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253ec77614
Add a function to the bif-core driver which provides a means to write new BIF data objects into the non-volatile memory (NVM) of a BIF slave. Also add functions which can be used to overwrite or delete an existing BIF object. Change-Id: I6cd48409c696bd60a4d52b0fac8782c58d744df1 Signed-off-by: David Collins <collinsd@codeaurora.org>
560 lines
25 KiB
Text
560 lines
25 KiB
Text
Introduction
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============
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BIF (Battery Interface) is a MIPI (Mobile Industry Processor Interface)
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Alliance specification for a serial interface between a host device and a
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battery pack. It provides a means to handle smart battery packs which can
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communicate over BIF as well as low cost battery packs which provide no
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serial communication interface.
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The BIF bus supports 1 master and up to 256 slaves. It supports data rates
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up to 250 kbps. The master is in charge of initiating all bus
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communications. Slaves may only respond asynchronously when they need to
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signal the master that they have an interrupt pending and when the bus is
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configured for interrupt mode.
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The BIF framework consists of a core into which BIF controller drivers
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register. At runtime, consumers are notified of various events (e.g. battery
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insertion and battery removal) via a notifier. Various framework functions are
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available for consumers to read and write slave registers as well as to send
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arbitrary BIF commands on the bus.
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Hardware description
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====================
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The BIF bus is a 1-wire wired-or interface. The bus signal is referred to as
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the battery communication line (BCL). The BCL is pulled high by a resistor on
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the host side and is driven low when the master or one of the slaves is
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communicating. Additionally, there is a pull down resistor in the battery
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pack which is used to identify whether or not the battery pack has BIF slaves.
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Battery removal detection is achieved by comparing the analog voltage of the BCL
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when idle to the host side reference voltage. If these voltages are within a
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certain threshold, then a battery pack is not present.
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Slaves are addressed on the BIF bus using an 8-bit device address (DEV_ADR).
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Notably, it is possible for no slaves to have defined DEV_ADR. In this case,
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slave addressing is achieved via the always present unique ID (UID). The UID
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of a slave is 80 bits long and guaranteed to be globally unique. A UID search
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algorithm can be followed in order determine the UID of all slaves on the bus.
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BIF slaves come in two varieties: primary and secondary. A single primary
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slave may be present on the battery pack and a single primary slave may be
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present on the host. A battery pack primary slave has DEV_ADR=0x01. The
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DEV_ADR of a host primary slave is set by the manufacturer. A given primary
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slave contains a list of the UIDs of all secondary slaves in the same
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subsystem. This provides a fast mechanism to determine the address of all
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slaves without having to resort to the lengthy UID search algorithm.
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Each slave has a 64 kB address space. Part of this address space consists of
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generic DDB L1 and L2 data structures at known addresses. This allows for
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runtime discovery of supported battery properties and functions of a given
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smart battery pack.
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System Diagram:
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+-------------------------------+ +---------------------------------+
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| Host | | Smart Battery Pack |
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| | | |
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| Vbat-<+>-------<+>----------------------------+ |
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| | | | |
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| +--------------+ | | +--------------+ | |
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| | Master BIF<+>-+---------<+>--BCL--<+>------+-<+>BIF Primary | | |
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| | | | | | | | Slave | | |
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| +--------------+ | | | | +--------------+ | |
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| | | | | | |
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| + - - - - - - -+ | | | | + - - - - - - -+ | |
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| | Primary BIF<+>-+ | | +-<+>BIF Secondary| | |
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| | Slave | | | | | | Slave | | |
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| +- - - - - - - + | | | | +-- - - - - - -+ | |
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| | | | | | |
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| + - - - - - - -+ | | | | + - - - - - - -+ | |
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| |Secondary BIF<+>-+ | | +-<+>BIF Secondary| | |
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| |Slave | | | | | | Slave | | |
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| +- - - - - - - + | | | | +-- - - - - - -+ | |
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| / | | / | |
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| Vref \ Rpu | | Rid \ ---- |
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| ___ / | | / Battery -- |
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| | \ | | \ Cell ---- |
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| +-------+ | | | -- |
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| | | | | |
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| GND-<+>-------<+>------+---------------------+ |
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| | | |
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+-------------------------------+ +---------------------------------+
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An overview of BIF is available at:
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http://mipi.org/specifications/battery-interface
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Software description
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====================
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A given BIF hardware interface driver registers as a BIF controller in the
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BIF framework during its probe function. The controller specifies a set of
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callback functions which are used by the BIF framework to initiate bus
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transactions (e.g. register read, register write, wait for slave interrupt)
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and to configure the bus. The framework exposes a small API to controllers
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which is used to notify the framework about asynchronous events such as
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battery pack insertion/removal and slave interrupts.
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A given BIF consumer is linked to a BIF controller by specifying a property
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in the consumer's device tree node which takes as its value the phandle of
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the BIF controller's device tree node.
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A consumer driver calls a get function during its probe function with its
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device pointer in order to get a handle to the BIF controller if it has probed.
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If it hasn't, then ERR_PTR(-EPROBE_DEFER) is returned. The controller handle
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can be used directly by the consumer to issue raw bus transactions if needed.
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The controller handle can then be used to query which slaves are currently
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present on the bus, if any. Handles to these slaves may be used by a consumer
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driver in high level framework APIs such as register read and register write
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which are slave oriented. All BIF framework API functions are synchronous,
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blocking, and can sleep.
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Consumer drivers may also register a notifier function which is called when
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certain bus activities occur such as battery pack insertion and removal.
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Additionally, consumer drivers may register a notifier function which is called
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when a specified slave interrupt fires.
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The framework maintains several linked-lists. One list contains all controllers
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that have been registered. A second list contains all slaves that have been
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seen since the system booted as well as a flag to indicate if they are currently
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present or not. This scheme is used to avoid issues with slave handles existing
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after a slave is removed and also so that function and object values do not have
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to be searched when a slave is reinserted in the system since slaves are
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globally unique and these features are read-only. Two further lists are
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maintained inside slave device structures which contain BIF functions and
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objects found in the slave. API functions are provided so that consumers can
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find functions supported by slaves.
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Design
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======
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Design Goals:
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One major goal of the BIF framework is to provide a uniform API for BIF
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consumers to communicate with battery packs. This ensures that consumers are
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unaffected by changes in the controller driver which actually interfaces with
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the BCL at a hardware level.
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Another goal of the framework is to ensure the BIF bus can be shared between
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multiple consumers in a simple and functionally correct way. Locking is used
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inside of the framework to provide mutual exclusion on the bus.
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The framework also exposes features that almost all consumers will need, such
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as BIF slave identification and BIF function enumeration within a given slave.
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The framework allows consumers to issue very specific bus commands which may
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not be used within high level APIs. This provides maximum flexibility so
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that consumers can make use of manufacturer defined bus commands which cannot be
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handled in a generic fashion.
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Design Trade-offs:
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The choice to not treat BIF like a traditional Linux bus was made because
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there is nothing within BIF that naturally maps to a device on the bus for a
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driver to manage. Slave devices would be a good candidate except that
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consumers will not be managing slaves so much as functions exposed within
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slaves. Bus matching could then instead be made at a BIF slave function
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level. Unfortunately, the BIF specification allows for manufacturer specific
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features to reside at any non-defined addresses. Additionally, consumers may
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wish only to read and make policy decisions based on BIF non-volatile memory
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(NVM) objects read out of memory. Thus, there are use-cases that require
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consumers to utilize the bus without having a particular function to match to.
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Another trade-off was the choice to use custom interrupt handling functions
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instead of the Linux interrupt framework. This choice was made because there is
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no obvious way to handle IRQ chip registration given the dynamic nature of BIF
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slaves (i.e. slaves may come and go at runtime if battery packs are swapped).
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Software layering:
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BIF controller drivers register a set of callback functions with the BIF
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framework which implement various BIF transaction primitives. These
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callbacks ensure that tight timing constraints are met such as when receiving
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a bus query response immediately after issuing a command. Such actions
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cannot be carried out at the framework level as timing requirements are on
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the order of 32 us when using the maximum data rate.
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The BIF framework provides easy access to standard BIF features such as
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slave, functions, and interrupts. The framework also ensures mutual exclusion
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between different BIF consumers.
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BIF consumer drivers make use of the API exposed by the framework in order
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utilize functionality found on smart battery packs. One example of a
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consumer driver is a temperature monitoring driver which reads the
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temperature reported by the BIF temperature function on a BIF slave and
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reports it to the Linux thermal framework.
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Power Management
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================
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The framework does not perform any special actions during system suspend and
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resume. Controller drivers may choose to enter low power states during
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suspend if they wish as long as it does not affect the logical state of the
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bus.
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SMP/multi-core
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==============
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Various linked lists are maintained inside of the framework which are
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protected by mutexes. Mutex locks are also used during transactions at a bus
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level in order to ensure mutual exclusion between consumers of the bus.
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Performance
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===========
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The BIF bus is inherently slow. Consumers should expect transactions to take
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a long time to execute. Consumers are responsible for blocking suspend if
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their transactions must be completed before the system enters suspend.
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Interface - BIF Consumer API
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============================
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BIF framework structs, enums, and functions used by BIF consumers are defined in
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include/linux/bif/consumer.h
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Detailed descriptions of the BIF framework functions can be found in:
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drivers/bif/bif-core.c
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Get/put handle for a BIF controller:
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------------------------------------
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struct bif_ctrl *bif_ctrl_get(struct device *consumer_dev);
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void bif_ctrl_put(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl);
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int bif_ctrl_count(void);
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struct bif_ctrl *bif_ctrl_get_by_id(unsigned int id);
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The function bif_ctrl_get() is intended to be the primary way to get a consumer
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BIF controller handle. It relies upon the consumer device specifying a
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"qcom,bif-ctrl" property in its device tree node which points to the phandle of
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the BIF controller it wishes to use.
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A secondary mechanism is also provided for drivers without device tree support.
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bif_ctrl_count() returns the number of BIF controllers currently registered.
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bif_ctrl_get_by_id() returns a handle to the id'th controller enumerated in
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registration order.
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Get/put handle for a BIF slave:
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-------------------------------
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int bif_slave_match_count(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl,
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const struct bif_match_criteria *match_criteria);
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struct bif_slave *bif_slave_match_get(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl,
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unsigned int id, const struct bif_match_criteria *match_criteria);
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void bif_slave_put(struct bif_slave *slave);
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A consumer finds a slave attached to a given BIF controller by specifying a set
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of matching criteria. The criteria can include such quantities as manufacturer
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ID, product ID, function type or function version. It is possible that multiple
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slaves will match the criteria. bif_slave_match_count() returns how many slaves
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match the specified criteria. bif_slave_match_get() returns the id'th slave
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which matches the criteria in an arbitrary, but fixed order (for a constant set
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of slaves). Consumer drivers need to be able to handle the case of multiple
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slaves matching the criteria.
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Additionally, if a battery pack is inserted or removed, then the output of
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bif_slave_match_count() and bif_slave_match_get() could change. A consumer
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driver can register to receive notification of battery pack insertion and
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removal using the bif_ctrl_notifier_register() function listed below.
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Check if slave handle is still meaningful:
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------------------------------------------
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int bif_slave_is_present(struct bif_slave *slave);
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If a battery pack is removed, then the handles for its slaves will no longer be
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meaningful. All transactions using a handle for a slave that isn't present will
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fail. The function bif_slave_is_present() allows a consumer to determine if
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a given slave is still physically present in the system.
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Get access to the controller handle present in a slave handle:
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--------------------------------------------------------------
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struct bif_ctrl *bif_get_ctrl_handle(struct bif_slave *slave);
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This function is useful if a consumer wishes to only store a slave handle but
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also has need to call bus oriented BIF framework functions.
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Get version and register offset of a BIF function if it is present in a slave:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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int bif_slave_find_function(struct bif_slave *slave, u8 function, u8 *version,
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u16 *function_pointer);
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This function is used by consumers who wish to support given BIF functions
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(e.g. temperature measurement, authentication, etc.) found inside of slaves.
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Receive notification upon battery insertion and removal:
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--------------------------------------------------------
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int bif_ctrl_notifier_register(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl,
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struct notifier_block *nb);
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int bif_ctrl_notifier_unregister(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl,
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struct notifier_block *nb);
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Read or write BIF slave registers:
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----------------------------------
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int bif_slave_read(struct bif_slave *slave, u16 addr, u8 *buf, int len);
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int bif_slave_write(struct bif_slave *slave, u16 addr, u8 *buf, int len);
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BIF slave non-volatile memory manipulation:
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-------------------------------------------
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int bif_slave_nvm_raw_read(struct bif_slave *slave, u16 offset, u8 *buf,
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int len);
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int bif_slave_nvm_raw_write(struct bif_slave *slave, u16 offset, u8 *buf,
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int len);
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Raw NVM writing may be needed in order to intialize the NVM BIF object list.
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However, its use can be dangerous as it can overwrite existing objects in the
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list and make the list unparsable.
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BIF object search in slave non-volatile memory:
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-----------------------------------------------
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int bif_object_match_count(struct bif_slave *slave,
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const struct bif_obj_match_criteria *match_criteria);
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struct bif_object *bif_object_match_get(struct bif_slave *slave,
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unsigned int id, const struct bif_obj_match_criteria *match_criteria);
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void bif_object_put(struct bif_object *object);
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bif_object_match_count() and bif_object_match_get() can be used together in
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order to retrieve the set of BIF objects within a slave which match certain
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criteria. bif_object_put() is used to free the memory allocated by
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bif_object_match_get().
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BIF object manipulation in slave non-volatile memory:
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-----------------------------------------------------
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int bif_object_write(struct bif_slave *slave, u8 type, u8 version, u16
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manufacturer_id, const u8 *data, int data_len);
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int bif_object_overwrite(struct bif_slave *slave,
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struct bif_object *object, u8 type, u8 version,
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u16 manufacturer_id, const u8 *data, int data_len);
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int bif_object_delete(struct bif_slave *slave, const struct bif_object *object);
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bif_object_write() can be used to write a new BIF data object into the NVM of
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a given slave. The new object is added to the end of the NVM object list.
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bif_object_overwrite() can be used to overwrite an existing BIF data object
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in the NVM of a slave. The new object data must be the same size as the
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existing object data. bif_object_delete() can be used to delete a object from
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the NVM object list and shift all of the objects after it in order to fill the
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deleted object's space.
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Get or set the BIF bus state or period:
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---------------------------------------
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int bif_ctrl_get_bus_state(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl);
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int bif_ctrl_set_bus_state(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl, enum bif_bus_state state);
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int bif_ctrl_get_bus_period(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl);
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int bif_ctrl_set_bus_period(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl, int period_ns);
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Bus states include: active for communication, active waiting for interrupt,
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standby, and power down. The MIPI-BIF specification defines the allowed range
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of bus periods as 2000 ns to 153000 ns. Individual controllers may further
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restrict the range of allowed periods. When bif_ctrl_set_bus_period() is called
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the first supported period that greater than or equal to the specified period
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will be set.
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Measure battery pack resistance:
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--------------------------------
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int bif_ctrl_measure_rid(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl);
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This function returns an estimate of the battery pack resistance in ohms. If
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no battery pack is connected, then the output of this function is undefined.
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Utilize BIF slave tasks and interrupts:
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---------------------------------------
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int bif_request_irq(struct bif_slave *slave, unsigned int task,
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struct notifier_block *nb);
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int bif_free_irq(struct bif_slave *slave, unsigned int task,
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struct notifier_block *nb);
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int bif_trigger_task(struct bif_slave *slave, unsigned int task);
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int bif_task_is_busy(struct bif_slave *slave, unsigned int task);
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int bif_enable_auto_task(struct bif_slave *slave, unsigned int task);
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int bif_disable_auto_task(struct bif_slave *slave, unsigned int task);
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A consumer can request a slave interrupt and specify a notifier to call when the
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interrupt is triggered. Once the interrupt is requested the consumer will need
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to call bif_trigger_task() in order to start the task associated with the
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interrupt (both are identified by the same index). Polling for task completion
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is also supported via the bif_task_is_busy() function. Auto task triggered can
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be enabled and disabled for a given task using bif_enable_auto_task() and
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bif_disable_auto_task() respectively.
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Raw BIF bus transactions:
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-------------------------
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void bif_ctrl_bus_lock(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl);
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void bif_ctrl_bus_unlock(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl);
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int bif_ctrl_raw_transaction(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl, int transaction, u8 data);
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int bif_ctrl_raw_transaction_read(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl, int transaction,
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u8 data, int *response);
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int bif_ctrl_raw_transaction_query(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl, int transaction,
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u8 data, bool *query_response);
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int bif_slave_is_selected(struct bif_slave *slave);
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int bif_slave_select(struct bif_slave *slave);
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The function bif_ctrl_bus_lock() locks the BIF bus for exclusive use by the
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consumer. No other transactions will be allowed on the bus including those
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that would arise from battery insertion/removal or slave interrupt reception.
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This lock is primarily intended to be used along with the raw transaction
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functions. These functions allow a consumer to issue any BIF transaction
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including manufacturer specific bus commands not handled by the BIF framework.
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While performing raw transactions, features normally performed transparently by
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the core, such as device selection, are not available. The functions
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bif_slave_select() and bif_slave_is_selected() can be used to fill in this gap
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so that raw transactions are performed on the desired slave.
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Notify the BIF core that a battery has been inserted or removed:
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----------------------------------------------------------------
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int bif_ctrl_signal_battery_changed(struct bif_ctrl *ctrl);
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This function should only be called on systems where the BIF controller driver
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is architecturally unable to detect battery insertion and removal on its own.
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Perform BIF object CRC using CRC-CCITT algorithm:
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-------------------------------------------------
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u16 bif_crc_ccitt(const u8 *buffer, int len);
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Interface - BIF Controller API
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==============================
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BIF framework structs and functions used by BIF controllers are defined in:
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include/linux/bif/driver.h
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Ops found in struct bif_ctrl_ops:
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---------------------------------
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int (*bus_transaction) (struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev, int transaction, u8 data);
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int (*bus_transaction_query) (struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev, int transaction,
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u8 data, bool *query_response);
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int (*bus_transaction_read) (struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev, int transaction,
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u8 data, int *response);
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int (*read_slave_registers) (struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev, u16 addr,
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u8 *data, int len);
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int (*write_slave_registers) (struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev, u16 addr,
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const u8 *data, int len);
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|
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int (*get_bus_period) (struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev);
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int (*set_bus_period) (struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev, int period_ns);
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int (*get_battery_presence) (struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev);
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|
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int (*get_battery_rid) (struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev);
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|
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int (*get_bus_state) (struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev);
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int (*set_bus_state) (struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev, int state);
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A BIF controller driver registers a set of call back functions which instantiate
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these ops. The BIF framework then calls these functions based on internal and
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consumer needs.
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|
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The ops bus_transaction(), bus_transaction_query(), and bus_transaction_read()
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carry out the controller hardware specific actions to perform BIF transactions
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on the BIF bus. These transactions result in no slave response, a pulse in
|
|
response, or a word in response respectively. The ops read_slave_registers()
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and write_slave_registers() internally must perform all transactions necessary
|
|
to read and write to BIF slave registers. These ops exist so that burst reads
|
|
and writes can take place since these activities have very tight timing
|
|
constraints that the BIF core cannot handle.
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|
|
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The ops get_bus_period() and set_bus_period() return the current bus clock base
|
|
period in nanoseconds and change the period to a new value respectively. The
|
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ops get_bus_state() and set_bus_state() allow for monitoring and controlling the
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bus state (i.e. active for communication, active waiting for interrupt, standby,
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or power down). The op get_battery_presence() returns if any battery pack
|
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(smart or low cost) is currently connected to the BCL. The op get_battery_rid()
|
|
returns a best estimate of the Rid battery pack pull down ID resistance in ohms
|
|
which can be used to determine if the battery pack is smart or low cost.
|
|
|
|
Register/unregister a BIF controller:
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|
-------------------------------------
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|
|
|
struct bif_ctrl_dev *bif_ctrl_register(struct bif_ctrl_desc *bif_desc,
|
|
struct device *dev, void *driver_data, struct device_node *of_node);
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|
|
|
void bif_ctrl_unregister(struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev);
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|
|
|
Notify the BIF framework that a battery has been inserted or removed:
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
int bif_ctrl_notify_battery_changed(struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev);
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|
|
|
The BIF core will then call the get_battery_presence() op internally to
|
|
determine if the event is an insertion or removal.
|
|
|
|
Notify the BIF framework that a slave interrupt has been received:
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
int bif_ctrl_notify_slave_irq(struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev);
|
|
|
|
Upon receiving this call, the BIF core interrogates each slave to determine
|
|
which slaves have pending interrupts. It then iterates through all interrupts
|
|
on those slaves clearing all pending interrupts and notifying any consumers
|
|
waiting for the interrupts.
|
|
|
|
Get BIF controller private data:
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
|
|
void *bdev_get_drvdata(struct bif_ctrl_dev *bdev);
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|
|
|
Config options
|
|
==============
|
|
|
|
CONFIG_BIF - Enables BIF framework support.
|
|
|
|
User space utilities
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
No user space interface is provided in the BIF framework. Therefore, user
|
|
space will not be able to directly use it.
|
|
|
|
To do
|
|
=====
|
|
|
|
It is conceivable that the BIF framework should take some action during
|
|
system suspend and resume. However, it is not clear exactly what should be
|
|
done given that the BCL would still need to be active in order to detect
|
|
battery removal while suspended.
|
|
|
|
sysfs nodes could be added which describe slaves as well as functions and
|
|
objects within the slaves. However these nodes would be read-only and would
|
|
really only be useful for descriptive as opposed to control purposes.
|
|
|
|
The exact time at which slave searching, function enumeration, and object
|
|
loading takes place could be optimized in order to improve performance to
|
|
some degree. It could also be made configurable at a controller level if
|
|
needed.
|