/* * ChromeOS EC multi-function device * * Copyright (C) 2012 Google, Inc * * This software is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public * License version 2, as published by the Free Software Foundation, and * may be copied, distributed, and modified under those terms. * * 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. */ #ifndef __LINUX_MFD_CROS_EC_H #define __LINUX_MFD_CROS_EC_H #include #include #include /* * Command interface between EC and AP, for LPC, I2C and SPI interfaces. */ enum { EC_MSG_TX_HEADER_BYTES = 3, EC_MSG_TX_TRAILER_BYTES = 1, EC_MSG_TX_PROTO_BYTES = EC_MSG_TX_HEADER_BYTES + EC_MSG_TX_TRAILER_BYTES, EC_MSG_RX_PROTO_BYTES = 3, /* Max length of messages */ EC_MSG_BYTES = EC_PROTO2_MAX_PARAM_SIZE + EC_MSG_TX_PROTO_BYTES, }; /* * @version: Command version number (often 0) * @command: Command to send (EC_CMD_...) * @outdata: Outgoing data to EC * @outsize: Outgoing length in bytes * @indata: Where to put the incoming data from EC * @insize: Max number of bytes to accept from EC * @result: EC's response to the command (separate from communication failure) */ struct cros_ec_command { uint32_t version; uint32_t command; uint8_t *outdata; uint32_t outsize; uint8_t *indata; uint32_t insize; uint32_t result; }; /** * struct cros_ec_device - Information about a ChromeOS EC device * * @ec_name: name of EC device (e.g. 'chromeos-ec') * @phys_name: name of physical comms layer (e.g. 'i2c-4') * @dev: Device pointer * @was_wake_device: true if this device was set to wake the system from * sleep at the last suspend * * @priv: Private data * @irq: Interrupt to use * @din: input buffer (for data from EC) * @dout: output buffer (for data to EC) * \note * These two buffers will always be dword-aligned and include enough * space for up to 7 word-alignment bytes also, so we can ensure that * the body of the message is always dword-aligned (64-bit). * We use this alignment to keep ARM and x86 happy. Probably word * alignment would be OK, there might be a small performance advantage * to using dword. * @din_size: size of din buffer to allocate (zero to use static din) * @dout_size: size of dout buffer to allocate (zero to use static dout) * @parent: pointer to parent device (e.g. i2c or spi device) * @wake_enabled: true if this device can wake the system from sleep * @cmd_xfer: send command to EC and get response * Returns the number of bytes received if the communication succeeded, but * that doesn't mean the EC was happy with the command. The caller * should check msg.result for the EC's result code. * @lock: one transaction at a time */ struct cros_ec_device { /* These are used by other drivers that want to talk to the EC */ const char *ec_name; const char *phys_name; struct device *dev; bool was_wake_device; struct class *cros_class; /* These are used to implement the platform-specific interface */ void *priv; int irq; uint8_t *din; uint8_t *dout; int din_size; int dout_size; struct device *parent; bool wake_enabled; int (*cmd_xfer)(struct cros_ec_device *ec, struct cros_ec_command *msg); struct mutex lock; }; /** * cros_ec_suspend - Handle a suspend operation for the ChromeOS EC device * * This can be called by drivers to handle a suspend event. * * ec_dev: Device to suspend * @return 0 if ok, -ve on error */ int cros_ec_suspend(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev); /** * cros_ec_resume - Handle a resume operation for the ChromeOS EC device * * This can be called by drivers to handle a resume event. * * @ec_dev: Device to resume * @return 0 if ok, -ve on error */ int cros_ec_resume(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev); /** * cros_ec_prepare_tx - Prepare an outgoing message in the output buffer * * This is intended to be used by all ChromeOS EC drivers, but at present * only SPI uses it. Once LPC uses the same protocol it can start using it. * I2C could use it now, with a refactor of the existing code. * * @ec_dev: Device to register * @msg: Message to write */ int cros_ec_prepare_tx(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev, struct cros_ec_command *msg); /** * cros_ec_check_result - Check ec_msg->result * * This is used by ChromeOS EC drivers to check the ec_msg->result for * errors and to warn about them. * * @ec_dev: EC device * @msg: Message to check */ int cros_ec_check_result(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev, struct cros_ec_command *msg); /** * cros_ec_cmd_xfer - Send a command to the ChromeOS EC * * Call this to send a command to the ChromeOS EC. This should be used * instead of calling the EC's cmd_xfer() callback directly. * * @ec_dev: EC device * @msg: Message to write */ int cros_ec_cmd_xfer(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev, struct cros_ec_command *msg); /** * cros_ec_remove - Remove a ChromeOS EC * * Call this to deregister a ChromeOS EC, then clean up any private data. * * @ec_dev: Device to register * @return 0 if ok, -ve on error */ int cros_ec_remove(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev); /** * cros_ec_register - Register a new ChromeOS EC, using the provided info * * Before calling this, allocate a pointer to a new device and then fill * in all the fields up to the --private-- marker. * * @ec_dev: Device to register * @return 0 if ok, -ve on error */ int cros_ec_register(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev); #endif /* __LINUX_MFD_CROS_EC_H */