in a standard, extensible fashion. |
| |
| The original motivation for the ``devlink-info`` API was twofold: |
| |
| - making it possible to automate device and firmware management in a fleet |
| of machines in a vendor-independent fashion (see also |
| :ref:`Documentation/networking/devlink/devlink-flash.rst <devlink_flash>`); |
| - name the per component FW versions (as opposed to the crowded ethtool |
| version string). |
| |
| ``devlink-info`` supports reporting multiple types of objects. Reporting driver |
| versions is generally discouraged - here, and via any other Linux API. |
| |
| .. list-table:: List of top level info objects |
| :widths: 5 95 |
| |
| * - Name |
| - Description |
| * - ``driver`` |
| - Name of the currently used device driver, also available through sysfs. |
| |
| * - ``serial_number`` |
| - Serial number of the device. |
| |
| This is usually the serial number of the ASIC, also often available |
| in PCI config space of the device in the *Device Serial Number* |
| capability. |
| |
| The serial number should be unique per physical device. |
| Sometimes the serial number of the device is only 48 bits long (the |
| length of the Ethernet MAC address), and since PCI DSN is 64 bits long |
| devices pad or encode additional information into the serial number. |
| One example is adding port ID or PCI interface ID in the extra two bytes. |
| Drivers should make sure to strip or normalize any such padding |
| or interface ID, and report only the part of the serial number |
| which uniquely identifies the hardware. In other words serial number |
| reported for two ports of the same device or on two hosts of |
| a multi-host device should be identical. |
| |
| * - ``board.serial_number`` |
| - Board serial number of the device. |
| |
| This is usually the serial number of the board, often available in |
| PCI *Vital Product Data*. |
| |
| * - ``fixed`` |
| - Group for hardware identifiers, and versions of components |
| which are not field-updatable. |
| |
| Versions in this section identify the device design. For example, |
| component identifiers or the board version reported in the PCI VPD. |
| Data in ``devlink-info`` should be broken into the smallest logical |
| components, e.g. PCI VPD may concatenate various information |
| to form the Part Number string, while in ``devlink-info`` all parts |
| should be reported as separate items. |
| |
| This group must not contain any frequently changing identifiers, |
| such as serial numbers. See |
| :ref:`Documentation/networking/devlink/devlink-flash.rst <devlink_flash>` |
| to understand why. |
| |
| * - ``running`` |
| - Group for information about currently running software/firmware. |
| These versions often only update after a reboot, sometimes device reset. |
| |
| * - ``stored`` |
| - Group for software/firmware versions in device flash. |
| |
| Stored values must update to reflect changes in the flash even |
| if reboot has not yet occurred. If device is not capable of updating |
| ``stored`` versions when new software is flashed, it must not report |
| them. |
| |
| Each version can be reported at most once in each version group. Firmware |
| components stored on the flash should feature in both the ``running`` and |
| ``stored`` sections, if device is capable of reporting ``stored`` versions |
| (see :ref:`Documentation/networking/devlink/devlink-flash.rst <devlink_flash>`). |
| In case software/firmware components are loaded from the disk (e.g. |
| ``/lib/firmware``) only the running version should be reported via |
| the kernel API. |
| |
| Generic Versions |
| ================ |
| |
| It is expected that drivers use the following generic names for exporting |
| version information. If a generic name for a given component doesn't exist yet, |
| driver authors should consult existing driver-specific versions and attempt |
| reuse. As last resort, if a component is truly unique, using driver-specific |
| names is allowed, but these should be documented in the driver-specific file. |
| |
| All versions should try to use the following terminology: |
| |
| .. list-table:: List of common version suffixes |
| :widths: 10 90 |
| |
| * - Name |
| - Description |
| * - ``id``, ``revision`` |
| - Identifiers of designs and revision, mostly used for hardware versions. |
| |
| * - ``api`` |
| - Version of API between components. API items are usually of limited |
| value to the user, and can be inferred from other versions by the vendor, |
| so adding API versions is generally discouraged as noise. |
| |
| * - ``bundle_id`` |
| - Identifier of a distribution package which was flashed onto the device. |
| This is an attribute of a firmware package which covers multiple versions |
| for ease of managing firmware images (see |
| :ref:`Documentation/networking/devlink/devlink-flash.rst <devlink_flash>`). |
| |
| ``bundle_id`` can appear in both ``running`` and ``stored`` versions, |
| but it must not be reported if any of the components covered by the |
| ``bundle_id`` was changed and no longer matches the version from |
| the bundle. |
| |
| board.id |
| -------- |
| |
| Unique identifier of the board design. |
| |
| board.rev |
| --------- |
| |
| Board design revision. |
| |
| asic.id |
| ------- |
| |
| ASIC design identifier. |
| |
| asic.rev |
| -------- |
| |
| ASIC design revision/stepping. |
| |
| board.manufacture |
| ----------------- |
| |
| An identifier of the company or the facility which produced the part. |
| |
| fw |
| -- |
| |
| Overall firmware version, often representing the collection of |
| fw.mgmt, fw.app, etc. |
| |
| fw.mgmt |
| ------- |
| |
| Control unit firmware version. This firmware is responsible for house |
| keeping tasks, PHY control etc. but not the packet-by-packet data path |
| operation. |
| |
| fw.mgmt.api |
| ----------- |
| |
| Firmware interface specification version of the software interfaces between |
| driver and firmware. |
| |
| fw.app |
| ------ |
| |
| Data path microcode controlling high-speed packet processing. |
| |
| fw.undi |
| ------- |
| |
| UNDI software, may include the UEFI driver, firmware or both. |
| |
| fw.ncsi |
| ------- |
| |
| Version of the software responsible for supporting/handling the |
| Network Controller Sideband Interface. |
| |
| fw.psid |
| ------- |
| |
| Unique identifier of the firmware parameter set. These are usually |
| parameters of a particular board, defined at manufacturing time. |
| |
| fw.roce |
| ------- |
| |
| RoCE firmware version which is responsible for handling roce |
| management. |
| |
| fw.bundle_id |
| ------------ |
| |
| Unique identifier of the entire firmware bundle. |
| |
| fw.bootloader |
| ------------- |
| |
| Version of the bootloader. |
| |
| Future work |
| =========== |
| |
| The following extensions could be useful: |
| |
| - on-disk firmware file names - drivers list the file names of firmware they |
| may need to load onto devices via the ``MODULE_FIRMWARE()`` macro. These, |
| however, are per module, rather than per device. It'd be useful to list |
| the names of firmware files the driver will try to load for a given device, |
| in order of priority. |