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1 | |
2 | Linux UWB + Wireless USB + WiNET | |
3 | ||
4 | (C) 2005-2006 Intel Corporation | |
5 | Inaky Perez-Gonzalez <inaky.perez-gonzalez@intel.com> | |
6 | ||
7 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or | |
8 | modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version | |
9 | 2 as published by the Free Software Foundation. | |
10 | ||
11 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, | |
12 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | |
13 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the | |
14 | GNU General Public License for more details. | |
15 | ||
16 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | |
17 | along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software | |
18 | Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA | |
19 | 02110-1301, USA. | |
20 | ||
21 | ||
22 | Please visit http://bughost.org/thewiki/Design-overview.txt-1.8 for | |
23 | updated content. | |
24 | ||
25 | * Design-overview.txt-1.8 | |
26 | ||
27 | This code implements a Ultra Wide Band stack for Linux, as well as | |
df5cbb27 | 28 | drivers for the USB based UWB radio controllers defined in the |
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29 | Wireless USB 1.0 specification (including Wireless USB host controller |
30 | and an Intel WiNET controller). | |
31 | ||
32 | 1. Introduction | |
33 | 1. HWA: Host Wire adapters, your Wireless USB dongle | |
34 | ||
35 | 2. DWA: Device Wired Adaptor, a Wireless USB hub for wired | |
36 | devices | |
37 | 3. WHCI: Wireless Host Controller Interface, the PCI WUSB host | |
38 | adapter | |
39 | 2. The UWB stack | |
40 | 1. Devices and hosts: the basic structure | |
41 | ||
42 | 2. Host Controller life cycle | |
43 | ||
44 | 3. On the air: beacons and enumerating the radio neighborhood | |
45 | ||
46 | 4. Device lists | |
47 | 5. Bandwidth allocation | |
48 | ||
49 | 3. Wireless USB Host Controller drivers | |
50 | ||
51 | 4. Glossary | |
52 | ||
53 | ||
54 | Introduction | |
55 | ||
56 | UWB is a wide-band communication protocol that is to serve also as the | |
57 | low-level protocol for others (much like TCP sits on IP). Currently | |
58 | these others are Wireless USB and TCP/IP, but seems Bluetooth and | |
59 | Firewire/1394 are coming along. | |
60 | ||
61 | UWB uses a band from roughly 3 to 10 GHz, transmitting at a max of | |
62 | ~-41dB (or 0.074 uW/MHz--geography specific data is still being | |
63 | negotiated w/ regulators, so watch for changes). That band is divided in | |
64 | a bunch of ~1.5 GHz wide channels (or band groups) composed of three | |
65 | subbands/subchannels (528 MHz each). Each channel is independent of each | |
66 | other, so you could consider them different "busses". Initially this | |
67 | driver considers them all a single one. | |
68 | ||
69 | Radio time is divided in 65536 us long /superframes/, each one divided | |
70 | in 256 256us long /MASs/ (Media Allocation Slots), which are the basic | |
71 | time/media allocation units for transferring data. At the beginning of | |
72 | each superframe there is a Beacon Period (BP), where every device | |
73 | transmit its beacon on a single MAS. The length of the BP depends on how | |
74 | many devices are present and the length of their beacons. | |
75 | ||
76 | Devices have a MAC (fixed, 48 bit address) and a device (changeable, 16 | |
77 | bit address) and send periodic beacons to advertise themselves and pass | |
78 | info on what they are and do. They advertise their capabilities and a | |
79 | bunch of other stuff. | |
80 | ||
81 | The different logical parts of this driver are: | |
82 | ||
83 | * | |
84 | ||
85 | *UWB*: the Ultra-Wide-Band stack -- manages the radio and | |
86 | associated spectrum to allow for devices sharing it. Allows to | |
19f59460 | 87 | control bandwidth assignment, beaconing, scanning, etc |
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88 | |
89 | * | |
90 | ||
91 | *WUSB*: the layer that sits on top of UWB to provide Wireless USB. | |
92 | The Wireless USB spec defines means to control a UWB radio and to | |
93 | do the actual WUSB. | |
94 | ||
95 | ||
96 | HWA: Host Wire adapters, your Wireless USB dongle | |
97 | ||
98 | WUSB also defines a device called a Host Wire Adaptor (HWA), which in | |
99 | mere terms is a USB dongle that enables your PC to have UWB and Wireless | |
100 | USB. The Wireless USB Host Controller in a HWA looks to the host like a | |
101 | [Wireless] USB controller connected via USB (!) | |
102 | ||
103 | The HWA itself is broken in two or three main interfaces: | |
104 | ||
105 | * | |
106 | ||
107 | *RC*: Radio control -- this implements an interface to the | |
108 | Ultra-Wide-Band radio controller. The driver for this implements a | |
109 | USB-based UWB Radio Controller to the UWB stack. | |
110 | ||
111 | * | |
112 | ||
113 | *HC*: the wireless USB host controller. It looks like a USB host | |
114 | whose root port is the radio and the WUSB devices connect to it. | |
115 | To the system it looks like a separate USB host. The driver (will) | |
116 | implement a USB host controller (similar to UHCI, OHCI or EHCI) | |
117 | for which the root hub is the radio...To reiterate: it is a USB | |
118 | controller that is connected via USB instead of PCI. | |
119 | ||
120 | * | |
121 | ||
122 | *WINET*: some HW provide a WiNET interface (IP over UWB). This | |
123 | package provides a driver for it (it looks like a network | |
124 | interface, winetX). The driver detects when there is a link up for | |
125 | their type and kick into gear. | |
126 | ||
127 | ||
128 | DWA: Device Wired Adaptor, a Wireless USB hub for wired devices | |
129 | ||
130 | These are the complement to HWAs. They are a USB host for connecting | |
131 | wired devices, but it is connected to your PC connected via Wireless | |
132 | USB. To the system it looks like yet another USB host. To the untrained | |
133 | eye, it looks like a hub that connects upstream wirelessly. | |
134 | ||
135 | We still offer no support for this; however, it should share a lot of | |
136 | code with the HWA-RC driver; there is a bunch of factorization work that | |
137 | has been done to support that in upcoming releases. | |
138 | ||
139 | ||
140 | WHCI: Wireless Host Controller Interface, the PCI WUSB host adapter | |
141 | ||
142 | This is your usual PCI device that implements WHCI. Similar in concept | |
143 | to EHCI, it allows your wireless USB devices (including DWAs) to connect | |
144 | to your host via a PCI interface. As in the case of the HWA, it has a | |
145 | Radio Control interface and the WUSB Host Controller interface per se. | |
146 | ||
147 | There is still no driver support for this, but will be in upcoming | |
148 | releases. | |
149 | ||
150 | ||
151 | The UWB stack | |
152 | ||
153 | The main mission of the UWB stack is to keep a tally of which devices | |
154 | are in radio proximity to allow drivers to connect to them. As well, it | |
155 | provides an API for controlling the local radio controllers (RCs from | |
156 | now on), such as to start/stop beaconing, scan, allocate bandwidth, etc. | |
157 | ||
158 | ||
159 | Devices and hosts: the basic structure | |
160 | ||
161 | The main building block here is the UWB device (struct uwb_dev). For | |
162 | each device that pops up in radio presence (ie: the UWB host receives a | |
163 | beacon from it) you get a struct uwb_dev that will show up in | |
005799d5 | 164 | /sys/bus/uwb/devices. |
99d368bc | 165 | |
005799d5 TP |
166 | For each RC that is detected, a new struct uwb_rc and struct uwb_dev are |
167 | created. An entry is also created in /sys/class/uwb_rc for each RC. | |
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168 | |
169 | Each RC driver is implemented by a separate driver that plugs into the | |
170 | interface that the UWB stack provides through a struct uwb_rc_ops. The | |
171 | spec creators have been nice enough to make the message format the same | |
172 | for HWA and WHCI RCs, so the driver is really a very thin transport that | |
173 | moves the requests from the UWB API to the device [/uwb_rc_ops->cmd()/] | |
174 | and sends the replies and notifications back to the API | |
175 | [/uwb_rc_neh_grok()/]. Notifications are handled to the UWB daemon, that | |
176 | is chartered, among other things, to keep the tab of how the UWB radio | |
177 | neighborhood looks, creating and destroying devices as they show up or | |
19f59460 | 178 | disappear. |
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179 | |
180 | Command execution is very simple: a command block is sent and a event | |
181 | block or reply is expected back. For sending/receiving command/events, a | |
182 | handle called /neh/ (Notification/Event Handle) is opened with | |
183 | /uwb_rc_neh_open()/. | |
184 | ||
185 | The HWA-RC (USB dongle) driver (drivers/uwb/hwa-rc.c) does this job for | |
186 | the USB connected HWA. Eventually, drivers/whci-rc.c will do the same | |
187 | for the PCI connected WHCI controller. | |
188 | ||
189 | ||
190 | Host Controller life cycle | |
191 | ||
192 | So let's say we connect a dongle to the system: it is detected and | |
193 | firmware uploaded if needed [for Intel's i1480 | |
194 | /drivers/uwb/ptc/usb.c:ptc_usb_probe()/] and then it is reenumerated. | |
195 | Now we have a real HWA device connected and | |
196 | /drivers/uwb/hwa-rc.c:hwarc_probe()/ picks it up, that will set up the | |
197 | Wire-Adaptor environment and then suck it into the UWB stack's vision of | |
198 | the world [/drivers/uwb/lc-rc.c:uwb_rc_add()/]. | |
199 | ||
200 | * | |
201 | ||
202 | [*] The stack should put a new RC to scan for devices | |
203 | [/uwb_rc_scan()/] so it finds what's available around and tries to | |
204 | connect to them, but this is policy stuff and should be driven | |
205 | from user space. As of now, the operator is expected to do it | |
206 | manually; see the release notes for documentation on the procedure. | |
207 | ||
208 | When a dongle is disconnected, /drivers/uwb/hwa-rc.c:hwarc_disconnect()/ | |
209 | takes time of tearing everything down safely (or not...). | |
210 | ||
211 | ||
212 | On the air: beacons and enumerating the radio neighborhood | |
213 | ||
214 | So assuming we have devices and we have agreed for a channel to connect | |
215 | on (let's say 9), we put the new RC to beacon: | |
216 | ||
217 | * | |
218 | ||
219 | $ echo 9 0 > /sys/class/uwb_rc/uwb0/beacon | |
220 | ||
221 | Now it is visible. If there were other devices in the same radio channel | |
222 | and beacon group (that's what the zero is for), the dongle's radio | |
223 | control interface will send beacon notifications on its | |
224 | notification/event endpoint (NEEP). The beacon notifications are part of | |
225 | the event stream that is funneled into the API with | |
226 | /drivers/uwb/neh.c:uwb_rc_neh_grok()/ and delivered to the UWBD, the UWB | |
227 | daemon through a notification list. | |
228 | ||
229 | UWBD wakes up and scans the event list; finds a beacon and adds it to | |
230 | the BEACON CACHE (/uwb_beca/). If he receives a number of beacons from | |
231 | the same device, he considers it to be 'onair' and creates a new device | |
232 | [/drivers/uwb/lc-dev.c:uwbd_dev_onair()/]. Similarly, when no beacons | |
233 | are received in some time, the device is considered gone and wiped out | |
234 | [uwbd calls periodically /uwb/beacon.c:uwb_beca_purge()/ that will purge | |
235 | the beacon cache of dead devices]. | |
236 | ||
237 | ||
238 | Device lists | |
239 | ||
005799d5 | 240 | All UWB devices are kept in the list of the struct bus_type uwb_bus_type. |
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241 | |
242 | ||
243 | Bandwidth allocation | |
244 | ||
245 | The UWB stack maintains a local copy of DRP availability through | |
246 | processing of incoming *DRP Availability Change* notifications. This | |
247 | local copy is currently used to present the current bandwidth | |
248 | availability to the user through the sysfs file | |
249 | /sys/class/uwb_rc/uwbx/bw_avail. In the future the bandwidth | |
250 | availability information will be used by the bandwidth reservation | |
251 | routines. | |
252 | ||
253 | The bandwidth reservation routines are in progress and are thus not | |
254 | present in the current release. When completed they will enable a user | |
255 | to initiate DRP reservation requests through interaction with sysfs. DRP | |
256 | reservation requests from remote UWB devices will also be handled. The | |
257 | bandwidth management done by the UWB stack will include callbacks to the | |
258 | higher layers will enable the higher layers to use the reservations upon | |
259 | completion. [Note: The bandwidth reservation work is in progress and | |
260 | subject to change.] | |
261 | ||
262 | ||
263 | Wireless USB Host Controller drivers | |
264 | ||
265 | *WARNING* This section needs a lot of work! | |
266 | ||
267 | As explained above, there are three different types of HCs in the WUSB | |
268 | world: HWA-HC, DWA-HC and WHCI-HC. | |
269 | ||
270 | HWA-HC and DWA-HC share that they are Wire-Adapters (USB or WUSB | |
271 | connected controllers), and their transfer management system is almost | |
272 | identical. So is their notification delivery system. | |
273 | ||
274 | HWA-HC and WHCI-HC share that they are both WUSB host controllers, so | |
275 | they have to deal with WUSB device life cycle and maintenance, wireless | |
276 | root-hub | |
277 | ||
278 | HWA exposes a Host Controller interface (HWA-HC 0xe0/02/02). This has | |
279 | three endpoints (Notifications, Data Transfer In and Data Transfer | |
280 | Out--known as NEP, DTI and DTO in the code). | |
281 | ||
282 | We reserve UWB bandwidth for our Wireless USB Cluster, create a Cluster | |
283 | ID and tell the HC to use all that. Then we start it. This means the HC | |
284 | starts sending MMCs. | |
285 | ||
286 | * | |
287 | ||
288 | The MMCs are blocks of data defined somewhere in the WUSB1.0 spec | |
289 | that define a stream in the UWB channel time allocated for sending | |
290 | WUSB IEs (host to device commands/notifications) and Device | |
291 | Notifications (device initiated to host). Each host defines a | |
292 | unique Wireless USB cluster through MMCs. Devices can connect to a | |
293 | single cluster at the time. The IEs are Information Elements, and | |
294 | among them are the bandwidth allocations that tell each device | |
295 | when can they transmit or receive. | |
296 | ||
297 | Now it all depends on external stimuli. | |
298 | ||
299 | *New device connection* | |
300 | ||
301 | A new device pops up, it scans the radio looking for MMCs that give out | |
302 | the existence of Wireless USB channels. Once one (or more) are found, | |
303 | selects which one to connect to. Sends a /DN_Connect/ (device | |
304 | notification connect) during the DNTS (Device Notification Time | |
305 | Slot--announced in the MMCs | |
306 | ||
307 | HC picks the /DN_Connect/ out (nep module sends to notif.c for delivery | |
308 | into /devconnect/). This process starts the authentication process for | |
309 | the device. First we allocate a /fake port/ and assign an | |
310 | unauthenticated address (128 to 255--what we really do is | |
37ebb549 | 311 | 0x80 | fake_port_idx). We fiddle with the fake port status and /hub_wq/ |
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312 | sees a new connection, so he moves on to enable the fake port with a reset. |
313 | ||
314 | So now we are in the reset path -- we know we have a non-yet enumerated | |
315 | device with an unauthorized address; we ask user space to authenticate | |
316 | (FIXME: not yet done, similar to bluetooth pairing), then we do the key | |
317 | exchange (FIXME: not yet done) and issue a /set address 0/ to bring the | |
318 | device to the default state. Device is authenticated. | |
319 | ||
37ebb549 | 320 | From here, the USB stack takes control through the usb_hcd ops. hub_wq |
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321 | has seen the port status changes, as we have been toggling them. It will |
322 | start enumerating and doing transfers through usb_hcd->urb_enqueue() to | |
323 | read descriptors and move our data. | |
324 | ||
325 | *Device life cycle and keep alives* | |
326 | ||
19f59460 | 327 | Every time there is a successful transfer to/from a device, we update a |
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328 | per-device activity timestamp. If not, every now and then we check and |
329 | if the activity timestamp gets old, we ping the device by sending it a | |
330 | Keep Alive IE; it responds with a /DN_Alive/ pong during the DNTS (this | |
331 | arrives to us as a notification through | |
332 | devconnect.c:wusb_handle_dn_alive(). If a device times out, we | |
333 | disconnect it from the system (cleaning up internal information and | |
37ebb549 | 334 | toggling the bits in the fake hub port, which kicks hub_wq into removing |
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335 | the rest of the stuff). |
336 | ||
337 | This is done through devconnect:__wusb_check_devs(), which will scan the | |
338 | device list looking for whom needs refreshing. | |
339 | ||
340 | If the device wants to disconnect, it will either die (ugly) or send a | |
341 | /DN_Disconnect/ that will prompt a disconnection from the system. | |
342 | ||
343 | *Sending and receiving data* | |
344 | ||
345 | Data is sent and received through /Remote Pipes/ (rpipes). An rpipe is | |
346 | /aimed/ at an endpoint in a WUSB device. This is the same for HWAs and | |
347 | DWAs. | |
348 | ||
349 | Each HC has a number of rpipes and buffers that can be assigned to them; | |
350 | when doing a data transfer (xfer), first the rpipe has to be aimed and | |
351 | prepared (buffers assigned), then we can start queueing requests for | |
352 | data in or out. | |
353 | ||
354 | Data buffers have to be segmented out before sending--so we send first a | |
355 | header (segment request) and then if there is any data, a data buffer | |
356 | immediately after to the DTI interface (yep, even the request). If our | |
357 | buffer is bigger than the max segment size, then we just do multiple | |
358 | requests. | |
359 | ||
360 | [This sucks, because doing USB scatter gatter in Linux is resource | |
361 | intensive, if any...not that the current approach is not. It just has to | |
362 | be cleaned up a lot :)]. | |
363 | ||
364 | If reading, we don't send data buffers, just the segment headers saying | |
365 | we want to read segments. | |
366 | ||
367 | When the xfer is executed, we receive a notification that says data is | |
368 | ready in the DTI endpoint (handled through | |
369 | xfer.c:wa_handle_notif_xfer()). In there we read from the DTI endpoint a | |
370 | descriptor that gives us the status of the transfer, its identification | |
371 | (given when we issued it) and the segment number. If it was a data read, | |
372 | we issue another URB to read into the destination buffer the chunk of | |
373 | data coming out of the remote endpoint. Done, wait for the next guy. The | |
374 | callbacks for the URBs issued from here are the ones that will declare | |
a33f3224 | 375 | the xfer complete at some point and call its callback. |
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376 | |
377 | Seems simple, but the implementation is not trivial. | |
378 | ||
379 | * | |
380 | ||
381 | *WARNING* Old!! | |
382 | ||
383 | The main xfer descriptor, wa_xfer (equivalent to a URB) contains an | |
384 | array of segments, tallys on segments and buffers and callback | |
385 | information. Buried in there is a lot of URBs for executing the segments | |
386 | and buffer transfers. | |
387 | ||
388 | For OUT xfers, there is an array of segments, one URB for each, another | |
389 | one of buffer URB. When submitting, we submit URBs for segment request | |
390 | 1, buffer 1, segment 2, buffer 2...etc. Then we wait on the DTI for xfer | |
391 | result data; when all the segments are complete, we call the callback to | |
392 | finalize the transfer. | |
393 | ||
394 | For IN xfers, we only issue URBs for the segments we want to read and | |
395 | then wait for the xfer result data. | |
396 | ||
397 | *URB mapping into xfers* | |
398 | ||
399 | This is done by hwahc_op_urb_[en|de]queue(). In enqueue() we aim an | |
400 | rpipe to the endpoint where we have to transmit, create a transfer | |
401 | context (wa_xfer) and submit it. When the xfer is done, our callback is | |
402 | called and we assign the status bits and release the xfer resources. | |
403 | ||
404 | In dequeue() we are basically cancelling/aborting the transfer. We issue | |
19f59460 | 405 | a xfer abort request to the HC, cancel all the URBs we had submitted |
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406 | and not yet done and when all that is done, the xfer callback will be |
407 | called--this will call the URB callback. | |
408 | ||
409 | ||
410 | Glossary | |
411 | ||
412 | *DWA* -- Device Wire Adapter | |
413 | ||
414 | USB host, wired for downstream devices, upstream connects wirelessly | |
415 | with Wireless USB. | |
416 | ||
417 | *EVENT* -- Response to a command on the NEEP | |
418 | ||
419 | *HWA* -- Host Wire Adapter / USB dongle for UWB and Wireless USB | |
420 | ||
421 | *NEH* -- Notification/Event Handle | |
422 | ||
423 | Handle/file descriptor for receiving notifications or events. The WA | |
424 | code requires you to get one of this to listen for notifications or | |
425 | events on the NEEP. | |
426 | ||
427 | *NEEP* -- Notification/Event EndPoint | |
428 | ||
429 | Stuff related to the management of the first endpoint of a HWA USB | |
430 | dongle that is used to deliver an stream of events and notifications to | |
431 | the host. | |
432 | ||
433 | *NOTIFICATION* -- Message coming in the NEEP as response to something. | |
434 | ||
435 | *RC* -- Radio Control | |
436 | ||
437 | Design-overview.txt-1.8 (last edited 2006-11-04 12:22:24 by | |
438 | InakyPerezGonzalez) | |
439 |