| ========================= |
| Writing a MUSB Glue Layer |
| ========================= |
| |
| :Author: Apelete Seketeli |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| The Linux MUSB subsystem is part of the larger Linux USB subsystem. It |
| provides support for embedded USB Device Controllers (UDC) that do not |
| use Universal Host Controller Interface (UHCI) or Open Host Controller |
| Interface (OHCI). |
| |
| Instead, these embedded UDC rely on the USB On-the-Go (OTG) |
| specification which they implement at least partially. The silicon |
| reference design used in most cases is the Multipoint USB Highspeed |
| Dual-Role Controller (MUSB HDRC) found in the Mentor Graphics Inventra™ |
| design. |
| |
| As a self-taught exercise I have written an MUSB glue layer for the |
| Ingenic JZ4740 SoC, modelled after the many MUSB glue layers in the |
| kernel source tree. This layer can be found at |
| ``drivers/usb/musb/jz4740.c``. In this documentation I will walk through the |
| basics of the ``jz4740.c`` glue layer, explaining the different pieces and |
| what needs to be done in order to write your own device glue layer. |
| |
| .. _musb-basics: |
| |
| Linux MUSB Basics |
| ================= |
| |
| To get started on the topic, please read USB On-the-Go Basics (see |
| Resources) which provides an introduction of USB OTG operation at the |
| hardware level. A couple of wiki pages by Texas Instruments and Analog |
| Devices also provide an overview of the Linux kernel MUSB configuration, |
| albeit focused on some specific devices provided by these companies. |
| Finally, getting acquainted with the USB specification at USB home page |
| may come in handy, with practical instance provided through the Writing |
| USB Device Drivers documentation (again, see Resources). |
| |
| Linux USB stack is a layered architecture in which the MUSB controller |
| hardware sits at the lowest. The MUSB controller driver abstract the |
| MUSB controller hardware to the Linux USB stack:: |
| |
| ------------------------ |
| | | <------- drivers/usb/gadget |
| | Linux USB Core Stack | <------- drivers/usb/host |
| | | <------- drivers/usb/core |
| ------------------------ |
| ⬍ |
| -------------------------- |
| | | <------ drivers/usb/musb/musb_gadget.c |
| | MUSB Controller driver | <------ drivers/usb/musb/musb_host.c |
| | | <------ drivers/usb/musb/musb_core.c |
| -------------------------- |
| ⬍ |
| --------------------------------- |
| | MUSB Platform Specific Driver | |
| | | <-- drivers/usb/musb/jz4740.c |
| | aka "Glue Layer" | |
| --------------------------------- |
| ⬍ |
| --------------------------------- |
| | MUSB Controller Hardware | |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| As outlined above, the glue layer is actually the platform specific code |
| sitting in between the controller driver and the controller hardware. |
| |
| Just like a Linux USB driver needs to register itself with the Linux USB |
| subsystem, the MUSB glue layer needs first to register itself with the |
| MUSB controller driver. This will allow the controller driver to know |
| about which device the glue layer supports and which functions to call |
| when a supported device is detected or released; remember we are talking |
| about an embedded controller chip here, so no insertion or removal at |
| run-time. |
| |
| All of this information is passed to the MUSB controller driver through |
| a :c:type:`platform_driver` structure defined in the glue layer as:: |
| |
| static struct platform_driver jz4740_driver = { |
| .probe = jz4740_probe, |
| .remove = jz4740_remove, |
| .driver = { |
| .name = "musb-jz4740", |
| }, |
| }; |
| |
| The probe and remove function pointers are called when a matching device |
| is detected and, respectively, released. The name string describes the |
| device supported by this glue layer. In the current case it matches a |
| platform_device structure declared in ``arch/mips/jz4740/platform.c``. Note |
| that we are not using device tree bindings here. |
| |
| In order to register itself to the controller driver, the glue layer |
| goes through a few steps, basically allocating the controller hardware |
| resources and initialising a couple of circuits. To do so, it needs to |
| keep track of the information used throughout these steps. This is done |
| by defining a private ``jz4740_glue`` structure:: |
| |
| struct jz4740_glue { |
| struct device *dev; |
| struct platform_device *musb; |
| struct clk *clk; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| The dev and musb members are both device structure variables. The first |
| one holds generic information about the device, since it's the basic |
| device structure, and the latter holds information more closely related |
| to the subsystem the device is registered to. The clk variable keeps |
| information related to the device clock operation. |
| |
| Let's go through the steps of the probe function that leads the glue |
| layer to register itself to the controller driver. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| For the sake of readability each function will be split in logical |
| parts, each part being shown as if it was independent from the others. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| :emphasize-lines: 8,12,18 |
| |
| static int jz4740_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) |
| { |
| struct platform_device *musb; |
| struct jz4740_glue *glue; |
| struct clk *clk; |
| int ret; |
| |
| glue = devm_kzalloc(&pdev->dev, sizeof(*glue), GFP_KERNEL); |
| if (!glue) |
| return -ENOMEM; |
| |
| musb = platform_device_alloc("musb-hdrc", PLATFORM_DEVID_AUTO); |
| if (!musb) { |
| dev_err(&pdev->dev, "failed to allocate musb device\n"); |
| return -ENOMEM; |
| } |
| |
| clk = devm_clk_get(&pdev->dev, "udc"); |
| if (IS_ERR(clk)) { |
| dev_err(&pdev->dev, "failed to get clock\n"); |
| ret = PTR_ERR(clk); |
| goto err_platform_device_put; |
| } |
| |
| ret = clk_prepare_enable(clk); |
| if (ret) { |
| dev_err(&pdev->dev, "failed to enable clock\n"); |
| goto err_platform_device_put; |
| } |
| |
| musb->dev.parent = &pdev->dev; |
| |
| glue->dev = &pdev->dev; |
| glue->musb = musb; |
| glue->clk = clk; |
| |
| return 0; |
| |
| err_platform_device_put: |
| platform_device_put(musb); |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| The first few lines of the probe function allocate and assign the glue, |
| musb and clk variables. The ``GFP_KERNEL`` flag (line 8) allows the |
| allocation process to sleep and wait for memory, thus being usable in a |
| locking situation. The ``PLATFORM_DEVID_AUTO`` flag (line 12) allows |
| automatic allocation and management of device IDs in order to avoid |
| device namespace collisions with explicit IDs. With :c:func:`devm_clk_get` |
| (line 18) the glue layer allocates the clock -- the ``devm_`` prefix |
| indicates that :c:func:`clk_get` is managed: it automatically frees the |
| allocated clock resource data when the device is released -- and enable |
| it. |
| |
| |
| |
| Then comes the registration steps: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| :emphasize-lines: 3,5,7,9,16 |
| |
| static int jz4740_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) |
| { |
| struct musb_hdrc_platform_data *pdata = &jz4740_musb_platform_data; |
| |
| pdata->platform_ops = &jz4740_musb_ops; |
| |
| platform_set_drvdata(pdev, glue); |
| |
| ret = platform_device_add_resources(musb, pdev->resource, |
| pdev->num_resources); |
| if (ret) { |
| dev_err(&pdev->dev, "failed to add resources\n"); |
| goto err_clk_disable; |
| } |
| |
| ret = platform_device_add_data(musb, pdata, sizeof(*pdata)); |
| if (ret) { |
| dev_err(&pdev->dev, "failed to add platform_data\n"); |
| goto err_clk_disable; |
| } |
| |
| return 0; |
| |
| err_clk_disable: |
| clk_disable_unprepare(clk); |
| err_platform_device_put: |
| platform_device_put(musb); |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| The first step is to pass the device data privately held by the glue |
| layer on to the controller driver through :c:func:`platform_set_drvdata` |
| (line 7). Next is passing on the device resources information, also privately |
| held at that point, through :c:func:`platform_device_add_resources` (line 9). |
| |
| Finally comes passing on the platform specific data to the controller |
| driver (line 16). Platform data will be discussed in |
| :ref:`musb-dev-platform-data`, but here we are looking at the |
| ``platform_ops`` function pointer (line 5) in ``musb_hdrc_platform_data`` |
| structure (line 3). This function pointer allows the MUSB controller |
| driver to know which function to call for device operation:: |
| |
| static const struct musb_platform_ops jz4740_musb_ops = { |
| .init = jz4740_musb_init, |
| .exit = jz4740_musb_exit, |
| }; |
| |
| Here we have the minimal case where only init and exit functions are |
| called by the controller driver when needed. Fact is the JZ4740 MUSB |
| controller is a basic controller, lacking some features found in other |
| controllers, otherwise we may also have pointers to a few other |
| functions like a power management function or a function to switch |
| between OTG and non-OTG modes, for instance. |
| |
| At that point of the registration process, the controller driver |
| actually calls the init function: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| :emphasize-lines: 12,14 |
| |
| static int jz4740_musb_init(struct musb *musb) |
| { |
| musb->xceiv = usb_get_phy(USB_PHY_TYPE_USB2); |
| if (!musb->xceiv) { |
| pr_err("HS UDC: no transceiver configured\n"); |
| return -ENODEV; |
| } |
| |
| /* Silicon does not implement ConfigData register. |
| * Set dyn_fifo to avoid reading EP config from hardware. |
| */ |
| musb->dyn_fifo = true; |
| |
| musb->isr = jz4740_musb_interrupt; |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| The goal of ``jz4740_musb_init()`` is to get hold of the transceiver |
| driver data of the MUSB controller hardware and pass it on to the MUSB |
| controller driver, as usual. The transceiver is the circuitry inside the |
| controller hardware responsible for sending/receiving the USB data. |
| Since it is an implementation of the physical layer of the OSI model, |
| the transceiver is also referred to as PHY. |
| |
| Getting hold of the ``MUSB PHY`` driver data is done with ``usb_get_phy()`` |
| which returns a pointer to the structure containing the driver instance |
| data. The next couple of instructions (line 12 and 14) are used as a |
| quirk and to setup IRQ handling respectively. Quirks and IRQ handling |
| will be discussed later in :ref:`musb-dev-quirks` and |
| :ref:`musb-handling-irqs`\ :: |
| |
| static int jz4740_musb_exit(struct musb *musb) |
| { |
| usb_put_phy(musb->xceiv); |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| Acting as the counterpart of init, the exit function releases the MUSB |
| PHY driver when the controller hardware itself is about to be released. |
| |
| Again, note that init and exit are fairly simple in this case due to the |
| basic set of features of the JZ4740 controller hardware. When writing an |
| musb glue layer for a more complex controller hardware, you might need |
| to take care of more processing in those two functions. |
| |
| Returning from the init function, the MUSB controller driver jumps back |
| into the probe function:: |
| |
| static int jz4740_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) |
| { |
| ret = platform_device_add(musb); |
| if (ret) { |
| dev_err(&pdev->dev, "failed to register musb device\n"); |
| goto err_clk_disable; |
| } |
| |
| return 0; |
| |
| err_clk_disable: |
| clk_disable_unprepare(clk); |
| err_platform_device_put: |
| platform_device_put(musb); |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| This is the last part of the device registration process where the glue |
| layer adds the controller hardware device to Linux kernel device |
| hierarchy: at this stage, all known information about the device is |
| passed on to the Linux USB core stack: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| :emphasize-lines: 5,6 |
| |
| static int jz4740_remove(struct platform_device *pdev) |
| { |
| struct jz4740_glue *glue = platform_get_drvdata(pdev); |
| |
| platform_device_unregister(glue->musb); |
| clk_disable_unprepare(glue->clk); |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| Acting as the counterpart of probe, the remove function unregister the |
| MUSB controller hardware (line 5) and disable the clock (line 6), |
| allowing it to be gated. |
| |
| .. _musb-handling-irqs: |
| |
| Handling IRQs |
| ============= |
| |
| Additionally to the MUSB controller hardware basic setup and |
| registration, the glue layer is also responsible for handling the IRQs: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| :emphasize-lines: 7,9-11,14,24 |
| |
| static irqreturn_t jz4740_musb_interrupt(int irq, void *__hci) |
| { |
| unsigned long flags; |
| irqreturn_t retval = IRQ_NONE; |
| struct musb *musb = __hci; |
| |
| spin_lock_irqsave(&musb->lock, flags); |
| |
| musb->int_usb = musb_readb(musb->mregs, MUSB_INTRUSB); |
| musb->int_tx = musb_readw(musb->mregs, MUSB_INTRTX); |
| musb->int_rx = musb_readw(musb->mregs, MUSB_INTRRX); |
| |
| /* |
| * The controller is gadget only, the state of the host mode IRQ bits is |
| * undefined. Mask them to make sure that the musb driver core will |
| * never see them set |
| */ |
| musb->int_usb &= MUSB_INTR_SUSPEND | MUSB_INTR_RESUME | |
| MUSB_INTR_RESET | MUSB_INTR_SOF; |
| |
| if (musb->int_usb || musb->int_tx || musb->int_rx) |
| retval = musb_interrupt(musb); |
| |
| spin_unlock_irqrestore(&musb->lock, flags); |
| |
| return retval; |
| } |
| |
| Here the glue layer mostly has to read the relevant hardware registers |
| and pass their values on to the controller driver which will handle the |
| actual event that triggered the IRQ. |
| |
| The interrupt handler critical section is protected by the |
| :c:func:`spin_lock_irqsave` and counterpart :c:func:`spin_unlock_irqrestore` |
| functions (line 7 and 24 respectively), which prevent the interrupt |
| handler code to be run by two different threads at the same time. |
| |
| Then the relevant interrupt registers are read (line 9 to 11): |
| |
| - ``MUSB_INTRUSB``: indicates which USB interrupts are currently active, |
| |
| - ``MUSB_INTRTX``: indicates which of the interrupts for TX endpoints are |
| currently active, |
| |
| - ``MUSB_INTRRX``: indicates which of the interrupts for TX endpoints are |
| currently active. |
| |
| Note that :c:func:`musb_readb` is used to read 8-bit registers at most, while |
| :c:func:`musb_readw` allows us to read at most 16-bit registers. There are |
| other functions that can be used depending on the size of your device |
| registers. See ``musb_io.h`` for more information. |
| |
| Instruction on line 18 is another quirk specific to the JZ4740 USB |
| device controller, which will be discussed later in :ref:`musb-dev-quirks`. |
| |
| The glue layer still needs to register the IRQ handler though. Remember |
| the instruction on line 14 of the init function:: |
| |
| static int jz4740_musb_init(struct musb *musb) |
| { |
| musb->isr = jz4740_musb_interrupt; |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| This instruction sets a pointer to the glue layer IRQ handler function, |
| in order for the controller hardware to call the handler back when an |
| IRQ comes from the controller hardware. The interrupt handler is now |
| implemented and registered. |
| |
| .. _musb-dev-platform-data: |
| |
| Device Platform Data |
| ==================== |
| |
| In order to write an MUSB glue layer, you need to have some data |
| describing the hardware capabilities of your controller hardware, which |
| is called the platform data. |
| |
| Platform data is specific to your hardware, though it may cover a broad |
| range of devices, and is generally found somewhere in the ``arch/`` |
| directory, depending on your device architecture. |
| |
| For instance, platform data for the JZ4740 SoC is found in |
| ``arch/mips/jz4740/platform.c``. In the ``platform.c`` file each device of the |
| JZ4740 SoC is described through a set of structures. |
| |
| Here is the part of ``arch/mips/jz4740/platform.c`` that covers the USB |
| Device Controller (UDC): |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| :emphasize-lines: 2,7,14-17,21,22,25,26,28,29 |
| |
| /* USB Device Controller */ |
| struct platform_device jz4740_udc_xceiv_device = { |
| .name = "usb_phy_gen_xceiv", |
| .id = 0, |
| }; |
| |
| static struct resource jz4740_udc_resources[] = { |
| [0] = { |
| .start = JZ4740_UDC_BASE_ADDR, |
| .end = JZ4740_UDC_BASE_ADDR + 0x10000 - 1, |
| .flags = IORESOURCE_MEM, |
| }, |
| [1] = { |
| .start = JZ4740_IRQ_UDC, |
| .end = JZ4740_IRQ_UDC, |
| .flags = IORESOURCE_IRQ, |
| .name = "mc", |
| }, |
| }; |
| |
| struct platform_device jz4740_udc_device = { |
| .name = "musb-jz4740", |
| .id = -1, |
| .dev = { |
| .dma_mask = &jz4740_udc_device.dev.coherent_dma_mask, |
| .coherent_dma_mask = DMA_BIT_MASK(32), |
| }, |
| .num_resources = ARRAY_SIZE(jz4740_udc_resources), |
| .resource = jz4740_udc_resources, |
| }; |
| |
| The ``jz4740_udc_xceiv_device`` platform device structure (line 2) |
| describes the UDC transceiver with a name and id number. |
| |
| At the time of this writing, note that ``usb_phy_gen_xceiv`` is the |
| specific name to be used for all transceivers that are either built-in |
| with reference USB IP or autonomous and doesn't require any PHY |
| programming. You will need to set ``CONFIG_NOP_USB_XCEIV=y`` in the |
| kernel configuration to make use of the corresponding transceiver |
| driver. The id field could be set to -1 (equivalent to |
| ``PLATFORM_DEVID_NONE``), -2 (equivalent to ``PLATFORM_DEVID_AUTO``) or |
| start with 0 for the first device of this kind if we want a specific id |
| number. |
| |
| The ``jz4740_udc_resources`` resource structure (line 7) defines the UDC |
| registers base addresses. |
| |
| The first array (line 9 to 11) defines the UDC registers base memory |
| addresses: start points to the first register memory address, end points |
| to the last register memory address and the flags member defines the |
| type of resource we are dealing with. So ``IORESOURCE_MEM`` is used to |
| define the registers memory addresses. The second array (line 14 to 17) |
| defines the UDC IRQ registers addresses. Since there is only one IRQ |
| register available for the JZ4740 UDC, start and end point at the same |
| address. The ``IORESOURCE_IRQ`` flag tells that we are dealing with IRQ |
| resources, and the name ``mc`` is in fact hard-coded in the MUSB core in |
| order for the controller driver to retrieve this IRQ resource by |
| querying it by its name. |
| |
| Finally, the ``jz4740_udc_device`` platform device structure (line 21) |
| describes the UDC itself. |
| |
| The ``musb-jz4740`` name (line 22) defines the MUSB driver that is used |
| for this device; remember this is in fact the name that we used in the |
| ``jz4740_driver`` platform driver structure in :ref:`musb-basics`. |
| The id field (line 23) is set to -1 (equivalent to ``PLATFORM_DEVID_NONE``) |
| since we do not need an id for the device: the MUSB controller driver was |
| already set to allocate an automatic id in :ref:`musb-basics`. In the dev field |
| we care for DMA related information here. The ``dma_mask`` field (line 25) |
| defines the width of the DMA mask that is going to be used, and |
| ``coherent_dma_mask`` (line 26) has the same purpose but for the |
| ``alloc_coherent`` DMA mappings: in both cases we are using a 32 bits mask. |
| Then the resource field (line 29) is simply a pointer to the resource |
| structure defined before, while the ``num_resources`` field (line 28) keeps |
| track of the number of arrays defined in the resource structure (in this |
| case there were two resource arrays defined before). |
| |
| With this quick overview of the UDC platform data at the ``arch/`` level now |
| done, let's get back to the MUSB glue layer specific platform data in |
| ``drivers/usb/musb/jz4740.c``: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| :emphasize-lines: 3,5,7-9,11 |
| |
| static struct musb_hdrc_config jz4740_musb_config = { |
| /* Silicon does not implement USB OTG. */ |
| .multipoint = 0, |
| /* Max EPs scanned, driver will decide which EP can be used. */ |
| .num_eps = 4, |
| /* RAMbits needed to configure EPs from table */ |
| .ram_bits = 9, |
| .fifo_cfg = jz4740_musb_fifo_cfg, |
| .fifo_cfg_size = ARRAY_SIZE(jz4740_musb_fifo_cfg), |
| }; |
| |
| static struct musb_hdrc_platform_data jz4740_musb_platform_data = { |
| .mode = MUSB_PERIPHERAL, |
| .config = &jz4740_musb_config, |
| }; |
| |
| First the glue layer configures some aspects of the controller driver |
| operation related to the controller hardware specifics. This is done |
| through the ``jz4740_musb_config`` :c:type:`musb_hdrc_config` structure. |
| |
| Defining the OTG capability of the controller hardware, the multipoint |
| member (line 3) is set to 0 (equivalent to false) since the JZ4740 UDC |
| is not OTG compatible. Then ``num_eps`` (line 5) defines the number of USB |
| endpoints of the controller hardware, including endpoint 0: here we have |
| 3 endpoints + endpoint 0. Next is ``ram_bits`` (line 7) which is the width |
| of the RAM address bus for the MUSB controller hardware. This |
| information is needed when the controller driver cannot automatically |
| configure endpoints by reading the relevant controller hardware |
| registers. This issue will be discussed when we get to device quirks in |
| :ref:`musb-dev-quirks`. Last two fields (line 8 and 9) are also |
| about device quirks: ``fifo_cfg`` points to the USB endpoints configuration |
| table and ``fifo_cfg_size`` keeps track of the size of the number of |
| entries in that configuration table. More on that later in |
| :ref:`musb-dev-quirks`. |
| |
| Then this configuration is embedded inside ``jz4740_musb_platform_data`` |
| :c:type:`musb_hdrc_platform_data` structure (line 11): config is a pointer to |
| the configuration structure itself, and mode tells the controller driver |
| if the controller hardware may be used as ``MUSB_HOST`` only, |
| ``MUSB_PERIPHERAL`` only or ``MUSB_OTG`` which is a dual mode. |
| |
| Remember that ``jz4740_musb_platform_data`` is then used to convey |
| platform data information as we have seen in the probe function in |
| :ref:`musb-basics`. |
| |
| .. _musb-dev-quirks: |
| |
| Device Quirks |
| ============= |
| |
| Completing the platform data specific to your device, you may also need |
| to write some code in the glue layer to work around some device specific |
| limitations. These quirks may be due to some hardware bugs, or simply be |
| the result of an incomplete implementation of the USB On-the-Go |
| specification. |
| |
| The JZ4740 UDC exhibits such quirks, some of which we will discuss here |
| for the sake of insight even though these might not be found in the |
| controller hardware you are working on. |
| |
| Let's get back to the init function first: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| :emphasize-lines: 12 |
| |
| static int jz4740_musb_init(struct musb *musb) |
| { |
| musb->xceiv = usb_get_phy(USB_PHY_TYPE_USB2); |
| if (!musb->xceiv) { |
| pr_err("HS UDC: no transceiver configured\n"); |
| return -ENODEV; |
| } |
| |
| /* Silicon does not implement ConfigData register. |
| * Set dyn_fifo to avoid reading EP config from hardware. |
| */ |
| musb->dyn_fifo = true; |
| |
| musb->isr = jz4740_musb_interrupt; |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| Instruction on line 12 helps the MUSB controller driver to work around |
| the fact that the controller hardware is missing registers that are used |
| for USB endpoints configuration. |
| |
| Without these registers, the controller driver is unable to read the |
| endpoints configuration from the hardware, so we use line 12 instruction |
| to bypass reading the configuration from silicon, and rely on a |
| hard-coded table that describes the endpoints configuration instead:: |
| |
| static struct musb_fifo_cfg jz4740_musb_fifo_cfg[] = { |
| { .hw_ep_num = 1, .style = FIFO_TX, .maxpacket = 512, }, |
| { .hw_ep_num = 1, .style = FIFO_RX, .maxpacket = 512, }, |
| { .hw_ep_num = 2, .style = FIFO_TX, .maxpacket = 64, }, |
| }; |
| |
| Looking at the configuration table above, we see that each endpoints is |
| described by three fields: ``hw_ep_num`` is the endpoint number, style is |
| its direction (either ``FIFO_TX`` for the controller driver to send packets |
| in the controller hardware, or ``FIFO_RX`` to receive packets from |
| hardware), and maxpacket defines the maximum size of each data packet |
| that can be transmitted over that endpoint. Reading from the table, the |
| controller driver knows that endpoint 1 can be used to send and receive |
| USB data packets of 512 bytes at once (this is in fact a bulk in/out |
| endpoint), and endpoint 2 can be used to send data packets of 64 bytes |
| at once (this is in fact an interrupt endpoint). |
| |
| Note that there is no information about endpoint 0 here: that one is |
| implemented by default in every silicon design, with a predefined |
| configuration according to the USB specification. For more examples of |
| endpoint configuration tables, see ``musb_core.c``. |
| |
| Let's now get back to the interrupt handler function: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| :emphasize-lines: 18-19 |
| |
| static irqreturn_t jz4740_musb_interrupt(int irq, void *__hci) |
| { |
| unsigned long flags; |
| irqreturn_t retval = IRQ_NONE; |
| struct musb *musb = __hci; |
| |
| spin_lock_irqsave(&musb->lock, flags); |
| |
| musb->int_usb = musb_readb(musb->mregs, MUSB_INTRUSB); |
| musb->int_tx = musb_readw(musb->mregs, MUSB_INTRTX); |
| musb->int_rx = musb_readw(musb->mregs, MUSB_INTRRX); |
| |
| /* |
| * The controller is gadget only, the state of the host mode IRQ bits is |
| * undefined. Mask them to make sure that the musb driver core will |
| * never see them set |
| */ |
| musb->int_usb &= MUSB_INTR_SUSPEND | MUSB_INTR_RESUME | |
| MUSB_INTR_RESET | MUSB_INTR_SOF; |
| |
| if (musb->int_usb || musb->int_tx || musb->int_rx) |
| retval = musb_interrupt(musb); |
| |
| spin_unlock_irqrestore(&musb->lock, flags); |
| |
| return retval; |
| } |
| |
| Instruction on line 18 above is a way for the controller driver to work |
| around the fact that some interrupt bits used for USB host mode |
| operation are missing in the ``MUSB_INTRUSB`` register, thus left in an |
| undefined hardware state, since this MUSB controller hardware is used in |
| peripheral mode only. As a consequence, the glue layer masks these |
| missing bits out to avoid parasite interrupts by doing a logical AND |
| operation between the value read from ``MUSB_INTRUSB`` and the bits that |
| are actually implemented in the register. |
| |
| These are only a couple of the quirks found in the JZ4740 USB device |
| controller. Some others were directly addressed in the MUSB core since |
| the fixes were generic enough to provide a better handling of the issues |
| for others controller hardware eventually. |
| |
| Conclusion |
| ========== |
| |
| Writing a Linux MUSB glue layer should be a more accessible task, as |
| this documentation tries to show the ins and outs of this exercise. |
| |
| The JZ4740 USB device controller being fairly simple, I hope its glue |
| layer serves as a good example for the curious mind. Used with the |
| current MUSB glue layers, this documentation should provide enough |
| guidance to get started; should anything gets out of hand, the linux-usb |
| mailing list archive is another helpful resource to browse through. |
| |
| Acknowledgements |
| ================ |
| |
| Many thanks to Lars-Peter Clausen and Maarten ter Huurne for answering |
| my questions while I was writing the JZ4740 glue layer and for helping |
| me out getting the code in good shape. |
| |
| I would also like to thank the Qi-Hardware community at large for its |
| cheerful guidance and support. |
| |
| Resources |
| ========= |
| |
| USB Home Page: http://www.usb.org |
| |
| linux-usb Mailing List Archives: http://marc.info/?l=linux-usb |
| |
| USB On-the-Go Basics: |
| http://www.maximintegrated.com/app-notes/index.mvp/id/1822 |
| |
| :ref:`Writing USB Device Drivers <writing-usb-driver>` |
| |
| Texas Instruments USB Configuration Wiki Page: |
| http://processors.wiki.ti.com/index.php/Usbgeneralpage |