| _DSD Device Properties Usage Rules |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| Properties, Property Sets and Property Subsets |
| ---------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The _DSD (Device Specific Data) configuration object, introduced in ACPI 5.1, |
| allows any type of device configuration data to be provided via the ACPI |
| namespace. In principle, the format of the data may be arbitrary, but it has to |
| be identified by a UUID which must be recognized by the driver processing the |
| _DSD output. However, there are generic UUIDs defined for _DSD recognized by |
| the ACPI subsystem in the Linux kernel which automatically processes the data |
| packages associated with them and makes those data available to device drivers |
| as "device properties". |
| |
| A device property is a data item consisting of a string key and a value (of a |
| specific type) associated with it. |
| |
| In the ACPI _DSD context it is an element of the sub-package following the |
| generic Device Properties UUID in the _DSD return package as specified in the |
| Device Properties UUID definition document [1]. |
| |
| It also may be regarded as the definition of a key and the associated data type |
| that can be returned by _DSD in the Device Properties UUID sub-package for a |
| given device. |
| |
| A property set is a collection of properties applicable to a hardware entity |
| like a device. In the ACPI _DSD context it is the set of all properties that |
| can be returned in the Device Properties UUID sub-package for the device in |
| question. |
| |
| Property subsets are nested collections of properties. Each of them is |
| associated with an additional key (name) allowing the subset to be referred |
| to as a whole (and to be treated as a separate entity). The canonical |
| representation of property subsets is via the mechanism specified in the |
| Hierarchical Properties Extension UUID definition document [2]. |
| |
| Property sets may be hierarchical. That is, a property set may contain |
| multiple property subsets that each may contain property subsets of its |
| own and so on. |
| |
| General Validity Rule for Property Sets |
| --------------------------------------- |
| |
| Valid property sets must follow the guidance given by the Device Properties UUID |
| definition document [1]. |
| |
| _DSD properties are intended to be used in addition to, and not instead of, the |
| existing mechanisms defined by the ACPI specification. Therefore, as a rule, |
| they should only be used if the ACPI specification does not make direct |
| provisions for handling the underlying use case. It generally is invalid to |
| return property sets which do not follow that rule from _DSD in data packages |
| associated with the Device Properties UUID. |
| |
| Additional Considerations |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| There are cases in which, even if the general rule given above is followed in |
| principle, the property set may still not be regarded as a valid one. |
| |
| For example, that applies to device properties which may cause kernel code |
| (either a device driver or a library/subsystem) to access hardware in a way |
| possibly leading to a conflict with AML methods in the ACPI namespace. In |
| particular, that may happen if the kernel code uses device properties to |
| manipulate hardware normally controlled by ACPI methods related to power |
| management, like _PSx and _DSW (for device objects) or _ON and _OFF (for power |
| resource objects), or by ACPI device disabling/enabling methods, like _DIS and |
| _SRS. |
| |
| In all cases in which kernel code may do something that will confuse AML as a |
| result of using device properties, the device properties in question are not |
| suitable for the ACPI environment and consequently they cannot belong to a valid |
| property set. |
| |
| Property Sets and Device Tree Bindings |
| -------------------------------------- |
| |
| It often is useful to make _DSD return property sets that follow Device Tree |
| bindings. |
| |
| In those cases, however, the above validity considerations must be taken into |
| account in the first place and returning invalid property sets from _DSD must be |
| avoided. For this reason, it may not be possible to make _DSD return a property |
| set following the given DT binding literally and completely. Still, for the |
| sake of code re-use, it may make sense to provide as much of the configuration |
| data as possible in the form of device properties and complement that with an |
| ACPI-specific mechanism suitable for the use case at hand. |
| |
| In any case, property sets following DT bindings literally should not be |
| expected to automatically work in the ACPI environment regardless of their |
| contents. |
| |
| References |
| ---------- |
| |
| [1] http://www.uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/_DSD-device-properties-UUID.pdf |
| [2] http://www.uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/_DSD-hierarchical-data-extension-UUID-v1.1.pdf |