linux-stable/include/linux/greybus/operation.h

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/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
2014-10-02 02:54:15 +00:00
/*
* Greybus operations
*
* Copyright 2014 Google Inc.
* Copyright 2014 Linaro Ltd.
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
2014-10-02 02:54:15 +00:00
*/
#ifndef __OPERATION_H
#define __OPERATION_H
#include <linux/completion.h>
staging: greybus: add missing includes Before moving greybus core out of staging and moving header files to include/linux some greybus header files were missing the necessary includes. This would trigger compilation faillures with some example errors logged bellow for with CONFIG_KERNEL_HEADER_TEST=y. So, add the necessary headers to compile clean before relocating the header files. ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:23:50: error: unknown type name 'u16' int (*cport_disable)(struct gb_host_device *hd, u16 cport_id); ^~~ ./include/linux/greybus/greybus_protocols.h:1314:2: error: unknown type name '__u8' __u8 data[0]; ^~~~ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:24:52: error: unknown type name 'u16' int (*cport_connected)(struct gb_host_device *hd, u16 cport_id); ^~~ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:25:48: error: unknown type name 'u16' int (*cport_flush)(struct gb_host_device *hd, u16 cport_id); ^~~ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:26:51: error: unknown type name 'u16' int (*cport_shutdown)(struct gb_host_device *hd, u16 cport_id, ^~~ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:27:5: error: unknown type name 'u8' u8 phase, unsigned int timeout); ^~ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:28:50: error: unknown type name 'u16' int (*cport_quiesce)(struct gb_host_device *hd, u16 cport_id, ^~~ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:29:5: error: unknown type name 'size_t' size_t peer_space, unsigned int timeout); ^~~~~~ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:29:5: note: 'size_t' is defined in header '<stddef.h>'; did you forget to '#include <stddef.h>'? ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:1:1: +#include <stddef.h> /* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:29:5: size_t peer_space, unsigned int timeout); ^~~~~~ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:30:48: error: unknown type name 'u16' int (*cport_clear)(struct gb_host_device *hd, u16 cport_id); ^~~ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:32:49: error: unknown type name 'u16' int (*message_send)(struct gb_host_device *hd, u16 dest_cport_id, ^~~ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:33:32: error: unknown type name 'gfp_t' struct gb_message *message, gfp_t gfp_mask); ^~~~~ ./include/linux/greybus/hd.h:35:55: error: unknown type name 'u16' int (*latency_tag_enable)(struct gb_host_device *hd, u16 cport_id); Reported-by: kbuild test robot <lkp@intel.com> Reported-by: Gao Xiang <hsiangkao@aol.com> Signed-off-by: Rui Miguel Silva <rmfrfs@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Rui Miguel Silva <rui.silva@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20190827155302.25704-1-rui.silva@linaro.org Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2019-08-27 15:53:02 +00:00
#include <linux/kref.h>
#include <linux/timer.h>
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/workqueue.h>
struct gb_host_device;
struct gb_operation;
/* The default amount of time a request is given to complete */
#define GB_OPERATION_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT 1000 /* milliseconds */
/*
* The top bit of the type in an operation message header indicates
* whether the message is a request (bit clear) or response (bit set)
*/
#define GB_MESSAGE_TYPE_RESPONSE ((u8)0x80)
enum gb_operation_result {
GB_OP_SUCCESS = 0x00,
GB_OP_INTERRUPTED = 0x01,
GB_OP_TIMEOUT = 0x02,
GB_OP_NO_MEMORY = 0x03,
GB_OP_PROTOCOL_BAD = 0x04,
GB_OP_OVERFLOW = 0x05,
GB_OP_INVALID = 0x06,
GB_OP_RETRY = 0x07,
GB_OP_NONEXISTENT = 0x08,
GB_OP_UNKNOWN_ERROR = 0xfe,
GB_OP_MALFUNCTION = 0xff,
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
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};
#define GB_OPERATION_MESSAGE_SIZE_MIN sizeof(struct gb_operation_msg_hdr)
#define GB_OPERATION_MESSAGE_SIZE_MAX U16_MAX
/*
* Protocol code should only examine the payload and payload_size fields, and
* host-controller drivers may use the hcpriv field. All other fields are
* intended to be private to the operations core code.
*/
struct gb_message {
struct gb_operation *operation;
struct gb_operation_msg_hdr *header;
void *payload;
size_t payload_size;
void *buffer;
void *hcpriv;
};
#define GB_OPERATION_FLAG_INCOMING BIT(0)
#define GB_OPERATION_FLAG_UNIDIRECTIONAL BIT(1)
#define GB_OPERATION_FLAG_SHORT_RESPONSE BIT(2)
#define GB_OPERATION_FLAG_CORE BIT(3)
#define GB_OPERATION_FLAG_USER_MASK (GB_OPERATION_FLAG_SHORT_RESPONSE | \
GB_OPERATION_FLAG_UNIDIRECTIONAL)
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
2014-10-02 02:54:15 +00:00
/*
* A Greybus operation is a remote procedure call performed over a
* connection between two UniPro interfaces.
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
2014-10-02 02:54:15 +00:00
*
* Every operation consists of a request message sent to the other
* end of the connection coupled with a reply message returned to
* the sender. Every operation has a type, whose interpretation is
* dependent on the protocol associated with the connection.
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
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*
* Only four things in an operation structure are intended to be
* directly usable by protocol handlers: the operation's connection
* pointer; the operation type; the request message payload (and
* size); and the response message payload (and size). Note that a
* message with a 0-byte payload has a null message payload pointer.
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
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*
* In addition, every operation has a result, which is an errno
* value. Protocol handlers access the operation result using
* gb_operation_result().
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
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*/
typedef void (*gb_operation_callback)(struct gb_operation *);
struct gb_operation {
struct gb_connection *connection;
struct gb_message *request;
struct gb_message *response;
unsigned long flags;
u8 type;
u16 id;
int errno; /* Operation result */
struct work_struct work;
gb_operation_callback callback;
struct completion completion;
struct timer_list timer;
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
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struct kref kref;
atomic_t waiters;
int active;
struct list_head links; /* connection->operations */
void *private;
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
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};
static inline bool
gb_operation_is_incoming(struct gb_operation *operation)
{
return operation->flags & GB_OPERATION_FLAG_INCOMING;
}
static inline bool
gb_operation_is_unidirectional(struct gb_operation *operation)
{
return operation->flags & GB_OPERATION_FLAG_UNIDIRECTIONAL;
}
static inline bool
gb_operation_short_response_allowed(struct gb_operation *operation)
{
return operation->flags & GB_OPERATION_FLAG_SHORT_RESPONSE;
}
static inline bool gb_operation_is_core(struct gb_operation *operation)
{
return operation->flags & GB_OPERATION_FLAG_CORE;
}
void gb_connection_recv(struct gb_connection *connection,
void *data, size_t size);
int gb_operation_result(struct gb_operation *operation);
size_t gb_operation_get_payload_size_max(struct gb_connection *connection);
struct gb_operation *
gb_operation_create_flags(struct gb_connection *connection,
u8 type, size_t request_size,
size_t response_size, unsigned long flags,
gfp_t gfp);
static inline struct gb_operation *
gb_operation_create(struct gb_connection *connection,
u8 type, size_t request_size,
size_t response_size, gfp_t gfp)
{
return gb_operation_create_flags(connection, type, request_size,
response_size, 0, gfp);
}
struct gb_operation *
gb_operation_create_core(struct gb_connection *connection,
u8 type, size_t request_size,
size_t response_size, unsigned long flags,
gfp_t gfp);
void gb_operation_get(struct gb_operation *operation);
void gb_operation_put(struct gb_operation *operation);
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
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bool gb_operation_response_alloc(struct gb_operation *operation,
size_t response_size, gfp_t gfp);
int gb_operation_request_send(struct gb_operation *operation,
gb_operation_callback callback,
unsigned int timeout,
gfp_t gfp);
int gb_operation_request_send_sync_timeout(struct gb_operation *operation,
unsigned int timeout);
static inline int
gb_operation_request_send_sync(struct gb_operation *operation)
{
return gb_operation_request_send_sync_timeout(operation,
GB_OPERATION_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT);
}
void gb_operation_cancel(struct gb_operation *operation, int errno);
void gb_operation_cancel_incoming(struct gb_operation *operation, int errno);
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
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void greybus_message_sent(struct gb_host_device *hd,
struct gb_message *message, int status);
int gb_operation_sync_timeout(struct gb_connection *connection, int type,
void *request, int request_size,
void *response, int response_size,
unsigned int timeout);
int gb_operation_unidirectional_timeout(struct gb_connection *connection,
int type, void *request, int request_size,
unsigned int timeout);
static inline int gb_operation_sync(struct gb_connection *connection, int type,
void *request, int request_size,
void *response, int response_size)
{
return gb_operation_sync_timeout(connection, type,
request, request_size, response, response_size,
GB_OPERATION_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT);
}
static inline int gb_operation_unidirectional(struct gb_connection *connection,
int type, void *request, int request_size)
{
return gb_operation_unidirectional_timeout(connection, type,
request, request_size, GB_OPERATION_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT);
}
static inline void *gb_operation_get_data(struct gb_operation *operation)
{
return operation->private;
}
static inline void gb_operation_set_data(struct gb_operation *operation,
void *data)
{
operation->private = data;
}
int gb_operation_init(void);
void gb_operation_exit(void);
greybus: introduce an operation abstraction This patch defines a new "operation" abstraction. An operation is a request from by one end of a connection to the function (or AP) on the other, coupled with a matching response returned to the requestor. The request indicates some action to be performed by the target of the request (such as "read some data"). Once the action has completed the target sends back an operation response message. Additional data can be supplied by the sender with its request, and/or by the target with its resposne message. Each request message has a unique id, generated by the sender. The sender recognizes the matching response by the presence of this id value. Each end of a connection is responsible for creating unique ids for the requests it sends. An operation also has a type, whose interpretation is dependent on the function type on the end of the connection opposite the sender. It is up to the creator of an operation to fill in the data (if any) to be sent with the request. Note that not all requests are initiated by the AP. Incoming data on a module function can result in a request message being sent from that function to the AP to notify of the data's arrival. Once the AP has processed this, it sends a response to the sender. Every operation response contains a status byte. If it's value is 0, the operation was successful. Any other value indicates an error. Add a defintion of U16_MAX to "kernel_ver.h". Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>
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#endif /* !__OPERATION_H */