From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: X-Google-Smtp-Source: AH8x226JWWFNVr7D7TWqi0etJmfA6Rrp8FZG/j0AvfMrymyRUGUQD+n4ZGk40uG4YcqbfhTLdJS4 ARC-Seal: i=1; a=rsa-sha256; t=1519677653; cv=none; d=google.com; s=arc-20160816; b=rZLlMGCWKxvA7xTxsu2Imnzxj38kiNVp1Hrn6HOenD7P1qqJ5ZuVYCjBj52ZxJEu+y 5t8AQB3MtXVfb0s2SFSuD9PiUVol2vzF6Om4vKtCxpFT2p7GxvxoPxNH5q/HYlxXagL4 7AawBSpwI+Y25KjH7dttgIsSXfr4pYeRMXmJW7IQ7H4T/f+QGvyoDtHDbneJhvo6ZLIr zVZJIKMa26YIhLKlqBOanGuM340QeKfN8nbYzRQC7O0CBIYpAjI1FXhdzMNyLpVuWSPD 59v/f77IRITDu8nBsCSuAoPO1UWPoWqY/Go5/qkacGJ51+ZuFUK46L0d8HD8wD/EzT/r 9R/g== ARC-Message-Signature: i=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=google.com; s=arc-20160816; h=content-transfer-encoding:mime-version:references:in-reply-to :message-id:subject:cc:to:from:date:arc-authentication-results; bh=AWJVAXjYY9dWa/9kiRTdo90hgu+WYSTYMz2+GZU3EEg=; b=xGBOLdp2wzrrz9uaXdxQ3i7cs5zx39QGUZ/yJbY/Lq7vFOnhAnugZLzNpEH/Hf6ekS bWmq7Lt6+FuM03DgumAcOE65T224er5c6uP+/UiW3yBuODUpYrOvozge1u5eUtKOZu1F lGYkgiwWeZCeXXMwS9U6gGgq534fnh5y8V4fDLHgWfb3frCDU8UFlAbZqqwJFZBOoA6E zyhxsbgukW0Pi6BPS8WF1sYZuDPFyGhbN0nOo7HwRM9/yu0mTLr9lwO5OoTnurc2rv4A koMBFFreN52cUQ/isb3NnlMK/I3ICJqKqEHlITt3E54QctxU8v81Cenn7U3GLRtsF7yr OmpQ== ARC-Authentication-Results: i=1; mx.google.com; spf=pass (google.com: domain of boris.brezillon@bootlin.com designates 62.4.15.54 as permitted sender) smtp.mailfrom=boris.brezillon@bootlin.com Authentication-Results: mx.google.com; spf=pass (google.com: domain of boris.brezillon@bootlin.com designates 62.4.15.54 as permitted sender) smtp.mailfrom=boris.brezillon@bootlin.com Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2018 21:40:32 +0100 From: Boris Brezillon To: Vitor Soares Cc: Boris Brezillon , Wolfram Sang , , Jonathan Corbet , , Greg Kroah-Hartman , Arnd Bergmann , Przemyslaw Sroka , Arkadiusz Golec , Alan Douglas , Bartosz Folta , Damian Kos , Alicja Jurasik-Urbaniak , "Cyprian Wronka" , Suresh Punnoose , Thomas Petazzoni , Nishanth Menon , Rob Herring , Pawel Moll , Mark Rutland , Ian Campbell , Kumar Gala , , , "Geert Uytterhoeven" , Linus Walleij Subject: Re: [PATCH v2 2/7] i3c: Add core I3C infrastructure Message-ID: <20180226214032.1c3f929a@bbrezillon> In-Reply-To: <20180226213607.7161bb0a@bbrezillon> References: <20171214151610.19153-1-boris.brezillon@free-electrons.com> <20171214151610.19153-3-boris.brezillon@free-electrons.com> <20180223213000.407461d2@bbrezillon> <1b8fe82f-079b-6f55-0e59-5773027faa8e@synopsys.com> <20180226213607.7161bb0a@bbrezillon> X-Mailer: Claws Mail 3.15.0-dirty (GTK+ 2.24.31; x86_64-pc-linux-gnu) MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-getmail-retrieved-from-mailbox: INBOX X-GMAIL-THRID: =?utf-8?q?1586772916728163872?= X-GMAIL-MSGID: =?utf-8?q?1593497515540718108?= X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org List-ID: On Mon, 26 Feb 2018 21:36:07 +0100 Boris Brezillon wrote: > > >>> + > > >>> +/** > > >>> + * struct i3c_master_controller_ops - I3C master methods > > >>> + * @bus_init: hook responsible for the I3C bus initialization. This > > >>> + * initialization should follow the steps described in the I3C > > >>> + * specification. This hook is called with the bus lock held in > > >>> + * write mode, which means all _locked() helpers can safely be > > >>> + * called from there > > >>> + * @bus_cleanup: cleanup everything done in > > >>> + * &i3c_master_controller_ops->bus_init(). This function is > > >>> + * optional and should only be implemented if > > >>> + * &i3c_master_controller_ops->bus_init() attached private data > > >>> + * to I3C/I2C devices. This hook is called with the bus lock > > >>> + * held in write mode, which means all _locked() helpers can > > >>> + * safely be called from there > > >>> + * @supports_ccc_cmd: should return true if the CCC command is supported, false > > >>> + * otherwise > > >>> + * @send_ccc_cmd: send a CCC command > > >>> + * @send_hdr_cmds: send one or several HDR commands. If there is more than one > > >>> + * command, they should ideally be sent in the same HDR > > >>> + * transaction > > >>> + * @priv_xfers: do one or several private I3C SDR transfers > > >>> + * @i2c_xfers: do one or several I2C transfers > > >>> + * @request_ibi: attach an IBI handler to an I3C device. This implies defining > > >>> + * an IBI handler and the constraints of the IBI (maximum payload > > >>> + * length and number of pre-allocated slots). > > >>> + * Some controllers support less IBI-capable devices than regular > > >>> + * devices, so this method might return -%EBUSY if there's no > > >>> + * more space for an extra IBI registration > > >>> + * @free_ibi: free an IBI previously requested with ->request_ibi(). The IBI > > >>> + * should have been disabled with ->disable_irq() prior to that > > >>> + * @enable_ibi: enable the IBI. Only valid if ->request_ibi() has been called > > >>> + * prior to ->enable_ibi(). The controller should first enable > > >>> + * the IBI on the controller end (for example, unmask the hardware > > >>> + * IRQ) and then send the ENEC CCC command (with the IBI flag set) > > >>> + * to the I3C device > > >>> + * @disable_ibi: disable an IBI. First send the DISEC CCC command with the IBI > > >>> + * flag set and then deactivate the hardware IRQ on the > > >>> + * controller end > > >>> + * @recycle_ibi_slot: recycle an IBI slot. Called every time an IBI has been > > >>> + * processed by its handler. The IBI slot should be put back > > >>> + * in the IBI slot pool so that the controller can re-use it > > >>> + * for a future IBI > > >>> + * > > >>> + * One of the most important hooks in these ops is > > >>> + * &i3c_master_controller_ops->bus_init(). Here is a non-exhaustive list of > > >>> + * things that should be done in &i3c_master_controller_ops->bus_init(): > > >>> + * > > >>> + * 1) call i3c_master_set_info() with all information describing the master > > >>> + * 2) ask all slaves to drop their dynamic address by sending the RSTDAA CCC > > >>> + * with i3c_master_rstdaa_locked() > > >>> + * 3) ask all slaves to disable IBIs using i3c_master_disec_locked() > > >>> + * 4) start a DDA procedure by sending the ENTDAA CCC with > > >>> + * i3c_master_entdaa_locked(), or using the internal DAA logic provided by > > >>> + * your controller > > >> You mean SETDASA CCC command? > > > No, I really mean ENTDAA and DAA. By internal DAA logic I mean that > > > some controllers are probably automating the whole DAA procedure, while > > > others may let the SW control every step. > > My understanding is that i3c_master_entdaa_locked() will trigger the DAA process > > and DAA can be done by SETDASA, ENTDAA and later after the bus initialization > > with SETNEWDA. > > No. Only ENTDAA can trigger a DAA procedure. SETDASA is here to assign > a single dynamic address to a device that already has a static address > but no dynamic address yet, and SETNEWDA is here to modify the dynamic > address of a device that already has one. > > > > > I think the DAA process should be more generic, right now is only made through > > the ENTDAA command with (cmd.ndests = 1). > > I mean, shouldn't this be made by the core? First doing DAA for the devices > > declared and them try do discover the rest of devices on the bus. > > Can you detail a bit more? If the only part you're complaining about is > pre-assignment of dynamic addresses with SETDASA when a device is > declared in the DT with a reg and dynamic-address property, then yes, I > think I can provide an helper for that. But this helper would still have > to be called from the master controller driver (from ->bus_init() or > after a Hot-Join). > > Now, if the question is, is there a way we can automate things even more > and completely implement DAA from the core? I doubt it, because the way > the core will trigger DAA, expose discovered devices or allow you to > declare manually assigned addresses is likely to be > controller-dependent. > When I designed the framework I took the decision to base my work on the > spec rather than focusing on the I3C master controller I had to support > (Cadence). This is the reason I decided to keep the interface as simple > as possible at the risk of encouraging code-duplication (at first) > rather than coming up with an interface that is designed with a single > controller in mind and having to break things every time a new > controller comes out. > > Thank you for you comments, but I'd like to know if some of my design > choices are blocking you to support your controller. What I've seen so > far is a collection of things that might be relevant to fix (though > most of them are subject to interpretation and/or a matter of taste), > but nothing that should really block you. Well, that's not entirely true: I agree that something is missing in ->priv_xfers() to let the controller know about the device limitations, and this could be a blocking aspect. -- Boris Brezillon, Bootlin (formerly Free Electrons) Embedded Linux and Kernel engineering https://bootlin.com