| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 |  | 
 | 2 | Porting Drivers to the New Driver Model | 
 | 3 |  | 
 | 4 | Patrick Mochel | 
 | 5 |  | 
 | 6 | 7 January 2003 | 
 | 7 |  | 
 | 8 |  | 
 | 9 | Overview | 
 | 10 |  | 
 | 11 | Please refer to Documentation/driver-model/*.txt for definitions of | 
 | 12 | various driver types and concepts.  | 
 | 13 |  | 
 | 14 | Most of the work of porting devices drivers to the new model happens | 
 | 15 | at the bus driver layer. This was intentional, to minimize the | 
 | 16 | negative effect on kernel drivers, and to allow a gradual transition | 
 | 17 | of bus drivers. | 
 | 18 |  | 
 | 19 | In a nutshell, the driver model consists of a set of objects that can | 
 | 20 | be embedded in larger, bus-specific objects. Fields in these generic | 
 | 21 | objects can replace fields in the bus-specific objects.  | 
 | 22 |  | 
 | 23 | The generic objects must be registered with the driver model core. By | 
 | 24 | doing so, they will exported via the sysfs filesystem. sysfs can be | 
 | 25 | mounted by doing  | 
 | 26 |  | 
 | 27 | 	# mount -t sysfs sysfs /sys | 
 | 28 |  | 
 | 29 |  | 
 | 30 |  | 
 | 31 | The Process | 
 | 32 |  | 
 | 33 | Step 0: Read include/linux/device.h for object and function definitions.  | 
 | 34 |  | 
 | 35 | Step 1: Registering the bus driver.  | 
 | 36 |  | 
 | 37 |  | 
 | 38 | - Define a struct bus_type for the bus driver. | 
 | 39 |  | 
 | 40 | struct bus_type pci_bus_type = { | 
 | 41 |         .name           = "pci", | 
 | 42 | }; | 
 | 43 |  | 
 | 44 |  | 
 | 45 | - Register the bus type. | 
 | 46 |   This should be done in the initialization function for the bus type, | 
 | 47 |   which is usually the module_init(), or equivalent, function.  | 
 | 48 |  | 
 | 49 | static int __init pci_driver_init(void) | 
 | 50 | { | 
 | 51 |         return bus_register(&pci_bus_type); | 
 | 52 | } | 
 | 53 |  | 
 | 54 | subsys_initcall(pci_driver_init); | 
 | 55 |  | 
 | 56 |  | 
 | 57 |   The bus type may be unregistered (if the bus driver may be compiled | 
 | 58 |   as a module) by doing: | 
 | 59 |  | 
 | 60 |      bus_unregister(&pci_bus_type); | 
 | 61 |  | 
 | 62 |  | 
 | 63 | - Export the bus type for others to use.  | 
 | 64 |  | 
 | 65 |   Other code may wish to reference the bus type, so declare it in a  | 
 | 66 |   shared header file and export the symbol. | 
 | 67 |  | 
 | 68 | From include/linux/pci.h: | 
 | 69 |  | 
 | 70 | extern struct bus_type pci_bus_type; | 
 | 71 |  | 
 | 72 |  | 
 | 73 | From file the above code appears in: | 
 | 74 |  | 
 | 75 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(pci_bus_type); | 
 | 76 |  | 
 | 77 |  | 
 | 78 |  | 
 | 79 | - This will cause the bus to show up in /sys/bus/pci/ with two | 
 | 80 |   subdirectories: 'devices' and 'drivers'. | 
 | 81 |  | 
 | 82 | # tree -d /sys/bus/pci/ | 
 | 83 | /sys/bus/pci/ | 
 | 84 | |-- devices | 
 | 85 | `-- drivers | 
 | 86 |  | 
 | 87 |  | 
 | 88 |  | 
 | 89 | Step 2: Registering Devices.  | 
 | 90 |  | 
 | 91 | struct device represents a single device. It mainly contains metadata | 
 | 92 | describing the relationship the device has to other entities.  | 
 | 93 |  | 
 | 94 |  | 
| Matt LaPlante | 5d3f083 | 2006-11-30 05:21:10 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 95 | - Embed a struct device in the bus-specific device type.  | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 96 |  | 
 | 97 |  | 
 | 98 | struct pci_dev { | 
 | 99 |        ... | 
 | 100 |        struct  device  dev;            /* Generic device interface */ | 
 | 101 |        ... | 
 | 102 | }; | 
 | 103 |  | 
 | 104 |   It is recommended that the generic device not be the first item in  | 
 | 105 |   the struct to discourage programmers from doing mindless casts | 
 | 106 |   between the object types. Instead macros, or inline functions, | 
 | 107 |   should be created to convert from the generic object type. | 
 | 108 |  | 
 | 109 |  | 
 | 110 | #define to_pci_dev(n) container_of(n, struct pci_dev, dev) | 
 | 111 |  | 
 | 112 | or  | 
 | 113 |  | 
 | 114 | static inline struct pci_dev * to_pci_dev(struct kobject * kobj) | 
 | 115 | { | 
 | 116 | 	return container_of(n, struct pci_dev, dev); | 
 | 117 | } | 
 | 118 |  | 
 | 119 |   This allows the compiler to verify type-safety of the operations  | 
 | 120 |   that are performed (which is Good). | 
 | 121 |  | 
 | 122 |  | 
 | 123 | - Initialize the device on registration. | 
 | 124 |  | 
 | 125 |   When devices are discovered or registered with the bus type, the  | 
 | 126 |   bus driver should initialize the generic device. The most important | 
 | 127 |   things to initialize are the bus_id, parent, and bus fields. | 
 | 128 |  | 
 | 129 |   The bus_id is an ASCII string that contains the device's address on | 
 | 130 |   the bus. The format of this string is bus-specific. This is | 
 | 131 |   necessary for representing devices in sysfs.  | 
 | 132 |  | 
 | 133 |   parent is the physical parent of the device. It is important that | 
 | 134 |   the bus driver sets this field correctly.  | 
 | 135 |  | 
 | 136 |   The driver model maintains an ordered list of devices that it uses | 
 | 137 |   for power management. This list must be in order to guarantee that | 
 | 138 |   devices are shutdown before their physical parents, and vice versa. | 
 | 139 |   The order of this list is determined by the parent of registered | 
 | 140 |   devices. | 
 | 141 |  | 
 | 142 |   Also, the location of the device's sysfs directory depends on a | 
 | 143 |   device's parent. sysfs exports a directory structure that mirrors  | 
 | 144 |   the device hierarchy. Accurately setting the parent guarantees that | 
 | 145 |   sysfs will accurately represent the hierarchy. | 
 | 146 |  | 
 | 147 |   The device's bus field is a pointer to the bus type the device | 
 | 148 |   belongs to. This should be set to the bus_type that was declared | 
 | 149 |   and initialized before.  | 
 | 150 |  | 
 | 151 |   Optionally, the bus driver may set the device's name and release | 
 | 152 |   fields. | 
 | 153 |  | 
 | 154 |   The name field is an ASCII string describing the device, like | 
 | 155 |  | 
 | 156 |      "ATI Technologies Inc Radeon QD" | 
 | 157 |  | 
 | 158 |   The release field is a callback that the driver model core calls  | 
 | 159 |   when the device has been removed, and all references to it have  | 
 | 160 |   been released. More on this in a moment. | 
 | 161 |  | 
 | 162 |  | 
 | 163 | - Register the device.  | 
 | 164 |  | 
 | 165 |   Once the generic device has been initialized, it can be registered | 
 | 166 |   with the driver model core by doing: | 
 | 167 |  | 
 | 168 |        device_register(&dev->dev); | 
 | 169 |  | 
 | 170 |   It can later be unregistered by doing:  | 
 | 171 |  | 
 | 172 |        device_unregister(&dev->dev); | 
 | 173 |  | 
 | 174 |   This should happen on buses that support hotpluggable devices.  | 
 | 175 |   If a bus driver unregisters a device, it should not immediately free | 
 | 176 |   it. It should instead wait for the driver model core to call the  | 
 | 177 |   device's release method, then free the bus-specific object.  | 
 | 178 |   (There may be other code that is currently referencing the device | 
 | 179 |   structure, and it would be rude to free the device while that is  | 
 | 180 |   happening). | 
 | 181 |  | 
 | 182 |  | 
 | 183 |   When the device is registered, a directory in sysfs is created.  | 
 | 184 |   The PCI tree in sysfs looks like:  | 
 | 185 |  | 
 | 186 | /sys/devices/pci0/ | 
 | 187 | |-- 00:00.0 | 
 | 188 | |-- 00:01.0 | 
 | 189 | |   `-- 01:00.0 | 
 | 190 | |-- 00:02.0 | 
 | 191 | |   `-- 02:1f.0 | 
 | 192 | |       `-- 03:00.0 | 
 | 193 | |-- 00:1e.0 | 
 | 194 | |   `-- 04:04.0 | 
 | 195 | |-- 00:1f.0 | 
 | 196 | |-- 00:1f.1 | 
 | 197 | |   |-- ide0 | 
 | 198 | |   |   |-- 0.0 | 
 | 199 | |   |   `-- 0.1 | 
 | 200 | |   `-- ide1 | 
 | 201 | |       `-- 1.0 | 
 | 202 | |-- 00:1f.2 | 
 | 203 | |-- 00:1f.3 | 
 | 204 | `-- 00:1f.5 | 
 | 205 |  | 
 | 206 |   Also, symlinks are created in the bus's 'devices' directory | 
 | 207 |   that point to the device's directory in the physical hierarchy.  | 
 | 208 |  | 
 | 209 | /sys/bus/pci/devices/ | 
 | 210 | |-- 00:00.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:00.0 | 
 | 211 | |-- 00:01.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:01.0 | 
 | 212 | |-- 00:02.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:02.0 | 
 | 213 | |-- 00:1e.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1e.0 | 
 | 214 | |-- 00:1f.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1f.0 | 
 | 215 | |-- 00:1f.1 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1f.1 | 
 | 216 | |-- 00:1f.2 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1f.2 | 
 | 217 | |-- 00:1f.3 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1f.3 | 
 | 218 | |-- 00:1f.5 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1f.5 | 
 | 219 | |-- 01:00.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:01.0/01:00.0 | 
 | 220 | |-- 02:1f.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:02.0/02:1f.0 | 
 | 221 | |-- 03:00.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:02.0/02:1f.0/03:00.0 | 
 | 222 | `-- 04:04.0 -> ../../../devices/pci0/00:1e.0/04:04.0 | 
 | 223 |  | 
 | 224 |  | 
 | 225 |  | 
 | 226 | Step 3: Registering Drivers. | 
 | 227 |  | 
 | 228 | struct device_driver is a simple driver structure that contains a set | 
 | 229 | of operations that the driver model core may call.  | 
 | 230 |  | 
 | 231 |  | 
 | 232 | - Embed a struct device_driver in the bus-specific driver.  | 
 | 233 |  | 
 | 234 |   Just like with devices, do something like: | 
 | 235 |  | 
 | 236 | struct pci_driver { | 
 | 237 |        ... | 
 | 238 |        struct device_driver    driver; | 
 | 239 | }; | 
 | 240 |  | 
 | 241 |  | 
 | 242 | - Initialize the generic driver structure.  | 
 | 243 |  | 
 | 244 |   When the driver registers with the bus (e.g. doing pci_register_driver()), | 
 | 245 |   initialize the necessary fields of the driver: the name and bus | 
 | 246 |   fields.  | 
 | 247 |  | 
 | 248 |  | 
 | 249 | - Register the driver. | 
 | 250 |  | 
 | 251 |   After the generic driver has been initialized, call | 
 | 252 |  | 
 | 253 | 	driver_register(&drv->driver); | 
 | 254 |  | 
 | 255 |   to register the driver with the core. | 
 | 256 |  | 
 | 257 |   When the driver is unregistered from the bus, unregister it from the | 
 | 258 |   core by doing: | 
 | 259 |  | 
 | 260 |         driver_unregister(&drv->driver); | 
 | 261 |  | 
 | 262 |   Note that this will block until all references to the driver have | 
 | 263 |   gone away. Normally, there will not be any. | 
 | 264 |  | 
 | 265 |  | 
 | 266 | - Sysfs representation. | 
 | 267 |  | 
 | 268 |   Drivers are exported via sysfs in their bus's 'driver's directory.  | 
 | 269 |   For example: | 
 | 270 |  | 
 | 271 | /sys/bus/pci/drivers/ | 
 | 272 | |-- 3c59x | 
 | 273 | |-- Ensoniq AudioPCI | 
 | 274 | |-- agpgart-amdk7 | 
 | 275 | |-- e100 | 
 | 276 | `-- serial | 
 | 277 |  | 
 | 278 |  | 
 | 279 | Step 4: Define Generic Methods for Drivers. | 
 | 280 |  | 
 | 281 | struct device_driver defines a set of operations that the driver model | 
 | 282 | core calls. Most of these operations are probably similar to | 
 | 283 | operations the bus already defines for drivers, but taking different | 
 | 284 | parameters.  | 
 | 285 |  | 
 | 286 | It would be difficult and tedious to force every driver on a bus to | 
 | 287 | simultaneously convert their drivers to generic format. Instead, the | 
 | 288 | bus driver should define single instances of the generic methods that | 
 | 289 | forward call to the bus-specific drivers. For instance:  | 
 | 290 |  | 
 | 291 |  | 
 | 292 | static int pci_device_remove(struct device * dev) | 
 | 293 | { | 
 | 294 |         struct pci_dev * pci_dev = to_pci_dev(dev); | 
 | 295 |         struct pci_driver * drv = pci_dev->driver; | 
 | 296 |  | 
 | 297 |         if (drv) { | 
 | 298 |                 if (drv->remove) | 
 | 299 |                         drv->remove(pci_dev); | 
 | 300 |                 pci_dev->driver = NULL; | 
 | 301 |         } | 
 | 302 |         return 0; | 
 | 303 | } | 
 | 304 |  | 
 | 305 |  | 
 | 306 | The generic driver should be initialized with these methods before it | 
 | 307 | is registered.  | 
 | 308 |  | 
 | 309 |         /* initialize common driver fields */ | 
 | 310 |         drv->driver.name = drv->name; | 
 | 311 |         drv->driver.bus = &pci_bus_type; | 
 | 312 |         drv->driver.probe = pci_device_probe; | 
 | 313 |         drv->driver.resume = pci_device_resume; | 
 | 314 |         drv->driver.suspend = pci_device_suspend; | 
 | 315 |         drv->driver.remove = pci_device_remove; | 
 | 316 |  | 
 | 317 |         /* register with core */ | 
 | 318 |         driver_register(&drv->driver); | 
 | 319 |  | 
 | 320 |  | 
 | 321 | Ideally, the bus should only initialize the fields if they are not | 
 | 322 | already set. This allows the drivers to implement their own generic | 
 | 323 | methods.  | 
 | 324 |  | 
 | 325 |  | 
 | 326 | Step 5: Support generic driver binding.  | 
 | 327 |  | 
 | 328 | The model assumes that a device or driver can be dynamically | 
 | 329 | registered with the bus at any time. When registration happens, | 
 | 330 | devices must be bound to a driver, or drivers must be bound to all | 
 | 331 | devices that it supports.  | 
 | 332 |  | 
 | 333 | A driver typically contains a list of device IDs that it supports. The | 
 | 334 | bus driver compares these IDs to the IDs of devices registered with it.  | 
 | 335 | The format of the device IDs, and the semantics for comparing them are | 
 | 336 | bus-specific, so the generic model does attempt to generalize them.  | 
 | 337 |  | 
 | 338 | Instead, a bus may supply a method in struct bus_type that does the | 
 | 339 | comparison:  | 
 | 340 |  | 
 | 341 |   int (*match)(struct device * dev, struct device_driver * drv); | 
 | 342 |  | 
 | 343 | match should return '1' if the driver supports the device, and '0' | 
 | 344 | otherwise.  | 
 | 345 |  | 
 | 346 | When a device is registered, the bus's list of drivers is iterated | 
 | 347 | over. bus->match() is called for each one until a match is found.  | 
 | 348 |  | 
 | 349 | When a driver is registered, the bus's list of devices is iterated | 
 | 350 | over. bus->match() is called for each device that is not already | 
 | 351 | claimed by a driver.  | 
 | 352 |  | 
| Erik Hovland | 2a7ff1f | 2005-10-06 10:47:49 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 353 | When a device is successfully bound to a driver, device->driver is | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 354 | set, the device is added to a per-driver list of devices, and a | 
 | 355 | symlink is created in the driver's sysfs directory that points to the | 
 | 356 | device's physical directory: | 
 | 357 |  | 
 | 358 | /sys/bus/pci/drivers/ | 
 | 359 | |-- 3c59x | 
 | 360 | |   `-- 00:0b.0 -> ../../../../devices/pci0/00:0b.0 | 
 | 361 | |-- Ensoniq AudioPCI | 
 | 362 | |-- agpgart-amdk7 | 
 | 363 | |   `-- 00:00.0 -> ../../../../devices/pci0/00:00.0 | 
 | 364 | |-- e100 | 
 | 365 | |   `-- 00:0c.0 -> ../../../../devices/pci0/00:0c.0 | 
 | 366 | `-- serial | 
 | 367 |  | 
 | 368 |  | 
 | 369 | This driver binding should replace the existing driver binding | 
 | 370 | mechanism the bus currently uses.  | 
 | 371 |  | 
 | 372 |  | 
 | 373 | Step 6: Supply a hotplug callback. | 
 | 374 |  | 
 | 375 | Whenever a device is registered with the driver model core, the | 
 | 376 | userspace program /sbin/hotplug is called to notify userspace.  | 
 | 377 | Users can define actions to perform when a device is inserted or | 
 | 378 | removed.  | 
 | 379 |  | 
 | 380 | The driver model core passes several arguments to userspace via | 
 | 381 | environment variables, including | 
 | 382 |  | 
 | 383 | - ACTION: set to 'add' or 'remove' | 
 | 384 | - DEVPATH: set to the device's physical path in sysfs.  | 
 | 385 |  | 
 | 386 | A bus driver may also supply additional parameters for userspace to | 
 | 387 | consume. To do this, a bus must implement the 'hotplug' method in | 
 | 388 | struct bus_type: | 
 | 389 |  | 
 | 390 |      int (*hotplug) (struct device *dev, char **envp,  | 
 | 391 |                      int num_envp, char *buffer, int buffer_size); | 
 | 392 |  | 
 | 393 | This is called immediately before /sbin/hotplug is executed.  | 
 | 394 |  | 
 | 395 |  | 
 | 396 | Step 7: Cleaning up the bus driver. | 
 | 397 |  | 
 | 398 | The generic bus, device, and driver structures provide several fields | 
 | 399 | that can replace those defined privately to the bus driver.  | 
 | 400 |  | 
 | 401 | - Device list. | 
 | 402 |  | 
 | 403 | struct bus_type contains a list of all devices registered with the bus | 
 | 404 | type. This includes all devices on all instances of that bus type. | 
 | 405 | An internal list that the bus uses may be removed, in favor of using | 
 | 406 | this one. | 
 | 407 |  | 
 | 408 | The core provides an iterator to access these devices.  | 
 | 409 |  | 
 | 410 | int bus_for_each_dev(struct bus_type * bus, struct device * start,  | 
 | 411 |                      void * data, int (*fn)(struct device *, void *)); | 
 | 412 |  | 
 | 413 |  | 
 | 414 | - Driver list. | 
 | 415 |  | 
 | 416 | struct bus_type also contains a list of all drivers registered with | 
 | 417 | it. An internal list of drivers that the bus driver maintains may  | 
 | 418 | be removed in favor of using the generic one.  | 
 | 419 |  | 
 | 420 | The drivers may be iterated over, like devices:  | 
 | 421 |  | 
 | 422 | int bus_for_each_drv(struct bus_type * bus, struct device_driver * start, | 
 | 423 |                      void * data, int (*fn)(struct device_driver *, void *)); | 
 | 424 |  | 
 | 425 |  | 
 | 426 | Please see drivers/base/bus.c for more information. | 
 | 427 |  | 
 | 428 |  | 
 | 429 | - rwsem  | 
 | 430 |  | 
 | 431 | struct bus_type contains an rwsem that protects all core accesses to | 
 | 432 | the device and driver lists. This can be used by the bus driver | 
 | 433 | internally, and should be used when accessing the device or driver | 
 | 434 | lists the bus maintains.  | 
 | 435 |  | 
 | 436 |  | 
 | 437 | - Device and driver fields.  | 
 | 438 |  | 
 | 439 | Some of the fields in struct device and struct device_driver duplicate | 
 | 440 | fields in the bus-specific representations of these objects. Feel free | 
 | 441 | to remove the bus-specific ones and favor the generic ones. Note | 
 | 442 | though, that this will likely mean fixing up all the drivers that | 
 | 443 | reference the bus-specific fields (though those should all be 1-line | 
 | 444 | changes). | 
 | 445 |  |