linux-stable/include/linux/mfd/cros_ec.h
Vic Yang b2376407f9 mfd: cros-ec: Fix host command buffer size
For SPI, we can get up to 32 additional bytes for response preamble.
The current overhead (2 bytes) may cause problems when we try to receive
a big response. Update it to 32 bytes.

Without this fix we could see a kernel BUG when we receive a big response
from the Chrome EC when is connected via SPI.

Signed-off-by: Vic Yang <victoryang@google.com>
Tested-by: Enric Balletbo i Serra <enric.balletbo.collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Lee Jones <lee.jones@linaro.org>
2017-04-05 13:30:07 +01:00

308 lines
9.3 KiB
C

/*
* ChromeOS EC multi-function device
*
* Copyright (C) 2012 Google, Inc
*
* This software is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public
* License version 2, as published by the Free Software Foundation, and
* may be copied, distributed, and modified under those terms.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that 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 __LINUX_MFD_CROS_EC_H
#define __LINUX_MFD_CROS_EC_H
#include <linux/cdev.h>
#include <linux/device.h>
#include <linux/notifier.h>
#include <linux/mfd/cros_ec_commands.h>
#include <linux/mutex.h>
#define CROS_EC_DEV_NAME "cros_ec"
#define CROS_EC_DEV_PD_NAME "cros_pd"
/*
* The EC is unresponsive for a time after a reboot command. Add a
* simple delay to make sure that the bus stays locked.
*/
#define EC_REBOOT_DELAY_MS 50
/*
* Max bus-specific overhead incurred by request/responses.
* I2C requires 1 additional byte for requests.
* I2C requires 2 additional bytes for responses.
* SPI requires up to 32 additional bytes for responses.
* */
#define EC_PROTO_VERSION_UNKNOWN 0
#define EC_MAX_REQUEST_OVERHEAD 1
#define EC_MAX_RESPONSE_OVERHEAD 32
/*
* Command interface between EC and AP, for LPC, I2C and SPI interfaces.
*/
enum {
EC_MSG_TX_HEADER_BYTES = 3,
EC_MSG_TX_TRAILER_BYTES = 1,
EC_MSG_TX_PROTO_BYTES = EC_MSG_TX_HEADER_BYTES +
EC_MSG_TX_TRAILER_BYTES,
EC_MSG_RX_PROTO_BYTES = 3,
/* Max length of messages for proto 2*/
EC_PROTO2_MSG_BYTES = EC_PROTO2_MAX_PARAM_SIZE +
EC_MSG_TX_PROTO_BYTES,
EC_MAX_MSG_BYTES = 64 * 1024,
};
/*
* @version: Command version number (often 0)
* @command: Command to send (EC_CMD_...)
* @outsize: Outgoing length in bytes
* @insize: Max number of bytes to accept from EC
* @result: EC's response to the command (separate from communication failure)
* @data: Where to put the incoming data from EC and outgoing data to EC
*/
struct cros_ec_command {
uint32_t version;
uint32_t command;
uint32_t outsize;
uint32_t insize;
uint32_t result;
uint8_t data[0];
};
/**
* struct cros_ec_device - Information about a ChromeOS EC device
*
* @phys_name: name of physical comms layer (e.g. 'i2c-4')
* @dev: Device pointer for physical comms device
* @was_wake_device: true if this device was set to wake the system from
* sleep at the last suspend
* @cmd_readmem: direct read of the EC memory-mapped region, if supported
* @offset is within EC_LPC_ADDR_MEMMAP region.
* @bytes: number of bytes to read. zero means "read a string" (including
* the trailing '\0'). At most only EC_MEMMAP_SIZE bytes can be read.
* Caller must ensure that the buffer is large enough for the result when
* reading a string.
*
* @priv: Private data
* @irq: Interrupt to use
* @id: Device id
* @din: input buffer (for data from EC)
* @dout: output buffer (for data to EC)
* \note
* These two buffers will always be dword-aligned and include enough
* space for up to 7 word-alignment bytes also, so we can ensure that
* the body of the message is always dword-aligned (64-bit).
* We use this alignment to keep ARM and x86 happy. Probably word
* alignment would be OK, there might be a small performance advantage
* to using dword.
* @din_size: size of din buffer to allocate (zero to use static din)
* @dout_size: size of dout buffer to allocate (zero to use static dout)
* @wake_enabled: true if this device can wake the system from sleep
* @suspended: true if this device had been suspended
* @cmd_xfer: send command to EC and get response
* Returns the number of bytes received if the communication succeeded, but
* that doesn't mean the EC was happy with the command. The caller
* should check msg.result for the EC's result code.
* @pkt_xfer: send packet to EC and get response
* @lock: one transaction at a time
* @mkbp_event_supported: true if this EC supports the MKBP event protocol.
* @event_notifier: interrupt event notifier for transport devices.
* @event_data: raw payload transferred with the MKBP event.
* @event_size: size in bytes of the event data.
*/
struct cros_ec_device {
/* These are used by other drivers that want to talk to the EC */
const char *phys_name;
struct device *dev;
bool was_wake_device;
struct class *cros_class;
int (*cmd_readmem)(struct cros_ec_device *ec, unsigned int offset,
unsigned int bytes, void *dest);
/* These are used to implement the platform-specific interface */
u16 max_request;
u16 max_response;
u16 max_passthru;
u16 proto_version;
void *priv;
int irq;
u8 *din;
u8 *dout;
int din_size;
int dout_size;
bool wake_enabled;
bool suspended;
int (*cmd_xfer)(struct cros_ec_device *ec,
struct cros_ec_command *msg);
int (*pkt_xfer)(struct cros_ec_device *ec,
struct cros_ec_command *msg);
struct mutex lock;
bool mkbp_event_supported;
struct blocking_notifier_head event_notifier;
struct ec_response_get_next_event event_data;
int event_size;
};
/**
* struct cros_ec_sensor_platform - ChromeOS EC sensor platform information
*
* @sensor_num: Id of the sensor, as reported by the EC.
*/
struct cros_ec_sensor_platform {
u8 sensor_num;
};
/* struct cros_ec_platform - ChromeOS EC platform information
*
* @ec_name: name of EC device (e.g. 'cros-ec', 'cros-pd', ...)
* used in /dev/ and sysfs.
* @cmd_offset: offset to apply for each command. Set when
* registering a devicde behind another one.
*/
struct cros_ec_platform {
const char *ec_name;
u16 cmd_offset;
};
/*
* struct cros_ec_dev - ChromeOS EC device entry point
*
* @class_dev: Device structure used in sysfs
* @cdev: Character device structure in /dev
* @ec_dev: cros_ec_device structure to talk to the physical device
* @dev: pointer to the platform device
* @cmd_offset: offset to apply for each command.
*/
struct cros_ec_dev {
struct device class_dev;
struct cdev cdev;
struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev;
struct device *dev;
u16 cmd_offset;
u32 features[2];
};
/**
* cros_ec_suspend - Handle a suspend operation for the ChromeOS EC device
*
* This can be called by drivers to handle a suspend event.
*
* ec_dev: Device to suspend
* @return 0 if ok, -ve on error
*/
int cros_ec_suspend(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev);
/**
* cros_ec_resume - Handle a resume operation for the ChromeOS EC device
*
* This can be called by drivers to handle a resume event.
*
* @ec_dev: Device to resume
* @return 0 if ok, -ve on error
*/
int cros_ec_resume(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev);
/**
* cros_ec_prepare_tx - Prepare an outgoing message in the output buffer
*
* This is intended to be used by all ChromeOS EC drivers, but at present
* only SPI uses it. Once LPC uses the same protocol it can start using it.
* I2C could use it now, with a refactor of the existing code.
*
* @ec_dev: Device to register
* @msg: Message to write
*/
int cros_ec_prepare_tx(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev,
struct cros_ec_command *msg);
/**
* cros_ec_check_result - Check ec_msg->result
*
* This is used by ChromeOS EC drivers to check the ec_msg->result for
* errors and to warn about them.
*
* @ec_dev: EC device
* @msg: Message to check
*/
int cros_ec_check_result(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev,
struct cros_ec_command *msg);
/**
* cros_ec_cmd_xfer - Send a command to the ChromeOS EC
*
* Call this to send a command to the ChromeOS EC. This should be used
* instead of calling the EC's cmd_xfer() callback directly.
*
* @ec_dev: EC device
* @msg: Message to write
*/
int cros_ec_cmd_xfer(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev,
struct cros_ec_command *msg);
/**
* cros_ec_cmd_xfer_status - Send a command to the ChromeOS EC
*
* This function is identical to cros_ec_cmd_xfer, except it returns success
* status only if both the command was transmitted successfully and the EC
* replied with success status. It's not necessary to check msg->result when
* using this function.
*
* @ec_dev: EC device
* @msg: Message to write
* @return: Num. of bytes transferred on success, <0 on failure
*/
int cros_ec_cmd_xfer_status(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev,
struct cros_ec_command *msg);
/**
* cros_ec_remove - Remove a ChromeOS EC
*
* Call this to deregister a ChromeOS EC, then clean up any private data.
*
* @ec_dev: Device to register
* @return 0 if ok, -ve on error
*/
int cros_ec_remove(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev);
/**
* cros_ec_register - Register a new ChromeOS EC, using the provided info
*
* Before calling this, allocate a pointer to a new device and then fill
* in all the fields up to the --private-- marker.
*
* @ec_dev: Device to register
* @return 0 if ok, -ve on error
*/
int cros_ec_register(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev);
/**
* cros_ec_query_all - Query the protocol version supported by the ChromeOS EC
*
* @ec_dev: Device to register
* @return 0 if ok, -ve on error
*/
int cros_ec_query_all(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev);
/**
* cros_ec_get_next_event - Fetch next event from the ChromeOS EC
*
* @ec_dev: Device to fetch event from
*
* Returns: 0 on success, Linux error number on failure
*/
int cros_ec_get_next_event(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev);
/* sysfs stuff */
extern struct attribute_group cros_ec_attr_group;
extern struct attribute_group cros_ec_lightbar_attr_group;
extern struct attribute_group cros_ec_vbc_attr_group;
#endif /* __LINUX_MFD_CROS_EC_H */