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| Porting Drivers to the New Driver Model |
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| Patrick Mochel |
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| 7 January 2003 |
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| Overview |
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| Please refer to Documentation/driver-model/*.txt for definitions of |
| various driver types and concepts. |
| |
| Most of the work of porting devices drivers to the new model happens |
| at the bus driver layer. This was intentional, to minimize the |
| negative effect on kernel drivers, and to allow a gradual transition |
| of bus drivers. |
| |
| In a nutshell, the driver model consists of a set of objects that can |
| be embedded in larger, bus-specific objects. Fields in these generic |
| objects can replace fields in the bus-specific objects. |
| |
| The generic objects must be registered with the driver model core. By |
| doing so, they will exported via the sysfs filesystem. sysfs can be |
| mounted by doing |
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| # mount -t sysfs sysfs /sys |
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| |
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| The Process |
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| Step 0: Read include/linux/device.h for object and function definitions. |
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| Step 1: Registering the bus driver. |
| |
| |
| - Define a struct bus_type for the bus driver. |
| |
| struct bus_type pci_bus_type = { |
| .name = "pci", |
| }; |
| |
| |
| - Register the bus type. |
| This should be done in the initialization function for the bus type, |
| which is usually the module_init(), or equivalent, function. |
| |
| static int __init pci_driver_init(void) |
| { |
| return bus_register(&pci_bus_type); |
| } |
| |
| subsys_initcall(pci_driver_init); |
| |
| |
| The bus type may be unregistered (if the bus driver may be compiled |
| as a module) by doing: |
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| bus_unregister(&pci_bus_type); |
| |
| |
| - Export the bus type for others to use. |
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| Other code may wish to reference the bus type, so declare it in a |
| shared header file and export the symbol. |
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| From include/linux/pci.h: |
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| extern struct bus_type pci_bus_type; |
| |
| |
| From file the above code appears in: |
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| EXPORT_SYMBOL(pci_bus_type); |
| |
| |
| |
| - This will cause the bus to show up in /sys/bus/pci/ with two |
| subdirectories: 'devices' and 'drivers'. |
| |
| # tree -d /sys/bus/pci/ |
| /sys/bus/pci/ |
| |-- devices |
| `-- drivers |
| |
| |
| |
| Step 2: Registering Devices. |
| |
| struct device represents a single device. It mainly contains metadata |
| describing the relationship the device has to other entities. |
| |
| |
| - Embed a struct device in the bus-specific device type. |
| |
| |
| struct pci_dev { |
| ... |
| struct device dev; /* Generic device interface */ |
| ... |
| }; |
| |
| It is recommended that the generic device not be the first item in |
| the struct to discourage programmers from doing mindless casts |
| between the object types. Instead macros, or inline functions, |
| should be created to convert from the generic object type. |
| |
| |
| #define to_pci_dev(n) container_of(n, struct pci_dev, dev) |
| |
| or |
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| static inline struct pci_dev * to_pci_dev(struct kobject * kobj) |
| { |
| return container_of(n, struct pci_dev, dev); |
| } |
| |
| This allows the compiler to verify type-safety of the operations |
| that are performed (which is Good). |
| |
| |
| - Initialize the device on registration. |
| |
| When devices are discovered or registered with the bus type, the |
| bus driver should initialize the generic device. The most important |
| things to initialize are the bus_id, parent, and bus fields. |
| |
| The bus_id is an ASCII string that contains the device's address on |
| the bus. The format of this string is bus-specific. This is |
| necessary for representing devices in sysfs. |
| |
| parent is the physical parent of the device. It is important that |
| the bus driver sets this field correctly. |
| |
| The driver model maintains an ordered list of devices that it uses |
| for power management. This list must be in order to guarantee that |
| devices are shutdown before their physical parents, and vice versa. |
| The order of this list is determined by the parent of registered |
| devices. |
| |
| Also, the location of the device's sysfs directory depends on a |
| device's parent. sysfs exports a directory structure that mirrors |
| the device hierarchy. Accurately setting the parent guarantees that |
| sysfs will accurately represent the hierarchy. |
| |
| The device's bus field is a pointer to the bus type the device |
| belongs to. This should be set to the bus_type that was declared |
| and initialized before. |
| |
| Optionally, the bus driver may set the device's name and release |
| fields. |
| |
| The name field is an ASCII string describing the device, like |
| |
| "ATI Technologies Inc Radeon QD" |
| |
| The release field is a callback that the driver model core calls |
| when the device has been removed, and all references to it have |
| been released. More on this in a moment. |
| |
| |
| - Register the device. |
| |
| Once the generic device has been initialized, it can be registered |
| with the driver model core by doing: |
| |
| device_register(&dev->dev); |
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| It can later be unregistered by doing: |
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| device_unregister(&dev->dev); |
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| This should happen on buses that support hotpluggable devices. |
| If a bus driver unregisters a device, it should not immediately free |
| it. It should instead wait for the driver model core to call the |
| device's release method, then free the bus-specific object. |
| (There may be other code that is currently referencing the device |
| structure, and it would be rude to free the device while that is |
| happening). |
| |
| |
| When the device is registered, a directory in sysfs is created. |
| The PCI tree in sysfs looks like: |
| |
| /sys/devices/pci0/ |
| |-- 00:00.0 |
| |-- 00:01.0 |
| | `-- 01:00.0 |
| |-- 00:02.0 |
| | `-- 02:1f.0 |
| | `-- 03:00.0 |
| |-- 00:1e.0 |
| | `-- 04:04.0 |
| |-- 00:1f.0 |
| |-- 00:1f.1 |
| | |-- ide0 |
| | | |-- 0.0 |
| | | `-- 0.1 |
| | `-- ide1 |
| | `-- 1.0 |
| |-- 00:1f.2 |
| |-- 00:1f.3 |
| `-- 00:1f.5 |
| |
| Also, symlinks are created in the bus's 'devices' directory |
| that point to the device's directory in the physical hierarchy. |
| |
| /sys/bus/pci/devices/ |
| |-- 00:00.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:00.0 |
| |-- 00:01.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:01.0 |
| |-- 00:02.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:02.0 |
| |-- 00:1e.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1e.0 |
| |-- 00:1f.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1f.0 |
| |-- 00:1f.1 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1f.1 |
| |-- 00:1f.2 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1f.2 |
| |-- 00:1f.3 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1f.3 |
| |-- 00:1f.5 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1f.5 |
| |-- 01:00.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:01.0/01:00.0 |
| |-- 02:1f.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:02.0/02:1f.0 |
| |-- 03:00.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:02.0/02:1f.0/03:00.0 |
| `-- 04:04.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1e.0/04:04.0 |
| |
| |
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| Step 3: Registering Drivers. |
| |
| struct device_driver is a simple driver structure that contains a set |
| of operations that the driver model core may call. |
| |
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| - Embed a struct device_driver in the bus-specific driver. |
| |
| Just like with devices, do something like: |
| |
| struct pci_driver { |
| ... |
| struct device_driver driver; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| - Initialize the generic driver structure. |
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| When the driver registers with the bus (e.g. doing pci_register_driver()), |
| initialize the necessary fields of the driver: the name and bus |
| fields. |
| |
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| - Register the driver. |
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| After the generic driver has been initialized, call |
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| driver_register(&drv->driver); |
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| to register the driver with the core. |
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| When the driver is unregistered from the bus, unregister it from the |
| core by doing: |
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| driver_unregister(&drv->driver); |
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| Note that this will block until all references to the driver have |
| gone away. Normally, there will not be any. |
| |
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| - Sysfs representation. |
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| Drivers are exported via sysfs in their bus's 'driver's directory. |
| For example: |
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| /sys/bus/pci/drivers/ |
| |-- 3c59x |
| |-- Ensoniq AudioPCI |
| |-- agpgart-amdk7 |
| |-- e100 |
| `-- serial |
| |
| |
| Step 4: Define Generic Methods for Drivers. |
| |
| struct device_driver defines a set of operations that the driver model |
| core calls. Most of these operations are probably similar to |
| operations the bus already defines for drivers, but taking different |
| parameters. |
| |
| It would be difficult and tedious to force every driver on a bus to |
| simultaneously convert their drivers to generic format. Instead, the |
| bus driver should define single instances of the generic methods that |
| forward call to the bus-specific drivers. For instance: |
| |
| |
| static int pci_device_remove(struct device * dev) |
| { |
| struct pci_dev * pci_dev = to_pci_dev(dev); |
| struct pci_driver * drv = pci_dev->driver; |
| |
| if (drv) { |
| if (drv->remove) |
| drv->remove(pci_dev); |
| pci_dev->driver = NULL; |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| |
| The generic driver should be initialized with these methods before it |
| is registered. |
| |
| /* initialize common driver fields */ |
| drv->driver.name = drv->name; |
| drv->driver.bus = &pci_bus_type; |
| drv->driver.probe = pci_device_probe; |
| drv->driver.resume = pci_device_resume; |
| drv->driver.suspend = pci_device_suspend; |
| drv->driver.remove = pci_device_remove; |
| |
| /* register with core */ |
| driver_register(&drv->driver); |
| |
| |
| Ideally, the bus should only initialize the fields if they are not |
| already set. This allows the drivers to implement their own generic |
| methods. |
| |
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| Step 5: Support generic driver binding. |
| |
| The model assumes that a device or driver can be dynamically |
| registered with the bus at any time. When registration happens, |
| devices must be bound to a driver, or drivers must be bound to all |
| devices that it supports. |
| |
| A driver typically contains a list of device IDs that it supports. The |
| bus driver compares these IDs to the IDs of devices registered with it. |
| The format of the device IDs, and the semantics for comparing them are |
| bus-specific, so the generic model does attempt to generalize them. |
| |
| Instead, a bus may supply a method in struct bus_type that does the |
| comparison: |
| |
| int (*match)(struct device * dev, struct device_driver * drv); |
| |
| match should return positive value if the driver supports the device, |
| and zero otherwise. It may also return error code (for example |
| -EPROBE_DEFER) if determining that given driver supports the device is |
| not possible. |
| |
| When a device is registered, the bus's list of drivers is iterated |
| over. bus->match() is called for each one until a match is found. |
| |
| When a driver is registered, the bus's list of devices is iterated |
| over. bus->match() is called for each device that is not already |
| claimed by a driver. |
| |
| When a device is successfully bound to a driver, device->driver is |
| set, the device is added to a per-driver list of devices, and a |
| symlink is created in the driver's sysfs directory that points to the |
| device's physical directory: |
| |
| /sys/bus/pci/drivers/ |
| |-- 3c59x |
| | `-- 00:0b.0 -> ../../../../devices/pci0/00:0b.0 |
| |-- Ensoniq AudioPCI |
| |-- agpgart-amdk7 |
| | `-- 00:00.0 -> ../../../../devices/pci0/00:00.0 |
| |-- e100 |
| | `-- 00:0c.0 -> ../../../../devices/pci0/00:0c.0 |
| `-- serial |
| |
| |
| This driver binding should replace the existing driver binding |
| mechanism the bus currently uses. |
| |
| |
| Step 6: Supply a hotplug callback. |
| |
| Whenever a device is registered with the driver model core, the |
| userspace program /sbin/hotplug is called to notify userspace. |
| Users can define actions to perform when a device is inserted or |
| removed. |
| |
| The driver model core passes several arguments to userspace via |
| environment variables, including |
| |
| - ACTION: set to 'add' or 'remove' |
| - DEVPATH: set to the device's physical path in sysfs. |
| |
| A bus driver may also supply additional parameters for userspace to |
| consume. To do this, a bus must implement the 'hotplug' method in |
| struct bus_type: |
| |
| int (*hotplug) (struct device *dev, char **envp, |
| int num_envp, char *buffer, int buffer_size); |
| |
| This is called immediately before /sbin/hotplug is executed. |
| |
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| Step 7: Cleaning up the bus driver. |
| |
| The generic bus, device, and driver structures provide several fields |
| that can replace those defined privately to the bus driver. |
| |
| - Device list. |
| |
| struct bus_type contains a list of all devices registered with the bus |
| type. This includes all devices on all instances of that bus type. |
| An internal list that the bus uses may be removed, in favor of using |
| this one. |
| |
| The core provides an iterator to access these devices. |
| |
| int bus_for_each_dev(struct bus_type * bus, struct device * start, |
| void * data, int (*fn)(struct device *, void *)); |
| |
| |
| - Driver list. |
| |
| struct bus_type also contains a list of all drivers registered with |
| it. An internal list of drivers that the bus driver maintains may |
| be removed in favor of using the generic one. |
| |
| The drivers may be iterated over, like devices: |
| |
| int bus_for_each_drv(struct bus_type * bus, struct device_driver * start, |
| void * data, int (*fn)(struct device_driver *, void *)); |
| |
| |
| Please see drivers/base/bus.c for more information. |
| |
| |
| - rwsem |
| |
| struct bus_type contains an rwsem that protects all core accesses to |
| the device and driver lists. This can be used by the bus driver |
| internally, and should be used when accessing the device or driver |
| lists the bus maintains. |
| |
| |
| - Device and driver fields. |
| |
| Some of the fields in struct device and struct device_driver duplicate |
| fields in the bus-specific representations of these objects. Feel free |
| to remove the bus-specific ones and favor the generic ones. Note |
| though, that this will likely mean fixing up all the drivers that |
| reference the bus-specific fields (though those should all be 1-line |
| changes). |
| |