diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'include/linux/spi/spi-mem.h')
| -rw-r--r-- | include/linux/spi/spi-mem.h | 84 | 
1 files changed, 83 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/include/linux/spi/spi-mem.h b/include/linux/spi/spi-mem.h index 69ee30456864..3fe24500c5ee 100644 --- a/include/linux/spi/spi-mem.h +++ b/include/linux/spi/spi-mem.h @@ -57,10 +57,12 @@  /**   * enum spi_mem_data_dir - describes the direction of a SPI memory data   *			   transfer from the controller perspective + * @SPI_MEM_NO_DATA: no data transferred   * @SPI_MEM_DATA_IN: data coming from the SPI memory - * @SPI_MEM_DATA_OUT: data sent the SPI memory + * @SPI_MEM_DATA_OUT: data sent to the SPI memory   */  enum spi_mem_data_dir { +	SPI_MEM_NO_DATA,  	SPI_MEM_DATA_IN,  	SPI_MEM_DATA_OUT,  }; @@ -123,6 +125,49 @@ struct spi_mem_op {  	}  /** + * struct spi_mem_dirmap_info - Direct mapping information + * @op_tmpl: operation template that should be used by the direct mapping when + *	     the memory device is accessed + * @offset: absolute offset this direct mapping is pointing to + * @length: length in byte of this direct mapping + * + * These information are used by the controller specific implementation to know + * the portion of memory that is directly mapped and the spi_mem_op that should + * be used to access the device. + * A direct mapping is only valid for one direction (read or write) and this + * direction is directly encoded in the ->op_tmpl.data.dir field. + */ +struct spi_mem_dirmap_info { +	struct spi_mem_op op_tmpl; +	u64 offset; +	u64 length; +}; + +/** + * struct spi_mem_dirmap_desc - Direct mapping descriptor + * @mem: the SPI memory device this direct mapping is attached to + * @info: information passed at direct mapping creation time + * @nodirmap: set to 1 if the SPI controller does not implement + *	      ->mem_ops->dirmap_create() or when this function returned an + *	      error. If @nodirmap is true, all spi_mem_dirmap_{read,write}() + *	      calls will use spi_mem_exec_op() to access the memory. This is a + *	      degraded mode that allows spi_mem drivers to use the same code + *	      no matter whether the controller supports direct mapping or not + * @priv: field pointing to controller specific data + * + * Common part of a direct mapping descriptor. This object is created by + * spi_mem_dirmap_create() and controller implementation of ->create_dirmap() + * can create/attach direct mapping resources to the descriptor in the ->priv + * field. + */ +struct spi_mem_dirmap_desc { +	struct spi_mem *mem; +	struct spi_mem_dirmap_info info; +	unsigned int nodirmap; +	void *priv; +}; + +/**   * struct spi_mem - describes a SPI memory device   * @spi: the underlying SPI device   * @drvpriv: spi_mem_driver private data @@ -177,10 +222,32 @@ static inline void *spi_mem_get_drvdata(struct spi_mem *mem)   *	      Note that if the implementation of this function allocates memory   *	      dynamically, then it should do so with devm_xxx(), as we don't   *	      have a ->free_name() function. + * @dirmap_create: create a direct mapping descriptor that can later be used to + *		   access the memory device. This method is optional + * @dirmap_destroy: destroy a memory descriptor previous created by + *		    ->dirmap_create() + * @dirmap_read: read data from the memory device using the direct mapping + *		 created by ->dirmap_create(). The function can return less + *		 data than requested (for example when the request is crossing + *		 the currently mapped area), and the caller of + *		 spi_mem_dirmap_read() is responsible for calling it again in + *		 this case. + * @dirmap_write: write data to the memory device using the direct mapping + *		  created by ->dirmap_create(). The function can return less + *		  data than requested (for example when the request is crossing + *		  the currently mapped area), and the caller of + *		  spi_mem_dirmap_write() is responsible for calling it again in + *		  this case.   *   * This interface should be implemented by SPI controllers providing an   * high-level interface to execute SPI memory operation, which is usually the   * case for QSPI controllers. + * + * Note on ->dirmap_{read,write}(): drivers should avoid accessing the direct + * mapping from the CPU because doing that can stall the CPU waiting for the + * SPI mem transaction to finish, and this will make real-time maintainers + * unhappy and might make your system less reactive. Instead, drivers should + * use DMA to access this direct mapping.   */  struct spi_controller_mem_ops {  	int (*adjust_op_size)(struct spi_mem *mem, struct spi_mem_op *op); @@ -189,6 +256,12 @@ struct spi_controller_mem_ops {  	int (*exec_op)(struct spi_mem *mem,  		       const struct spi_mem_op *op);  	const char *(*get_name)(struct spi_mem *mem); +	int (*dirmap_create)(struct spi_mem_dirmap_desc *desc); +	void (*dirmap_destroy)(struct spi_mem_dirmap_desc *desc); +	ssize_t (*dirmap_read)(struct spi_mem_dirmap_desc *desc, +			       u64 offs, size_t len, void *buf); +	ssize_t (*dirmap_write)(struct spi_mem_dirmap_desc *desc, +				u64 offs, size_t len, const void *buf);  };  /** @@ -249,6 +322,15 @@ int spi_mem_exec_op(struct spi_mem *mem,  const char *spi_mem_get_name(struct spi_mem *mem); +struct spi_mem_dirmap_desc * +spi_mem_dirmap_create(struct spi_mem *mem, +		      const struct spi_mem_dirmap_info *info); +void spi_mem_dirmap_destroy(struct spi_mem_dirmap_desc *desc); +ssize_t spi_mem_dirmap_read(struct spi_mem_dirmap_desc *desc, +			    u64 offs, size_t len, void *buf); +ssize_t spi_mem_dirmap_write(struct spi_mem_dirmap_desc *desc, +			     u64 offs, size_t len, const void *buf); +  int spi_mem_driver_register_with_owner(struct spi_mem_driver *drv,  				       struct module *owner);  | 
