|  | Overview of Linux kernel SPI support | 
|  | ==================================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 21-May-2007 | 
|  |  | 
|  | What is SPI? | 
|  | ------------ | 
|  | The "Serial Peripheral Interface" (SPI) is a synchronous four wire serial | 
|  | link used to connect microcontrollers to sensors, memory, and peripherals. | 
|  | It's a simple "de facto" standard, not complicated enough to acquire a | 
|  | standardization body.  SPI uses a master/slave configuration. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The three signal wires hold a clock (SCK, often on the order of 10 MHz), | 
|  | and parallel data lines with "Master Out, Slave In" (MOSI) or "Master In, | 
|  | Slave Out" (MISO) signals.  (Other names are also used.)  There are four | 
|  | clocking modes through which data is exchanged; mode-0 and mode-3 are most | 
|  | commonly used.  Each clock cycle shifts data out and data in; the clock | 
|  | doesn't cycle except when there is a data bit to shift.  Not all data bits | 
|  | are used though; not every protocol uses those full duplex capabilities. | 
|  |  | 
|  | SPI masters use a fourth "chip select" line to activate a given SPI slave | 
|  | device, so those three signal wires may be connected to several chips | 
|  | in parallel.  All SPI slaves support chipselects; they are usually active | 
|  | low signals, labeled nCSx for slave 'x' (e.g. nCS0).  Some devices have | 
|  | other signals, often including an interrupt to the master. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Unlike serial busses like USB or SMBus, even low level protocols for | 
|  | SPI slave functions are usually not interoperable between vendors | 
|  | (except for commodities like SPI memory chips). | 
|  |  | 
|  | - SPI may be used for request/response style device protocols, as with | 
|  | touchscreen sensors and memory chips. | 
|  |  | 
|  | - It may also be used to stream data in either direction (half duplex), | 
|  | or both of them at the same time (full duplex). | 
|  |  | 
|  | - Some devices may use eight bit words.  Others may different word | 
|  | lengths, such as streams of 12-bit or 20-bit digital samples. | 
|  |  | 
|  | - Words are usually sent with their most significant bit (MSB) first, | 
|  | but sometimes the least significant bit (LSB) goes first instead. | 
|  |  | 
|  | - Sometimes SPI is used to daisy-chain devices, like shift registers. | 
|  |  | 
|  | In the same way, SPI slaves will only rarely support any kind of automatic | 
|  | discovery/enumeration protocol.  The tree of slave devices accessible from | 
|  | a given SPI master will normally be set up manually, with configuration | 
|  | tables. | 
|  |  | 
|  | SPI is only one of the names used by such four-wire protocols, and | 
|  | most controllers have no problem handling "MicroWire" (think of it as | 
|  | half-duplex SPI, for request/response protocols), SSP ("Synchronous | 
|  | Serial Protocol"), PSP ("Programmable Serial Protocol"), and other | 
|  | related protocols. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Some chips eliminate a signal line by combining MOSI and MISO, and | 
|  | limiting themselves to half-duplex at the hardware level.  In fact | 
|  | some SPI chips have this signal mode as a strapping option.  These | 
|  | can be accessed using the same programming interface as SPI, but of | 
|  | course they won't handle full duplex transfers.  You may find such | 
|  | chips described as using "three wire" signaling: SCK, data, nCSx. | 
|  | (That data line is sometimes called MOMI or SISO.) | 
|  |  | 
|  | Microcontrollers often support both master and slave sides of the SPI | 
|  | protocol.  This document (and Linux) currently only supports the master | 
|  | side of SPI interactions. | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | Who uses it?  On what kinds of systems? | 
|  | --------------------------------------- | 
|  | Linux developers using SPI are probably writing device drivers for embedded | 
|  | systems boards.  SPI is used to control external chips, and it is also a | 
|  | protocol supported by every MMC or SD memory card.  (The older "DataFlash" | 
|  | cards, predating MMC cards but using the same connectors and card shape, | 
|  | support only SPI.)  Some PC hardware uses SPI flash for BIOS code. | 
|  |  | 
|  | SPI slave chips range from digital/analog converters used for analog | 
|  | sensors and codecs, to memory, to peripherals like USB controllers | 
|  | or Ethernet adapters; and more. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Most systems using SPI will integrate a few devices on a mainboard. | 
|  | Some provide SPI links on expansion connectors; in cases where no | 
|  | dedicated SPI controller exists, GPIO pins can be used to create a | 
|  | low speed "bitbanging" adapter.  Very few systems will "hotplug" an SPI | 
|  | controller; the reasons to use SPI focus on low cost and simple operation, | 
|  | and if dynamic reconfiguration is important, USB will often be a more | 
|  | appropriate low-pincount peripheral bus. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Many microcontrollers that can run Linux integrate one or more I/O | 
|  | interfaces with SPI modes.  Given SPI support, they could use MMC or SD | 
|  | cards without needing a special purpose MMC/SD/SDIO controller. | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | I'm confused.  What are these four SPI "clock modes"? | 
|  | ----------------------------------------------------- | 
|  | It's easy to be confused here, and the vendor documentation you'll | 
|  | find isn't necessarily helpful.  The four modes combine two mode bits: | 
|  |  | 
|  | - CPOL indicates the initial clock polarity.  CPOL=0 means the | 
|  | clock starts low, so the first (leading) edge is rising, and | 
|  | the second (trailing) edge is falling.  CPOL=1 means the clock | 
|  | starts high, so the first (leading) edge is falling. | 
|  |  | 
|  | - CPHA indicates the clock phase used to sample data; CPHA=0 says | 
|  | sample on the leading edge, CPHA=1 means the trailing edge. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Since the signal needs to stablize before it's sampled, CPHA=0 | 
|  | implies that its data is written half a clock before the first | 
|  | clock edge.  The chipselect may have made it become available. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Chip specs won't always say "uses SPI mode X" in as many words, | 
|  | but their timing diagrams will make the CPOL and CPHA modes clear. | 
|  |  | 
|  | In the SPI mode number, CPOL is the high order bit and CPHA is the | 
|  | low order bit.  So when a chip's timing diagram shows the clock | 
|  | starting low (CPOL=0) and data stabilized for sampling during the | 
|  | trailing clock edge (CPHA=1), that's SPI mode 1. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Note that the clock mode is relevant as soon as the chipselect goes | 
|  | active.  So the master must set the clock to inactive before selecting | 
|  | a slave, and the slave can tell the chosen polarity by sampling the | 
|  | clock level when its select line goes active.  That's why many devices | 
|  | support for example both modes 0 and 3:  they don't care about polarity, | 
|  | and alway clock data in/out on rising clock edges. | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | How do these driver programming interfaces work? | 
|  | ------------------------------------------------ | 
|  | The <linux/spi/spi.h> header file includes kerneldoc, as does the | 
|  | main source code, and you should certainly read that chapter of the | 
|  | kernel API document.  This is just an overview, so you get the big | 
|  | picture before those details. | 
|  |  | 
|  | SPI requests always go into I/O queues.  Requests for a given SPI device | 
|  | are always executed in FIFO order, and complete asynchronously through | 
|  | completion callbacks.  There are also some simple synchronous wrappers | 
|  | for those calls, including ones for common transaction types like writing | 
|  | a command and then reading its response. | 
|  |  | 
|  | There are two types of SPI driver, here called: | 
|  |  | 
|  | Controller drivers ... controllers may be built in to System-On-Chip | 
|  | processors, and often support both Master and Slave roles. | 
|  | These drivers touch hardware registers and may use DMA. | 
|  | Or they can be PIO bitbangers, needing just GPIO pins. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Protocol drivers ... these pass messages through the controller | 
|  | driver to communicate with a Slave or Master device on the | 
|  | other side of an SPI link. | 
|  |  | 
|  | So for example one protocol driver might talk to the MTD layer to export | 
|  | data to filesystems stored on SPI flash like DataFlash; and others might | 
|  | control audio interfaces, present touchscreen sensors as input interfaces, | 
|  | or monitor temperature and voltage levels during industrial processing. | 
|  | And those might all be sharing the same controller driver. | 
|  |  | 
|  | A "struct spi_device" encapsulates the master-side interface between | 
|  | those two types of driver.  At this writing, Linux has no slave side | 
|  | programming interface. | 
|  |  | 
|  | There is a minimal core of SPI programming interfaces, focussing on | 
|  | using the driver model to connect controller and protocol drivers using | 
|  | device tables provided by board specific initialization code.  SPI | 
|  | shows up in sysfs in several locations: | 
|  |  | 
|  | /sys/devices/.../CTLR ... physical node for a given SPI controller | 
|  |  | 
|  | /sys/devices/.../CTLR/spiB.C ... spi_device on bus "B", | 
|  | chipselect C, accessed through CTLR. | 
|  |  | 
|  | /sys/bus/spi/devices/spiB.C ... symlink to that physical | 
|  | .../CTLR/spiB.C device | 
|  |  | 
|  | /sys/devices/.../CTLR/spiB.C/modalias ... identifies the driver | 
|  | that should be used with this device (for hotplug/coldplug) | 
|  |  | 
|  | /sys/bus/spi/drivers/D ... driver for one or more spi*.* devices | 
|  |  | 
|  | /sys/class/spi_master/spiB ... symlink (or actual device node) to | 
|  | a logical node which could hold class related state for the | 
|  | controller managing bus "B".  All spiB.* devices share one | 
|  | physical SPI bus segment, with SCLK, MOSI, and MISO. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Note that the actual location of the controller's class state depends | 
|  | on whether you enabled CONFIG_SYSFS_DEPRECATED or not.  At this time, | 
|  | the only class-specific state is the bus number ("B" in "spiB"), so | 
|  | those /sys/class entries are only useful to quickly identify busses. | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | How does board-specific init code declare SPI devices? | 
|  | ------------------------------------------------------ | 
|  | Linux needs several kinds of information to properly configure SPI devices. | 
|  | That information is normally provided by board-specific code, even for | 
|  | chips that do support some of automated discovery/enumeration. | 
|  |  | 
|  | DECLARE CONTROLLERS | 
|  |  | 
|  | The first kind of information is a list of what SPI controllers exist. | 
|  | For System-on-Chip (SOC) based boards, these will usually be platform | 
|  | devices, and the controller may need some platform_data in order to | 
|  | operate properly.  The "struct platform_device" will include resources | 
|  | like the physical address of the controller's first register and its IRQ. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Platforms will often abstract the "register SPI controller" operation, | 
|  | maybe coupling it with code to initialize pin configurations, so that | 
|  | the arch/.../mach-*/board-*.c files for several boards can all share the | 
|  | same basic controller setup code.  This is because most SOCs have several | 
|  | SPI-capable controllers, and only the ones actually usable on a given | 
|  | board should normally be set up and registered. | 
|  |  | 
|  | So for example arch/.../mach-*/board-*.c files might have code like: | 
|  |  | 
|  | #include <mach/spi.h>	/* for mysoc_spi_data */ | 
|  |  | 
|  | /* if your mach-* infrastructure doesn't support kernels that can | 
|  | * run on multiple boards, pdata wouldn't benefit from "__init". | 
|  | */ | 
|  | static struct mysoc_spi_data __initdata pdata = { ... }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | static __init board_init(void) | 
|  | { | 
|  | ... | 
|  | /* this board only uses SPI controller #2 */ | 
|  | mysoc_register_spi(2, &pdata); | 
|  | ... | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | And SOC-specific utility code might look something like: | 
|  |  | 
|  | #include <mach/spi.h> | 
|  |  | 
|  | static struct platform_device spi2 = { ... }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | void mysoc_register_spi(unsigned n, struct mysoc_spi_data *pdata) | 
|  | { | 
|  | struct mysoc_spi_data *pdata2; | 
|  |  | 
|  | pdata2 = kmalloc(sizeof *pdata2, GFP_KERNEL); | 
|  | *pdata2 = pdata; | 
|  | ... | 
|  | if (n == 2) { | 
|  | spi2->dev.platform_data = pdata2; | 
|  | register_platform_device(&spi2); | 
|  |  | 
|  | /* also: set up pin modes so the spi2 signals are | 
|  | * visible on the relevant pins ... bootloaders on | 
|  | * production boards may already have done this, but | 
|  | * developer boards will often need Linux to do it. | 
|  | */ | 
|  | } | 
|  | ... | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | Notice how the platform_data for boards may be different, even if the | 
|  | same SOC controller is used.  For example, on one board SPI might use | 
|  | an external clock, where another derives the SPI clock from current | 
|  | settings of some master clock. | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | DECLARE SLAVE DEVICES | 
|  |  | 
|  | The second kind of information is a list of what SPI slave devices exist | 
|  | on the target board, often with some board-specific data needed for the | 
|  | driver to work correctly. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Normally your arch/.../mach-*/board-*.c files would provide a small table | 
|  | listing the SPI devices on each board.  (This would typically be only a | 
|  | small handful.)  That might look like: | 
|  |  | 
|  | static struct ads7846_platform_data ads_info = { | 
|  | .vref_delay_usecs	= 100, | 
|  | .x_plate_ohms		= 580, | 
|  | .y_plate_ohms		= 410, | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | static struct spi_board_info spi_board_info[] __initdata = { | 
|  | { | 
|  | .modalias	= "ads7846", | 
|  | .platform_data	= &ads_info, | 
|  | .mode		= SPI_MODE_0, | 
|  | .irq		= GPIO_IRQ(31), | 
|  | .max_speed_hz	= 120000 /* max sample rate at 3V */ * 16, | 
|  | .bus_num	= 1, | 
|  | .chip_select	= 0, | 
|  | }, | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | Again, notice how board-specific information is provided; each chip may need | 
|  | several types.  This example shows generic constraints like the fastest SPI | 
|  | clock to allow (a function of board voltage in this case) or how an IRQ pin | 
|  | is wired, plus chip-specific constraints like an important delay that's | 
|  | changed by the capacitance at one pin. | 
|  |  | 
|  | (There's also "controller_data", information that may be useful to the | 
|  | controller driver.  An example would be peripheral-specific DMA tuning | 
|  | data or chipselect callbacks.  This is stored in spi_device later.) | 
|  |  | 
|  | The board_info should provide enough information to let the system work | 
|  | without the chip's driver being loaded.  The most troublesome aspect of | 
|  | that is likely the SPI_CS_HIGH bit in the spi_device.mode field, since | 
|  | sharing a bus with a device that interprets chipselect "backwards" is | 
|  | not possible until the infrastructure knows how to deselect it. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Then your board initialization code would register that table with the SPI | 
|  | infrastructure, so that it's available later when the SPI master controller | 
|  | driver is registered: | 
|  |  | 
|  | spi_register_board_info(spi_board_info, ARRAY_SIZE(spi_board_info)); | 
|  |  | 
|  | Like with other static board-specific setup, you won't unregister those. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The widely used "card" style computers bundle memory, cpu, and little else | 
|  | onto a card that's maybe just thirty square centimeters.  On such systems, | 
|  | your arch/.../mach-.../board-*.c file would primarily provide information | 
|  | about the devices on the mainboard into which such a card is plugged.  That | 
|  | certainly includes SPI devices hooked up through the card connectors! | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | NON-STATIC CONFIGURATIONS | 
|  |  | 
|  | Developer boards often play by different rules than product boards, and one | 
|  | example is the potential need to hotplug SPI devices and/or controllers. | 
|  |  | 
|  | For those cases you might need to use spi_busnum_to_master() to look | 
|  | up the spi bus master, and will likely need spi_new_device() to provide the | 
|  | board info based on the board that was hotplugged.  Of course, you'd later | 
|  | call at least spi_unregister_device() when that board is removed. | 
|  |  | 
|  | When Linux includes support for MMC/SD/SDIO/DataFlash cards through SPI, those | 
|  | configurations will also be dynamic.  Fortunately, such devices all support | 
|  | basic device identification probes, so they should hotplug normally. | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | How do I write an "SPI Protocol Driver"? | 
|  | ---------------------------------------- | 
|  | Most SPI drivers are currently kernel drivers, but there's also support | 
|  | for userspace drivers.  Here we talk only about kernel drivers. | 
|  |  | 
|  | SPI protocol drivers somewhat resemble platform device drivers: | 
|  |  | 
|  | static struct spi_driver CHIP_driver = { | 
|  | .driver = { | 
|  | .name		= "CHIP", | 
|  | .owner		= THIS_MODULE, | 
|  | }, | 
|  |  | 
|  | .probe		= CHIP_probe, | 
|  | .remove		= __devexit_p(CHIP_remove), | 
|  | .suspend	= CHIP_suspend, | 
|  | .resume		= CHIP_resume, | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | The driver core will automatically attempt to bind this driver to any SPI | 
|  | device whose board_info gave a modalias of "CHIP".  Your probe() code | 
|  | might look like this unless you're creating a device which is managing | 
|  | a bus (appearing under /sys/class/spi_master). | 
|  |  | 
|  | static int __devinit CHIP_probe(struct spi_device *spi) | 
|  | { | 
|  | struct CHIP			*chip; | 
|  | struct CHIP_platform_data	*pdata; | 
|  |  | 
|  | /* assuming the driver requires board-specific data: */ | 
|  | pdata = &spi->dev.platform_data; | 
|  | if (!pdata) | 
|  | return -ENODEV; | 
|  |  | 
|  | /* get memory for driver's per-chip state */ | 
|  | chip = kzalloc(sizeof *chip, GFP_KERNEL); | 
|  | if (!chip) | 
|  | return -ENOMEM; | 
|  | spi_set_drvdata(spi, chip); | 
|  |  | 
|  | ... etc | 
|  | return 0; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | As soon as it enters probe(), the driver may issue I/O requests to | 
|  | the SPI device using "struct spi_message".  When remove() returns, | 
|  | or after probe() fails, the driver guarantees that it won't submit | 
|  | any more such messages. | 
|  |  | 
|  | - An spi_message is a sequence of protocol operations, executed | 
|  | as one atomic sequence.  SPI driver controls include: | 
|  |  | 
|  | + when bidirectional reads and writes start ... by how its | 
|  | sequence of spi_transfer requests is arranged; | 
|  |  | 
|  | + which I/O buffers are used ... each spi_transfer wraps a | 
|  | buffer for each transfer direction, supporting full duplex | 
|  | (two pointers, maybe the same one in both cases) and half | 
|  | duplex (one pointer is NULL) transfers; | 
|  |  | 
|  | + optionally defining short delays after transfers ... using | 
|  | the spi_transfer.delay_usecs setting (this delay can be the | 
|  | only protocol effect, if the buffer length is zero); | 
|  |  | 
|  | + whether the chipselect becomes inactive after a transfer and | 
|  | any delay ... by using the spi_transfer.cs_change flag; | 
|  |  | 
|  | + hinting whether the next message is likely to go to this same | 
|  | device ... using the spi_transfer.cs_change flag on the last | 
|  | transfer in that atomic group, and potentially saving costs | 
|  | for chip deselect and select operations. | 
|  |  | 
|  | - Follow standard kernel rules, and provide DMA-safe buffers in | 
|  | your messages.  That way controller drivers using DMA aren't forced | 
|  | to make extra copies unless the hardware requires it (e.g. working | 
|  | around hardware errata that force the use of bounce buffering). | 
|  |  | 
|  | If standard dma_map_single() handling of these buffers is inappropriate, | 
|  | you can use spi_message.is_dma_mapped to tell the controller driver | 
|  | that you've already provided the relevant DMA addresses. | 
|  |  | 
|  | - The basic I/O primitive is spi_async().  Async requests may be | 
|  | issued in any context (irq handler, task, etc) and completion | 
|  | is reported using a callback provided with the message. | 
|  | After any detected error, the chip is deselected and processing | 
|  | of that spi_message is aborted. | 
|  |  | 
|  | - There are also synchronous wrappers like spi_sync(), and wrappers | 
|  | like spi_read(), spi_write(), and spi_write_then_read().  These | 
|  | may be issued only in contexts that may sleep, and they're all | 
|  | clean (and small, and "optional") layers over spi_async(). | 
|  |  | 
|  | - The spi_write_then_read() call, and convenience wrappers around | 
|  | it, should only be used with small amounts of data where the | 
|  | cost of an extra copy may be ignored.  It's designed to support | 
|  | common RPC-style requests, such as writing an eight bit command | 
|  | and reading a sixteen bit response -- spi_w8r16() being one its | 
|  | wrappers, doing exactly that. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Some drivers may need to modify spi_device characteristics like the | 
|  | transfer mode, wordsize, or clock rate.  This is done with spi_setup(), | 
|  | which would normally be called from probe() before the first I/O is | 
|  | done to the device.  However, that can also be called at any time | 
|  | that no message is pending for that device. | 
|  |  | 
|  | While "spi_device" would be the bottom boundary of the driver, the | 
|  | upper boundaries might include sysfs (especially for sensor readings), | 
|  | the input layer, ALSA, networking, MTD, the character device framework, | 
|  | or other Linux subsystems. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Note that there are two types of memory your driver must manage as part | 
|  | of interacting with SPI devices. | 
|  |  | 
|  | - I/O buffers use the usual Linux rules, and must be DMA-safe. | 
|  | You'd normally allocate them from the heap or free page pool. | 
|  | Don't use the stack, or anything that's declared "static". | 
|  |  | 
|  | - The spi_message and spi_transfer metadata used to glue those | 
|  | I/O buffers into a group of protocol transactions.  These can | 
|  | be allocated anywhere it's convenient, including as part of | 
|  | other allocate-once driver data structures.  Zero-init these. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If you like, spi_message_alloc() and spi_message_free() convenience | 
|  | routines are available to allocate and zero-initialize an spi_message | 
|  | with several transfers. | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | How do I write an "SPI Master Controller Driver"? | 
|  | ------------------------------------------------- | 
|  | An SPI controller will probably be registered on the platform_bus; write | 
|  | a driver to bind to the device, whichever bus is involved. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The main task of this type of driver is to provide an "spi_master". | 
|  | Use spi_alloc_master() to allocate the master, and spi_master_get_devdata() | 
|  | to get the driver-private data allocated for that device. | 
|  |  | 
|  | struct spi_master	*master; | 
|  | struct CONTROLLER	*c; | 
|  |  | 
|  | master = spi_alloc_master(dev, sizeof *c); | 
|  | if (!master) | 
|  | return -ENODEV; | 
|  |  | 
|  | c = spi_master_get_devdata(master); | 
|  |  | 
|  | The driver will initialize the fields of that spi_master, including the | 
|  | bus number (maybe the same as the platform device ID) and three methods | 
|  | used to interact with the SPI core and SPI protocol drivers.  It will | 
|  | also initialize its own internal state.  (See below about bus numbering | 
|  | and those methods.) | 
|  |  | 
|  | After you initialize the spi_master, then use spi_register_master() to | 
|  | publish it to the rest of the system.  At that time, device nodes for | 
|  | the controller and any predeclared spi devices will be made available, | 
|  | and the driver model core will take care of binding them to drivers. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If you need to remove your SPI controller driver, spi_unregister_master() | 
|  | will reverse the effect of spi_register_master(). | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | BUS NUMBERING | 
|  |  | 
|  | Bus numbering is important, since that's how Linux identifies a given | 
|  | SPI bus (shared SCK, MOSI, MISO).  Valid bus numbers start at zero.  On | 
|  | SOC systems, the bus numbers should match the numbers defined by the chip | 
|  | manufacturer.  For example, hardware controller SPI2 would be bus number 2, | 
|  | and spi_board_info for devices connected to it would use that number. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If you don't have such hardware-assigned bus number, and for some reason | 
|  | you can't just assign them, then provide a negative bus number.  That will | 
|  | then be replaced by a dynamically assigned number. You'd then need to treat | 
|  | this as a non-static configuration (see above). | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | SPI MASTER METHODS | 
|  |  | 
|  | master->setup(struct spi_device *spi) | 
|  | This sets up the device clock rate, SPI mode, and word sizes. | 
|  | Drivers may change the defaults provided by board_info, and then | 
|  | call spi_setup(spi) to invoke this routine.  It may sleep. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Unless each SPI slave has its own configuration registers, don't | 
|  | change them right away ... otherwise drivers could corrupt I/O | 
|  | that's in progress for other SPI devices. | 
|  |  | 
|  | ** BUG ALERT:  for some reason the first version of | 
|  | ** many spi_master drivers seems to get this wrong. | 
|  | ** When you code setup(), ASSUME that the controller | 
|  | ** is actively processing transfers for another device. | 
|  |  | 
|  | master->transfer(struct spi_device *spi, struct spi_message *message) | 
|  | This must not sleep.  Its responsibility is arrange that the | 
|  | transfer happens and its complete() callback is issued.  The two | 
|  | will normally happen later, after other transfers complete, and | 
|  | if the controller is idle it will need to be kickstarted. | 
|  |  | 
|  | master->cleanup(struct spi_device *spi) | 
|  | Your controller driver may use spi_device.controller_state to hold | 
|  | state it dynamically associates with that device.  If you do that, | 
|  | be sure to provide the cleanup() method to free that state. | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | SPI MESSAGE QUEUE | 
|  |  | 
|  | The bulk of the driver will be managing the I/O queue fed by transfer(). | 
|  |  | 
|  | That queue could be purely conceptual.  For example, a driver used only | 
|  | for low-frequency sensor access might be fine using synchronous PIO. | 
|  |  | 
|  | But the queue will probably be very real, using message->queue, PIO, | 
|  | often DMA (especially if the root filesystem is in SPI flash), and | 
|  | execution contexts like IRQ handlers, tasklets, or workqueues (such | 
|  | as keventd).  Your driver can be as fancy, or as simple, as you need. | 
|  | Such a transfer() method would normally just add the message to a | 
|  | queue, and then start some asynchronous transfer engine (unless it's | 
|  | already running). | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | THANKS TO | 
|  | --------- | 
|  | Contributors to Linux-SPI discussions include (in alphabetical order, | 
|  | by last name): | 
|  |  | 
|  | David Brownell | 
|  | Russell King | 
|  | Dmitry Pervushin | 
|  | Stephen Street | 
|  | Mark Underwood | 
|  | Andrew Victor | 
|  | Vitaly Wool | 
|  |  |