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1. Add a short ducumentation for MEI HDCP driver, and fix DOC comments in drivers/misc/mei/hdcp/mei_hdcp.c Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
169 lines
4.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
169 lines
4.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
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==============================================
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Intel(R) Management Engine (ME) Client bus API
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==============================================
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Rationale
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=========
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The MEI character device is useful for dedicated applications to send and receive
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data to the many FW appliance found in Intel's ME from the user space.
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However, for some of the ME functionalities it makes sense to leverage existing software
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stack and expose them through existing kernel subsystems.
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In order to plug seamlessly into the kernel device driver model we add kernel virtual
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bus abstraction on top of the MEI driver. This allows implementing Linux kernel drivers
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for the various MEI features as a stand alone entities found in their respective subsystem.
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Existing device drivers can even potentially be re-used by adding an MEI CL bus layer to
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the existing code.
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MEI CL bus API
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==============
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A driver implementation for an MEI Client is very similar to any other existing bus
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based device drivers. The driver registers itself as an MEI CL bus driver through
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the ``struct mei_cl_driver`` structure defined in :file:`include/linux/mei_cl_bus.c`
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.. code-block:: C
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struct mei_cl_driver {
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struct device_driver driver;
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const char *name;
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const struct mei_cl_device_id *id_table;
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int (*probe)(struct mei_cl_device *dev, const struct mei_cl_id *id);
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int (*remove)(struct mei_cl_device *dev);
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};
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The mei_cl_device_id structure defined in :file:`include/linux/mod_devicetable.h` allows a
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driver to bind itself against a device name.
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.. code-block:: C
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struct mei_cl_device_id {
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char name[MEI_CL_NAME_SIZE];
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uuid_le uuid;
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__u8 version;
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kernel_ulong_t driver_info;
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};
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To actually register a driver on the ME Client bus one must call the :c:func:`mei_cl_add_driver`
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API. This is typically called at module initialization time.
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Once the driver is registered and bound to the device, a driver will typically
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try to do some I/O on this bus and this should be done through the :c:func:`mei_cl_send`
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and :c:func:`mei_cl_recv` functions. More detailed information is in :ref:`api` section.
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In order for a driver to be notified about pending traffic or event, the driver
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should register a callback via :c:func:`mei_cl_devev_register_rx_cb` and
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:c:func:`mei_cldev_register_notify_cb` function respectively.
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.. _api:
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API:
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----
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.. kernel-doc:: drivers/misc/mei/bus.c
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:export: drivers/misc/mei/bus.c
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Example
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=======
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As a theoretical example let's pretend the ME comes with a "contact" NFC IP.
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The driver init and exit routines for this device would look like:
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.. code-block:: C
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#define CONTACT_DRIVER_NAME "contact"
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static struct mei_cl_device_id contact_mei_cl_tbl[] = {
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{ CONTACT_DRIVER_NAME, },
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/* required last entry */
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{ }
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};
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MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(mei_cl, contact_mei_cl_tbl);
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static struct mei_cl_driver contact_driver = {
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.id_table = contact_mei_tbl,
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.name = CONTACT_DRIVER_NAME,
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.probe = contact_probe,
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.remove = contact_remove,
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};
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static int contact_init(void)
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{
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int r;
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r = mei_cl_driver_register(&contact_driver);
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if (r) {
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pr_err(CONTACT_DRIVER_NAME ": driver registration failed\n");
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return r;
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}
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return 0;
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}
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static void __exit contact_exit(void)
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{
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mei_cl_driver_unregister(&contact_driver);
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}
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module_init(contact_init);
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module_exit(contact_exit);
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And the driver's simplified probe routine would look like that:
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.. code-block:: C
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int contact_probe(struct mei_cl_device *dev, struct mei_cl_device_id *id)
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{
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[...]
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mei_cldev_enable(dev);
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mei_cldev_register_rx_cb(dev, contact_rx_cb);
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return 0;
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}
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In the probe routine the driver first enable the MEI device and then registers
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an rx handler which is as close as it can get to registering a threaded IRQ handler.
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The handler implementation will typically call :c:func:`mei_cldev_recv` and then
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process received data.
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.. code-block:: C
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#define MAX_PAYLOAD 128
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#define HDR_SIZE 4
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static void conntact_rx_cb(struct mei_cl_device *cldev)
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{
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struct contact *c = mei_cldev_get_drvdata(cldev);
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unsigned char payload[MAX_PAYLOAD];
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ssize_t payload_sz;
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payload_sz = mei_cldev_recv(cldev, payload, MAX_PAYLOAD)
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if (reply_size < HDR_SIZE) {
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return;
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}
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c->process_rx(payload);
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}
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MEI Client Bus Drivers
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======================
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.. toctree::
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:maxdepth: 2
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hdcp
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nfc
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