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authorLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>2009-01-07 15:37:24 -0800
committerLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>2009-01-07 15:37:24 -0800
commit7c7758f99d39d529a64d4f60d22129bbf2f16d74 (patch)
tree8847b5e56812fe4c4c812cfffc78e391a91f4ebe /include
parentMerge git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/arjan/linux-2.6-async (diff)
parentwimax/i2400m: add CREDITS and MAINTAINERS entries (diff)
downloadlinux-dev-7c7758f99d39d529a64d4f60d22129bbf2f16d74.tar.xz
linux-dev-7c7758f99d39d529a64d4f60d22129bbf2f16d74.zip
Merge git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/usb-2.6
* git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/usb-2.6: (123 commits) wimax/i2400m: add CREDITS and MAINTAINERS entries wimax: export linux/wimax.h and linux/wimax/i2400m.h with headers_install i2400m: Makefile and Kconfig i2400m/SDIO: TX and RX path backends i2400m/SDIO: firmware upload backend i2400m/SDIO: probe/disconnect, dev init/shutdown and reset backends i2400m/SDIO: header for the SDIO subdriver i2400m/USB: TX and RX path backends i2400m/USB: firmware upload backend i2400m/USB: probe/disconnect, dev init/shutdown and reset backends i2400m/USB: header for the USB bus driver i2400m: debugfs controls i2400m: various functions for device management i2400m: RX and TX data/control paths i2400m: firmware loading and bootrom initialization i2400m: linkage to the networking stack i2400m: Generic probe/disconnect, reset and message passing i2400m: host/device procotol and core driver definitions i2400m: documentation and instructions for usage wimax: Makefile, Kconfig and docbook linkage for the stack ...
Diffstat (limited to 'include')
-rw-r--r--include/linux/Kbuild2
-rw-r--r--include/linux/debugfs.h2
-rw-r--r--include/linux/oxu210hp.h7
-rw-r--r--include/linux/usb.h30
-rw-r--r--include/linux/usb/association.h22
-rw-r--r--include/linux/usb/gpio_vbus.h30
-rw-r--r--include/linux/usb/musb.h5
-rw-r--r--include/linux/usb/otg.h1
-rw-r--r--include/linux/usb_usual.h7
-rw-r--r--include/linux/wimax.h234
-rw-r--r--include/linux/wimax/Kbuild1
-rw-r--r--include/linux/wimax/debug.h453
-rw-r--r--include/linux/wimax/i2400m.h512
-rw-r--r--include/net/wimax.h520
14 files changed, 1806 insertions, 20 deletions
diff --git a/include/linux/Kbuild b/include/linux/Kbuild
index a3323f337e4d..12e9a2957caf 100644
--- a/include/linux/Kbuild
+++ b/include/linux/Kbuild
@@ -371,3 +371,5 @@ unifdef-y += xattr.h
unifdef-y += xfrm.h
objhdr-y += version.h
+header-y += wimax.h
+header-y += wimax/
diff --git a/include/linux/debugfs.h b/include/linux/debugfs.h
index e1a6c046cea3..23936b16426b 100644
--- a/include/linux/debugfs.h
+++ b/include/linux/debugfs.h
@@ -63,6 +63,8 @@ struct dentry *debugfs_create_x16(const char *name, mode_t mode,
struct dentry *parent, u16 *value);
struct dentry *debugfs_create_x32(const char *name, mode_t mode,
struct dentry *parent, u32 *value);
+struct dentry *debugfs_create_size_t(const char *name, mode_t mode,
+ struct dentry *parent, size_t *value);
struct dentry *debugfs_create_bool(const char *name, mode_t mode,
struct dentry *parent, u32 *value);
diff --git a/include/linux/oxu210hp.h b/include/linux/oxu210hp.h
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..0bf96eae5389
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/linux/oxu210hp.h
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
+/* platform data for the OXU210HP HCD */
+
+struct oxu210hp_platform_data {
+ unsigned int bus16:1;
+ unsigned int use_hcd_otg:1;
+ unsigned int use_hcd_sph:1;
+};
diff --git a/include/linux/usb.h b/include/linux/usb.h
index f72aa51f7bcd..85ee9be9361e 100644
--- a/include/linux/usb.h
+++ b/include/linux/usb.h
@@ -108,6 +108,7 @@ enum usb_interface_condition {
* (in probe()), bound to a driver, or unbinding (in disconnect())
* @is_active: flag set when the interface is bound and not suspended.
* @sysfs_files_created: sysfs attributes exist
+ * @ep_devs_created: endpoint child pseudo-devices exist
* @unregistering: flag set when the interface is being unregistered
* @needs_remote_wakeup: flag set when the driver requires remote-wakeup
* capability during autosuspend.
@@ -120,6 +121,11 @@ enum usb_interface_condition {
* to the sysfs representation for that device.
* @pm_usage_cnt: PM usage counter for this interface; autosuspend is not
* allowed unless the counter is 0.
+ * @reset_ws: Used for scheduling resets from atomic context.
+ * @reset_running: set to 1 if the interface is currently running a
+ * queued reset so that usb_cancel_queued_reset() doesn't try to
+ * remove from the workqueue when running inside the worker
+ * thread. See __usb_queue_reset_device().
*
* USB device drivers attach to interfaces on a physical device. Each
* interface encapsulates a single high level function, such as feeding
@@ -164,14 +170,17 @@ struct usb_interface {
enum usb_interface_condition condition; /* state of binding */
unsigned is_active:1; /* the interface is not suspended */
unsigned sysfs_files_created:1; /* the sysfs attributes exist */
+ unsigned ep_devs_created:1; /* endpoint "devices" exist */
unsigned unregistering:1; /* unregistration is in progress */
unsigned needs_remote_wakeup:1; /* driver requires remote wakeup */
unsigned needs_altsetting0:1; /* switch to altsetting 0 is pending */
unsigned needs_binding:1; /* needs delayed unbind/rebind */
+ unsigned reset_running:1;
struct device dev; /* interface specific device info */
struct device *usb_dev;
int pm_usage_cnt; /* usage counter for autosuspend */
+ struct work_struct reset_ws; /* for resets in atomic context */
};
#define to_usb_interface(d) container_of(d, struct usb_interface, dev)
#define interface_to_usbdev(intf) \
@@ -329,7 +338,7 @@ struct usb_bus {
#endif
struct device *dev; /* device for this bus */
-#if defined(CONFIG_USB_MON)
+#if defined(CONFIG_USB_MON) || defined(CONFIG_USB_MON_MODULE)
struct mon_bus *mon_bus; /* non-null when associated */
int monitored; /* non-zero when monitored */
#endif
@@ -398,6 +407,7 @@ struct usb_tt;
* @urbnum: number of URBs submitted for the whole device
* @active_duration: total time device is not suspended
* @autosuspend: for delayed autosuspends
+ * @autoresume: for autoresumes requested while in_interrupt
* @pm_mutex: protects PM operations
* @last_busy: time of last use
* @autosuspend_delay: in jiffies
@@ -476,6 +486,7 @@ struct usb_device {
#ifdef CONFIG_PM
struct delayed_work autosuspend;
+ struct work_struct autoresume;
struct mutex pm_mutex;
unsigned long last_busy;
@@ -505,6 +516,7 @@ extern int usb_lock_device_for_reset(struct usb_device *udev,
/* USB port reset for device reinitialization */
extern int usb_reset_device(struct usb_device *dev);
+extern void usb_queue_reset_device(struct usb_interface *dev);
extern struct usb_device *usb_find_device(u16 vendor_id, u16 product_id);
@@ -513,6 +525,8 @@ extern struct usb_device *usb_find_device(u16 vendor_id, u16 product_id);
extern int usb_autopm_set_interface(struct usb_interface *intf);
extern int usb_autopm_get_interface(struct usb_interface *intf);
extern void usb_autopm_put_interface(struct usb_interface *intf);
+extern int usb_autopm_get_interface_async(struct usb_interface *intf);
+extern void usb_autopm_put_interface_async(struct usb_interface *intf);
static inline void usb_autopm_enable(struct usb_interface *intf)
{
@@ -539,8 +553,13 @@ static inline int usb_autopm_set_interface(struct usb_interface *intf)
static inline int usb_autopm_get_interface(struct usb_interface *intf)
{ return 0; }
+static inline int usb_autopm_get_interface_async(struct usb_interface *intf)
+{ return 0; }
+
static inline void usb_autopm_put_interface(struct usb_interface *intf)
{ }
+static inline void usb_autopm_put_interface_async(struct usb_interface *intf)
+{ }
static inline void usb_autopm_enable(struct usb_interface *intf)
{ }
static inline void usb_autopm_disable(struct usb_interface *intf)
@@ -1050,7 +1069,7 @@ struct usb_device_driver {
void (*disconnect) (struct usb_device *udev);
int (*suspend) (struct usb_device *udev, pm_message_t message);
- int (*resume) (struct usb_device *udev);
+ int (*resume) (struct usb_device *udev, pm_message_t message);
struct usbdrv_wrap drvwrap;
unsigned int supports_autosuspend:1;
};
@@ -1321,7 +1340,7 @@ struct urb {
struct kref kref; /* reference count of the URB */
void *hcpriv; /* private data for host controller */
atomic_t use_count; /* concurrent submissions counter */
- u8 reject; /* submissions will fail */
+ atomic_t reject; /* submissions will fail */
int unlinked; /* unlink error code */
/* public: documented fields in the urb that can be used by drivers */
@@ -1466,6 +1485,7 @@ extern void usb_poison_urb(struct urb *urb);
extern void usb_unpoison_urb(struct urb *urb);
extern void usb_kill_anchored_urbs(struct usb_anchor *anchor);
extern void usb_poison_anchored_urbs(struct usb_anchor *anchor);
+extern void usb_unpoison_anchored_urbs(struct usb_anchor *anchor);
extern void usb_unlink_anchored_urbs(struct usb_anchor *anchor);
extern void usb_anchor_urb(struct urb *urb, struct usb_anchor *anchor);
extern void usb_unanchor_urb(struct urb *urb);
@@ -1722,10 +1742,6 @@ extern void usb_unregister_notify(struct notifier_block *nb);
#define err(format, arg...) printk(KERN_ERR KBUILD_MODNAME ": " \
format "\n" , ## arg)
-#define info(format, arg...) printk(KERN_INFO KBUILD_MODNAME ": " \
- format "\n" , ## arg)
-#define warn(format, arg...) printk(KERN_WARNING KBUILD_MODNAME ": " \
- format "\n" , ## arg)
#endif /* __KERNEL__ */
diff --git a/include/linux/usb/association.h b/include/linux/usb/association.h
index 07c5e3cf5898..0a4a18b3c1bb 100644
--- a/include/linux/usb/association.h
+++ b/include/linux/usb/association.h
@@ -28,17 +28,17 @@ struct wusb_am_attr {
};
/* Different fields defined by the spec */
-#define WUSB_AR_AssociationTypeId { .id = 0x0000, .len = 2 }
-#define WUSB_AR_AssociationSubTypeId { .id = 0x0001, .len = 2 }
-#define WUSB_AR_Length { .id = 0x0002, .len = 4 }
-#define WUSB_AR_AssociationStatus { .id = 0x0004, .len = 4 }
-#define WUSB_AR_LangID { .id = 0x0008, .len = 2 }
-#define WUSB_AR_DeviceFriendlyName { .id = 0x000b, .len = 64 } /* max */
-#define WUSB_AR_HostFriendlyName { .id = 0x000c, .len = 64 } /* max */
-#define WUSB_AR_CHID { .id = 0x1000, .len = 16 }
-#define WUSB_AR_CDID { .id = 0x1001, .len = 16 }
-#define WUSB_AR_ConnectionContext { .id = 0x1002, .len = 48 }
-#define WUSB_AR_BandGroups { .id = 0x1004, .len = 2 }
+#define WUSB_AR_AssociationTypeId { .id = cpu_to_le16(0x0000), .len = cpu_to_le16(2) }
+#define WUSB_AR_AssociationSubTypeId { .id = cpu_to_le16(0x0001), .len = cpu_to_le16(2) }
+#define WUSB_AR_Length { .id = cpu_to_le16(0x0002), .len = cpu_to_le16(4) }
+#define WUSB_AR_AssociationStatus { .id = cpu_to_le16(0x0004), .len = cpu_to_le16(4) }
+#define WUSB_AR_LangID { .id = cpu_to_le16(0x0008), .len = cpu_to_le16(2) }
+#define WUSB_AR_DeviceFriendlyName { .id = cpu_to_le16(0x000b), .len = cpu_to_le16(64) } /* max */
+#define WUSB_AR_HostFriendlyName { .id = cpu_to_le16(0x000c), .len = cpu_to_le16(64) } /* max */
+#define WUSB_AR_CHID { .id = cpu_to_le16(0x1000), .len = cpu_to_le16(16) }
+#define WUSB_AR_CDID { .id = cpu_to_le16(0x1001), .len = cpu_to_le16(16) }
+#define WUSB_AR_ConnectionContext { .id = cpu_to_le16(0x1002), .len = cpu_to_le16(48) }
+#define WUSB_AR_BandGroups { .id = cpu_to_le16(0x1004), .len = cpu_to_le16(2) }
/* CBAF Control Requests (AMS1.0[T4-1] */
enum {
diff --git a/include/linux/usb/gpio_vbus.h b/include/linux/usb/gpio_vbus.h
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..d9f03ccc2d60
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/linux/usb/gpio_vbus.h
@@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
+/*
+ * A simple GPIO VBUS sensing driver for B peripheral only devices
+ * with internal transceivers.
+ * Optionally D+ pullup can be controlled by a second GPIO.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2008 Philipp Zabel <philipp.zabel@gmail.com>
+ *
+ * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+ * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as
+ * published by the Free Software Foundation.
+ *
+ */
+
+/**
+ * struct gpio_vbus_mach_info - configuration for gpio_vbus
+ * @gpio_vbus: VBUS sensing GPIO
+ * @gpio_pullup: optional D+ or D- pullup GPIO (else negative/invalid)
+ * @gpio_vbus_inverted: true if gpio_vbus is active low
+ * @gpio_pullup_inverted: true if gpio_pullup is active low
+ *
+ * The VBUS sensing GPIO should have a pulldown, which will normally be
+ * part of a resistor ladder turning a 4.0V-5.25V level on VBUS into a
+ * value the GPIO detects as active. Some systems will use comparators.
+ */
+struct gpio_vbus_mach_info {
+ int gpio_vbus;
+ int gpio_pullup;
+ bool gpio_vbus_inverted;
+ bool gpio_pullup_inverted;
+};
diff --git a/include/linux/usb/musb.h b/include/linux/usb/musb.h
index 630962c04ca4..d6aad0ea6033 100644
--- a/include/linux/usb/musb.h
+++ b/include/linux/usb/musb.h
@@ -47,6 +47,11 @@ struct musb_hdrc_config {
u8 ram_bits; /* ram address size */
struct musb_hdrc_eps_bits *eps_bits;
+#ifdef CONFIG_BLACKFIN
+ /* A GPIO controlling VRSEL in Blackfin */
+ unsigned int gpio_vrsel;
+#endif
+
};
struct musb_hdrc_platform_data {
diff --git a/include/linux/usb/otg.h b/include/linux/usb/otg.h
index 1db25d152ad8..94df4fe6c6c0 100644
--- a/include/linux/usb/otg.h
+++ b/include/linux/usb/otg.h
@@ -84,6 +84,7 @@ extern int otg_set_transceiver(struct otg_transceiver *);
/* for usb host and peripheral controller drivers */
extern struct otg_transceiver *otg_get_transceiver(void);
+extern void otg_put_transceiver(struct otg_transceiver *);
static inline int
otg_start_hnp(struct otg_transceiver *otg)
diff --git a/include/linux/usb_usual.h b/include/linux/usb_usual.h
index d9a3bbe38e6b..1eea1ab68dc4 100644
--- a/include/linux/usb_usual.h
+++ b/include/linux/usb_usual.h
@@ -52,8 +52,11 @@
US_FLAG(MAX_SECTORS_MIN,0x00002000) \
/* Sets max_sectors to arch min */ \
US_FLAG(BULK_IGNORE_TAG,0x00004000) \
- /* Ignore tag mismatch in bulk operations */
-
+ /* Ignore tag mismatch in bulk operations */ \
+ US_FLAG(SANE_SENSE, 0x00008000) \
+ /* Sane Sense (> 18 bytes) */ \
+ US_FLAG(CAPACITY_OK, 0x00010000) \
+ /* READ CAPACITY response is correct */
#define US_FLAG(name, value) US_FL_##name = value ,
enum { US_DO_ALL_FLAGS };
diff --git a/include/linux/wimax.h b/include/linux/wimax.h
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..c89de7f4e5b9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/linux/wimax.h
@@ -0,0 +1,234 @@
+/*
+ * Linux WiMax
+ * API for user space
+ *
+ *
+ * Copyright (C) 2007-2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved.
+ *
+ * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
+ * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
+ * are met:
+ *
+ * * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
+ * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
+ * * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
+ * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
+ * the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
+ * distribution.
+ * * Neither the name of Intel Corporation nor the names of its
+ * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
+ * from this software without specific prior written permission.
+ *
+ * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
+ * "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
+ * LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
+ * A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
+ * OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
+ * SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
+ * LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
+ * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
+ * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
+ * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
+ * OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
+ *
+ *
+ * Intel Corporation <linux-wimax@intel.com>
+ * Inaky Perez-Gonzalez <inaky.perez-gonzalez@intel.com>
+ * - Initial implementation
+ *
+ *
+ * This file declares the user/kernel protocol that is spoken over
+ * Generic Netlink, as well as any type declaration that is to be used
+ * by kernel and user space.
+ *
+ * It is intended for user space to clone it verbatim to use it as a
+ * primary reference for definitions.
+ *
+ * Stuff intended for kernel usage as well as full protocol and stack
+ * documentation is rooted in include/net/wimax.h.
+ */
+
+#ifndef __LINUX__WIMAX_H__
+#define __LINUX__WIMAX_H__
+
+#include <linux/types.h>
+
+enum {
+ /**
+ * Version of the interface (unsigned decimal, MMm, max 25.5)
+ * M - Major: change if removing or modifying an existing call.
+ * m - minor: change when adding a new call
+ */
+ WIMAX_GNL_VERSION = 00,
+ /* Generic NetLink attributes */
+ WIMAX_GNL_ATTR_INVALID = 0x00,
+ WIMAX_GNL_ATTR_MAX = 10,
+};
+
+
+/*
+ * Generic NetLink operations
+ *
+ * Most of these map to an API call; _OP_ stands for operation, _RP_
+ * for reply and _RE_ for report (aka: signal).
+ */
+enum {
+ WIMAX_GNL_OP_MSG_FROM_USER, /* User to kernel message */
+ WIMAX_GNL_OP_MSG_TO_USER, /* Kernel to user message */
+ WIMAX_GNL_OP_RFKILL, /* Run wimax_rfkill() */
+ WIMAX_GNL_OP_RESET, /* Run wimax_rfkill() */
+ WIMAX_GNL_RE_STATE_CHANGE, /* Report: status change */
+};
+
+
+/* Message from user / to user */
+enum {
+ WIMAX_GNL_MSG_IFIDX = 1,
+ WIMAX_GNL_MSG_PIPE_NAME,
+ WIMAX_GNL_MSG_DATA,
+};
+
+
+/*
+ * wimax_rfkill()
+ *
+ * The state of the radio (ON/OFF) is mapped to the rfkill subsystem's
+ * switch state (DISABLED/ENABLED).
+ */
+enum wimax_rf_state {
+ WIMAX_RF_OFF = 0, /* Radio is off, rfkill on/enabled */
+ WIMAX_RF_ON = 1, /* Radio is on, rfkill off/disabled */
+ WIMAX_RF_QUERY = 2,
+};
+
+/* Attributes */
+enum {
+ WIMAX_GNL_RFKILL_IFIDX = 1,
+ WIMAX_GNL_RFKILL_STATE,
+};
+
+
+/* Attributes for wimax_reset() */
+enum {
+ WIMAX_GNL_RESET_IFIDX = 1,
+};
+
+
+/*
+ * Attributes for the Report State Change
+ *
+ * For now we just have the old and new states; new attributes might
+ * be added later on.
+ */
+enum {
+ WIMAX_GNL_STCH_IFIDX = 1,
+ WIMAX_GNL_STCH_STATE_OLD,
+ WIMAX_GNL_STCH_STATE_NEW,
+};
+
+
+/**
+ * enum wimax_st - The different states of a WiMAX device
+ * @__WIMAX_ST_NULL: The device structure has been allocated and zeroed,
+ * but still wimax_dev_add() hasn't been called. There is no state.
+ *
+ * @WIMAX_ST_DOWN: The device has been registered with the WiMAX and
+ * networking stacks, but it is not initialized (normally that is
+ * done with 'ifconfig DEV up' [or equivalent], which can upload
+ * firmware and enable communications with the device).
+ * In this state, the device is powered down and using as less
+ * power as possible.
+ * This state is the default after a call to wimax_dev_add(). It
+ * is ok to have drivers move directly to %WIMAX_ST_UNINITIALIZED
+ * or %WIMAX_ST_RADIO_OFF in _probe() after the call to
+ * wimax_dev_add().
+ * It is recommended that the driver leaves this state when
+ * calling 'ifconfig DEV up' and enters it back on 'ifconfig DEV
+ * down'.
+ *
+ * @__WIMAX_ST_QUIESCING: The device is being torn down, so no API
+ * operations are allowed to proceed except the ones needed to
+ * complete the device clean up process.
+ *
+ * @WIMAX_ST_UNINITIALIZED: [optional] Communication with the device
+ * is setup, but the device still requires some configuration
+ * before being operational.
+ * Some WiMAX API calls might work.
+ *
+ * @WIMAX_ST_RADIO_OFF: The device is fully up; radio is off (wether
+ * by hardware or software switches).
+ * It is recommended to always leave the device in this state
+ * after initialization.
+ *
+ * @WIMAX_ST_READY: The device is fully up and radio is on.
+ *
+ * @WIMAX_ST_SCANNING: [optional] The device has been instructed to
+ * scan. In this state, the device cannot be actively connected to
+ * a network.
+ *
+ * @WIMAX_ST_CONNECTING: The device is connecting to a network. This
+ * state exists because in some devices, the connect process can
+ * include a number of negotiations between user space, kernel
+ * space and the device. User space needs to know what the device
+ * is doing. If the connect sequence in a device is atomic and
+ * fast, the device can transition directly to CONNECTED
+ *
+ * @WIMAX_ST_CONNECTED: The device is connected to a network.
+ *
+ * @__WIMAX_ST_INVALID: This is an invalid state used to mark the
+ * maximum numeric value of states.
+ *
+ * Description:
+ *
+ * Transitions from one state to another one are atomic and can only
+ * be caused in kernel space with wimax_state_change(). To read the
+ * state, use wimax_state_get().
+ *
+ * States starting with __ are internal and shall not be used or
+ * referred to by drivers or userspace. They look ugly, but that's the
+ * point -- if any use is made non-internal to the stack, it is easier
+ * to catch on review.
+ *
+ * All API operations [with well defined exceptions] will take the
+ * device mutex before starting and then check the state. If the state
+ * is %__WIMAX_ST_NULL, %WIMAX_ST_DOWN, %WIMAX_ST_UNINITIALIZED or
+ * %__WIMAX_ST_QUIESCING, it will drop the lock and quit with
+ * -%EINVAL, -%ENOMEDIUM, -%ENOTCONN or -%ESHUTDOWN.
+ *
+ * The order of the definitions is important, so we can do numerical
+ * comparisons (eg: < %WIMAX_ST_RADIO_OFF means the device is not ready
+ * to operate).
+ */
+/*
+ * The allowed state transitions are described in the table below
+ * (states in rows can go to states in columns where there is an X):
+ *
+ * UNINI RADIO READY SCAN CONNEC CONNEC
+ * NULL DOWN QUIESCING TIALIZED OFF NING TING TED
+ * NULL - x
+ * DOWN - x x x
+ * QUIESCING x -
+ * UNINITIALIZED x - x
+ * RADIO_OFF x - x
+ * READY x x - x x x
+ * SCANNING x x x - x x
+ * CONNECTING x x x x - x
+ * CONNECTED x x x -
+ *
+ * This table not available in kernel-doc because the formatting messes it up.
+ */
+ enum wimax_st {
+ __WIMAX_ST_NULL = 0,
+ WIMAX_ST_DOWN,
+ __WIMAX_ST_QUIESCING,
+ WIMAX_ST_UNINITIALIZED,
+ WIMAX_ST_RADIO_OFF,
+ WIMAX_ST_READY,
+ WIMAX_ST_SCANNING,
+ WIMAX_ST_CONNECTING,
+ WIMAX_ST_CONNECTED,
+ __WIMAX_ST_INVALID /* Always keep last */
+};
+
+
+#endif /* #ifndef __LINUX__WIMAX_H__ */
diff --git a/include/linux/wimax/Kbuild b/include/linux/wimax/Kbuild
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..3cb4f269bb09
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/linux/wimax/Kbuild
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+header-y += i2400m.h
diff --git a/include/linux/wimax/debug.h b/include/linux/wimax/debug.h
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..ba0c49399a83
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/linux/wimax/debug.h
@@ -0,0 +1,453 @@
+/*
+ * Linux WiMAX
+ * Collection of tools to manage debug operations.
+ *
+ *
+ * Copyright (C) 2005-2007 Intel Corporation
+ * Inaky Perez-Gonzalez <inaky.perez-gonzalez@intel.com>
+ *
+ * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+ * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version
+ * 2 as published by the Free Software Foundation.
+ *
+ * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ * GNU General Public License for more details.
+ *
+ * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+ * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+ * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
+ * 02110-1301, USA.
+ *
+ *
+ * Don't #include this file directly, read on!
+ *
+ *
+ * EXECUTING DEBUGGING ACTIONS OR NOT
+ *
+ * The main thing this framework provides is decission power to take a
+ * debug action (like printing a message) if the current debug level
+ * allows it.
+ *
+ * The decission power is at two levels: at compile-time (what does
+ * not make it is compiled out) and at run-time. The run-time
+ * selection is done per-submodule (as they are declared by the user
+ * of the framework).
+ *
+ * A call to d_test(L) (L being the target debug level) returns true
+ * if the action should be taken because the current debug levels
+ * allow it (both compile and run time).
+ *
+ * It follows that a call to d_test() that can be determined to be
+ * always false at compile time will get the code depending on it
+ * compiled out by optimization.
+ *
+ *
+ * DEBUG LEVELS
+ *
+ * It is up to the caller to define how much a debugging level is.
+ *
+ * Convention sets 0 as "no debug" (so an action marked as debug level 0
+ * will always be taken). The increasing debug levels are used for
+ * increased verbosity.
+ *
+ *
+ * USAGE
+ *
+ * Group the code in modules and submodules inside each module [which
+ * in most cases maps to Linux modules and .c files that compose
+ * those].
+ *
+ *
+ * For each module, there is:
+ *
+ * - a MODULENAME (single word, legal C identifier)
+ *
+ * - a debug-levels.h header file that declares the list of
+ * submodules and that is included by all .c files that use
+ * the debugging tools. The file name can be anything.
+ *
+ * - some (optional) .c code to manipulate the runtime debug levels
+ * through debugfs.
+ *
+ * The debug-levels.h file would look like:
+ *
+ * #ifndef __debug_levels__h__
+ * #define __debug_levels__h__
+ *
+ * #define D_MODULENAME modulename
+ * #define D_MASTER 10
+ *
+ * #include <linux/wimax/debug.h>
+ *
+ * enum d_module {
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DECLARE(submodule_1),
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DECLARE(submodule_2),
+ * ...
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DECLARE(submodule_N)
+ * };
+ *
+ * #endif
+ *
+ * D_MASTER is the maximum compile-time debug level; any debug actions
+ * above this will be out. D_MODULENAME is the module name (legal C
+ * identifier), which has to be unique for each module (to avoid
+ * namespace collisions during linkage). Note those #defines need to
+ * be done before #including debug.h
+ *
+ * We declare N different submodules whose debug level can be
+ * independently controlled during runtime.
+ *
+ * In a .c file of the module (and only in one of them), define the
+ * following code:
+ *
+ * struct d_level D_LEVEL[] = {
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DEFINE(submodule_1),
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DEFINE(submodule_2),
+ * ...
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DEFINE(submodule_N),
+ * };
+ * size_t D_LEVEL_SIZE = ARRAY_SIZE(D_LEVEL);
+ *
+ * Externs for d_level_MODULENAME and d_level_size_MODULENAME are used
+ * and declared in this file using the D_LEVEL and D_LEVEL_SIZE macros
+ * #defined also in this file.
+ *
+ * To manipulate from user space the levels, create a debugfs dentry
+ * and then register each submodule with:
+ *
+ * result = d_level_register_debugfs("PREFIX_", submodule_X, parent);
+ * if (result < 0)
+ * goto error;
+ *
+ * Where PREFIX_ is a name of your chosing. This will create debugfs
+ * file with a single numeric value that can be use to tweak it. To
+ * remove the entires, just use debugfs_remove_recursive() on 'parent'.
+ *
+ * NOTE: remember that even if this will show attached to some
+ * particular instance of a device, the settings are *global*.
+ *
+ *
+ * On each submodule (for example, .c files), the debug infrastructure
+ * should be included like this:
+ *
+ * #define D_SUBMODULE submodule_x // matches one in debug-levels.h
+ * #include "debug-levels.h"
+ *
+ * after #including all your include files.
+ *
+ *
+ * Now you can use the d_*() macros below [d_test(), d_fnstart(),
+ * d_fnend(), d_printf(), d_dump()].
+ *
+ * If their debug level is greater than D_MASTER, they will be
+ * compiled out.
+ *
+ * If their debug level is lower or equal than D_MASTER but greater
+ * than the current debug level of their submodule, they'll be
+ * ignored.
+ *
+ * Otherwise, the action will be performed.
+ */
+#ifndef __debug__h__
+#define __debug__h__
+
+#include <linux/types.h>
+#include <linux/device.h>
+
+
+/* Backend stuff */
+
+/*
+ * Debug backend: generate a message header from a 'struct device'
+ *
+ * @head: buffer where to place the header
+ * @head_size: length of @head
+ * @dev: pointer to device used to generate a header from. If NULL,
+ * an empty ("") header is generated.
+ */
+static inline
+void __d_head(char *head, size_t head_size,
+ struct device *dev)
+{
+ if (dev == NULL)
+ head[0] = 0;
+ else if ((unsigned long)dev < 4096) {
+ printk(KERN_ERR "E: Corrupt dev %p\n", dev);
+ WARN_ON(1);
+ } else
+ snprintf(head, head_size, "%s %s: ",
+ dev_driver_string(dev), dev->bus_id);
+}
+
+
+/*
+ * Debug backend: log some message if debugging is enabled
+ *
+ * @l: intended debug level
+ * @tag: tag to prefix the message with
+ * @dev: 'struct device' associated to this message
+ * @f: printf-like format and arguments
+ *
+ * Note this is optimized out if it doesn't pass the compile-time
+ * check; however, it is *always* compiled. This is useful to make
+ * sure the printf-like formats and variables are always checked and
+ * they don't get bit rot if you have all the debugging disabled.
+ */
+#define _d_printf(l, tag, dev, f, a...) \
+do { \
+ char head[64]; \
+ if (!d_test(l)) \
+ break; \
+ __d_head(head, sizeof(head), dev); \
+ printk(KERN_ERR "%s%s%s: " f, head, __func__, tag, ##a); \
+} while (0)
+
+
+/*
+ * CPP sintatic sugar to generate A_B like symbol names when one of
+ * the arguments is a a preprocessor #define.
+ */
+#define __D_PASTE__(varname, modulename) varname##_##modulename
+#define __D_PASTE(varname, modulename) (__D_PASTE__(varname, modulename))
+#define _D_SUBMODULE_INDEX(_name) (D_SUBMODULE_DECLARE(_name))
+
+
+/*
+ * Store a submodule's runtime debug level and name
+ */
+struct d_level {
+ u8 level;
+ const char *name;
+};
+
+
+/*
+ * List of available submodules and their debug levels
+ *
+ * We call them d_level_MODULENAME and d_level_size_MODULENAME; the
+ * macros D_LEVEL and D_LEVEL_SIZE contain the name already for
+ * convenience.
+ *
+ * This array and the size are defined on some .c file that is part of
+ * the current module.
+ */
+#define D_LEVEL __D_PASTE(d_level, D_MODULENAME)
+#define D_LEVEL_SIZE __D_PASTE(d_level_size, D_MODULENAME)
+
+extern struct d_level D_LEVEL[];
+extern size_t D_LEVEL_SIZE;
+
+
+/*
+ * Frontend stuff
+ *
+ *
+ * Stuff you need to declare prior to using the actual "debug" actions
+ * (defined below).
+ */
+
+#ifndef D_MODULENAME
+#error D_MODULENAME is not defined in your debug-levels.h file
+/**
+ * D_MODULE - Name of the current module
+ *
+ * #define in your module's debug-levels.h, making sure it is
+ * unique. This has to be a legal C identifier.
+ */
+#define D_MODULENAME undefined_modulename
+#endif
+
+
+#ifndef D_MASTER
+#warning D_MASTER not defined, but debug.h included! [see docs]
+/**
+ * D_MASTER - Compile time maximum debug level
+ *
+ * #define in your debug-levels.h file to the maximum debug level the
+ * runtime code will be allowed to have. This allows you to provide a
+ * main knob.
+ *
+ * Anything above that level will be optimized out of the compile.
+ *
+ * Defaults to zero (no debug code compiled in).
+ *
+ * Maximum one definition per module (at the debug-levels.h file).
+ */
+#define D_MASTER 0
+#endif
+
+#ifndef D_SUBMODULE
+#error D_SUBMODULE not defined, but debug.h included! [see docs]
+/**
+ * D_SUBMODULE - Name of the current submodule
+ *
+ * #define in your submodule .c file before #including debug-levels.h
+ * to the name of the current submodule as previously declared and
+ * defined with D_SUBMODULE_DECLARE() (in your module's
+ * debug-levels.h) and D_SUBMODULE_DEFINE().
+ *
+ * This is used to provide runtime-control over the debug levels.
+ *
+ * Maximum one per .c file! Can be shared among different .c files
+ * (meaning they belong to the same submodule categorization).
+ */
+#define D_SUBMODULE undefined_module
+#endif
+
+
+/**
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DECLARE - Declare a submodule for runtime debug level control
+ *
+ * @_name: name of the submodule, restricted to the chars that make up a
+ * valid C identifier ([a-zA-Z0-9_]).
+ *
+ * Declare in the module's debug-levels.h header file as:
+ *
+ * enum d_module {
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DECLARE(submodule_1),
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DECLARE(submodule_2),
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DECLARE(submodule_3),
+ * };
+ *
+ * Some corresponding .c file needs to have a matching
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DEFINE().
+ */
+#define D_SUBMODULE_DECLARE(_name) __D_SUBMODULE_##_name
+
+
+/**
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DEFINE - Define a submodule for runtime debug level control
+ *
+ * @_name: name of the submodule, restricted to the chars that make up a
+ * valid C identifier ([a-zA-Z0-9_]).
+ *
+ * Use once per module (in some .c file) as:
+ *
+ * static
+ * struct d_level d_level_SUBMODULENAME[] = {
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DEFINE(submodule_1),
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DEFINE(submodule_2),
+ * D_SUBMODULE_DEFINE(submodule_3),
+ * };
+ * size_t d_level_size_SUBDMODULENAME = ARRAY_SIZE(d_level_SUBDMODULENAME);
+ *
+ * Matching D_SUBMODULE_DECLARE()s have to be present in a
+ * debug-levels.h header file.
+ */
+#define D_SUBMODULE_DEFINE(_name) \
+[__D_SUBMODULE_##_name] = { \
+ .level = 0, \
+ .name = #_name \
+}
+
+
+
+/* The actual "debug" operations */
+
+
+/**
+ * d_test - Returns true if debugging should be enabled
+ *
+ * @l: intended debug level (unsigned)
+ *
+ * If the master debug switch is enabled and the current settings are
+ * higher or equal to the requested level, then debugging
+ * output/actions should be enabled.
+ *
+ * NOTE:
+ *
+ * This needs to be coded so that it can be evaluated in compile
+ * time; this is why the ugly BUG_ON() is placed in there, so the
+ * D_MASTER evaluation compiles all out if it is compile-time false.
+ */
+#define d_test(l) \
+({ \
+ unsigned __l = l; /* type enforcer */ \
+ (D_MASTER) >= __l \
+ && ({ \
+ BUG_ON(_D_SUBMODULE_INDEX(D_SUBMODULE) >= D_LEVEL_SIZE);\
+ D_LEVEL[_D_SUBMODULE_INDEX(D_SUBMODULE)].level >= __l; \
+ }); \
+})
+
+
+/**
+ * d_fnstart - log message at function start if debugging enabled
+ *
+ * @l: intended debug level
+ * @_dev: 'struct device' pointer, NULL if none (for context)
+ * @f: printf-like format and arguments
+ */
+#define d_fnstart(l, _dev, f, a...) _d_printf(l, " FNSTART", _dev, f, ## a)
+
+
+/**
+ * d_fnend - log message at function end if debugging enabled
+ *
+ * @l: intended debug level
+ * @_dev: 'struct device' pointer, NULL if none (for context)
+ * @f: printf-like format and arguments
+ */
+#define d_fnend(l, _dev, f, a...) _d_printf(l, " FNEND", _dev, f, ## a)
+
+
+/**
+ * d_printf - log message if debugging enabled
+ *
+ * @l: intended debug level
+ * @_dev: 'struct device' pointer, NULL if none (for context)
+ * @f: printf-like format and arguments
+ */
+#define d_printf(l, _dev, f, a...) _d_printf(l, "", _dev, f, ## a)
+
+
+/**
+ * d_dump - log buffer hex dump if debugging enabled
+ *
+ * @l: intended debug level
+ * @_dev: 'struct device' pointer, NULL if none (for context)
+ * @f: printf-like format and arguments
+ */
+#define d_dump(l, dev, ptr, size) \
+do { \
+ char head[64]; \
+ if (!d_test(l)) \
+ break; \
+ __d_head(head, sizeof(head), dev); \
+ print_hex_dump(KERN_ERR, head, 0, 16, 1, \
+ ((void *) ptr), (size), 0); \
+} while (0)
+
+
+/**
+ * Export a submodule's debug level over debugfs as PREFIXSUBMODULE
+ *
+ * @prefix: string to prefix the name with
+ * @submodule: name of submodule (not a string, just the name)
+ * @dentry: debugfs parent dentry
+ *
+ * Returns: 0 if ok, < 0 errno on error.
+ *
+ * For removing, just use debugfs_remove_recursive() on the parent.
+ */
+#define d_level_register_debugfs(prefix, name, parent) \
+({ \
+ int rc; \
+ struct dentry *fd; \
+ struct dentry *verify_parent_type = parent; \
+ fd = debugfs_create_u8( \
+ prefix #name, 0600, verify_parent_type, \
+ &(D_LEVEL[__D_SUBMODULE_ ## name].level)); \
+ rc = PTR_ERR(fd); \
+ if (IS_ERR(fd) && rc != -ENODEV) \
+ printk(KERN_ERR "%s: Can't create debugfs entry %s: " \
+ "%d\n", __func__, prefix #name, rc); \
+ else \
+ rc = 0; \
+ rc; \
+})
+
+
+#endif /* #ifndef __debug__h__ */
diff --git a/include/linux/wimax/i2400m.h b/include/linux/wimax/i2400m.h
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..74198f5bb4dc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/linux/wimax/i2400m.h
@@ -0,0 +1,512 @@
+/*
+ * Intel Wireless WiMax Connection 2400m
+ * Host-Device protocol interface definitions
+ *
+ *
+ * Copyright (C) 2007-2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved.
+ *
+ * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
+ * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
+ * are met:
+ *
+ * * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
+ * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
+ * * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
+ * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
+ * the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
+ * distribution.
+ * * Neither the name of Intel Corporation nor the names of its
+ * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
+ * from this software without specific prior written permission.
+ *
+ * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
+ * "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
+ * LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
+ * A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
+ * OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
+ * SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
+ * LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
+ * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
+ * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
+ * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
+ * OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
+ *
+ *
+ * Intel Corporation <linux-wimax@intel.com>
+ * Inaky Perez-Gonzalez <inaky.perez-gonzalez@intel.com>
+ * - Initial implementation
+ *
+ *
+ * This header defines the data structures and constants used to
+ * communicate with the device.
+ *
+ * BOOTMODE/BOOTROM/FIRMWARE UPLOAD PROTOCOL
+ *
+ * The firmware upload protocol is quite simple and only requires a
+ * handful of commands. See drivers/net/wimax/i2400m/fw.c for more
+ * details.
+ *
+ * The BCF data structure is for the firmware file header.
+ *
+ *
+ * THE DATA / CONTROL PROTOCOL
+ *
+ * This is the normal protocol spoken with the device once the
+ * firmware is uploaded. It transports data payloads and control
+ * messages back and forth.
+ *
+ * It consists 'messages' that pack one or more payloads each. The
+ * format is described in detail in drivers/net/wimax/i2400m/rx.c and
+ * tx.c.
+ *
+ *
+ * THE L3L4 PROTOCOL
+ *
+ * The term L3L4 refers to Layer 3 (the device), Layer 4 (the
+ * driver/host software).
+ *
+ * This is the control protocol used by the host to control the i2400m
+ * device (scan, connect, disconnect...). This is sent to / received
+ * as control frames. These frames consist of a header and zero or
+ * more TLVs with information. We call each control frame a "message".
+ *
+ * Each message is composed of:
+ *
+ * HEADER
+ * [TLV0 + PAYLOAD0]
+ * [TLV1 + PAYLOAD1]
+ * [...]
+ * [TLVN + PAYLOADN]
+ *
+ * The HEADER is defined by 'struct i2400m_l3l4_hdr'. The payloads are
+ * defined by a TLV structure (Type Length Value) which is a 'header'
+ * (struct i2400m_tlv_hdr) and then the payload.
+ *
+ * All integers are represented as Little Endian.
+ *
+ * - REQUESTS AND EVENTS
+ *
+ * The requests can be clasified as follows:
+ *
+ * COMMAND: implies a request from the host to the device requesting
+ * an action being performed. The device will reply with a
+ * message (with the same type as the command), status and
+ * no (TLV) payload. Execution of a command might cause
+ * events (of different type) to be sent later on as
+ * device's state changes.
+ *
+ * GET/SET: similar to COMMAND, but will not cause other
+ * EVENTs. The reply, in the case of GET, will contain
+ * TLVs with the requested information.
+ *
+ * EVENT: asynchronous messages sent from the device, maybe as a
+ * consequence of previous COMMANDs but disassociated from
+ * them.
+ *
+ * Only one request might be pending at the same time (ie: don't
+ * parallelize nor post another GET request before the previous
+ * COMMAND has been acknowledged with it's corresponding reply by the
+ * device).
+ *
+ * The different requests and their formats are described below:
+ *
+ * I2400M_MT_* Message types
+ * I2400M_MS_* Message status (for replies, events)
+ * i2400m_tlv_* TLVs
+ *
+ * data types are named 'struct i2400m_msg_OPNAME', OPNAME matching the
+ * operation.
+ */
+
+#ifndef __LINUX__WIMAX__I2400M_H__
+#define __LINUX__WIMAX__I2400M_H__
+
+#include <linux/types.h>
+
+
+/*
+ * Host Device Interface (HDI) common to all busses
+ */
+
+/* Boot-mode (firmware upload mode) commands */
+
+/* Header for the firmware file */
+struct i2400m_bcf_hdr {
+ __le32 module_type;
+ __le32 header_len;
+ __le32 header_version;
+ __le32 module_id;
+ __le32 module_vendor;
+ __le32 date; /* BCD YYYMMDD */
+ __le32 size;
+ __le32 key_size; /* in dwords */
+ __le32 modulus_size; /* in dwords */
+ __le32 exponent_size; /* in dwords */
+ __u8 reserved[88];
+} __attribute__ ((packed));
+
+/* Boot mode opcodes */
+enum i2400m_brh_opcode {
+ I2400M_BRH_READ = 1,
+ I2400M_BRH_WRITE = 2,
+ I2400M_BRH_JUMP = 3,
+ I2400M_BRH_SIGNED_JUMP = 8,
+ I2400M_BRH_HASH_PAYLOAD_ONLY = 9,
+};
+
+/* Boot mode command masks and stuff */
+enum i2400m_brh {
+ I2400M_BRH_SIGNATURE = 0xcbbc0000,
+ I2400M_BRH_SIGNATURE_MASK = 0xffff0000,
+ I2400M_BRH_SIGNATURE_SHIFT = 16,
+ I2400M_BRH_OPCODE_MASK = 0x0000000f,
+ I2400M_BRH_RESPONSE_MASK = 0x000000f0,
+ I2400M_BRH_RESPONSE_SHIFT = 4,
+ I2400M_BRH_DIRECT_ACCESS = 0x00000400,
+ I2400M_BRH_RESPONSE_REQUIRED = 0x00000200,
+ I2400M_BRH_USE_CHECKSUM = 0x00000100,
+};
+
+
+/* Constants for bcf->module_id */
+enum i2400m_bcf_mod_id {
+ /* Firmware file carries its own pokes -- pokes are a set of
+ * magical values that have to be written in certain memory
+ * addresses to get the device up and ready for firmware
+ * download when it is in non-signed boot mode. */
+ I2400M_BCF_MOD_ID_POKES = 0x000000001,
+};
+
+
+/**
+ * i2400m_bootrom_header - Header for a boot-mode command
+ *
+ * @cmd: the above command descriptor
+ * @target_addr: where on the device memory should the action be performed.
+ * @data_size: for read/write, amount of data to be read/written
+ * @block_checksum: checksum value (if applicable)
+ * @payload: the beginning of data attached to this header
+ */
+struct i2400m_bootrom_header {
+ __le32 command; /* Compose with enum i2400_brh */
+ __le32 target_addr;
+ __le32 data_size;
+ __le32 block_checksum;
+ char payload[0];
+} __attribute__ ((packed));
+
+
+/*
+ * Data / control protocol
+ */
+
+/* Packet types for the host-device interface */
+enum i2400m_pt {
+ I2400M_PT_DATA = 0,
+ I2400M_PT_CTRL,
+ I2400M_PT_TRACE, /* For device debug */
+ I2400M_PT_RESET_WARM, /* device reset */
+ I2400M_PT_RESET_COLD, /* USB[transport] reset, like reconnect */
+ I2400M_PT_ILLEGAL
+};
+
+
+/*
+ * Payload for a data packet
+ *
+ * This is prefixed to each and every outgoing DATA type.
+ */
+struct i2400m_pl_data_hdr {
+ __le32 reserved;
+} __attribute__((packed));
+
+
+/* Misc constants */
+enum {
+ I2400M_PL_PAD = 16, /* Payload data size alignment */
+ I2400M_PL_SIZE_MAX = 0x3EFF,
+ I2400M_MAX_PLS_IN_MSG = 60,
+ /* protocol barkers: sync sequences; for notifications they
+ * are sent in groups of four. */
+ I2400M_H2D_PREVIEW_BARKER = 0xcafe900d,
+ I2400M_COLD_RESET_BARKER = 0xc01dc01d,
+ I2400M_WARM_RESET_BARKER = 0x50f750f7,
+ I2400M_NBOOT_BARKER = 0xdeadbeef,
+ I2400M_SBOOT_BARKER = 0x0ff1c1a1,
+ I2400M_ACK_BARKER = 0xfeedbabe,
+ I2400M_D2H_MSG_BARKER = 0xbeefbabe,
+};
+
+
+/*
+ * Hardware payload descriptor
+ *
+ * Bitfields encoded in a struct to enforce typing semantics.
+ *
+ * Look in rx.c and tx.c for a full description of the format.
+ */
+struct i2400m_pld {
+ __le32 val;
+} __attribute__ ((packed));
+
+#define I2400M_PLD_SIZE_MASK 0x00003fff
+#define I2400M_PLD_TYPE_SHIFT 16
+#define I2400M_PLD_TYPE_MASK 0x000f0000
+
+/*
+ * Header for a TX message or RX message
+ *
+ * @barker: preamble
+ * @size: used for management of the FIFO queue buffer; before
+ * sending, this is converted to be a real preamble. This
+ * indicates the real size of the TX message that starts at this
+ * point. If the highest bit is set, then this message is to be
+ * skipped.
+ * @sequence: sequence number of this message
+ * @offset: offset where the message itself starts -- see the comments
+ * in the file header about message header and payload descriptor
+ * alignment.
+ * @num_pls: number of payloads in this message
+ * @padding: amount of padding bytes at the end of the message to make
+ * it be of block-size aligned
+ *
+ * Look in rx.c and tx.c for a full description of the format.
+ */
+struct i2400m_msg_hdr {
+ union {
+ __le32 barker;
+ __u32 size; /* same size type as barker!! */
+ };
+ union {
+ __le32 sequence;
+ __u32 offset; /* same size type as barker!! */
+ };
+ __le16 num_pls;
+ __le16 rsv1;
+ __le16 padding;
+ __le16 rsv2;
+ struct i2400m_pld pld[0];
+} __attribute__ ((packed));
+
+
+
+/*
+ * L3/L4 control protocol
+ */
+
+enum {
+ /* Interface version */
+ I2400M_L3L4_VERSION = 0x0100,
+};
+
+/* Message types */
+enum i2400m_mt {
+ I2400M_MT_RESERVED = 0x0000,
+ I2400M_MT_INVALID = 0xffff,
+ I2400M_MT_REPORT_MASK = 0x8000,
+
+ I2400M_MT_GET_SCAN_RESULT = 0x4202,
+ I2400M_MT_SET_SCAN_PARAM = 0x4402,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_RF_CONTROL = 0x4602,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_SCAN = 0x4603,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_CONNECT = 0x4604,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_DISCONNECT = 0x4605,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_EXIT_IDLE = 0x4606,
+ I2400M_MT_GET_LM_VERSION = 0x5201,
+ I2400M_MT_GET_DEVICE_INFO = 0x5202,
+ I2400M_MT_GET_LINK_STATUS = 0x5203,
+ I2400M_MT_GET_STATISTICS = 0x5204,
+ I2400M_MT_GET_STATE = 0x5205,
+ I2400M_MT_GET_MEDIA_STATUS = 0x5206,
+ I2400M_MT_SET_INIT_CONFIG = 0x5404,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_INIT = 0x5601,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_TERMINATE = 0x5602,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_MODE_OF_OP = 0x5603,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_RESET_DEVICE = 0x5604,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_MONITOR_CONTROL = 0x5605,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_ENTER_POWERSAVE = 0x5606,
+ I2400M_MT_GET_TLS_OPERATION_RESULT = 0x6201,
+ I2400M_MT_SET_EAP_SUCCESS = 0x6402,
+ I2400M_MT_SET_EAP_FAIL = 0x6403,
+ I2400M_MT_SET_EAP_KEY = 0x6404,
+ I2400M_MT_CMD_SEND_EAP_RESPONSE = 0x6602,
+ I2400M_MT_REPORT_SCAN_RESULT = 0xc002,
+ I2400M_MT_REPORT_STATE = 0xd002,
+ I2400M_MT_REPORT_POWERSAVE_READY = 0xd005,
+ I2400M_MT_REPORT_EAP_REQUEST = 0xe002,
+ I2400M_MT_REPORT_EAP_RESTART = 0xe003,
+ I2400M_MT_REPORT_ALT_ACCEPT = 0xe004,
+ I2400M_MT_REPORT_KEY_REQUEST = 0xe005,
+};
+
+
+/*
+ * Message Ack Status codes
+ *
+ * When a message is replied-to, this status is reported.
+ */
+enum i2400m_ms {
+ I2400M_MS_DONE_OK = 0,
+ I2400M_MS_DONE_IN_PROGRESS = 1,
+ I2400M_MS_INVALID_OP = 2,
+ I2400M_MS_BAD_STATE = 3,
+ I2400M_MS_ILLEGAL_VALUE = 4,
+ I2400M_MS_MISSING_PARAMS = 5,
+ I2400M_MS_VERSION_ERROR = 6,
+ I2400M_MS_ACCESSIBILITY_ERROR = 7,
+ I2400M_MS_BUSY = 8,
+ I2400M_MS_CORRUPTED_TLV = 9,
+ I2400M_MS_UNINITIALIZED = 10,
+ I2400M_MS_UNKNOWN_ERROR = 11,
+ I2400M_MS_PRODUCTION_ERROR = 12,
+ I2400M_MS_NO_RF = 13,
+ I2400M_MS_NOT_READY_FOR_POWERSAVE = 14,
+ I2400M_MS_THERMAL_CRITICAL = 15,
+ I2400M_MS_MAX
+};
+
+
+/**
+ * i2400m_tlv - enumeration of the different types of TLVs
+ *
+ * TLVs stand for type-length-value and are the header for a payload
+ * composed of almost anything. Each payload has a type assigned
+ * and a length.
+ */
+enum i2400m_tlv {
+ I2400M_TLV_L4_MESSAGE_VERSIONS = 129,
+ I2400M_TLV_SYSTEM_STATE = 141,
+ I2400M_TLV_MEDIA_STATUS = 161,
+ I2400M_TLV_RF_OPERATION = 162,
+ I2400M_TLV_RF_STATUS = 163,
+ I2400M_TLV_DEVICE_RESET_TYPE = 132,
+ I2400M_TLV_CONFIG_IDLE_PARAMETERS = 601,
+};
+
+
+struct i2400m_tlv_hdr {
+ __le16 type;
+ __le16 length; /* payload's */
+ __u8 pl[0];
+} __attribute__((packed));
+
+
+struct i2400m_l3l4_hdr {
+ __le16 type;
+ __le16 length; /* payload's */
+ __le16 version;
+ __le16 resv1;
+ __le16 status;
+ __le16 resv2;
+ struct i2400m_tlv_hdr pl[0];
+} __attribute__((packed));
+
+
+/**
+ * i2400m_system_state - different states of the device
+ */
+enum i2400m_system_state {
+ I2400M_SS_UNINITIALIZED = 1,
+ I2400M_SS_INIT,
+ I2400M_SS_READY,
+ I2400M_SS_SCAN,
+ I2400M_SS_STANDBY,
+ I2400M_SS_CONNECTING,
+ I2400M_SS_WIMAX_CONNECTED,
+ I2400M_SS_DATA_PATH_CONNECTED,
+ I2400M_SS_IDLE,
+ I2400M_SS_DISCONNECTING,
+ I2400M_SS_OUT_OF_ZONE,
+ I2400M_SS_SLEEPACTIVE,
+ I2400M_SS_PRODUCTION,
+ I2400M_SS_CONFIG,
+ I2400M_SS_RF_OFF,
+ I2400M_SS_RF_SHUTDOWN,
+ I2400M_SS_DEVICE_DISCONNECT,
+ I2400M_SS_MAX,
+};
+
+
+/**
+ * i2400m_tlv_system_state - report on the state of the system
+ *
+ * @state: see enum i2400m_system_state
+ */
+struct i2400m_tlv_system_state {
+ struct i2400m_tlv_hdr hdr;
+ __le32 state;
+} __attribute__((packed));
+
+
+struct i2400m_tlv_l4_message_versions {
+ struct i2400m_tlv_hdr hdr;
+ __le16 major;
+ __le16 minor;
+ __le16 branch;
+ __le16 reserved;
+} __attribute__((packed));
+
+
+struct i2400m_tlv_detailed_device_info {
+ struct i2400m_tlv_hdr hdr;
+ __u8 reserved1[400];
+ __u8 mac_address[6];
+ __u8 reserved2[2];
+} __attribute__((packed));
+
+
+enum i2400m_rf_switch_status {
+ I2400M_RF_SWITCH_ON = 1,
+ I2400M_RF_SWITCH_OFF = 2,
+};
+
+struct i2400m_tlv_rf_switches_status {
+ struct i2400m_tlv_hdr hdr;
+ __u8 sw_rf_switch; /* 1 ON, 2 OFF */
+ __u8 hw_rf_switch; /* 1 ON, 2 OFF */
+ __u8 reserved[2];
+} __attribute__((packed));
+
+
+enum {
+ i2400m_rf_operation_on = 1,
+ i2400m_rf_operation_off = 2
+};
+
+struct i2400m_tlv_rf_operation {
+ struct i2400m_tlv_hdr hdr;
+ __le32 status; /* 1 ON, 2 OFF */
+} __attribute__((packed));
+
+
+enum i2400m_tlv_reset_type {
+ I2400M_RESET_TYPE_COLD = 1,
+ I2400M_RESET_TYPE_WARM
+};
+
+struct i2400m_tlv_device_reset_type {
+ struct i2400m_tlv_hdr hdr;
+ __le32 reset_type;
+} __attribute__((packed));
+
+
+struct i2400m_tlv_config_idle_parameters {
+ struct i2400m_tlv_hdr hdr;
+ __le32 idle_timeout; /* 100 to 300000 ms [5min], 100 increments
+ * 0 disabled */
+ __le32 idle_paging_interval; /* frames */
+} __attribute__((packed));
+
+
+enum i2400m_media_status {
+ I2400M_MEDIA_STATUS_LINK_UP = 1,
+ I2400M_MEDIA_STATUS_LINK_DOWN,
+ I2400M_MEDIA_STATUS_LINK_RENEW,
+};
+
+struct i2400m_tlv_media_status {
+ struct i2400m_tlv_hdr hdr;
+ __le32 media_status;
+} __attribute__((packed));
+
+#endif /* #ifndef __LINUX__WIMAX__I2400M_H__ */
diff --git a/include/net/wimax.h b/include/net/wimax.h
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..1602614fdaf9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/net/wimax.h
@@ -0,0 +1,520 @@
+/*
+ * Linux WiMAX
+ * Kernel space API for accessing WiMAX devices
+ *
+ *
+ * Copyright (C) 2007-2008 Intel Corporation <linux-wimax@intel.com>
+ * Inaky Perez-Gonzalez <inaky.perez-gonzalez@intel.com>
+ *
+ * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+ * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version
+ * 2 as published by the Free Software Foundation.
+ *
+ * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ * GNU General Public License for more details.
+ *
+ * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+ * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+ * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
+ * 02110-1301, USA.
+ *
+ *
+ * The WiMAX stack provides an API for controlling and managing the
+ * system's WiMAX devices. This API affects the control plane; the
+ * data plane is accessed via the network stack (netdev).
+ *
+ * Parts of the WiMAX stack API and notifications are exported to
+ * user space via Generic Netlink. In user space, libwimax (part of
+ * the wimax-tools package) provides a shim layer for accessing those
+ * calls.
+ *
+ * The API is standarized for all WiMAX devices and different drivers
+ * implement the backend support for it. However, device-specific
+ * messaging pipes are provided that can be used to issue commands and
+ * receive notifications in free form.
+ *
+ * Currently the messaging pipes are the only means of control as it
+ * is not known (due to the lack of more devices in the market) what
+ * will be a good abstraction layer. Expect this to change as more
+ * devices show in the market. This API is designed to be growable in
+ * order to address this problem.
+ *
+ * USAGE
+ *
+ * Embed a `struct wimax_dev` at the beginning of the the device's
+ * private structure, initialize and register it. For details, see
+ * `struct wimax_dev`s documentation.
+ *
+ * Once this is done, wimax-tools's libwimaxll can be used to
+ * communicate with the driver from user space. You user space
+ * application does not have to forcibily use libwimaxll and can talk
+ * the generic netlink protocol directly if desired.
+ *
+ * Remember this is a very low level API that will to provide all of
+ * WiMAX features. Other daemons and services running in user space
+ * are the expected clients of it. They offer a higher level API that
+ * applications should use (an example of this is the Intel's WiMAX
+ * Network Service for the i2400m).
+ *
+ * DESIGN
+ *
+ * Although not set on final stone, this very basic interface is
+ * mostly completed. Remember this is meant to grow as new common
+ * operations are decided upon. New operations will be added to the
+ * interface, intent being on keeping backwards compatibility as much
+ * as possible.
+ *
+ * This layer implements a set of calls to control a WiMAX device,
+ * exposing a frontend to the rest of the kernel and user space (via
+ * generic netlink) and a backend implementation in the driver through
+ * function pointers.
+ *
+ * WiMAX devices have a state, and a kernel-only API allows the
+ * drivers to manipulate that state. State transitions are atomic, and
+ * only some of them are allowed (see `enum wimax_st`).
+ *
+ * Most API calls will set the state automatically; in most cases
+ * drivers have to only report state changes due to external
+ * conditions.
+ *
+ * All API operations are 'atomic', serialized thorough a mutex in the
+ * `struct wimax_dev`.
+ *
+ * EXPORTING TO USER SPACE THROUGH GENERIC NETLINK
+ *
+ * The API is exported to user space using generic netlink (other
+ * methods can be added as needed).
+ *
+ * There is a Generic Netlink Family named "WiMAX", where interfaces
+ * supporting the WiMAX interface receive commands and broadcast their
+ * signals over a multicast group named "msg".
+ *
+ * Mapping to the source/destination interface is done by an interface
+ * index attribute.
+ *
+ * For user-to-kernel traffic (commands) we use a function call
+ * marshalling mechanism, where a message X with attributes A, B, C
+ * sent from user space to kernel space means executing the WiMAX API
+ * call wimax_X(A, B, C), sending the results back as a message.
+ *
+ * Kernel-to-user (notifications or signals) communication is sent
+ * over multicast groups. This allows to have multiple applications
+ * monitoring them.
+ *
+ * Each command/signal gets assigned it's own attribute policy. This
+ * way the validator will verify that all the attributes in there are
+ * only the ones that should be for each command/signal. Thing of an
+ * attribute mapping to a type+argumentname for each command/signal.
+ *
+ * If we had a single policy for *all* commands/signals, after running
+ * the validator we'd have to check "does this attribute belong in
+ * here"? for each one. It can be done manually, but it's just easier
+ * to have the validator do that job with multiple policies. As well,
+ * it makes it easier to later expand each command/signal signature
+ * without affecting others and keeping the namespace more or less
+ * sane. Not that it is too complicated, but it makes it even easier.
+ *
+ * No state information is maintained in the kernel for each user
+ * space connection (the connection is stateless).
+ *
+ * TESTING FOR THE INTERFACE AND VERSIONING
+ *
+ * If network interface X is a WiMAX device, there will be a Generic
+ * Netlink family named "WiMAX X" and the device will present a
+ * "wimax" directory in it's network sysfs directory
+ * (/sys/class/net/DEVICE/wimax) [used by HAL].
+ *
+ * The inexistence of any of these means the device does not support
+ * this WiMAX API.
+ *
+ * By querying the generic netlink controller, versioning information
+ * and the multicast groups available can be found. Applications using
+ * the interface can either rely on that or use the generic netlink
+ * controller to figure out which generic netlink commands/signals are
+ * supported.
+ *
+ * NOTE: this versioning is a last resort to avoid hard
+ * incompatibilities. It is the intention of the design of this
+ * stack not to introduce backward incompatible changes.
+ *
+ * The version code has to fit in one byte (restrictions imposed by
+ * generic netlink); we use `version / 10` for the major version and
+ * `version % 10` for the minor. This gives 9 minors for each major
+ * and 25 majors.
+ *
+ * The version change protocol is as follow:
+ *
+ * - Major versions: needs to be increased if an existing message/API
+ * call is changed or removed. Doesn't need to be changed if a new
+ * message is added.
+ *
+ * - Minor version: needs to be increased if new messages/API calls are
+ * being added or some other consideration that doesn't impact the
+ * user-kernel interface too much (like some kind of bug fix) and
+ * that is kind of left up in the air to common sense.
+ *
+ * User space code should not try to work if the major version it was
+ * compiled for differs from what the kernel offers. As well, if the
+ * minor version of the kernel interface is lower than the one user
+ * space is expecting (the one it was compiled for), the kernel
+ * might be missing API calls; user space shall be ready to handle
+ * said condition. Use the generic netlink controller operations to
+ * find which ones are supported and which not.
+ *
+ * libwimaxll:wimaxll_open() takes care of checking versions.
+ *
+ * THE OPERATIONS:
+ *
+ * Each operation is defined in its on file (drivers/net/wimax/op-*.c)
+ * for clarity. The parts needed for an operation are:
+ *
+ * - a function pointer in `struct wimax_dev`: optional, as the
+ * operation might be implemented by the stack and not by the
+ * driver.
+ *
+ * All function pointers are named wimax_dev->op_*(), and drivers
+ * must implement them except where noted otherwise.
+ *
+ * - When exported to user space, a `struct nla_policy` to define the
+ * attributes of the generic netlink command and a `struct genl_ops`
+ * to define the operation.
+ *
+ * All the declarations for the operation codes (WIMAX_GNL_OP_<NAME>)
+ * and generic netlink attributes (WIMAX_GNL_<NAME>_*) are declared in
+ * include/linux/wimax.h; this file is intended to be cloned by user
+ * space to gain access to those declarations.
+ *
+ * A few caveats to remember:
+ *
+ * - Need to define attribute numbers starting in 1; otherwise it
+ * fails.
+ *
+ * - the `struct genl_family` requires a maximum attribute id; when
+ * defining the `struct nla_policy` for each message, it has to have
+ * an array size of WIMAX_GNL_ATTR_MAX+1.
+ *
+ * THE PIPE INTERFACE:
+ *
+ * This interface is kept intentionally simple. The driver can send
+ * and receive free-form messages to/from user space through a
+ * pipe. See drivers/net/wimax/op-msg.c for details.
+ *
+ * The kernel-to-user messages are sent with
+ * wimax_msg(). user-to-kernel messages are delivered via
+ * wimax_dev->op_msg_from_user().
+ *
+ * RFKILL:
+ *
+ * RFKILL support is built into the wimax_dev layer; the driver just
+ * needs to call wimax_report_rfkill_{hw,sw}() to inform of changes in
+ * the hardware or software RF kill switches. When the stack wants to
+ * turn the radio off, it will call wimax_dev->op_rfkill_sw_toggle(),
+ * which the driver implements.
+ *
+ * User space can set the software RF Kill switch by calling
+ * wimax_rfkill().
+ *
+ * The code for now only supports devices that don't require polling;
+ * If the device needs to be polled, create a self-rearming delayed
+ * work struct for polling or look into adding polled support to the
+ * WiMAX stack.
+ *
+ * When initializing the hardware (_probe), after calling
+ * wimax_dev_add(), query the device for it's RF Kill switches status
+ * and feed it back to the WiMAX stack using
+ * wimax_report_rfkill_{hw,sw}(). If any switch is missing, always
+ * report it as ON.
+ *
+ * NOTE: the wimax stack uses an inverted terminology to that of the
+ * RFKILL subsystem:
+ *
+ * - ON: radio is ON, RFKILL is DISABLED or OFF.
+ * - OFF: radio is OFF, RFKILL is ENABLED or ON.
+ *
+ * MISCELLANEOUS OPS:
+ *
+ * wimax_reset() can be used to reset the device to power on state; by
+ * default it issues a warm reset that maintains the same device
+ * node. If that is not possible, it falls back to a cold reset
+ * (device reconnect). The driver implements the backend to this
+ * through wimax_dev->op_reset().
+ */
+
+#ifndef __NET__WIMAX_H__
+#define __NET__WIMAX_H__
+#ifdef __KERNEL__
+
+#include <linux/wimax.h>
+#include <net/genetlink.h>
+#include <linux/netdevice.h>
+
+struct net_device;
+struct genl_info;
+struct wimax_dev;
+struct input_dev;
+
+/**
+ * struct wimax_dev - Generic WiMAX device
+ *
+ * @net_dev: [fill] Pointer to the &struct net_device this WiMAX
+ * device implements.
+ *
+ * @op_msg_from_user: [fill] Driver-specific operation to
+ * handle a raw message from user space to the driver. The
+ * driver can send messages to user space using with
+ * wimax_msg_to_user().
+ *
+ * @op_rfkill_sw_toggle: [fill] Driver-specific operation to act on
+ * userspace (or any other agent) requesting the WiMAX device to
+ * change the RF Kill software switch (WIMAX_RF_ON or
+ * WIMAX_RF_OFF).
+ * If such hardware support is not present, it is assumed the
+ * radio cannot be switched off and it is always on (and the stack
+ * will error out when trying to switch it off). In such case,
+ * this function pointer can be left as NULL.
+ *
+ * @op_reset: [fill] Driver specific operation to reset the
+ * device.
+ * This operation should always attempt first a warm reset that
+ * does not disconnect the device from the bus and return 0.
+ * If that fails, it should resort to some sort of cold or bus
+ * reset (even if it implies a bus disconnection and device
+ * dissapearance). In that case, -ENODEV should be returned to
+ * indicate the device is gone.
+ * This operation has to be synchronous, and return only when the
+ * reset is complete. In case of having had to resort to bus/cold
+ * reset implying a device disconnection, the call is allowed to
+ * return inmediately.
+ * NOTE: wimax_dev->mutex is NOT locked when this op is being
+ * called; however, wimax_dev->mutex_reset IS locked to ensure
+ * serialization of calls to wimax_reset().
+ * See wimax_reset()'s documentation.
+ *
+ * @name: [fill] A way to identify this device. We need to register a
+ * name with many subsystems (input for RFKILL, workqueue
+ * creation, etc). We can't use the network device name as that
+ * might change and in some instances we don't know it yet (until
+ * we don't call register_netdev()). So we generate an unique one
+ * using the driver name and device bus id, place it here and use
+ * it across the board. Recommended naming:
+ * DRIVERNAME-BUSNAME:BUSID (dev->bus->name, dev->bus_id).
+ *
+ * @id_table_node: [private] link to the list of wimax devices kept by
+ * id-table.c. Protected by it's own spinlock.
+ *
+ * @mutex: [private] Serializes all concurrent access and execution of
+ * operations.
+ *
+ * @mutex_reset: [private] Serializes reset operations. Needs to be a
+ * different mutex because as part of the reset operation, the
+ * driver has to call back into the stack to do things such as
+ * state change, that require wimax_dev->mutex.
+ *
+ * @state: [private] Current state of the WiMAX device.
+ *
+ * @rfkill: [private] integration into the RF-Kill infrastructure.
+ *
+ * @rfkill_input: [private] virtual input device to process the
+ * hardware RF Kill switches.
+ *
+ * @rf_sw: [private] State of the software radio switch (OFF/ON)
+ *
+ * @rf_hw: [private] State of the hardware radio switch (OFF/ON)
+ *
+ * Description:
+ * This structure defines a common interface to access all WiMAX
+ * devices from different vendors and provides a common API as well as
+ * a free-form device-specific messaging channel.
+ *
+ * Usage:
+ * 1. Embed a &struct wimax_dev at *the beginning* the network
+ * device structure so that netdev_priv() points to it.
+ *
+ * 2. memset() it to zero
+ *
+ * 3. Initialize with wimax_dev_init(). This will leave the WiMAX
+ * device in the %__WIMAX_ST_NULL state.
+ *
+ * 4. Fill all the fields marked with [fill]; once called
+ * wimax_dev_add(), those fields CANNOT be modified.
+ *
+ * 5. Call wimax_dev_add() *after* registering the network
+ * device. This will leave the WiMAX device in the %WIMAX_ST_DOWN
+ * state.
+ * Protect the driver's net_device->open() against succeeding if
+ * the wimax device state is lower than %WIMAX_ST_DOWN.
+ *
+ * 6. Select when the device is going to be turned on/initialized;
+ * for example, it could be initialized on 'ifconfig up' (when the
+ * netdev op 'open()' is called on the driver).
+ *
+ * When the device is initialized (at `ifconfig up` time, or right
+ * after calling wimax_dev_add() from _probe(), make sure the
+ * following steps are taken
+ *
+ * a. Move the device to %WIMAX_ST_UNINITIALIZED. This is needed so
+ * some API calls that shouldn't work until the device is ready
+ * can be blocked.
+ *
+ * b. Initialize the device. Make sure to turn the SW radio switch
+ * off and move the device to state %WIMAX_ST_RADIO_OFF when
+ * done. When just initialized, a device should be left in RADIO
+ * OFF state until user space devices to turn it on.
+ *
+ * c. Query the device for the state of the hardware rfkill switch
+ * and call wimax_rfkill_report_hw() and wimax_rfkill_report_sw()
+ * as needed. See below.
+ *
+ * wimax_dev_rm() undoes before unregistering the network device. Once
+ * wimax_dev_add() is called, the driver can get called on the
+ * wimax_dev->op_* function pointers
+ *
+ * CONCURRENCY:
+ *
+ * The stack provides a mutex for each device that will disallow API
+ * calls happening concurrently; thus, op calls into the driver
+ * through the wimax_dev->op*() function pointers will always be
+ * serialized and *never* concurrent.
+ *
+ * For locking, take wimax_dev->mutex is taken; (most) operations in
+ * the API have to check for wimax_dev_is_ready() to return 0 before
+ * continuing (this is done internally).
+ *
+ * REFERENCE COUNTING:
+ *
+ * The WiMAX device is reference counted by the associated network
+ * device. The only operation that can be used to reference the device
+ * is wimax_dev_get_by_genl_info(), and the reference it acquires has
+ * to be released with dev_put(wimax_dev->net_dev).
+ *
+ * RFKILL:
+ *
+ * At startup, both HW and SW radio switchess are assumed to be off.
+ *
+ * At initialization time [after calling wimax_dev_add()], have the
+ * driver query the device for the status of the software and hardware
+ * RF kill switches and call wimax_report_rfkill_hw() and
+ * wimax_rfkill_report_sw() to indicate their state. If any is
+ * missing, just call it to indicate it is ON (radio always on).
+ *
+ * Whenever the driver detects a change in the state of the RF kill
+ * switches, it should call wimax_report_rfkill_hw() or
+ * wimax_report_rfkill_sw() to report it to the stack.
+ */
+struct wimax_dev {
+ struct net_device *net_dev;
+ struct list_head id_table_node;
+ struct mutex mutex; /* Protects all members and API calls */
+ struct mutex mutex_reset;
+ enum wimax_st state;
+
+ int (*op_msg_from_user)(struct wimax_dev *wimax_dev,
+ const char *,
+ const void *, size_t,
+ const struct genl_info *info);
+ int (*op_rfkill_sw_toggle)(struct wimax_dev *wimax_dev,
+ enum wimax_rf_state);
+ int (*op_reset)(struct wimax_dev *wimax_dev);
+
+ struct rfkill *rfkill;
+ struct input_dev *rfkill_input;
+ unsigned rf_hw;
+ unsigned rf_sw;
+ char name[32];
+
+ struct dentry *debugfs_dentry;
+};
+
+
+
+/*
+ * WiMAX stack public API for device drivers
+ * -----------------------------------------
+ *
+ * These functions are not exported to user space.
+ */
+extern void wimax_dev_init(struct wimax_dev *);
+extern int wimax_dev_add(struct wimax_dev *, struct net_device *);
+extern void wimax_dev_rm(struct wimax_dev *);
+
+static inline
+struct wimax_dev *net_dev_to_wimax(struct net_device *net_dev)
+{
+ return netdev_priv(net_dev);
+}
+
+static inline
+struct device *wimax_dev_to_dev(struct wimax_dev *wimax_dev)
+{
+ return wimax_dev->net_dev->dev.parent;
+}
+
+extern void wimax_state_change(struct wimax_dev *, enum wimax_st);
+extern enum wimax_st wimax_state_get(struct wimax_dev *);
+
+/*
+ * Radio Switch state reporting.
+ *
+ * enum wimax_rf_state is declared in linux/wimax.h so the exports
+ * to user space can use it.
+ */
+extern void wimax_report_rfkill_hw(struct wimax_dev *, enum wimax_rf_state);
+extern void wimax_report_rfkill_sw(struct wimax_dev *, enum wimax_rf_state);
+
+
+/*
+ * Free-form messaging to/from user space
+ *
+ * Sending a message:
+ *
+ * wimax_msg(wimax_dev, pipe_name, buf, buf_size, GFP_KERNEL);
+ *
+ * Broken up:
+ *
+ * skb = wimax_msg_alloc(wimax_dev, pipe_name, buf_size, GFP_KERNEL);
+ * ...fill up skb...
+ * wimax_msg_send(wimax_dev, pipe_name, skb);
+ *
+ * Be sure not to modify skb->data in the middle (ie: don't use
+ * skb_push()/skb_pull()/skb_reserve() on the skb).
+ *
+ * "pipe_name" is any string, than can be interpreted as the name of
+ * the pipe or destinatary; the interpretation of it is driver
+ * specific, so the recipient can multiplex it as wished. It can be
+ * NULL, it won't be used - an example is using a "diagnostics" tag to
+ * send diagnostics information that a device-specific diagnostics
+ * tool would be interested in.
+ */
+extern struct sk_buff *wimax_msg_alloc(struct wimax_dev *, const char *,
+ const void *, size_t, gfp_t);
+extern int wimax_msg_send(struct wimax_dev *, struct sk_buff *);
+extern int wimax_msg(struct wimax_dev *, const char *,
+ const void *, size_t, gfp_t);
+
+extern const void *wimax_msg_data_len(struct sk_buff *, size_t *);
+extern const void *wimax_msg_data(struct sk_buff *);
+extern ssize_t wimax_msg_len(struct sk_buff *);
+
+
+/*
+ * WiMAX stack user space API
+ * --------------------------
+ *
+ * This API is what gets exported to user space for general
+ * operations. As well, they can be called from within the kernel,
+ * (with a properly referenced `struct wimax_dev`).
+ *
+ * Properly referenced means: the 'struct net_device' that embeds the
+ * device's control structure and (as such) the 'struct wimax_dev' is
+ * referenced by the caller.
+ */
+extern int wimax_rfkill(struct wimax_dev *, enum wimax_rf_state);
+extern int wimax_reset(struct wimax_dev *);
+
+#else
+/* You might be looking for linux/wimax.h */
+#error This file should not be included from user space.
+#endif /* #ifdef __KERNEL__ */
+#endif /* #ifndef __NET__WIMAX_H__ */