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The :doc:`foo` tag is auto-generated via automarkup.py. So, use the filename at the sources, instead of :doc:`foo`. Acked-by: Maximilian Luz <luzmaximilian@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+huawei@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/6097027b4de4c9015485cb73b297b98660c4296d.1623824363.git.mchehab+huawei@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
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3.9 KiB
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79 lines
3.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
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========
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Overview
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========
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The Surface/System Aggregator Module (SAM, SSAM) is an (arguably *the*)
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embedded controller (EC) on Microsoft Surface devices. It has been originally
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introduced on 4th generation devices (Surface Pro 4, Surface Book 1), but
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its responsibilities and feature-set have since been expanded significantly
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with the following generations.
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Features and Integration
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========================
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Not much is currently known about SAM on 4th generation devices (Surface Pro
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4, Surface Book 1), due to the use of a different communication interface
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between host and EC (as detailed below). On 5th (Surface Pro 2017, Surface
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Book 2, Surface Laptop 1) and later generation devices, SAM is responsible
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for providing battery information (both current status and static values,
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such as maximum capacity etc.), as well as an assortment of temperature
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sensors (e.g. skin temperature) and cooling/performance-mode setting to the
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host. On the Surface Book 2, specifically, it additionally provides an
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interface for properly handling clipboard detachment (i.e. separating the
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display part from the keyboard part of the device), on the Surface Laptop 1
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and 2 it is required for keyboard HID input. This HID subsystem has been
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restructured for 7th generation devices and on those, specifically Surface
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Laptop 3 and Surface Book 3, is responsible for all major HID input (i.e.
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keyboard and touchpad).
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While features have not changed much on a coarse level since the 5th
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generation, internal interfaces have undergone some rather large changes. On
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5th and 6th generation devices, both battery and temperature information is
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exposed to ACPI via a shim driver (referred to as Surface ACPI Notify, or
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SAN), translating ACPI generic serial bus write-/read-accesses to SAM
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requests. On 7th generation devices, this additional layer is gone and these
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devices require a driver hooking directly into the SAM interface. Equally,
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on newer generations, less devices are declared in ACPI, making them a bit
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harder to discover and requiring us to hard-code a sort of device registry.
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Due to this, a SSAM bus and subsystem with client devices
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(:c:type:`struct ssam_device <ssam_device>`) has been implemented.
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Communication
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=============
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The type of communication interface between host and EC depends on the
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generation of the Surface device. On 4th generation devices, host and EC
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communicate via HID, specifically using a HID-over-I2C device, whereas on
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5th and later generations, communication takes place via a USART serial
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device. In accordance to the drivers found on other operating systems, we
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refer to the serial device and its driver as Surface Serial Hub (SSH). When
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needed, we differentiate between both types of SAM by referring to them as
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SAM-over-SSH and SAM-over-HID.
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Currently, this subsystem only supports SAM-over-SSH. The SSH communication
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interface is described in more detail below. The HID interface has not been
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reverse engineered yet and it is, at the moment, unclear how many (and
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which) concepts of the SSH interface detailed below can be transferred to
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it.
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Surface Serial Hub
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------------------
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As already elaborated above, the Surface Serial Hub (SSH) is the
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communication interface for SAM on 5th- and all later-generation Surface
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devices. On the highest level, communication can be separated into two main
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types: Requests, messages sent from host to EC that may trigger a direct
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response from the EC (explicitly associated with the request), and events
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(sometimes also referred to as notifications), sent from EC to host without
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being a direct response to a previous request. We may also refer to requests
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without response as commands. In general, events need to be enabled via one
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of multiple dedicated requests before they are sent by the EC.
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See Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/ssh.rst for a
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more technical protocol documentation and
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Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/internal.rst for an
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overview of the internal driver architecture.
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