aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/include
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'include')
-rw-r--r--include/linux/firewire-cdev.h501
-rw-r--r--include/linux/firewire.h62
2 files changed, 451 insertions, 112 deletions
diff --git a/include/linux/firewire-cdev.h b/include/linux/firewire-cdev.h
index 68f883b30a53..68c642d8843d 100644
--- a/include/linux/firewire-cdev.h
+++ b/include/linux/firewire-cdev.h
@@ -30,12 +30,18 @@
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/firewire-constants.h>
-#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_BUS_RESET 0x00
-#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_RESPONSE 0x01
-#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_REQUEST 0x02
-#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_INTERRUPT 0x03
-#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_RESOURCE_ALLOCATED 0x04
-#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_RESOURCE_DEALLOCATED 0x05
+#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_BUS_RESET 0x00
+#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_RESPONSE 0x01
+#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_REQUEST 0x02
+#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_INTERRUPT 0x03
+#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_RESOURCE_ALLOCATED 0x04
+#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_RESOURCE_DEALLOCATED 0x05
+
+/* available since kernel version 2.6.36 */
+#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_REQUEST2 0x06
+#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_PHY_PACKET_SENT 0x07
+#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_PHY_PACKET_RECEIVED 0x08
+#define FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_INTERRUPT_MULTICHANNEL 0x09
/**
* struct fw_cdev_event_common - Common part of all fw_cdev_event_ types
@@ -68,6 +74,10 @@ struct fw_cdev_event_common {
* This event is sent when the bus the device belongs to goes through a bus
* reset. It provides information about the new bus configuration, such as
* new node ID for this device, new root ID, and others.
+ *
+ * If @bm_node_id is 0xffff right after bus reset it can be reread by an
+ * %FW_CDEV_IOC_GET_INFO ioctl after bus manager selection was finished.
+ * Kernels with ABI version < 4 do not set @bm_node_id.
*/
struct fw_cdev_event_bus_reset {
__u64 closure;
@@ -82,8 +92,9 @@ struct fw_cdev_event_bus_reset {
/**
* struct fw_cdev_event_response - Sent when a response packet was received
- * @closure: See &fw_cdev_event_common;
- * set by %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_REQUEST ioctl
+ * @closure: See &fw_cdev_event_common; set by %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_REQUEST
+ * or %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_BROADCAST_REQUEST
+ * or %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_STREAM_PACKET ioctl
* @type: See &fw_cdev_event_common; always %FW_CDEV_EVENT_RESPONSE
* @rcode: Response code returned by the remote node
* @length: Data length, i.e. the response's payload size in bytes
@@ -93,6 +104,11 @@ struct fw_cdev_event_bus_reset {
* sent by %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_REQUEST ioctl. The payload data for responses
* carrying data (read and lock responses) follows immediately and can be
* accessed through the @data field.
+ *
+ * The event is also generated after conclusions of transactions that do not
+ * involve response packets. This includes unified write transactions,
+ * broadcast write transactions, and transmission of asynchronous stream
+ * packets. @rcode indicates success or failure of such transmissions.
*/
struct fw_cdev_event_response {
__u64 closure;
@@ -103,11 +119,46 @@ struct fw_cdev_event_response {
};
/**
- * struct fw_cdev_event_request - Sent on incoming request to an address region
+ * struct fw_cdev_event_request - Old version of &fw_cdev_event_request2
* @closure: See &fw_cdev_event_common; set by %FW_CDEV_IOC_ALLOCATE ioctl
* @type: See &fw_cdev_event_common; always %FW_CDEV_EVENT_REQUEST
+ * @tcode: See &fw_cdev_event_request2
+ * @offset: See &fw_cdev_event_request2
+ * @handle: See &fw_cdev_event_request2
+ * @length: See &fw_cdev_event_request2
+ * @data: See &fw_cdev_event_request2
+ *
+ * This event is sent instead of &fw_cdev_event_request2 if the kernel or
+ * the client implements ABI version <= 3.
+ *
+ * Unlike &fw_cdev_event_request2, the sender identity cannot be established,
+ * broadcast write requests cannot be distinguished from unicast writes, and
+ * @tcode of lock requests is %TCODE_LOCK_REQUEST.
+ *
+ * Requests to the FCP_REQUEST or FCP_RESPONSE register are responded to as
+ * with &fw_cdev_event_request2, except in kernel 2.6.32 and older which send
+ * the response packet of the client's %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_RESPONSE ioctl.
+ */
+struct fw_cdev_event_request {
+ __u64 closure;
+ __u32 type;
+ __u32 tcode;
+ __u64 offset;
+ __u32 handle;
+ __u32 length;
+ __u32 data[0];
+};
+
+/**
+ * struct fw_cdev_event_request2 - Sent on incoming request to an address region
+ * @closure: See &fw_cdev_event_common; set by %FW_CDEV_IOC_ALLOCATE ioctl
+ * @type: See &fw_cdev_event_common; always %FW_CDEV_EVENT_REQUEST2
* @tcode: Transaction code of the incoming request
* @offset: The offset into the 48-bit per-node address space
+ * @source_node_id: Sender node ID
+ * @destination_node_id: Destination node ID
+ * @card: The index of the card from which the request came
+ * @generation: Bus generation in which the request is valid
* @handle: Reference to the kernel-side pending request
* @length: Data length, i.e. the request's payload size in bytes
* @data: Incoming data, if any
@@ -120,12 +171,42 @@ struct fw_cdev_event_response {
*
* The payload data for requests carrying data (write and lock requests)
* follows immediately and can be accessed through the @data field.
+ *
+ * Unlike &fw_cdev_event_request, @tcode of lock requests is one of the
+ * firewire-core specific %TCODE_LOCK_MASK_SWAP...%TCODE_LOCK_VENDOR_DEPENDENT,
+ * i.e. encodes the extended transaction code.
+ *
+ * @card may differ from &fw_cdev_get_info.card because requests are received
+ * from all cards of the Linux host. @source_node_id, @destination_node_id, and
+ * @generation pertain to that card. Destination node ID and bus generation may
+ * therefore differ from the corresponding fields of the last
+ * &fw_cdev_event_bus_reset.
+ *
+ * @destination_node_id may also differ from the current node ID because of a
+ * non-local bus ID part or in case of a broadcast write request. Note, a
+ * client must call an %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_RESPONSE ioctl even in case of a
+ * broadcast write request; the kernel will then release the kernel-side pending
+ * request but will not actually send a response packet.
+ *
+ * In case of a write request to FCP_REQUEST or FCP_RESPONSE, the kernel already
+ * sent a write response immediately after the request was received; in this
+ * case the client must still call an %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_RESPONSE ioctl to
+ * release the kernel-side pending request, though another response won't be
+ * sent.
+ *
+ * If the client subsequently needs to initiate requests to the sender node of
+ * an &fw_cdev_event_request2, it needs to use a device file with matching
+ * card index, node ID, and generation for outbound requests.
*/
-struct fw_cdev_event_request {
+struct fw_cdev_event_request2 {
__u64 closure;
__u32 type;
__u32 tcode;
__u64 offset;
+ __u32 source_node_id;
+ __u32 destination_node_id;
+ __u32 card;
+ __u32 generation;
__u32 handle;
__u32 length;
__u32 data[0];
@@ -141,26 +222,43 @@ struct fw_cdev_event_request {
* @header: Stripped headers, if any
*
* This event is sent when the controller has completed an &fw_cdev_iso_packet
- * with the %FW_CDEV_ISO_INTERRUPT bit set. In the receive case, the headers
- * stripped of all packets up until and including the interrupt packet are
- * returned in the @header field. The amount of header data per packet is as
- * specified at iso context creation by &fw_cdev_create_iso_context.header_size.
+ * with the %FW_CDEV_ISO_INTERRUPT bit set.
*
- * In version 1 of this ABI, header data consisted of the 1394 isochronous
- * packet header, followed by quadlets from the packet payload if
- * &fw_cdev_create_iso_context.header_size > 4.
+ * Isochronous transmit events (context type %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_TRANSMIT):
*
- * In version 2 of this ABI, header data consist of the 1394 isochronous
- * packet header, followed by a timestamp quadlet if
- * &fw_cdev_create_iso_context.header_size > 4, followed by quadlets from the
- * packet payload if &fw_cdev_create_iso_context.header_size > 8.
+ * In version 3 and some implementations of version 2 of the ABI, &header_length
+ * is a multiple of 4 and &header contains timestamps of all packets up until
+ * the interrupt packet. The format of the timestamps is as described below for
+ * isochronous reception. In version 1 of the ABI, &header_length was 0.
*
- * Behaviour of ver. 1 of this ABI is no longer available since ABI ver. 2.
+ * Isochronous receive events (context type %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE):
+ *
+ * The headers stripped of all packets up until and including the interrupt
+ * packet are returned in the @header field. The amount of header data per
+ * packet is as specified at iso context creation by
+ * &fw_cdev_create_iso_context.header_size.
+ *
+ * Hence, _interrupt.header_length / _context.header_size is the number of
+ * packets received in this interrupt event. The client can now iterate
+ * through the mmap()'ed DMA buffer according to this number of packets and
+ * to the buffer sizes as the client specified in &fw_cdev_queue_iso.
+ *
+ * Since version 2 of this ABI, the portion for each packet in _interrupt.header
+ * consists of the 1394 isochronous packet header, followed by a timestamp
+ * quadlet if &fw_cdev_create_iso_context.header_size > 4, followed by quadlets
+ * from the packet payload if &fw_cdev_create_iso_context.header_size > 8.
*
- * Format of 1394 iso packet header: 16 bits len, 2 bits tag, 6 bits channel,
- * 4 bits tcode, 4 bits sy, in big endian byte order. Format of timestamp:
- * 16 bits invalid, 3 bits cycleSeconds, 13 bits cycleCount, in big endian byte
- * order.
+ * Format of 1394 iso packet header: 16 bits data_length, 2 bits tag, 6 bits
+ * channel, 4 bits tcode, 4 bits sy, in big endian byte order.
+ * data_length is the actual received size of the packet without the four
+ * 1394 iso packet header bytes.
+ *
+ * Format of timestamp: 16 bits invalid, 3 bits cycleSeconds, 13 bits
+ * cycleCount, in big endian byte order.
+ *
+ * In version 1 of the ABI, no timestamp quadlet was inserted; instead, payload
+ * data followed directly after the 1394 is header if header_size > 4.
+ * Behaviour of ver. 1 of this ABI is no longer available since ABI ver. 2.
*/
struct fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt {
__u64 closure;
@@ -171,6 +269,43 @@ struct fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt {
};
/**
+ * struct fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt_mc - An iso buffer chunk was completed
+ * @closure: See &fw_cdev_event_common;
+ * set by %FW_CDEV_CREATE_ISO_CONTEXT ioctl
+ * @type: %FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_INTERRUPT_MULTICHANNEL
+ * @completed: Offset into the receive buffer; data before this offest is valid
+ *
+ * This event is sent in multichannel contexts (context type
+ * %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE_MULTICHANNEL) for &fw_cdev_iso_packet buffer
+ * chunks that have the %FW_CDEV_ISO_INTERRUPT bit set. Whether this happens
+ * when a packet is completed and/or when a buffer chunk is completed depends
+ * on the hardware implementation.
+ *
+ * The buffer is continuously filled with the following data, per packet:
+ * - the 1394 iso packet header as described at &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt,
+ * but in little endian byte order,
+ * - packet payload (as many bytes as specified in the data_length field of
+ * the 1394 iso packet header) in big endian byte order,
+ * - 0...3 padding bytes as needed to align the following trailer quadlet,
+ * - trailer quadlet, containing the reception timestamp as described at
+ * &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt, but in little endian byte order.
+ *
+ * Hence the per-packet size is data_length (rounded up to a multiple of 4) + 8.
+ * When processing the data, stop before a packet that would cross the
+ * @completed offset.
+ *
+ * A packet near the end of a buffer chunk will typically spill over into the
+ * next queued buffer chunk. It is the responsibility of the client to check
+ * for this condition, assemble a broken-up packet from its parts, and not to
+ * re-queue any buffer chunks in which as yet unread packet parts reside.
+ */
+struct fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt_mc {
+ __u64 closure;
+ __u32 type;
+ __u32 completed;
+};
+
+/**
* struct fw_cdev_event_iso_resource - Iso resources were allocated or freed
* @closure: See &fw_cdev_event_common;
* set by %FW_CDEV_IOC_(DE)ALLOCATE_ISO_RESOURCE(_ONCE) ioctl
@@ -200,15 +335,45 @@ struct fw_cdev_event_iso_resource {
};
/**
+ * struct fw_cdev_event_phy_packet - A PHY packet was transmitted or received
+ * @closure: See &fw_cdev_event_common; set by %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_PHY_PACKET
+ * or %FW_CDEV_IOC_RECEIVE_PHY_PACKETS ioctl
+ * @type: %FW_CDEV_EVENT_PHY_PACKET_SENT or %..._RECEIVED
+ * @rcode: %RCODE_..., indicates success or failure of transmission
+ * @length: Data length in bytes
+ * @data: Incoming data
+ *
+ * If @type is %FW_CDEV_EVENT_PHY_PACKET_SENT, @length is 0 and @data empty,
+ * except in case of a ping packet: Then, @length is 4, and @data[0] is the
+ * ping time in 49.152MHz clocks if @rcode is %RCODE_COMPLETE.
+ *
+ * If @type is %FW_CDEV_EVENT_PHY_PACKET_RECEIVED, @length is 8 and @data
+ * consists of the two PHY packet quadlets, in host byte order.
+ */
+struct fw_cdev_event_phy_packet {
+ __u64 closure;
+ __u32 type;
+ __u32 rcode;
+ __u32 length;
+ __u32 data[0];
+};
+
+/**
* union fw_cdev_event - Convenience union of fw_cdev_event_ types
- * @common: Valid for all types
- * @bus_reset: Valid if @common.type == %FW_CDEV_EVENT_BUS_RESET
- * @response: Valid if @common.type == %FW_CDEV_EVENT_RESPONSE
- * @request: Valid if @common.type == %FW_CDEV_EVENT_REQUEST
- * @iso_interrupt: Valid if @common.type == %FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_INTERRUPT
- * @iso_resource: Valid if @common.type ==
+ * @common: Valid for all types
+ * @bus_reset: Valid if @common.type == %FW_CDEV_EVENT_BUS_RESET
+ * @response: Valid if @common.type == %FW_CDEV_EVENT_RESPONSE
+ * @request: Valid if @common.type == %FW_CDEV_EVENT_REQUEST
+ * @request2: Valid if @common.type == %FW_CDEV_EVENT_REQUEST2
+ * @iso_interrupt: Valid if @common.type == %FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_INTERRUPT
+ * @iso_interrupt_mc: Valid if @common.type ==
+ * %FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_INTERRUPT_MULTICHANNEL
+ * @iso_resource: Valid if @common.type ==
* %FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_RESOURCE_ALLOCATED or
* %FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_RESOURCE_DEALLOCATED
+ * @phy_packet: Valid if @common.type ==
+ * %FW_CDEV_EVENT_PHY_PACKET_SENT or
+ * %FW_CDEV_EVENT_PHY_PACKET_RECEIVED
*
* Convenience union for userspace use. Events could be read(2) into an
* appropriately aligned char buffer and then cast to this union for further
@@ -223,8 +388,11 @@ union fw_cdev_event {
struct fw_cdev_event_bus_reset bus_reset;
struct fw_cdev_event_response response;
struct fw_cdev_event_request request;
+ struct fw_cdev_event_request2 request2; /* added in 2.6.36 */
struct fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt iso_interrupt;
- struct fw_cdev_event_iso_resource iso_resource;
+ struct fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt_mc iso_interrupt_mc; /* added in 2.6.36 */
+ struct fw_cdev_event_iso_resource iso_resource; /* added in 2.6.30 */
+ struct fw_cdev_event_phy_packet phy_packet; /* added in 2.6.36 */
};
/* available since kernel version 2.6.22 */
@@ -256,23 +424,46 @@ union fw_cdev_event {
/* available since kernel version 2.6.34 */
#define FW_CDEV_IOC_GET_CYCLE_TIMER2 _IOWR('#', 0x14, struct fw_cdev_get_cycle_timer2)
+/* available since kernel version 2.6.36 */
+#define FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_PHY_PACKET _IOWR('#', 0x15, struct fw_cdev_send_phy_packet)
+#define FW_CDEV_IOC_RECEIVE_PHY_PACKETS _IOW('#', 0x16, struct fw_cdev_receive_phy_packets)
+#define FW_CDEV_IOC_SET_ISO_CHANNELS _IOW('#', 0x17, struct fw_cdev_set_iso_channels)
+
/*
- * FW_CDEV_VERSION History
+ * ABI version history
* 1 (2.6.22) - initial version
+ * (2.6.24) - added %FW_CDEV_IOC_GET_CYCLE_TIMER
* 2 (2.6.30) - changed &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt.header if
* &fw_cdev_create_iso_context.header_size is 8 or more
+ * - added %FW_CDEV_IOC_*_ISO_RESOURCE*,
+ * %FW_CDEV_IOC_GET_SPEED, %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_BROADCAST_REQUEST,
+ * %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_STREAM_PACKET
* (2.6.32) - added time stamp to xmit &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt
* (2.6.33) - IR has always packet-per-buffer semantics now, not one of
* dual-buffer or packet-per-buffer depending on hardware
+ * - shared use and auto-response for FCP registers
* 3 (2.6.34) - made &fw_cdev_get_cycle_timer reliable
+ * - added %FW_CDEV_IOC_GET_CYCLE_TIMER2
+ * 4 (2.6.36) - added %FW_CDEV_EVENT_REQUEST2, %FW_CDEV_EVENT_PHY_PACKET_*,
+ * and &fw_cdev_allocate.region_end
+ * - implemented &fw_cdev_event_bus_reset.bm_node_id
+ * - added %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_PHY_PACKET, _RECEIVE_PHY_PACKETS
+ * - added %FW_CDEV_EVENT_ISO_INTERRUPT_MULTICHANNEL,
+ * %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE_MULTICHANNEL, and
+ * %FW_CDEV_IOC_SET_ISO_CHANNELS
*/
-#define FW_CDEV_VERSION 3
+#define FW_CDEV_VERSION 3 /* Meaningless; don't use this macro. */
/**
* struct fw_cdev_get_info - General purpose information ioctl
- * @version: The version field is just a running serial number.
- * We never break backwards compatibility, but may add more
- * structs and ioctls in later revisions.
+ * @version: The version field is just a running serial number. Both an
+ * input parameter (ABI version implemented by the client) and
+ * output parameter (ABI version implemented by the kernel).
+ * A client must not fill in an %FW_CDEV_VERSION defined from an
+ * included kernel header file but the actual version for which
+ * the client was implemented. This is necessary for forward
+ * compatibility. We never break backwards compatibility, but
+ * may add more structs, events, and ioctls in later revisions.
* @rom_length: If @rom is non-zero, at most rom_length bytes of configuration
* ROM will be copied into that user space address. In either
* case, @rom_length is updated with the actual length of the
@@ -339,28 +530,48 @@ struct fw_cdev_send_response {
};
/**
- * struct fw_cdev_allocate - Allocate a CSR address range
+ * struct fw_cdev_allocate - Allocate a CSR in an address range
* @offset: Start offset of the address range
* @closure: To be passed back to userspace in request events
- * @length: Length of the address range, in bytes
+ * @length: Length of the CSR, in bytes
* @handle: Handle to the allocation, written by the kernel
+ * @region_end: First address above the address range (added in ABI v4, 2.6.36)
*
* Allocate an address range in the 48-bit address space on the local node
* (the controller). This allows userspace to listen for requests with an
- * offset within that address range. When the kernel receives a request
- * within the range, an &fw_cdev_event_request event will be written back.
- * The @closure field is passed back to userspace in the response event.
+ * offset within that address range. Every time when the kernel receives a
+ * request within the range, an &fw_cdev_event_request2 event will be emitted.
+ * (If the kernel or the client implements ABI version <= 3, an
+ * &fw_cdev_event_request will be generated instead.)
+ *
+ * The @closure field is passed back to userspace in these request events.
* The @handle field is an out parameter, returning a handle to the allocated
* range to be used for later deallocation of the range.
*
* The address range is allocated on all local nodes. The address allocation
- * is exclusive except for the FCP command and response registers.
+ * is exclusive except for the FCP command and response registers. If an
+ * exclusive address region is already in use, the ioctl fails with errno set
+ * to %EBUSY.
+ *
+ * If kernel and client implement ABI version >= 4, the kernel looks up a free
+ * spot of size @length inside [@offset..@region_end) and, if found, writes
+ * the start address of the new CSR back in @offset. I.e. @offset is an
+ * in and out parameter. If this automatic placement of a CSR in a bigger
+ * address range is not desired, the client simply needs to set @region_end
+ * = @offset + @length.
+ *
+ * If the kernel or the client implements ABI version <= 3, @region_end is
+ * ignored and effectively assumed to be @offset + @length.
+ *
+ * @region_end is only present in a kernel header >= 2.6.36. If necessary,
+ * this can for example be tested by #ifdef FW_CDEV_EVENT_REQUEST2.
*/
struct fw_cdev_allocate {
__u64 offset;
__u64 closure;
__u32 length;
__u32 handle;
+ __u64 region_end; /* available since kernel version 2.6.36 */
};
/**
@@ -382,9 +593,14 @@ struct fw_cdev_deallocate {
* Initiate a bus reset for the bus this device is on. The bus reset can be
* either the original (long) bus reset or the arbitrated (short) bus reset
* introduced in 1394a-2000.
+ *
+ * The ioctl returns immediately. A subsequent &fw_cdev_event_bus_reset
+ * indicates when the reset actually happened. Since ABI v4, this may be
+ * considerably later than the ioctl because the kernel ensures a grace period
+ * between subsequent bus resets as per IEEE 1394 bus management specification.
*/
struct fw_cdev_initiate_bus_reset {
- __u32 type; /* FW_CDEV_SHORT_RESET or FW_CDEV_LONG_RESET */
+ __u32 type;
};
/**
@@ -408,9 +624,10 @@ struct fw_cdev_initiate_bus_reset {
*
* @immediate, @key, and @data array elements are CPU-endian quadlets.
*
- * If successful, the kernel adds the descriptor and writes back a handle to the
- * kernel-side object to be used for later removal of the descriptor block and
- * immediate key.
+ * If successful, the kernel adds the descriptor and writes back a @handle to
+ * the kernel-side object to be used for later removal of the descriptor block
+ * and immediate key. The kernel will also generate a bus reset to signal the
+ * change of the configuration ROM to other nodes.
*
* This ioctl affects the configuration ROMs of all local nodes.
* The ioctl only succeeds on device files which represent a local node.
@@ -429,38 +646,50 @@ struct fw_cdev_add_descriptor {
* descriptor was added
*
* Remove a descriptor block and accompanying immediate key from the local
- * nodes' configuration ROMs.
+ * nodes' configuration ROMs. The kernel will also generate a bus reset to
+ * signal the change of the configuration ROM to other nodes.
*/
struct fw_cdev_remove_descriptor {
__u32 handle;
};
-#define FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_TRANSMIT 0
-#define FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE 1
+#define FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_TRANSMIT 0
+#define FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE 1
+#define FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE_MULTICHANNEL 2 /* added in 2.6.36 */
/**
- * struct fw_cdev_create_iso_context - Create a context for isochronous IO
- * @type: %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_TRANSMIT or %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE
- * @header_size: Header size to strip for receive contexts
- * @channel: Channel to bind to
- * @speed: Speed for transmit contexts
- * @closure: To be returned in &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt
+ * struct fw_cdev_create_iso_context - Create a context for isochronous I/O
+ * @type: %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_TRANSMIT or %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE or
+ * %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE_MULTICHANNEL
+ * @header_size: Header size to strip in single-channel reception
+ * @channel: Channel to bind to in single-channel reception or transmission
+ * @speed: Transmission speed
+ * @closure: To be returned in &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt or
+ * &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt_multichannel
* @handle: Handle to context, written back by kernel
*
* Prior to sending or receiving isochronous I/O, a context must be created.
* The context records information about the transmit or receive configuration
* and typically maps to an underlying hardware resource. A context is set up
* for either sending or receiving. It is bound to a specific isochronous
- * channel.
+ * @channel.
+ *
+ * In case of multichannel reception, @header_size and @channel are ignored
+ * and the channels are selected by %FW_CDEV_IOC_SET_ISO_CHANNELS.
+ *
+ * For %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE contexts, @header_size must be at least 4
+ * and must be a multiple of 4. It is ignored in other context types.
+ *
+ * @speed is ignored in receive context types.
*
* If a context was successfully created, the kernel writes back a handle to the
* context, which must be passed in for subsequent operations on that context.
*
- * For receive contexts, @header_size must be at least 4 and must be a multiple
- * of 4.
- *
- * Note that the effect of a @header_size > 4 depends on
- * &fw_cdev_get_info.version, as documented at &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt.
+ * Limitations:
+ * No more than one iso context can be created per fd.
+ * The total number of contexts that all userspace and kernelspace drivers can
+ * create on a card at a time is a hardware limit, typically 4 or 8 contexts per
+ * direction, and of them at most one multichannel receive context.
*/
struct fw_cdev_create_iso_context {
__u32 type;
@@ -471,6 +700,22 @@ struct fw_cdev_create_iso_context {
__u32 handle;
};
+/**
+ * struct fw_cdev_set_iso_channels - Select channels in multichannel reception
+ * @channels: Bitmask of channels to listen to
+ * @handle: Handle of the mutichannel receive context
+ *
+ * @channels is the bitwise or of 1ULL << n for each channel n to listen to.
+ *
+ * The ioctl fails with errno %EBUSY if there is already another receive context
+ * on a channel in @channels. In that case, the bitmask of all unoccupied
+ * channels is returned in @channels.
+ */
+struct fw_cdev_set_iso_channels {
+ __u64 channels;
+ __u32 handle;
+};
+
#define FW_CDEV_ISO_PAYLOAD_LENGTH(v) (v)
#define FW_CDEV_ISO_INTERRUPT (1 << 16)
#define FW_CDEV_ISO_SKIP (1 << 17)
@@ -481,42 +726,72 @@ struct fw_cdev_create_iso_context {
/**
* struct fw_cdev_iso_packet - Isochronous packet
- * @control: Contains the header length (8 uppermost bits), the sy field
- * (4 bits), the tag field (2 bits), a sync flag (1 bit),
- * a skip flag (1 bit), an interrupt flag (1 bit), and the
+ * @control: Contains the header length (8 uppermost bits),
+ * the sy field (4 bits), the tag field (2 bits), a sync flag
+ * or a skip flag (1 bit), an interrupt flag (1 bit), and the
* payload length (16 lowermost bits)
- * @header: Header and payload
+ * @header: Header and payload in case of a transmit context.
*
* &struct fw_cdev_iso_packet is used to describe isochronous packet queues.
- *
* Use the FW_CDEV_ISO_ macros to fill in @control.
+ * The @header array is empty in case of receive contexts.
+ *
+ * Context type %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_TRANSMIT:
+ *
+ * @control.HEADER_LENGTH must be a multiple of 4. It specifies the numbers of
+ * bytes in @header that will be prepended to the packet's payload. These bytes
+ * are copied into the kernel and will not be accessed after the ioctl has
+ * returned.
+ *
+ * The @control.SY and TAG fields are copied to the iso packet header. These
+ * fields are specified by IEEE 1394a and IEC 61883-1.
+ *
+ * The @control.SKIP flag specifies that no packet is to be sent in a frame.
+ * When using this, all other fields except @control.INTERRUPT must be zero.
+ *
+ * When a packet with the @control.INTERRUPT flag set has been completed, an
+ * &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt event will be sent.
+ *
+ * Context type %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE:
+ *
+ * @control.HEADER_LENGTH must be a multiple of the context's header_size.
+ * If the HEADER_LENGTH is larger than the context's header_size, multiple
+ * packets are queued for this entry.
+ *
+ * The @control.SY and TAG fields are ignored.
+ *
+ * If the @control.SYNC flag is set, the context drops all packets until a
+ * packet with a sy field is received which matches &fw_cdev_start_iso.sync.
+ *
+ * @control.PAYLOAD_LENGTH defines how many payload bytes can be received for
+ * one packet (in addition to payload quadlets that have been defined as headers
+ * and are stripped and returned in the &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt structure).
+ * If more bytes are received, the additional bytes are dropped. If less bytes
+ * are received, the remaining bytes in this part of the payload buffer will not
+ * be written to, not even by the next packet. I.e., packets received in
+ * consecutive frames will not necessarily be consecutive in memory. If an
+ * entry has queued multiple packets, the PAYLOAD_LENGTH is divided equally
+ * among them.
*
- * For transmit packets, the header length must be a multiple of 4 and specifies
- * the numbers of bytes in @header that will be prepended to the packet's
- * payload; these bytes are copied into the kernel and will not be accessed
- * after the ioctl has returned. The sy and tag fields are copied to the iso
- * packet header (these fields are specified by IEEE 1394a and IEC 61883-1).
- * The skip flag specifies that no packet is to be sent in a frame; when using
- * this, all other fields except the interrupt flag must be zero.
- *
- * For receive packets, the header length must be a multiple of the context's
- * header size; if the header length is larger than the context's header size,
- * multiple packets are queued for this entry. The sy and tag fields are
- * ignored. If the sync flag is set, the context drops all packets until
- * a packet with a matching sy field is received (the sync value to wait for is
- * specified in the &fw_cdev_start_iso structure). The payload length defines
- * how many payload bytes can be received for one packet (in addition to payload
- * quadlets that have been defined as headers and are stripped and returned in
- * the &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt structure). If more bytes are received, the
- * additional bytes are dropped. If less bytes are received, the remaining
- * bytes in this part of the payload buffer will not be written to, not even by
- * the next packet, i.e., packets received in consecutive frames will not
- * necessarily be consecutive in memory. If an entry has queued multiple
- * packets, the payload length is divided equally among them.
- *
- * When a packet with the interrupt flag set has been completed, the
+ * When a packet with the @control.INTERRUPT flag set has been completed, an
* &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt event will be sent. An entry that has queued
* multiple receive packets is completed when its last packet is completed.
+ *
+ * Context type %FW_CDEV_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE_MULTICHANNEL:
+ *
+ * Here, &fw_cdev_iso_packet would be more aptly named _iso_buffer_chunk since
+ * it specifies a chunk of the mmap()'ed buffer, while the number and alignment
+ * of packets to be placed into the buffer chunk is not known beforehand.
+ *
+ * @control.PAYLOAD_LENGTH is the size of the buffer chunk and specifies room
+ * for header, payload, padding, and trailer bytes of one or more packets.
+ * It must be a multiple of 4.
+ *
+ * @control.HEADER_LENGTH, TAG and SY are ignored. SYNC is treated as described
+ * for single-channel reception.
+ *
+ * When a buffer chunk with the @control.INTERRUPT flag set has been filled
+ * entirely, an &fw_cdev_event_iso_interrupt_mc event will be sent.
*/
struct fw_cdev_iso_packet {
__u32 control;
@@ -525,9 +800,9 @@ struct fw_cdev_iso_packet {
/**
* struct fw_cdev_queue_iso - Queue isochronous packets for I/O
- * @packets: Userspace pointer to packet data
+ * @packets: Userspace pointer to an array of &fw_cdev_iso_packet
* @data: Pointer into mmap()'ed payload buffer
- * @size: Size of packet data in bytes
+ * @size: Size of the @packets array, in bytes
* @handle: Isochronous context handle
*
* Queue a number of isochronous packets for reception or transmission.
@@ -540,6 +815,9 @@ struct fw_cdev_iso_packet {
* The kernel may or may not queue all packets, but will write back updated
* values of the @packets, @data and @size fields, so the ioctl can be
* resubmitted easily.
+ *
+ * In case of a multichannel receive context, @data must be quadlet-aligned
+ * relative to the buffer start.
*/
struct fw_cdev_queue_iso {
__u64 packets;
@@ -698,4 +976,39 @@ struct fw_cdev_send_stream_packet {
__u32 speed;
};
+/**
+ * struct fw_cdev_send_phy_packet - send a PHY packet
+ * @closure: Passed back to userspace in the PHY-packet-sent event
+ * @data: First and second quadlet of the PHY packet
+ * @generation: The bus generation where packet is valid
+ *
+ * The %FW_CDEV_IOC_SEND_PHY_PACKET ioctl sends a PHY packet to all nodes
+ * on the same card as this device. After transmission, an
+ * %FW_CDEV_EVENT_PHY_PACKET_SENT event is generated.
+ *
+ * The payload @data[] shall be specified in host byte order. Usually,
+ * @data[1] needs to be the bitwise inverse of @data[0]. VersaPHY packets
+ * are an exception to this rule.
+ *
+ * The ioctl is only permitted on device files which represent a local node.
+ */
+struct fw_cdev_send_phy_packet {
+ __u64 closure;
+ __u32 data[2];
+ __u32 generation;
+};
+
+/**
+ * struct fw_cdev_receive_phy_packets - start reception of PHY packets
+ * @closure: Passed back to userspace in phy packet events
+ *
+ * This ioctl activates issuing of %FW_CDEV_EVENT_PHY_PACKET_RECEIVED due to
+ * incoming PHY packets from any node on the same bus as the device.
+ *
+ * The ioctl is only permitted on device files which represent a local node.
+ */
+struct fw_cdev_receive_phy_packets {
+ __u64 closure;
+};
+
#endif /* _LINUX_FIREWIRE_CDEV_H */
diff --git a/include/linux/firewire.h b/include/linux/firewire.h
index 72e2b8ac2a5a..1cd637ef62d2 100644
--- a/include/linux/firewire.h
+++ b/include/linux/firewire.h
@@ -32,11 +32,13 @@
#define CSR_CYCLE_TIME 0x200
#define CSR_BUS_TIME 0x204
#define CSR_BUSY_TIMEOUT 0x210
+#define CSR_PRIORITY_BUDGET 0x218
#define CSR_BUS_MANAGER_ID 0x21c
#define CSR_BANDWIDTH_AVAILABLE 0x220
#define CSR_CHANNELS_AVAILABLE 0x224
#define CSR_CHANNELS_AVAILABLE_HI 0x224
#define CSR_CHANNELS_AVAILABLE_LO 0x228
+#define CSR_MAINT_UTILITY 0x230
#define CSR_BROADCAST_CHANNEL 0x234
#define CSR_CONFIG_ROM 0x400
#define CSR_CONFIG_ROM_END 0x800
@@ -89,6 +91,11 @@ struct fw_card {
struct list_head transaction_list;
unsigned long reset_jiffies;
+ u32 split_timeout_hi;
+ u32 split_timeout_lo;
+ unsigned int split_timeout_cycles;
+ unsigned int split_timeout_jiffies;
+
unsigned long long guid;
unsigned max_receive;
int link_speed;
@@ -104,18 +111,28 @@ struct fw_card {
bool beta_repeaters_present;
int index;
-
struct list_head link;
- /* Work struct for BM duties. */
- struct delayed_work work;
+ struct list_head phy_receiver_list;
+
+ struct delayed_work br_work; /* bus reset job */
+ bool br_short;
+
+ struct delayed_work bm_work; /* bus manager job */
int bm_retries;
int bm_generation;
__be32 bm_transaction_data[2];
+ int bm_node_id;
+ bool bm_abdicate;
+
+ bool priority_budget_implemented; /* controller feature */
+ bool broadcast_channel_auto_allocated; /* controller feature */
bool broadcast_channel_allocated;
u32 broadcast_channel;
__be32 topology_map[(CSR_TOPOLOGY_MAP_END - CSR_TOPOLOGY_MAP) / 4];
+
+ __be32 maint_utility_register;
};
struct fw_attribute_group {
@@ -252,7 +269,7 @@ typedef void (*fw_transaction_callback_t)(struct fw_card *card, int rcode,
typedef void (*fw_address_callback_t)(struct fw_card *card,
struct fw_request *request,
int tcode, int destination, int source,
- int generation, int speed,
+ int generation,
unsigned long long offset,
void *data, size_t length,
void *callback_data);
@@ -269,10 +286,10 @@ struct fw_packet {
u32 timestamp;
/*
- * This callback is called when the packet transmission has
- * completed; for successful transmission, the status code is
- * the ack received from the destination, otherwise it's a
- * negative errno: ENOMEM, ESTALE, ETIMEDOUT, ENODEV, EIO.
+ * This callback is called when the packet transmission has completed.
+ * For successful transmission, the status code is the ack received
+ * from the destination. Otherwise it is one of the juju-specific
+ * rcodes: RCODE_SEND_ERROR, _CANCELLED, _BUSY, _GENERATION, _NO_ACK.
* The callback can be called from tasklet context and thus
* must never block.
*/
@@ -355,17 +372,19 @@ void fw_core_remove_descriptor(struct fw_descriptor *desc);
* scatter-gather streaming (e.g. assembling video frame automatically).
*/
struct fw_iso_packet {
- u16 payload_length; /* Length of indirect payload. */
- u32 interrupt:1; /* Generate interrupt on this packet */
- u32 skip:1; /* Set to not send packet at all. */
- u32 tag:2;
- u32 sy:4;
- u32 header_length:8; /* Length of immediate header. */
- u32 header[0];
+ u16 payload_length; /* Length of indirect payload */
+ u32 interrupt:1; /* Generate interrupt on this packet */
+ u32 skip:1; /* tx: Set to not send packet at all */
+ /* rx: Sync bit, wait for matching sy */
+ u32 tag:2; /* tx: Tag in packet header */
+ u32 sy:4; /* tx: Sy in packet header */
+ u32 header_length:8; /* Length of immediate header */
+ u32 header[0]; /* tx: Top of 1394 isoch. data_block */
};
-#define FW_ISO_CONTEXT_TRANSMIT 0
-#define FW_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE 1
+#define FW_ISO_CONTEXT_TRANSMIT 0
+#define FW_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE 1
+#define FW_ISO_CONTEXT_RECEIVE_MULTICHANNEL 2
#define FW_ISO_CONTEXT_MATCH_TAG0 1
#define FW_ISO_CONTEXT_MATCH_TAG1 2
@@ -389,24 +408,31 @@ struct fw_iso_buffer {
int fw_iso_buffer_init(struct fw_iso_buffer *buffer, struct fw_card *card,
int page_count, enum dma_data_direction direction);
void fw_iso_buffer_destroy(struct fw_iso_buffer *buffer, struct fw_card *card);
+size_t fw_iso_buffer_lookup(struct fw_iso_buffer *buffer, dma_addr_t completed);
struct fw_iso_context;
typedef void (*fw_iso_callback_t)(struct fw_iso_context *context,
u32 cycle, size_t header_length,
void *header, void *data);
+typedef void (*fw_iso_mc_callback_t)(struct fw_iso_context *context,
+ dma_addr_t completed, void *data);
struct fw_iso_context {
struct fw_card *card;
int type;
int channel;
int speed;
size_t header_size;
- fw_iso_callback_t callback;
+ union {
+ fw_iso_callback_t sc;
+ fw_iso_mc_callback_t mc;
+ } callback;
void *callback_data;
};
struct fw_iso_context *fw_iso_context_create(struct fw_card *card,
int type, int channel, int speed, size_t header_size,
fw_iso_callback_t callback, void *callback_data);
+int fw_iso_context_set_channels(struct fw_iso_context *ctx, u64 *channels);
int fw_iso_context_queue(struct fw_iso_context *ctx,
struct fw_iso_packet *packet,
struct fw_iso_buffer *buffer,