linux/Documentation/driver-api/nvmem.rst
Michael Walle 266570f496 nvmem: core: introduce NVMEM layouts
NVMEM layouts are used to generate NVMEM cells during runtime. Think of
an EEPROM with a well-defined conent. For now, the content can be
described by a device tree or a board file. But this only works if the
offsets and lengths are static and don't change. One could also argue
that putting the layout of the EEPROM in the device tree is the wrong
place. Instead, the device tree should just have a specific compatible
string.

Right now there are two use cases:
 (1) The NVMEM cell needs special processing. E.g. if it only specifies
     a base MAC address offset and you need to add an offset, or it
     needs to parse a MAC from ASCII format or some proprietary format.
     (Post processing of cells is added in a later commit).
 (2) u-boot environment parsing. The cells don't have a particular
     offset but it needs parsing the content to determine the offsets
     and length.

Co-developed-by: Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Walle <michael@walle.cc>
Signed-off-by: Srinivas Kandagatla <srinivas.kandagatla@linaro.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230404172148.82422-14-srinivas.kandagatla@linaro.org
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2023-04-05 19:41:11 +02:00

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6.8 KiB
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.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
===============
NVMEM Subsystem
===============
Srinivas Kandagatla <srinivas.kandagatla@linaro.org>
This document explains the NVMEM Framework along with the APIs provided,
and how to use it.
1. Introduction
===============
*NVMEM* is the abbreviation for Non Volatile Memory layer. It is used to
retrieve configuration of SOC or Device specific data from non volatile
memories like eeprom, efuses and so on.
Before this framework existed, NVMEM drivers like eeprom were stored in
drivers/misc, where they all had to duplicate pretty much the same code to
register a sysfs file, allow in-kernel users to access the content of the
devices they were driving, etc.
This was also a problem as far as other in-kernel users were involved, since
the solutions used were pretty much different from one driver to another, there
was a rather big abstraction leak.
This framework aims at solve these problems. It also introduces DT
representation for consumer devices to go get the data they require (MAC
Addresses, SoC/Revision ID, part numbers, and so on) from the NVMEMs.
NVMEM Providers
+++++++++++++++
NVMEM provider refers to an entity that implements methods to initialize, read
and write the non-volatile memory.
2. Registering/Unregistering the NVMEM provider
===============================================
A NVMEM provider can register with NVMEM core by supplying relevant
nvmem configuration to nvmem_register(), on success core would return a valid
nvmem_device pointer.
nvmem_unregister(nvmem) is used to unregister a previously registered provider.
For example, a simple nvram case::
static int brcm_nvram_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
{
struct nvmem_config config = {
.name = "brcm-nvram",
.reg_read = brcm_nvram_read,
};
...
config.dev = &pdev->dev;
config.priv = priv;
config.size = resource_size(res);
devm_nvmem_register(&config);
}
Users of board files can define and register nvmem cells using the
nvmem_cell_table struct::
static struct nvmem_cell_info foo_nvmem_cells[] = {
{
.name = "macaddr",
.offset = 0x7f00,
.bytes = ETH_ALEN,
}
};
static struct nvmem_cell_table foo_nvmem_cell_table = {
.nvmem_name = "i2c-eeprom",
.cells = foo_nvmem_cells,
.ncells = ARRAY_SIZE(foo_nvmem_cells),
};
nvmem_add_cell_table(&foo_nvmem_cell_table);
Additionally it is possible to create nvmem cell lookup entries and register
them with the nvmem framework from machine code as shown in the example below::
static struct nvmem_cell_lookup foo_nvmem_lookup = {
.nvmem_name = "i2c-eeprom",
.cell_name = "macaddr",
.dev_id = "foo_mac.0",
.con_id = "mac-address",
};
nvmem_add_cell_lookups(&foo_nvmem_lookup, 1);
NVMEM Consumers
+++++++++++++++
NVMEM consumers are the entities which make use of the NVMEM provider to
read from and to NVMEM.
3. NVMEM cell based consumer APIs
=================================
NVMEM cells are the data entries/fields in the NVMEM.
The NVMEM framework provides 3 APIs to read/write NVMEM cells::
struct nvmem_cell *nvmem_cell_get(struct device *dev, const char *name);
struct nvmem_cell *devm_nvmem_cell_get(struct device *dev, const char *name);
void nvmem_cell_put(struct nvmem_cell *cell);
void devm_nvmem_cell_put(struct device *dev, struct nvmem_cell *cell);
void *nvmem_cell_read(struct nvmem_cell *cell, ssize_t *len);
int nvmem_cell_write(struct nvmem_cell *cell, void *buf, ssize_t len);
`*nvmem_cell_get()` apis will get a reference to nvmem cell for a given id,
and nvmem_cell_read/write() can then read or write to the cell.
Once the usage of the cell is finished the consumer should call
`*nvmem_cell_put()` to free all the allocation memory for the cell.
4. Direct NVMEM device based consumer APIs
==========================================
In some instances it is necessary to directly read/write the NVMEM.
To facilitate such consumers NVMEM framework provides below apis::
struct nvmem_device *nvmem_device_get(struct device *dev, const char *name);
struct nvmem_device *devm_nvmem_device_get(struct device *dev,
const char *name);
struct nvmem_device *nvmem_device_find(void *data,
int (*match)(struct device *dev, const void *data));
void nvmem_device_put(struct nvmem_device *nvmem);
int nvmem_device_read(struct nvmem_device *nvmem, unsigned int offset,
size_t bytes, void *buf);
int nvmem_device_write(struct nvmem_device *nvmem, unsigned int offset,
size_t bytes, void *buf);
int nvmem_device_cell_read(struct nvmem_device *nvmem,
struct nvmem_cell_info *info, void *buf);
int nvmem_device_cell_write(struct nvmem_device *nvmem,
struct nvmem_cell_info *info, void *buf);
Before the consumers can read/write NVMEM directly, it should get hold
of nvmem_controller from one of the `*nvmem_device_get()` api.
The difference between these apis and cell based apis is that these apis always
take nvmem_device as parameter.
5. Releasing a reference to the NVMEM
=====================================
When a consumer no longer needs the NVMEM, it has to release the reference
to the NVMEM it has obtained using the APIs mentioned in the above section.
The NVMEM framework provides 2 APIs to release a reference to the NVMEM::
void nvmem_cell_put(struct nvmem_cell *cell);
void devm_nvmem_cell_put(struct device *dev, struct nvmem_cell *cell);
void nvmem_device_put(struct nvmem_device *nvmem);
void devm_nvmem_device_put(struct device *dev, struct nvmem_device *nvmem);
Both these APIs are used to release a reference to the NVMEM and
devm_nvmem_cell_put and devm_nvmem_device_put destroys the devres associated
with this NVMEM.
Userspace
+++++++++
6. Userspace binary interface
==============================
Userspace can read/write the raw NVMEM file located at::
/sys/bus/nvmem/devices/*/nvmem
ex::
hexdump /sys/bus/nvmem/devices/qfprom0/nvmem
0000000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
*
00000a0 db10 2240 0000 e000 0c00 0c00 0000 0c00
0000000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
...
*
0001000
7. DeviceTree Binding
=====================
See Documentation/devicetree/bindings/nvmem/nvmem.txt
8. NVMEM layouts
================
NVMEM layouts are yet another mechanism to create cells. With the device
tree binding it is possible to specify simple cells by using an offset
and a length. Sometimes, the cells doesn't have a static offset, but
the content is still well defined, e.g. tag-length-values. In this case,
the NVMEM device content has to be first parsed and the cells need to
be added accordingly. Layouts let you read the content of the NVMEM device
and let you add cells dynamically.
Another use case for layouts is the post processing of cells. With layouts,
it is possible to associate a custom post processing hook to a cell. It
even possible to add this hook to cells not created by the layout itself.