OpenCloudOS-Kernel/drivers/misc/mei/mei_dev.h

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staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/*
*
* Intel Management Engine Interface (Intel MEI) Linux driver
* Copyright (c) 2003-2012, Intel Corporation.
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* under the terms and conditions of the GNU General Public License,
* version 2, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope 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 _MEI_DEV_H_
#define _MEI_DEV_H_
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/cdev.h>
#include <linux/poll.h>
#include <linux/mei.h>
#include <linux/mei_cl_bus.h>
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
#include "hw.h"
#include "hbm.h"
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/*
* AMTHI Client UUID
*/
extern const uuid_le mei_amthif_guid;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
#define MEI_RD_MSG_BUF_SIZE (128 * sizeof(u32))
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/*
* Number of Maximum MEI Clients
*/
#define MEI_CLIENTS_MAX 256
/*
* maximum number of consecutive resets
*/
#define MEI_MAX_CONSEC_RESET 3
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/*
* Number of File descriptors/handles
* that can be opened to the driver.
*
* Limit to 255: 256 Total Clients
* minus internal client for MEI Bus Messages
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
*/
#define MEI_MAX_OPEN_HANDLE_COUNT (MEI_CLIENTS_MAX - 1)
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/* File state */
enum file_state {
MEI_FILE_INITIALIZING = 0,
MEI_FILE_CONNECTING,
MEI_FILE_CONNECTED,
MEI_FILE_DISCONNECTING,
MEI_FILE_DISCONNECT_REPLY,
MEI_FILE_DISCONNECT_REQUIRED,
MEI_FILE_DISCONNECTED,
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
};
/* MEI device states */
enum mei_dev_state {
MEI_DEV_INITIALIZING = 0,
MEI_DEV_INIT_CLIENTS,
MEI_DEV_ENABLED,
MEI_DEV_RESETTING,
MEI_DEV_DISABLED,
MEI_DEV_POWER_DOWN,
MEI_DEV_POWER_UP
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
};
const char *mei_dev_state_str(int state);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
enum iamthif_states {
MEI_IAMTHIF_IDLE,
MEI_IAMTHIF_WRITING,
MEI_IAMTHIF_READING,
};
enum mei_file_transaction_states {
MEI_IDLE,
MEI_WRITING,
MEI_WRITE_COMPLETE,
};
/**
* enum mei_cb_file_ops - file operation associated with the callback
* @MEI_FOP_READ: read
* @MEI_FOP_WRITE: write
* @MEI_FOP_CONNECT: connect
* @MEI_FOP_DISCONNECT: disconnect
* @MEI_FOP_DISCONNECT_RSP: disconnect response
* @MEI_FOP_NOTIFY_START: start notification
* @MEI_FOP_NOTIFY_STOP: stop notification
*/
enum mei_cb_file_ops {
MEI_FOP_READ = 0,
MEI_FOP_WRITE,
MEI_FOP_CONNECT,
MEI_FOP_DISCONNECT,
MEI_FOP_DISCONNECT_RSP,
MEI_FOP_NOTIFY_START,
MEI_FOP_NOTIFY_STOP,
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
};
/**
* enum mei_cl_io_mode - io mode between driver and fw
*
* @MEI_CL_IO_TX_BLOCKING: send is blocking
* @MEI_CL_IO_TX_INTERNAL: internal communication between driver and FW
*/
enum mei_cl_io_mode {
MEI_CL_IO_TX_BLOCKING = BIT(0),
MEI_CL_IO_TX_INTERNAL = BIT(1),
};
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/*
* Intel MEI message data struct
*/
struct mei_msg_data {
size_t size;
unsigned char *data;
};
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/* Maximum number of processed FW status registers */
#define MEI_FW_STATUS_MAX 6
/* Minimal buffer for FW status string (8 bytes in dw + space or '\0') */
#define MEI_FW_STATUS_STR_SZ (MEI_FW_STATUS_MAX * (8 + 1))
/*
* struct mei_fw_status - storage of FW status data
*
* @count: number of actually available elements in array
* @status: FW status registers
*/
struct mei_fw_status {
int count;
u32 status[MEI_FW_STATUS_MAX];
};
/**
* struct mei_me_client - representation of me (fw) client
*
* @list: link in me client list
* @refcnt: struct reference count
* @props: client properties
* @client_id: me client id
* @tx_flow_ctrl_creds: flow control credits
* @connect_count: number connections to this client
* @bus_added: added to bus
*/
struct mei_me_client {
struct list_head list;
struct kref refcnt;
struct mei_client_properties props;
u8 client_id;
u8 tx_flow_ctrl_creds;
u8 connect_count;
u8 bus_added;
};
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
struct mei_cl;
/**
* struct mei_cl_cb - file operation callback structure
*
* @list: link in callback queue
* @cl: file client who is running this operation
* @fop_type: file operation type
* @buf: buffer for data associated with the callback
* @buf_idx: last read index
* @fp: pointer to file structure
* @status: io status of the cb
* @internal: communication between driver and FW flag
* @blocking: transmission blocking mode
* @completed: the transfer or reception has completed
*/
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
struct mei_cl_cb {
struct list_head list;
struct mei_cl *cl;
enum mei_cb_file_ops fop_type;
struct mei_msg_data buf;
size_t buf_idx;
const struct file *fp;
int status;
u32 internal:1;
u32 blocking:1;
u32 completed:1;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
};
/**
* struct mei_cl - me client host representation
* carried in file->private_data
*
* @link: link in the clients list
* @dev: mei parent device
* @state: file operation state
* @tx_wait: wait queue for tx completion
* @rx_wait: wait queue for rx completion
* @wait: wait queue for management operation
* @ev_wait: notification wait queue
* @ev_async: event async notification
* @status: connection status
* @me_cl: fw client connected
* @fp: file associated with client
* @host_client_id: host id
* @tx_flow_ctrl_creds: transmit flow credentials
* @rx_flow_ctrl_creds: receive flow credentials
* @timer_count: watchdog timer for operation completion
* @notify_en: notification - enabled/disabled
* @notify_ev: pending notification event
* @writing_state: state of the tx
* @rd_pending: pending read credits
* @rd_completed: completed read
*
* @cldev: device on the mei client bus
*/
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
struct mei_cl {
struct list_head link;
struct mei_device *dev;
enum file_state state;
wait_queue_head_t tx_wait;
wait_queue_head_t rx_wait;
wait_queue_head_t wait;
wait_queue_head_t ev_wait;
struct fasync_struct *ev_async;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
int status;
struct mei_me_client *me_cl;
const struct file *fp;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
u8 host_client_id;
u8 tx_flow_ctrl_creds;
u8 rx_flow_ctrl_creds;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
u8 timer_count;
u8 notify_en;
u8 notify_ev;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
enum mei_file_transaction_states writing_state;
struct list_head rd_pending;
struct list_head rd_completed;
struct mei_cl_device *cldev;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
};
/**
* struct mei_hw_ops - hw specific ops
*
* @host_is_ready : query for host readiness
*
* @hw_is_ready : query if hw is ready
* @hw_reset : reset hw
* @hw_start : start hw after reset
* @hw_config : configure hw
*
* @fw_status : get fw status registers
* @pg_state : power gating state of the device
* @pg_in_transition : is device now in pg transition
* @pg_is_enabled : is power gating enabled
*
* @intr_clear : clear pending interrupts
* @intr_enable : enable interrupts
* @intr_disable : disable interrupts
*
* @hbuf_free_slots : query for write buffer empty slots
* @hbuf_is_ready : query if write buffer is empty
* @hbuf_max_len : query for write buffer max len
*
* @write : write a message to FW
*
* @rdbuf_full_slots : query how many slots are filled
*
* @read_hdr : get first 4 bytes (header)
* @read : read a buffer from the FW
*/
struct mei_hw_ops {
bool (*host_is_ready)(struct mei_device *dev);
bool (*hw_is_ready)(struct mei_device *dev);
int (*hw_reset)(struct mei_device *dev, bool enable);
int (*hw_start)(struct mei_device *dev);
void (*hw_config)(struct mei_device *dev);
int (*fw_status)(struct mei_device *dev, struct mei_fw_status *fw_sts);
enum mei_pg_state (*pg_state)(struct mei_device *dev);
bool (*pg_in_transition)(struct mei_device *dev);
bool (*pg_is_enabled)(struct mei_device *dev);
void (*intr_clear)(struct mei_device *dev);
void (*intr_enable)(struct mei_device *dev);
void (*intr_disable)(struct mei_device *dev);
int (*hbuf_free_slots)(struct mei_device *dev);
bool (*hbuf_is_ready)(struct mei_device *dev);
size_t (*hbuf_max_len)(const struct mei_device *dev);
int (*write)(struct mei_device *dev,
struct mei_msg_hdr *hdr,
unsigned char *buf);
int (*rdbuf_full_slots)(struct mei_device *dev);
u32 (*read_hdr)(const struct mei_device *dev);
int (*read)(struct mei_device *dev,
unsigned char *buf, unsigned long len);
};
/* MEI bus API*/
void mei_cl_bus_rescan(struct mei_device *bus);
void mei_cl_bus_rescan_work(struct work_struct *work);
void mei_cl_bus_dev_fixup(struct mei_cl_device *dev);
ssize_t __mei_cl_send(struct mei_cl *cl, u8 *buf, size_t length,
unsigned int mode);
ssize_t __mei_cl_recv(struct mei_cl *cl, u8 *buf, size_t length);
bool mei_cl_bus_rx_event(struct mei_cl *cl);
bool mei_cl_bus_notify_event(struct mei_cl *cl);
void mei_cl_bus_remove_devices(struct mei_device *bus);
int mei_cl_bus_init(void);
void mei_cl_bus_exit(void);
/**
* enum mei_pg_event - power gating transition events
*
* @MEI_PG_EVENT_IDLE: the driver is not in power gating transition
* @MEI_PG_EVENT_WAIT: the driver is waiting for a pg event to complete
* @MEI_PG_EVENT_RECEIVED: the driver received pg event
* @MEI_PG_EVENT_INTR_WAIT: the driver is waiting for a pg event interrupt
* @MEI_PG_EVENT_INTR_RECEIVED: the driver received pg event interrupt
*/
enum mei_pg_event {
MEI_PG_EVENT_IDLE,
MEI_PG_EVENT_WAIT,
MEI_PG_EVENT_RECEIVED,
MEI_PG_EVENT_INTR_WAIT,
MEI_PG_EVENT_INTR_RECEIVED,
};
/**
* enum mei_pg_state - device internal power gating state
*
* @MEI_PG_OFF: device is not power gated - it is active
* @MEI_PG_ON: device is power gated - it is in lower power state
*/
enum mei_pg_state {
MEI_PG_OFF = 0,
MEI_PG_ON = 1,
};
const char *mei_pg_state_str(enum mei_pg_state state);
/**
* struct mei_device - MEI private device struct
*
* @dev : device on a bus
* @cdev : character device
* @minor : minor number allocated for device
*
* @write_list : write pending list
* @write_waiting_list : write completion list
* @ctrl_wr_list : pending control write list
* @ctrl_rd_list : pending control read list
*
* @file_list : list of opened handles
* @open_handle_count: number of opened handles
*
* @device_lock : big device lock
* @timer_work : MEI timer delayed work (timeouts)
*
* @recvd_hw_ready : hw ready message received flag
*
* @wait_hw_ready : wait queue for receive HW ready message form FW
* @wait_pg : wait queue for receive PG message from FW
* @wait_hbm_start : wait queue for receive HBM start message from FW
*
* @reset_count : number of consecutive resets
* @dev_state : device state
* @hbm_state : state of host bus message protocol
* @init_clients_timer : HBM init handshake timeout
*
* @pg_event : power gating event
* @pg_domain : runtime PM domain
*
* @rd_msg_buf : control messages buffer
* @rd_msg_hdr : read message header storage
*
* @hbuf_depth : depth of hardware host/write buffer is slots
* @hbuf_is_ready : query if the host host/write buffer is ready
*
* @version : HBM protocol version in use
* @hbm_f_pg_supported : hbm feature pgi protocol
* @hbm_f_dc_supported : hbm feature dynamic clients
* @hbm_f_dot_supported : hbm feature disconnect on timeout
* @hbm_f_ev_supported : hbm feature event notification
* @hbm_f_fa_supported : hbm feature fixed address client
* @hbm_f_ie_supported : hbm feature immediate reply to enum request
*
* @me_clients_rwsem: rw lock over me_clients list
* @me_clients : list of FW clients
* @me_clients_map : FW clients bit map
* @host_clients_map : host clients id pool
*
* @allow_fixed_address: allow user space to connect a fixed client
* @override_fixed_address: force allow fixed address behavior
*
* @amthif_cmd_list : amthif list for cmd waiting
* @iamthif_cl : amthif host client
* @iamthif_open_count : number of opened amthif connections
* @iamthif_stall_timer : timer to detect amthif hang
* @iamthif_state : amthif processor state
* @iamthif_canceled : current amthif command is canceled
*
* @reset_work : work item for the device reset
* @bus_rescan_work : work item for the bus rescan
*
* @device_list : mei client bus list
* @cl_bus_lock : client bus list lock
*
* @dbgfs_dir : debugfs mei root directory
*
* @ops: : hw specific operations
* @hw : hw specific data
*/
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
struct mei_device {
struct device *dev;
struct cdev cdev;
int minor;
struct mei_cl_cb write_list;
struct mei_cl_cb write_waiting_list;
struct mei_cl_cb ctrl_wr_list;
struct mei_cl_cb ctrl_rd_list;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
struct list_head file_list;
long open_handle_count;
struct mutex device_lock;
struct delayed_work timer_work;
bool recvd_hw_ready;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/*
* waiting queue for receive message from FW
*/
wait_queue_head_t wait_hw_ready;
wait_queue_head_t wait_pg;
wait_queue_head_t wait_hbm_start;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/*
* mei device states
*/
unsigned long reset_count;
enum mei_dev_state dev_state;
enum mei_hbm_state hbm_state;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
u16 init_clients_timer;
/*
* Power Gating support
*/
enum mei_pg_event pg_event;
#ifdef CONFIG_PM
struct dev_pm_domain pg_domain;
#endif /* CONFIG_PM */
unsigned char rd_msg_buf[MEI_RD_MSG_BUF_SIZE];
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
u32 rd_msg_hdr;
/* write buffer */
u8 hbuf_depth;
bool hbuf_is_ready;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
struct hbm_version version;
unsigned int hbm_f_pg_supported:1;
unsigned int hbm_f_dc_supported:1;
unsigned int hbm_f_dot_supported:1;
unsigned int hbm_f_ev_supported:1;
unsigned int hbm_f_fa_supported:1;
unsigned int hbm_f_ie_supported:1;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
struct rw_semaphore me_clients_rwsem;
struct list_head me_clients;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
DECLARE_BITMAP(me_clients_map, MEI_CLIENTS_MAX);
DECLARE_BITMAP(host_clients_map, MEI_CLIENTS_MAX);
bool allow_fixed_address;
bool override_fixed_address;
/* amthif list for cmd waiting */
struct mei_cl_cb amthif_cmd_list;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
struct mei_cl iamthif_cl;
long iamthif_open_count;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
u32 iamthif_stall_timer;
enum iamthif_states iamthif_state;
bool iamthif_canceled;
struct work_struct reset_work;
struct work_struct bus_rescan_work;
/* List of bus devices */
struct list_head device_list;
struct mutex cl_bus_lock;
#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_DEBUG_FS)
struct dentry *dbgfs_dir;
#endif /* CONFIG_DEBUG_FS */
const struct mei_hw_ops *ops;
char hw[0] __aligned(sizeof(void *));
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
};
static inline unsigned long mei_secs_to_jiffies(unsigned long sec)
{
return msecs_to_jiffies(sec * MSEC_PER_SEC);
}
/**
* mei_data2slots - get slots - number of (dwords) from a message length
* + size of the mei header
*
* @length: size of the messages in bytes
*
* Return: number of slots
*/
static inline u32 mei_data2slots(size_t length)
{
return DIV_ROUND_UP(sizeof(struct mei_msg_hdr) + length, 4);
}
/**
* mei_slots2data - get data in slots - bytes from slots
*
* @slots: number of available slots
*
* Return: number of bytes in slots
*/
static inline u32 mei_slots2data(int slots)
{
return slots * 4;
}
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/*
* mei init function prototypes
*/
void mei_device_init(struct mei_device *dev,
struct device *device,
const struct mei_hw_ops *hw_ops);
int mei_reset(struct mei_device *dev);
int mei_start(struct mei_device *dev);
int mei_restart(struct mei_device *dev);
void mei_stop(struct mei_device *dev);
void mei_cancel_work(struct mei_device *dev);
/*
* MEI interrupt functions prototype
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
*/
void mei_timer(struct work_struct *work);
void mei_schedule_stall_timer(struct mei_device *dev);
int mei_irq_read_handler(struct mei_device *dev,
struct mei_cl_cb *cmpl_list, s32 *slots);
int mei_irq_write_handler(struct mei_device *dev, struct mei_cl_cb *cmpl_list);
void mei_irq_compl_handler(struct mei_device *dev, struct mei_cl_cb *cmpl_list);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/*
* AMTHIF - AMT Host Interface Functions
*/
void mei_amthif_reset_params(struct mei_device *dev);
int mei_amthif_host_init(struct mei_device *dev, struct mei_me_client *me_cl);
unsigned int mei_amthif_poll(struct file *file, poll_table *wait);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
int mei_amthif_release(struct mei_device *dev, struct file *file);
int mei_amthif_write(struct mei_cl *cl, struct mei_cl_cb *cb);
int mei_amthif_run_next_cmd(struct mei_device *dev);
int mei_amthif_irq_write(struct mei_cl *cl, struct mei_cl_cb *cb,
struct mei_cl_cb *cmpl_list);
void mei_amthif_complete(struct mei_cl *cl, struct mei_cl_cb *cb);
int mei_amthif_irq_read_msg(struct mei_cl *cl,
struct mei_msg_hdr *mei_hdr,
struct mei_cl_cb *complete_list);
int mei_amthif_irq_read(struct mei_device *dev, s32 *slots);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
/*
* Register Access Function
*/
static inline void mei_hw_config(struct mei_device *dev)
{
dev->ops->hw_config(dev);
}
static inline enum mei_pg_state mei_pg_state(struct mei_device *dev)
{
return dev->ops->pg_state(dev);
}
static inline bool mei_pg_in_transition(struct mei_device *dev)
{
return dev->ops->pg_in_transition(dev);
}
static inline bool mei_pg_is_enabled(struct mei_device *dev)
{
return dev->ops->pg_is_enabled(dev);
}
static inline int mei_hw_reset(struct mei_device *dev, bool enable)
{
return dev->ops->hw_reset(dev, enable);
}
static inline int mei_hw_start(struct mei_device *dev)
{
return dev->ops->hw_start(dev);
}
static inline void mei_clear_interrupts(struct mei_device *dev)
{
dev->ops->intr_clear(dev);
}
static inline void mei_enable_interrupts(struct mei_device *dev)
{
dev->ops->intr_enable(dev);
}
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
static inline void mei_disable_interrupts(struct mei_device *dev)
{
dev->ops->intr_disable(dev);
}
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
static inline bool mei_host_is_ready(struct mei_device *dev)
{
return dev->ops->host_is_ready(dev);
}
static inline bool mei_hw_is_ready(struct mei_device *dev)
{
return dev->ops->hw_is_ready(dev);
}
static inline bool mei_hbuf_is_ready(struct mei_device *dev)
{
return dev->ops->hbuf_is_ready(dev);
}
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
static inline int mei_hbuf_empty_slots(struct mei_device *dev)
{
return dev->ops->hbuf_free_slots(dev);
}
static inline size_t mei_hbuf_max_len(const struct mei_device *dev)
{
return dev->ops->hbuf_max_len(dev);
}
static inline int mei_write_message(struct mei_device *dev,
struct mei_msg_hdr *hdr, void *buf)
{
return dev->ops->write(dev, hdr, buf);
}
static inline u32 mei_read_hdr(const struct mei_device *dev)
{
return dev->ops->read_hdr(dev);
}
static inline void mei_read_slots(struct mei_device *dev,
unsigned char *buf, unsigned long len)
{
dev->ops->read(dev, buf, len);
}
static inline int mei_count_full_read_slots(struct mei_device *dev)
{
return dev->ops->rdbuf_full_slots(dev);
}
static inline int mei_fw_status(struct mei_device *dev,
struct mei_fw_status *fw_status)
{
return dev->ops->fw_status(dev, fw_status);
}
bool mei_hbuf_acquire(struct mei_device *dev);
bool mei_write_is_idle(struct mei_device *dev);
void mei_irq_discard_msg(struct mei_device *dev, struct mei_msg_hdr *hdr);
#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_DEBUG_FS)
int mei_dbgfs_register(struct mei_device *dev, const char *name);
void mei_dbgfs_deregister(struct mei_device *dev);
#else
static inline int mei_dbgfs_register(struct mei_device *dev, const char *name)
{
return 0;
}
static inline void mei_dbgfs_deregister(struct mei_device *dev) {}
#endif /* CONFIG_DEBUG_FS */
int mei_register(struct mei_device *dev, struct device *parent);
void mei_deregister(struct mei_device *dev);
#define MEI_HDR_FMT "hdr:host=%02d me=%02d len=%d internal=%1d comp=%1d"
#define MEI_HDR_PRM(hdr) \
(hdr)->host_addr, (hdr)->me_addr, \
(hdr)->length, (hdr)->internal, (hdr)->msg_complete
ssize_t mei_fw_status2str(struct mei_fw_status *fw_sts, char *buf, size_t len);
/**
* mei_fw_status_str - fetch and convert fw status registers to printable string
*
* @dev: the device structure
* @buf: string buffer at minimal size MEI_FW_STATUS_STR_SZ
* @len: buffer len must be >= MEI_FW_STATUS_STR_SZ
*
* Return: number of bytes written or < 0 on failure
*/
static inline ssize_t mei_fw_status_str(struct mei_device *dev,
char *buf, size_t len)
{
struct mei_fw_status fw_status;
int ret;
buf[0] = '\0';
ret = mei_fw_status(dev, &fw_status);
if (ret)
return ret;
ret = mei_fw_status2str(&fw_status, buf, MEI_FW_STATUS_STR_SZ);
return ret;
}
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 18:43:41 +08:00
#endif