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1I2C topology
2============
3
4There are a couple of reasons for building more complex i2c topologies
5than a straight-forward i2c bus with one adapter and one or more devices.
6
71. A mux may be needed on the bus to prevent address collisions.
8
92. The bus may be accessible from some external bus master, and arbitration
10 may be needed to determine if it is ok to access the bus.
11
123. A device (particularly RF tuners) may want to avoid the digital noise
13 from the i2c bus, at least most of the time, and sits behind a gate
14 that has to be operated before the device can be accessed.
15
16Etc
17
18These constructs are represented as i2c adapter trees by Linux, where
19each adapter has a parent adapter (except the root adapter) and zero or
20more child adapters. The root adapter is the actual adapter that issues
21i2c transfers, and all adapters with a parent are part of an "i2c-mux"
22object (quoted, since it can also be an arbitrator or a gate).
23
24Depending of the particular mux driver, something happens when there is
25an i2c transfer on one of its child adapters. The mux driver can
26obviously operate a mux, but it can also do arbitration with an external
27bus master or open a gate. The mux driver has two operations for this,
28select and deselect. select is called before the transfer and (the
29optional) deselect is called after the transfer.
30
31
32Locking
33=======
34
35There are two variants of locking available to i2c muxes, they can be
36mux-locked or parent-locked muxes. As is evident from below, it can be
37useful to know if a mux is mux-locked or if it is parent-locked. The
38following list was correct at the time of writing:
39
40In drivers/i2c/muxes/
41i2c-arb-gpio-challenge Parent-locked
42i2c-mux-gpio Normally parent-locked, mux-locked iff
43 all involved gpio pins are controlled by the
44 same i2c root adapter that they mux.
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45i2c-mux-gpmux Normally parent-locked, mux-locked iff
46 specified in device-tree.
47i2c-mux-ltc4306 Mux-locked
48i2c-mux-mlxcpld Parent-locked
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49i2c-mux-pca9541 Parent-locked
50i2c-mux-pca954x Parent-locked
51i2c-mux-pinctrl Normally parent-locked, mux-locked iff
52 all involved pinctrl devices are controlled
53 by the same i2c root adapter that they mux.
54i2c-mux-reg Parent-locked
55
56In drivers/iio/
234fa0ad 57gyro/mpu3050 Mux-locked
1ffcfaf1 58imu/inv_mpu6050/ Mux-locked
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59
60In drivers/media/
234fa0ad 61dvb-frontends/lgdt3306a Mux-locked
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62dvb-frontends/m88ds3103 Parent-locked
63dvb-frontends/rtl2830 Parent-locked
1cf79db2 64dvb-frontends/rtl2832 Mux-locked
e6d7ffcd 65dvb-frontends/si2168 Mux-locked
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66usb/cx231xx/ Parent-locked
67
68
69Mux-locked muxes
70----------------
71
72Mux-locked muxes does not lock the entire parent adapter during the
73full select-transfer-deselect transaction, only the muxes on the parent
74adapter are locked. Mux-locked muxes are mostly interesting if the
75select and/or deselect operations must use i2c transfers to complete
76their tasks. Since the parent adapter is not fully locked during the
77full transaction, unrelated i2c transfers may interleave the different
78stages of the transaction. This has the benefit that the mux driver
79may be easier and cleaner to implement, but it has some caveats.
80
81ML1. If you build a topology with a mux-locked mux being the parent
82 of a parent-locked mux, this might break the expectation from the
83 parent-locked mux that the root adapter is locked during the
84 transaction.
85
86ML2. It is not safe to build arbitrary topologies with two (or more)
87 mux-locked muxes that are not siblings, when there are address
88 collisions between the devices on the child adapters of these
89 non-sibling muxes.
90
91 I.e. the select-transfer-deselect transaction targeting e.g. device
92 address 0x42 behind mux-one may be interleaved with a similar
93 operation targeting device address 0x42 behind mux-two. The
94 intension with such a topology would in this hypothetical example
95 be that mux-one and mux-two should not be selected simultaneously,
96 but mux-locked muxes do not guarantee that in all topologies.
97
98ML3. A mux-locked mux cannot be used by a driver for auto-closing
99 gates/muxes, i.e. something that closes automatically after a given
100 number (one, in most cases) of i2c transfers. Unrelated i2c transfers
101 may creep in and close prematurely.
102
103ML4. If any non-i2c operation in the mux driver changes the i2c mux state,
104 the driver has to lock the root adapter during that operation.
105 Otherwise garbage may appear on the bus as seen from devices
106 behind the mux, when an unrelated i2c transfer is in flight during
107 the non-i2c mux-changing operation.
108
109
110Mux-locked Example
111------------------
112
113 .----------. .--------.
114 .--------. | mux- |-----| dev D1 |
115 | root |--+--| locked | '--------'
116 '--------' | | mux M1 |--. .--------.
117 | '----------' '--| dev D2 |
118 | .--------. '--------'
119 '--| dev D3 |
120 '--------'
121
122When there is an access to D1, this happens:
123
124 1. Someone issues an i2c-transfer to D1.
125 2. M1 locks muxes on its parent (the root adapter in this case).
126 3. M1 calls ->select to ready the mux.
127 4. M1 (presumably) does some i2c-transfers as part of its select.
128 These transfers are normal i2c-transfers that locks the parent
129 adapter.
130 5. M1 feeds the i2c-transfer from step 1 to its parent adapter as a
131 normal i2c-transfer that locks the parent adapter.
132 6. M1 calls ->deselect, if it has one.
133 7. Same rules as in step 4, but for ->deselect.
134 8. M1 unlocks muxes on its parent.
135
136This means that accesses to D2 are lockout out for the full duration
137of the entire operation. But accesses to D3 are possibly interleaved
138at any point.
139
140
141Parent-locked muxes
142-------------------
143
144Parent-locked muxes lock the parent adapter during the full select-
145transfer-deselect transaction. The implication is that the mux driver
146has to ensure that any and all i2c transfers through that parent
147adapter during the transaction are unlocked i2c transfers (using e.g.
148__i2c_transfer), or a deadlock will follow. There are a couple of
149caveats.
150
151PL1. If you build a topology with a parent-locked mux being the child
152 of another mux, this might break a possible assumption from the
153 child mux that the root adapter is unused between its select op
154 and the actual transfer (e.g. if the child mux is auto-closing
155 and the parent mux issus i2c-transfers as part of its select).
156 This is especially the case if the parent mux is mux-locked, but
157 it may also happen if the parent mux is parent-locked.
158
159PL2. If select/deselect calls out to other subsystems such as gpio,
160 pinctrl, regmap or iio, it is essential that any i2c transfers
161 caused by these subsystems are unlocked. This can be convoluted to
162 accomplish, maybe even impossible if an acceptably clean solution
163 is sought.
164
165
166Parent-locked Example
167---------------------
168
169 .----------. .--------.
170 .--------. | parent- |-----| dev D1 |
171 | root |--+--| locked | '--------'
172 '--------' | | mux M1 |--. .--------.
173 | '----------' '--| dev D2 |
174 | .--------. '--------'
175 '--| dev D3 |
176 '--------'
177
178When there is an access to D1, this happens:
179
180 1. Someone issues an i2c-transfer to D1.
181 2. M1 locks muxes on its parent (the root adapter in this case).
182 3. M1 locks its parent adapter.
183 4. M1 calls ->select to ready the mux.
184 5. If M1 does any i2c-transfers (on this root adapter) as part of
185 its select, those transfers must be unlocked i2c-transfers so
186 that they do not deadlock the root adapter.
187 6. M1 feeds the i2c-transfer from step 1 to the root adapter as an
188 unlocked i2c-transfer, so that it does not deadlock the parent
189 adapter.
190 7. M1 calls ->deselect, if it has one.
191 8. Same rules as in step 5, but for ->deselect.
192 9. M1 unlocks its parent adapter.
19310. M1 unlocks muxes on its parent.
194
195
196This means that accesses to both D2 and D3 are locked out for the full
197duration of the entire operation.
198
199
200Complex Examples
201================
202
203Parent-locked mux as parent of parent-locked mux
204------------------------------------------------
205
206This is a useful topology, but it can be bad.
207
208 .----------. .----------. .--------.
209 .--------. | parent- |-----| parent- |-----| dev D1 |
210 | root |--+--| locked | | locked | '--------'
211 '--------' | | mux M1 |--. | mux M2 |--. .--------.
212 | '----------' | '----------' '--| dev D2 |
213 | .--------. | .--------. '--------'
214 '--| dev D4 | '--| dev D3 |
215 '--------' '--------'
216
217When any device is accessed, all other devices are locked out for
218the full duration of the operation (both muxes lock their parent,
219and specifically when M2 requests its parent to lock, M1 passes
220the buck to the root adapter).
221
222This topology is bad if M2 is an auto-closing mux and M1->select
223issues any unlocked i2c transfers on the root adapter that may leak
224through and be seen by the M2 adapter, thus closing M2 prematurely.
225
226
227Mux-locked mux as parent of mux-locked mux
228------------------------------------------
229
230This is a good topology.
231
232 .----------. .----------. .--------.
233 .--------. | mux- |-----| mux- |-----| dev D1 |
234 | root |--+--| locked | | locked | '--------'
235 '--------' | | mux M1 |--. | mux M2 |--. .--------.
236 | '----------' | '----------' '--| dev D2 |
237 | .--------. | .--------. '--------'
238 '--| dev D4 | '--| dev D3 |
239 '--------' '--------'
240
241When device D1 is accessed, accesses to D2 are locked out for the
242full duration of the operation (muxes on the top child adapter of M1
243are locked). But accesses to D3 and D4 are possibly interleaved at
244any point. Accesses to D3 locks out D1 and D2, but accesses to D4
245are still possibly interleaved.
246
247
248Mux-locked mux as parent of parent-locked mux
249---------------------------------------------
250
251This is probably a bad topology.
252
253 .----------. .----------. .--------.
254 .--------. | mux- |-----| parent- |-----| dev D1 |
255 | root |--+--| locked | | locked | '--------'
256 '--------' | | mux M1 |--. | mux M2 |--. .--------.
257 | '----------' | '----------' '--| dev D2 |
258 | .--------. | .--------. '--------'
259 '--| dev D4 | '--| dev D3 |
260 '--------' '--------'
261
262When device D1 is accessed, accesses to D2 and D3 are locked out
263for the full duration of the operation (M1 locks child muxes on the
264root adapter). But accesses to D4 are possibly interleaved at any
265point.
266
267This kind of topology is generally not suitable and should probably
268be avoided. The reason is that M2 probably assumes that there will
269be no i2c transfers during its calls to ->select and ->deselect, and
270if there are, any such transfers might appear on the slave side of M2
271as partial i2c transfers, i.e. garbage or worse. This might cause
272device lockups and/or other problems.
273
274The topology is especially troublesome if M2 is an auto-closing
275mux. In that case, any interleaved accesses to D4 might close M2
276prematurely, as might any i2c-transfers part of M1->select.
277
278But if M2 is not making the above stated assumption, and if M2 is not
279auto-closing, the topology is fine.
280
281
282Parent-locked mux as parent of mux-locked mux
283---------------------------------------------
284
285This is a good topology.
286
287 .----------. .----------. .--------.
288 .--------. | parent- |-----| mux- |-----| dev D1 |
289 | root |--+--| locked | | locked | '--------'
290 '--------' | | mux M1 |--. | mux M2 |--. .--------.
291 | '----------' | '----------' '--| dev D2 |
292 | .--------. | .--------. '--------'
293 '--| dev D4 | '--| dev D3 |
294 '--------' '--------'
295
296When D1 is accessed, accesses to D2 are locked out for the full
297duration of the operation (muxes on the top child adapter of M1
298are locked). Accesses to D3 and D4 are possibly interleaved at
299any point, just as is expected for mux-locked muxes.
300
301When D3 or D4 are accessed, everything else is locked out. For D3
302accesses, M1 locks the root adapter. For D4 accesses, the root
303adapter is locked directly.
304
305
306Two mux-locked sibling muxes
307----------------------------
308
309This is a good topology.
310
311 .--------.
312 .----------. .--| dev D1 |
313 | mux- |--' '--------'
314 .--| locked | .--------.
315 | | mux M1 |-----| dev D2 |
316 | '----------' '--------'
317 | .----------. .--------.
318 .--------. | | mux- |-----| dev D3 |
319 | root |--+--| locked | '--------'
320 '--------' | | mux M2 |--. .--------.
321 | '----------' '--| dev D4 |
322 | .--------. '--------'
323 '--| dev D5 |
324 '--------'
325
326When D1 is accessed, accesses to D2, D3 and D4 are locked out. But
327accesses to D5 may be interleaved at any time.
328
329
330Two parent-locked sibling muxes
331-------------------------------
332
333This is a good topology.
334
f10a59eb 335 .--------.
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336 .----------. .--| dev D1 |
337 | parent- |--' '--------'
338 .--| locked | .--------.
339 | | mux M1 |-----| dev D2 |
340 | '----------' '--------'
341 | .----------. .--------.
342 .--------. | | parent- |-----| dev D3 |
343 | root |--+--| locked | '--------'
344 '--------' | | mux M2 |--. .--------.
345 | '----------' '--| dev D4 |
346 | .--------. '--------'
347 '--| dev D5 |
348 '--------'
349
350When any device is accessed, accesses to all other devices are locked
351out.
352
353
354Mux-locked and parent-locked sibling muxes
355------------------------------------------
356
357This is a good topology.
358
f10a59eb 359 .--------.
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360 .----------. .--| dev D1 |
361 | mux- |--' '--------'
362 .--| locked | .--------.
363 | | mux M1 |-----| dev D2 |
364 | '----------' '--------'
365 | .----------. .--------.
366 .--------. | | parent- |-----| dev D3 |
367 | root |--+--| locked | '--------'
368 '--------' | | mux M2 |--. .--------.
369 | '----------' '--| dev D4 |
370 | .--------. '--------'
371 '--| dev D5 |
372 '--------'
373
374When D1 or D2 are accessed, accesses to D3 and D4 are locked out while
375accesses to D5 may interleave. When D3 or D4 are accessed, accesses to
376all other devices are locked out.