| PMBus core driver and internal API |
| ================================== |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| [from pmbus.org] The Power Management Bus (PMBus) is an open standard |
| power-management protocol with a fully defined command language that facilitates |
| communication with power converters and other devices in a power system. The |
| protocol is implemented over the industry-standard SMBus serial interface and |
| enables programming, control, and real-time monitoring of compliant power |
| conversion products. This flexible and highly versatile standard allows for |
| communication between devices based on both analog and digital technologies, and |
| provides true interoperability which will reduce design complexity and shorten |
| time to market for power system designers. Pioneered by leading power supply and |
| semiconductor companies, this open power system standard is maintained and |
| promoted by the PMBus Implementers Forum (PMBus-IF), comprising 30+ adopters |
| with the objective to provide support to, and facilitate adoption among, users. |
| |
| Unfortunately, while PMBus commands are standardized, there are no mandatory |
| commands, and manufacturers can add as many non-standard commands as they like. |
| Also, different PMBUs devices act differently if non-supported commands are |
| executed. Some devices return an error, some devices return 0xff or 0xffff and |
| set a status error flag, and some devices may simply hang up. |
| |
| Despite all those difficulties, a generic PMBus device driver is still useful |
| and supported since kernel version 2.6.39. However, it was necessary to support |
| device specific extensions in addition to the core PMBus driver, since it is |
| simply unknown what new device specific functionality PMBus device developers |
| come up with next. |
| |
| To make device specific extensions as scalable as possible, and to avoid having |
| to modify the core PMBus driver repeatedly for new devices, the PMBus driver was |
| split into core, generic, and device specific code. The core code (in |
| pmbus_core.c) provides generic functionality. The generic code (in pmbus.c) |
| provides support for generic PMBus devices. Device specific code is responsible |
| for device specific initialization and, if needed, maps device specific |
| functionality into generic functionality. This is to some degree comparable |
| to PCI code, where generic code is augmented as needed with quirks for all kinds |
| of devices. |
| |
| PMBus device capabilities auto-detection |
| ======================================== |
| |
| For generic PMBus devices, code in pmbus.c attempts to auto-detect all supported |
| PMBus commands. Auto-detection is somewhat limited, since there are simply too |
| many variables to consider. For example, it is almost impossible to autodetect |
| which PMBus commands are paged and which commands are replicated across all |
| pages (see the PMBus specification for details on multi-page PMBus devices). |
| |
| For this reason, it often makes sense to provide a device specific driver if not |
| all commands can be auto-detected. The data structures in this driver can be |
| used to inform the core driver about functionality supported by individual |
| chips. |
| |
| Some commands are always auto-detected. This applies to all limit commands |
| (lcrit, min, max, and crit attributes) as well as associated alarm attributes. |
| Limits and alarm attributes are auto-detected because there are simply too many |
| possible combinations to provide a manual configuration interface. |
| |
| PMBus internal API |
| ================== |
| |
| The API between core and device specific PMBus code is defined in |
| drivers/hwmon/pmbus/pmbus.h. In addition to the internal API, pmbus.h defines |
| standard PMBus commands and virtual PMBus commands. |
| |
| Standard PMBus commands |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Standard PMBus commands (commands values 0x00 to 0xff) are defined in the PMBUs |
| specification. |
| |
| Virtual PMBus commands |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| Virtual PMBus commands are provided to enable support for non-standard |
| functionality which has been implemented by several chip vendors and is thus |
| desirable to support. |
| |
| Virtual PMBus commands start with command value 0x100 and can thus easily be |
| distinguished from standard PMBus commands (which can not have values larger |
| than 0xff). Support for virtual PMBus commands is device specific and thus has |
| to be implemented in device specific code. |
| |
| Virtual commands are named PMBUS_VIRT_xxx and start with PMBUS_VIRT_BASE. All |
| virtual commands are word sized. |
| |
| There are currently two types of virtual commands. |
| |
| - READ commands are read-only; writes are either ignored or return an error. |
| - RESET commands are read/write. Reading reset registers returns zero |
| (used for detection), writing any value causes the associated history to be |
| reset. |
| |
| Virtual commands have to be handled in device specific driver code. Chip driver |
| code returns non-negative values if a virtual command is supported, or a |
| negative error code if not. The chip driver may return -ENODATA or any other |
| Linux error code in this case, though an error code other than -ENODATA is |
| handled more efficiently and thus preferred. Either case, the calling PMBus |
| core code will abort if the chip driver returns an error code when reading |
| or writing virtual registers (in other words, the PMBus core code will never |
| send a virtual command to a chip). |
| |
| PMBus driver information |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| PMBus driver information, defined in struct pmbus_driver_info, is the main means |
| for device specific drivers to pass information to the core PMBus driver. |
| Specifically, it provides the following information. |
| |
| - For devices supporting its data in Direct Data Format, it provides coefficients |
| for converting register values into normalized data. This data is usually |
| provided by chip manufacturers in device datasheets. |
| - Supported chip functionality can be provided to the core driver. This may be |
| necessary for chips which react badly if non-supported commands are executed, |
| and/or to speed up device detection and initialization. |
| - Several function entry points are provided to support overriding and/or |
| augmenting generic command execution. This functionality can be used to map |
| non-standard PMBus commands to standard commands, or to augment standard |
| command return values with device specific information. |
| |
| API functions |
| ------------- |
| |
| Functions provided by chip driver |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| All functions return the command return value (read) or zero (write) if |
| successful. A return value of -ENODATA indicates that there is no manufacturer |
| specific command, but that a standard PMBus command may exist. Any other |
| negative return value indicates that the commands does not exist for this |
| chip, and that no attempt should be made to read or write the standard |
| command. |
| |
| As mentioned above, an exception to this rule applies to virtual commands, |
| which _must_ be handled in driver specific code. See "Virtual PMBus Commands" |
| above for more details. |
| |
| Command execution in the core PMBus driver code is as follows. |
| |
| if (chip_access_function) { |
| status = chip_access_function(); |
| if (status != -ENODATA) |
| return status; |
| } |
| if (command >= PMBUS_VIRT_BASE) /* For word commands/registers only */ |
| return -EINVAL; |
| return generic_access(); |
| |
| Chip drivers may provide pointers to the following functions in struct |
| pmbus_driver_info. All functions are optional. |
| |
| int (*read_byte_data)(struct i2c_client *client, int page, int reg); |
| |
| Read byte from page <page>, register <reg>. |
| <page> may be -1, which means "current page". |
| |
| int (*read_word_data)(struct i2c_client *client, int page, int reg); |
| |
| Read word from page <page>, register <reg>. |
| |
| int (*write_word_data)(struct i2c_client *client, int page, int reg, |
| u16 word); |
| |
| Write word to page <page>, register <reg>. |
| |
| int (*write_byte)(struct i2c_client *client, int page, u8 value); |
| |
| Write byte to page <page>, register <reg>. |
| <page> may be -1, which means "current page". |
| |
| int (*identify)(struct i2c_client *client, struct pmbus_driver_info *info); |
| |
| Determine supported PMBus functionality. This function is only necessary |
| if a chip driver supports multiple chips, and the chip functionality is not |
| pre-determined. It is currently only used by the generic pmbus driver |
| (pmbus.c). |
| |
| Functions exported by core driver |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| Chip drivers are expected to use the following functions to read or write |
| PMBus registers. Chip drivers may also use direct I2C commands. If direct I2C |
| commands are used, the chip driver code must not directly modify the current |
| page, since the selected page is cached in the core driver and the core driver |
| will assume that it is selected. Using pmbus_set_page() to select a new page |
| is mandatory. |
| |
| int pmbus_set_page(struct i2c_client *client, u8 page); |
| |
| Set PMBus page register to <page> for subsequent commands. |
| |
| int pmbus_read_word_data(struct i2c_client *client, u8 page, u8 reg); |
| |
| Read word data from <page>, <reg>. Similar to i2c_smbus_read_word_data(), but |
| selects page first. |
| |
| int pmbus_write_word_data(struct i2c_client *client, u8 page, u8 reg, |
| u16 word); |
| |
| Write word data to <page>, <reg>. Similar to i2c_smbus_write_word_data(), but |
| selects page first. |
| |
| int pmbus_read_byte_data(struct i2c_client *client, int page, u8 reg); |
| |
| Read byte data from <page>, <reg>. Similar to i2c_smbus_read_byte_data(), but |
| selects page first. <page> may be -1, which means "current page". |
| |
| int pmbus_write_byte(struct i2c_client *client, int page, u8 value); |
| |
| Write byte data to <page>, <reg>. Similar to i2c_smbus_write_byte(), but |
| selects page first. <page> may be -1, which means "current page". |
| |
| void pmbus_clear_faults(struct i2c_client *client); |
| |
| Execute PMBus "Clear Fault" command on all chip pages. |
| This function calls the device specific write_byte function if defined. |
| Therefore, it must _not_ be called from that function. |
| |
| bool pmbus_check_byte_register(struct i2c_client *client, int page, int reg); |
| |
| Check if byte register exists. Return true if the register exists, false |
| otherwise. |
| This function calls the device specific write_byte function if defined to |
| obtain the chip status. Therefore, it must _not_ be called from that function. |
| |
| bool pmbus_check_word_register(struct i2c_client *client, int page, int reg); |
| |
| Check if word register exists. Return true if the register exists, false |
| otherwise. |
| This function calls the device specific write_byte function if defined to |
| obtain the chip status. Therefore, it must _not_ be called from that function. |
| |
| int pmbus_do_probe(struct i2c_client *client, const struct i2c_device_id *id, |
| struct pmbus_driver_info *info); |
| |
| Execute probe function. Similar to standard probe function for other drivers, |
| with the pointer to struct pmbus_driver_info as additional argument. Calls |
| identify function if supported. Must only be called from device probe |
| function. |
| |
| void pmbus_do_remove(struct i2c_client *client); |
| |
| Execute driver remove function. Similar to standard driver remove function. |
| |
| const struct pmbus_driver_info |
| *pmbus_get_driver_info(struct i2c_client *client); |
| |
| Return pointer to struct pmbus_driver_info as passed to pmbus_do_probe(). |
| |
| |
| PMBus driver platform data |
| ========================== |
| |
| PMBus platform data is defined in include/linux/i2c/pmbus.h. Platform data |
| currently only provides a flag field with a single bit used. |
| |
| #define PMBUS_SKIP_STATUS_CHECK (1 << 0) |
| |
| struct pmbus_platform_data { |
| u32 flags; /* Device specific flags */ |
| }; |
| |
| |
| Flags |
| ----- |
| |
| PMBUS_SKIP_STATUS_CHECK |
| |
| During register detection, skip checking the status register for |
| communication or command errors. |
| |
| Some PMBus chips respond with valid data when trying to read an unsupported |
| register. For such chips, checking the status register is mandatory when |
| trying to determine if a chip register exists or not. |
| Other PMBus chips don't support the STATUS_CML register, or report |
| communication errors for no explicable reason. For such chips, checking the |
| status register must be disabled. |
| |
| Some i2c controllers do not support single-byte commands (write commands with |
| no data, i2c_smbus_write_byte()). With such controllers, clearing the status |
| register is impossible, and the PMBUS_SKIP_STATUS_CHECK flag must be set. |