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1
2Device Drivers
3
63dc355a 4See the kerneldoc for the struct device_driver.
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5
6
7Allocation
8~~~~~~~~~~
9
10Device drivers are statically allocated structures. Though there may
11be multiple devices in a system that a driver supports, struct
12device_driver represents the driver as a whole (not a particular
13device instance).
14
15Initialization
16~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
17
18The driver must initialize at least the name and bus fields. It should
19also initialize the devclass field (when it arrives), so it may obtain
20the proper linkage internally. It should also initialize as many of
21the callbacks as possible, though each is optional.
22
23Declaration
24~~~~~~~~~~~
25
26As stated above, struct device_driver objects are statically
27allocated. Below is an example declaration of the eepro100
28driver. This declaration is hypothetical only; it relies on the driver
29being converted completely to the new model.
30
31static struct device_driver eepro100_driver = {
32 .name = "eepro100",
33 .bus = &pci_bus_type,
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34
35 .probe = eepro100_probe,
36 .remove = eepro100_remove,
37 .suspend = eepro100_suspend,
38 .resume = eepro100_resume,
39};
40
41Most drivers will not be able to be converted completely to the new
42model because the bus they belong to has a bus-specific structure with
43bus-specific fields that cannot be generalized.
44
45The most common example of this are device ID structures. A driver
46typically defines an array of device IDs that it supports. The format
47of these structures and the semantics for comparing device IDs are
48completely bus-specific. Defining them as bus-specific entities would
49sacrifice type-safety, so we keep bus-specific structures around.
50
51Bus-specific drivers should include a generic struct device_driver in
52the definition of the bus-specific driver. Like this:
53
54struct pci_driver {
55 const struct pci_device_id *id_table;
56 struct device_driver driver;
57};
58
59A definition that included bus-specific fields would look like
60(using the eepro100 driver again):
61
62static struct pci_driver eepro100_driver = {
63 .id_table = eepro100_pci_tbl,
64 .driver = {
65 .name = "eepro100",
66 .bus = &pci_bus_type,
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67 .probe = eepro100_probe,
68 .remove = eepro100_remove,
69 .suspend = eepro100_suspend,
70 .resume = eepro100_resume,
71 },
72};
73
74Some may find the syntax of embedded struct initialization awkward or
75even a bit ugly. So far, it's the best way we've found to do what we want...
76
77Registration
78~~~~~~~~~~~~
79
80int driver_register(struct device_driver * drv);
81
82The driver registers the structure on startup. For drivers that have
83no bus-specific fields (i.e. don't have a bus-specific driver
84structure), they would use driver_register and pass a pointer to their
85struct device_driver object.
86
87Most drivers, however, will have a bus-specific structure and will
88need to register with the bus using something like pci_driver_register.
89
90It is important that drivers register their driver structure as early as
91possible. Registration with the core initializes several fields in the
92struct device_driver object, including the reference count and the
93lock. These fields are assumed to be valid at all times and may be
94used by the device model core or the bus driver.
95
96
97Transition Bus Drivers
98~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
99
100By defining wrapper functions, the transition to the new model can be
101made easier. Drivers can ignore the generic structure altogether and
102let the bus wrapper fill in the fields. For the callbacks, the bus can
103define generic callbacks that forward the call to the bus-specific
104callbacks of the drivers.
105
106This solution is intended to be only temporary. In order to get class
107information in the driver, the drivers must be modified anyway. Since
108converting drivers to the new model should reduce some infrastructural
109complexity and code size, it is recommended that they are converted as
110class information is added.
111
112Access
113~~~~~~
114
115Once the object has been registered, it may access the common fields of
116the object, like the lock and the list of devices.
117
118int driver_for_each_dev(struct device_driver * drv, void * data,
119 int (*callback)(struct device * dev, void * data));
120
121The devices field is a list of all the devices that have been bound to
122the driver. The LDM core provides a helper function to operate on all
123the devices a driver controls. This helper locks the driver on each
124node access, and does proper reference counting on each device as it
125accesses it.
126
127
128sysfs
129~~~~~
130
131When a driver is registered, a sysfs directory is created in its
132bus's directory. In this directory, the driver can export an interface
133to userspace to control operation of the driver on a global basis;
134e.g. toggling debugging output in the driver.
135
136A future feature of this directory will be a 'devices' directory. This
137directory will contain symlinks to the directories of devices it
138supports.
139
140
141
142Callbacks
143~~~~~~~~~
144
145 int (*probe) (struct device * dev);
146
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147The probe() entry is called in task context, with the bus's rwsem locked
148and the driver partially bound to the device. Drivers commonly use
149container_of() to convert "dev" to a bus-specific type, both in probe()
150and other routines. That type often provides device resource data, such
151as pci_dev.resource[] or platform_device.resources, which is used in
152addition to dev->platform_data to initialize the driver.
153
154This callback holds the driver-specific logic to bind the driver to a
155given device. That includes verifying that the device is present, that
156it's a version the driver can handle, that driver data structures can
157be allocated and initialized, and that any hardware can be initialized.
158Drivers often store a pointer to their state with dev_set_drvdata().
159When the driver has successfully bound itself to that device, then probe()
160returns zero and the driver model code will finish its part of binding
161the driver to that device.
162
163A driver's probe() may return a negative errno value to indicate that
164the driver did not bind to this device, in which case it should have
d6bc8ac9 165released all resources it allocated.
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166
167 int (*remove) (struct device * dev);
168
4109aca0 169remove is called to unbind a driver from a device. This may be
1da177e4 170called if a device is physically removed from the system, if the
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171driver module is being unloaded, during a reboot sequence, or
172in other cases.
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173
174It is up to the driver to determine if the device is present or
175not. It should free any resources allocated specifically for the
176device; i.e. anything in the device's driver_data field.
177
178If the device is still present, it should quiesce the device and place
179it into a supported low-power state.
180
1a222bca 181 int (*suspend) (struct device * dev, pm_message_t state);
1da177e4 182
9480e307 183suspend is called to put the device in a low power state.
1da177e4 184
1a222bca 185 int (*resume) (struct device * dev);
1da177e4 186
9480e307 187Resume is used to bring a device back from a low power state.
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188
189
190Attributes
191~~~~~~~~~~
192struct driver_attribute {
193 struct attribute attr;
909662e1 194 ssize_t (*show)(struct device_driver *driver, char *buf);
195 ssize_t (*store)(struct device_driver *, const char * buf, size_t count);
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196};
197
198Device drivers can export attributes via their sysfs directories.
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199Drivers can declare attributes using a DRIVER_ATTR_RW and DRIVER_ATTR_RO
200macro that works identically to the DEVICE_ATTR_RW and DEVICE_ATTR_RO
201macros.
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202
203Example:
204
850fdec8 205DRIVER_ATTR_RW(debug);
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206
207This is equivalent to declaring:
208
209struct driver_attribute driver_attr_debug;
210
211This can then be used to add and remove the attribute from the
212driver's directory using:
213
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214int driver_create_file(struct device_driver *, const struct driver_attribute *);
215void driver_remove_file(struct device_driver *, const struct driver_attribute *);