Device drivers infrastructure¶
The Basic Device Driver-Model Structures¶
-
struct
subsys_interface
¶ interfaces to device functions
Definition
struct subsys_interface {
const char *name;
struct bus_type *subsys;
struct list_head node;
int (*add_dev)(struct device *dev, struct subsys_interface *sif);
void (*remove_dev)(struct device *dev, struct subsys_interface *sif);
};
Members
name
- name of the device function
subsys
- subsytem of the devices to attach to
node
- the list of functions registered at the subsystem
add_dev
- device hookup to device function handler
remove_dev
- device hookup to device function handler
Description
Simple interfaces attached to a subsystem. Multiple interfaces can attach to a subsystem and its devices. Unlike drivers, they do not exclusively claim or control devices. Interfaces usually represent a specific functionality of a subsystem/class of devices.
-
devm_alloc_percpu
(dev, type)¶ Resource-managed alloc_percpu
Parameters
dev
- Device to allocate per-cpu memory for
type
- Type to allocate per-cpu memory for
Description
Managed alloc_percpu. Per-cpu memory allocated with this function is automatically freed on driver detach.
Return
Pointer to allocated memory on success, NULL on failure.
-
enum
dl_dev_state
¶ Device driver presence tracking information.
Constants
DL_DEV_NO_DRIVER
- There is no driver attached to the device.
DL_DEV_PROBING
- A driver is probing.
DL_DEV_DRIVER_BOUND
- The driver has been bound to the device.
DL_DEV_UNBINDING
- The driver is unbinding from the device.
-
struct
dev_links_info
¶ Device data related to device links.
Definition
struct dev_links_info {
struct list_head suppliers;
struct list_head consumers;
struct list_head defer_sync;
enum dl_dev_state status;
};
Members
suppliers
- List of links to supplier devices.
consumers
- List of links to consumer devices.
defer_sync
- Hook to global list of devices that have deferred sync_state.
status
- Driver status information.
-
struct
device
¶ The basic device structure
Definition
struct device {
struct kobject kobj;
struct device *parent;
struct device_private *p;
const char *init_name;
const struct device_type *type;
struct bus_type *bus;
struct device_driver *driver;
void *platform_data;
void *driver_data;
#ifdef CONFIG_PROVE_LOCKING;
struct mutex lockdep_mutex;
#endif;
struct mutex mutex;
struct dev_links_info links;
struct dev_pm_info power;
struct dev_pm_domain *pm_domain;
#ifdef CONFIG_ENERGY_MODEL;
struct em_perf_domain *em_pd;
#endif;
#ifdef CONFIG_GENERIC_MSI_IRQ_DOMAIN;
struct irq_domain *msi_domain;
#endif;
#ifdef CONFIG_PINCTRL;
struct dev_pin_info *pins;
#endif;
#ifdef CONFIG_GENERIC_MSI_IRQ;
struct list_head msi_list;
#endif;
#ifdef CONFIG_DMA_OPS;
const struct dma_map_ops *dma_ops;
#endif;
u64 *dma_mask;
u64 coherent_dma_mask;
u64 bus_dma_limit;
const struct bus_dma_region *dma_range_map;
struct device_dma_parameters *dma_parms;
struct list_head dma_pools;
#ifdef CONFIG_DMA_DECLARE_COHERENT;
struct dma_coherent_mem *dma_mem;
#endif;
#ifdef CONFIG_DMA_CMA;
struct cma *cma_area;
#endif;
struct dev_archdata archdata;
struct device_node *of_node;
struct fwnode_handle *fwnode;
#ifdef CONFIG_NUMA;
int numa_node;
#endif;
dev_t devt;
u32 id;
spinlock_t devres_lock;
struct list_head devres_head;
struct class *class;
const struct attribute_group **groups;
void (*release)(struct device *dev);
struct iommu_group *iommu_group;
struct dev_iommu *iommu;
bool offline_disabled:1;
bool offline:1;
bool of_node_reused:1;
bool state_synced:1;
#if defined(CONFIG_ARCH_HAS_SYNC_DMA_FOR_DEVICE) || defined(CONFIG_ARCH_HAS_SYNC_DMA_FOR_CPU) || defined(CONFIG_ARCH_HAS_SYNC_DMA_FOR_CPU_ALL);
bool dma_coherent:1;
#endif;
#ifdef CONFIG_DMA_OPS_BYPASS;
bool dma_ops_bypass : 1;
#endif;
};
Members
kobj
- A top-level, abstract class from which other classes are derived.
parent
- The device’s “parent” device, the device to which it is attached. In most cases, a parent device is some sort of bus or host controller. If parent is NULL, the device, is a top-level device, which is not usually what you want.
p
- Holds the private data of the driver core portions of the device. See the comment of the struct device_private for detail.
init_name
- Initial name of the device.
type
- The type of device. This identifies the device type and carries type-specific information.
bus
- Type of bus device is on.
driver
- Which driver has allocated this
platform_data
- Platform data specific to the device.
driver_data
- Private pointer for driver specific info.
lockdep_mutex
- An optional debug lock that a subsystem can use as a peer lock to gain localized lockdep coverage of the device_lock.
mutex
- Mutex to synchronize calls to its driver.
links
- Links to suppliers and consumers of this device.
power
- For device power management. See Device Power Management Basics for details.
pm_domain
- Provide callbacks that are executed during system suspend, hibernation, system resume and during runtime PM transitions along with subsystem-level and driver-level callbacks.
em_pd
- device’s energy model performance domain
msi_domain
- The generic MSI domain this device is using.
pins
- For device pin management. See PINCTRL (PIN CONTROL) subsystem for details.
msi_list
- Hosts MSI descriptors
dma_ops
- DMA mapping operations for this device.
dma_mask
- Dma mask (if dma’ble device).
coherent_dma_mask
- Like dma_mask, but for alloc_coherent mapping as not all hardware supports 64-bit addresses for consistent allocations such descriptors.
bus_dma_limit
- Limit of an upstream bridge or bus which imposes a smaller DMA limit than the device itself supports.
dma_range_map
- map for DMA memory ranges relative to that of RAM
dma_parms
- A low level driver may set these to teach IOMMU code about segment limitations.
dma_pools
- Dma pools (if dma’ble device).
dma_mem
- Internal for coherent mem override.
cma_area
- Contiguous memory area for dma allocations
archdata
- For arch-specific additions.
of_node
- Associated device tree node.
fwnode
- Associated device node supplied by platform firmware.
numa_node
- NUMA node this device is close to.
devt
- For creating the sysfs “dev”.
id
- device instance
devres_lock
- Spinlock to protect the resource of the device.
devres_head
- The resources list of the device.
class
- The class of the device.
groups
- Optional attribute groups.
release
- Callback to free the device after all references have gone away. This should be set by the allocator of the device (i.e. the bus driver that discovered the device).
iommu_group
- IOMMU group the device belongs to.
iommu
- Per device generic IOMMU runtime data
offline_disabled
- If set, the device is permanently online.
offline
- Set after successful invocation of bus type’s .offline().
of_node_reused
- Set if the device-tree node is shared with an ancestor device.
state_synced
- The hardware state of this device has been synced to match the software state of this device by calling the driver/bus sync_state() callback.
dma_coherent
- this particular device is dma coherent, even if the architecture supports non-coherent devices.
dma_ops_bypass
- If set to
true
then the dma_ops are bypassed for the streaming DMA operations (->map_* / ->unmap_* / ->sync_*), and optionall (if the coherent mask is large enough) also for dma allocations. This flag is managed by the dma ops instance from ->dma_supported.
Example
- For devices on custom boards, as typical of embedded
- and SOC based hardware, Linux often uses platform_data to point to board-specific structures describing devices and how they are wired. That can include what ports are available, chip variants, which GPIO pins act in what additional roles, and so on. This shrinks the “Board Support Packages” (BSPs) and minimizes board-specific #ifdefs in drivers.
Description
At the lowest level, every device in a Linux system is represented by an
instance of struct device
. The device structure contains the information
that the device model core needs to model the system. Most subsystems,
however, track additional information about the devices they host. As a
result, it is rare for devices to be represented by bare device structures;
instead, that structure, like kobject structures, is usually embedded within
a higher-level representation of the device.
-
struct
device_link
¶ Device link representation.
Definition
struct device_link {
struct device *supplier;
struct list_head s_node;
struct device *consumer;
struct list_head c_node;
struct device link_dev;
enum device_link_state status;
u32 flags;
refcount_t rpm_active;
struct kref kref;
#ifdef CONFIG_SRCU;
struct rcu_head rcu_head;
#endif;
bool supplier_preactivated;
};
Members
supplier
- The device on the supplier end of the link.
s_node
- Hook to the supplier device’s list of links to consumers.
consumer
- The device on the consumer end of the link.
c_node
- Hook to the consumer device’s list of links to suppliers.
link_dev
- device used to expose link details in sysfs
status
- The state of the link (with respect to the presence of drivers).
flags
- Link flags.
rpm_active
- Whether or not the consumer device is runtime-PM-active.
kref
- Count repeated addition of the same link.
rcu_head
- An RCU head to use for deferred execution of SRCU callbacks.
supplier_preactivated
- Supplier has been made active before consumer probe.
-
bool
device_iommu_mapped
(struct device *dev)¶ Returns true when the device DMA is translated by an IOMMU
Parameters
struct device *dev
- Device to perform the check on
Device Drivers Base¶
-
void
driver_init
(void)¶ initialize driver model.
Parameters
void
- no arguments
Description
Call the driver model init functions to initialize their subsystems. Called early from init/main.c.
-
int
driver_for_each_device
(struct device_driver *drv, struct device *start, void *data, int (*fn)(struct device *, void *))¶ Iterator for devices bound to a driver.
Parameters
struct device_driver *drv
- Driver we’re iterating.
struct device *start
- Device to begin with
void *data
- Data to pass to the callback.
int (*fn)(struct device *, void *)
- Function to call for each device.
Description
Iterate over the drv’s list of devices calling fn for each one.
-
struct device *
driver_find_device
(struct device_driver *drv, struct device *start, const void *data, int (*match)(struct device *dev, const void *data))¶ device iterator for locating a particular device.
Parameters
struct device_driver *drv
- The device’s driver
struct device *start
- Device to begin with
const void *data
- Data to pass to match function
int (*match)(struct device *dev, const void *data)
- Callback function to check device
Description
This is similar to the driver_for_each_device()
function above, but
it returns a reference to a device that is ‘found’ for later use, as
determined by the match callback.
The callback should return 0 if the device doesn’t match and non-zero if it does. If the callback returns non-zero, this function will return to the caller and not iterate over any more devices.
-
int
driver_create_file
(struct device_driver *drv, const struct driver_attribute *attr)¶ create sysfs file for driver.
Parameters
struct device_driver *drv
- driver.
const struct driver_attribute *attr
- driver attribute descriptor.
-
void
driver_remove_file
(struct device_driver *drv, const struct driver_attribute *attr)¶ remove sysfs file for driver.
Parameters
struct device_driver *drv
- driver.
const struct driver_attribute *attr
- driver attribute descriptor.
-
int
driver_register
(struct device_driver *drv)¶ register driver with bus
Parameters
struct device_driver *drv
- driver to register
Description
We pass off most of the work to the bus_add_driver() call, since most of the things we have to do deal with the bus structures.
-
void
driver_unregister
(struct device_driver *drv)¶ remove driver from system.
Parameters
struct device_driver *drv
- driver.
Description
Again, we pass off most of the work to the bus-level call.
-
struct device_driver *
driver_find
(const char *name, struct bus_type *bus)¶ locate driver on a bus by its name.
Parameters
const char *name
- name of the driver.
struct bus_type *bus
- bus to scan for the driver.
Description
Call kset_find_obj()
to iterate over list of drivers on
a bus to find driver by name. Return driver if found.
This routine provides no locking to prevent the driver it returns from being unregistered or unloaded while the caller is using it. The caller is responsible for preventing this.
-
struct device_link *
device_link_add
(struct device *consumer, struct device *supplier, u32 flags)¶ Create a link between two devices.
Parameters
struct device *consumer
- Consumer end of the link.
struct device *supplier
- Supplier end of the link.
u32 flags
- Link flags.
Description
The caller is responsible for the proper synchronization of the link creation with runtime PM. First, setting the DL_FLAG_PM_RUNTIME flag will cause the runtime PM framework to take the link into account. Second, if the DL_FLAG_RPM_ACTIVE flag is set in addition to it, the supplier devices will be forced into the active meta state and reference-counted upon the creation of the link. If DL_FLAG_PM_RUNTIME is not set, DL_FLAG_RPM_ACTIVE will be ignored.
If DL_FLAG_STATELESS is set in flags, the caller of this function is
expected to release the link returned by it directly with the help of either
device_link_del()
or device_link_remove()
.
If that flag is not set, however, the caller of this function is handing the management of the link over to the driver core entirely and its return value can only be used to check whether or not the link is present. In that case, the DL_FLAG_AUTOREMOVE_CONSUMER and DL_FLAG_AUTOREMOVE_SUPPLIER device link flags can be used to indicate to the driver core when the link can be safely deleted. Namely, setting one of them in flags indicates to the driver core that the link is not going to be used (by the given caller of this function) after unbinding the consumer or supplier driver, respectively, from its device, so the link can be deleted at that point. If none of them is set, the link will be maintained until one of the devices pointed to by it (either the consumer or the supplier) is unregistered.
Also, if DL_FLAG_STATELESS, DL_FLAG_AUTOREMOVE_CONSUMER and DL_FLAG_AUTOREMOVE_SUPPLIER are not set in flags (that is, a persistent managed device link is being added), the DL_FLAG_AUTOPROBE_CONSUMER flag can be used to request the driver core to automatically probe for a consumer driver after successfully binding a driver to the supplier device.
The combination of DL_FLAG_STATELESS and one of DL_FLAG_AUTOREMOVE_CONSUMER, DL_FLAG_AUTOREMOVE_SUPPLIER, or DL_FLAG_AUTOPROBE_CONSUMER set in flags at the same time is invalid and will cause NULL to be returned upfront. However, if a device link between the given consumer and supplier pair exists already when this function is called for them, the existing link will be returned regardless of its current type and status (the link’s flags may be modified then). The caller of this function is then expected to treat the link as though it has just been created, so (in particular) if DL_FLAG_STATELESS was passed in flags, the link needs to be released explicitly when not needed any more (as stated above).
A side effect of the link creation is re-ordering of dpm_list and the devices_kset list by moving the consumer device and all devices depending on it to the ends of these lists (that does not happen to devices that have not been registered when this function is called).
The supplier device is required to be registered when this function is called and NULL will be returned if that is not the case. The consumer device need not be registered, however.
-
void
device_link_del
(struct device_link *link)¶ Delete a stateless link between two devices.
Parameters
struct device_link *link
- Device link to delete.
Description
The caller must ensure proper synchronization of this function with runtime
PM. If the link was added multiple times, it needs to be deleted as often.
Care is required for hotplugged devices: Their links are purged on removal
and calling device_link_del()
is then no longer allowed.
-
void
device_link_remove
(void *consumer, struct device *supplier)¶ Delete a stateless link between two devices.
Parameters
void *consumer
- Consumer end of the link.
struct device *supplier
- Supplier end of the link.
Description
The caller must ensure proper synchronization of this function with runtime PM.
-
const char *
dev_driver_string
(const struct device *dev)¶ Return a device’s driver name, if at all possible
Parameters
const struct device *dev
struct device
to get the name of
Description
Will return the device’s driver’s name if it is bound to a device. If the device is not bound to a driver, it will return the name of the bus it is attached to. If it is not attached to a bus either, an empty string will be returned.
-
int
devm_device_add_group
(struct device *dev, const struct attribute_group *grp)¶ given a device, create a managed attribute group
Parameters
struct device *dev
- The device to create the group for
const struct attribute_group *grp
- The attribute group to create
Description
This function creates a group for the first time. It will explicitly warn and error if any of the attribute files being created already exist.
Returns 0 on success or error code on failure.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device to remove the group from
const struct attribute_group *grp
- group to remove
Description
This function removes a group of attributes from a device. The attributes previously have to have been created for this group, otherwise it will fail.
-
int
devm_device_add_groups
(struct device *dev, const struct attribute_group **groups)¶ create a bunch of managed attribute groups
Parameters
struct device *dev
- The device to create the group for
const struct attribute_group **groups
- The attribute groups to create, NULL terminated
Description
This function creates a bunch of managed attribute groups. If an error occurs when creating a group, all previously created groups will be removed, unwinding everything back to the original state when this function was called. It will explicitly warn and error if any of the attribute files being created already exist.
Returns 0 on success or error code from sysfs_create_group on failure.
-
void
devm_device_remove_groups
(struct device *dev, const struct attribute_group **groups)¶ remove a list of managed groups
Parameters
struct device *dev
- The device for the groups to be removed from
const struct attribute_group **groups
- NULL terminated list of groups to be removed
Description
If groups is not NULL, remove the specified groups from the device.
-
int
device_create_file
(struct device *dev, const struct device_attribute *attr)¶ create sysfs attribute file for device.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
const struct device_attribute *attr
- device attribute descriptor.
-
void
device_remove_file
(struct device *dev, const struct device_attribute *attr)¶ remove sysfs attribute file.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
const struct device_attribute *attr
- device attribute descriptor.
-
bool
device_remove_file_self
(struct device *dev, const struct device_attribute *attr)¶ remove sysfs attribute file from its own method.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
const struct device_attribute *attr
- device attribute descriptor.
Description
See kernfs_remove_self() for details.
-
int
device_create_bin_file
(struct device *dev, const struct bin_attribute *attr)¶ create sysfs binary attribute file for device.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
const struct bin_attribute *attr
- device binary attribute descriptor.
-
void
device_remove_bin_file
(struct device *dev, const struct bin_attribute *attr)¶ remove sysfs binary attribute file
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
const struct bin_attribute *attr
- device binary attribute descriptor.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
Description
This prepares the device for use by other layers by initializing
its fields.
It is the first half of device_register()
, if called by
that function, though it can also be called separately, so one
may use dev’s fields. In particular, get_device()
/put_device()
may be used for reference counting of dev after calling this
function.
All fields in dev must be initialized by the caller to 0, except
for those explicitly set to some other value. The simplest
approach is to use kzalloc()
to allocate the structure containing
dev.
NOTE
Use put_device()
to give up your reference instead of freeing
dev directly once you have called this function.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device
const char *fmt
- format string for the device’s name
...
- variable arguments
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
Description
This is part 2 of device_register()
, though may be called
separately _iff_ device_initialize()
has been called separately.
This adds dev to the kobject hierarchy via kobject_add()
, adds it
to the global and sibling lists for the device, then
adds it to the other relevant subsystems of the driver model.
Do not call this routine or device_register()
more than once for
any device structure. The driver model core is not designed to work
with devices that get unregistered and then spring back to life.
(Among other things, it’s very hard to guarantee that all references
to the previous incarnation of dev have been dropped.) Allocate
and register a fresh new struct device
instead.
Rule of thumb is: if device_add()
succeeds, you should call
device_del()
when you want to get rid of it. If device_add()
has
not succeeded, use only put_device()
to drop the reference
count.
NOTE
_Never_ directly free dev after calling this function, even
if it returned an error! Always use put_device()
to give up your
reference instead.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- pointer to the device structure
Description
This happens in two clean steps - initialize the device and add it to the system. The two steps can be called separately, but this is the easiest and most common. I.e. you should only call the two helpers separately if have a clearly defined need to use and refcount the device before it is added to the hierarchy.
For more information, see the kerneldoc for device_initialize()
and device_add()
.
NOTE
_Never_ directly free dev after calling this function, even
if it returned an error! Always use put_device()
to give up the
reference initialized in this function instead.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
Description
This simply forwards the call to kobject_get()
, though
we do take care to provide for the case that we get a NULL
pointer passed in.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device in question.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
Description
This is the first part of the device unregistration
sequence. This removes the device from the lists we control
from here, has it removed from the other driver model
subsystems it was added to in device_add()
, and removes it
from the kobject hierarchy.
NOTE
this should be called manually _iff_ device_add()
was
also called manually.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device going away.
Description
We do this in two parts, like we do device_register()
. First,
we remove it from all the subsystems with device_del()
, then
we decrement the reference count via put_device()
. If that
is the final reference count, the device will be cleaned up
via device_release() above. Otherwise, the structure will
stick around until the final reference to the device is dropped.
-
int
device_for_each_child
(struct device *parent, void *data, int (*fn)(struct device *dev, void *data))¶ device child iterator.
Parameters
struct device *parent
- parent
struct device
. void *data
- data for the callback.
int (*fn)(struct device *dev, void *data)
- function to be called for each device.
Description
Iterate over parent’s child devices, and call fn for each, passing it data.
We check the return of fn each time. If it returns anything other than 0, we break out and return that value.
-
int
device_for_each_child_reverse
(struct device *parent, void *data, int (*fn)(struct device *dev, void *data))¶ device child iterator in reversed order.
Parameters
struct device *parent
- parent
struct device
. void *data
- data for the callback.
int (*fn)(struct device *dev, void *data)
- function to be called for each device.
Description
Iterate over parent’s child devices, and call fn for each, passing it data.
We check the return of fn each time. If it returns anything other than 0, we break out and return that value.
-
struct device *
device_find_child
(struct device *parent, void *data, int (*match)(struct device *dev, void *data))¶ device iterator for locating a particular device.
Parameters
struct device *parent
- parent
struct device
void *data
- Data to pass to match function
int (*match)(struct device *dev, void *data)
- Callback function to check device
Description
This is similar to the device_for_each_child()
function above, but it
returns a reference to a device that is ‘found’ for later use, as
determined by the match callback.
The callback should return 0 if the device doesn’t match and non-zero if it does. If the callback returns non-zero and a reference to the current device can be obtained, this function will return to the caller and not iterate over any more devices.
NOTE
you will need to drop the reference with put_device()
after use.
-
struct device *
device_find_child_by_name
(struct device *parent, const char *name)¶ device iterator for locating a child device.
Parameters
struct device *parent
- parent
struct device
const char *name
- name of the child device
Description
This is similar to the device_find_child()
function above, but it
returns a reference to a device that has the name name.
NOTE
you will need to drop the reference with put_device()
after use.
-
struct device *
__root_device_register
(const char *name, struct module *owner)¶ allocate and register a root device
Parameters
const char *name
- root device name
struct module *owner
- owner module of the root device, usually THIS_MODULE
Description
This function allocates a root device and registers it
using device_register()
. In order to free the returned
device, use root_device_unregister()
.
Root devices are dummy devices which allow other devices to be grouped under /sys/devices. Use this function to allocate a root device and then use it as the parent of any device which should appear under /sys/devices/{name}
The /sys/devices/{name} directory will also contain a ‘module’ symlink which points to the owner directory in sysfs.
Returns struct device
pointer on success, or ERR_PTR() on error.
Note
You probably want to use root_device_register().
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device going away
Description
This function unregisters and cleans up a device that was created by root_device_register().
-
struct device *
device_create
(struct class *class, struct device *parent, dev_t devt, void *drvdata, const char *fmt, ...)¶ creates a device and registers it with sysfs
Parameters
struct class *class
- pointer to the struct class that this device should be registered to
struct device *parent
- pointer to the parent
struct device
of this new device, if any dev_t devt
- the dev_t for the char device to be added
void *drvdata
- the data to be added to the device for callbacks
const char *fmt
- string for the device’s name
...
- variable arguments
Description
This function can be used by char device classes. A struct device
will be created in sysfs, registered to the specified class.
A “dev” file will be created, showing the dev_t for the device, if
the dev_t is not 0,0.
If a pointer to a parent struct device
is passed in, the newly created
struct device
will be a child of that device in sysfs.
The pointer to the struct device
will be returned from the call.
Any further sysfs files that might be required can be created using this
pointer.
Returns struct device
pointer on success, or ERR_PTR() on error.
Note
the struct class passed to this function must have previously been created with a call to class_create().
-
struct device *
device_create_with_groups
(struct class *class, struct device *parent, dev_t devt, void *drvdata, const struct attribute_group **groups, const char *fmt, ...)¶ creates a device and registers it with sysfs
Parameters
struct class *class
- pointer to the struct class that this device should be registered to
struct device *parent
- pointer to the parent
struct device
of this new device, if any dev_t devt
- the dev_t for the char device to be added
void *drvdata
- the data to be added to the device for callbacks
const struct attribute_group **groups
- NULL-terminated list of attribute groups to be created
const char *fmt
- string for the device’s name
...
- variable arguments
Description
This function can be used by char device classes. A struct device
will be created in sysfs, registered to the specified class.
Additional attributes specified in the groups parameter will also
be created automatically.
A “dev” file will be created, showing the dev_t for the device, if
the dev_t is not 0,0.
If a pointer to a parent struct device
is passed in, the newly created
struct device
will be a child of that device in sysfs.
The pointer to the struct device
will be returned from the call.
Any further sysfs files that might be required can be created using this
pointer.
Returns struct device
pointer on success, or ERR_PTR() on error.
Note
the struct class passed to this function must have previously been created with a call to class_create().
-
void
device_destroy
(struct class *class, dev_t devt)¶ removes a device that was created with
device_create()
Parameters
struct class *class
- pointer to the struct class that this device was registered with
dev_t devt
- the dev_t of the device that was previously registered
Description
This call unregisters and cleans up a device that was created with a
call to device_create()
.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- the pointer to the
struct device
to be renamed const char *new_name
- the new name of the device
Description
It is the responsibility of the caller to provide mutual exclusion between two different calls of device_rename on the same device to ensure that new_name is valid and won’t conflict with other devices.
Renaming devices is racy at many levels, symlinks and other stuff are not replaced atomically, and you get a “move” uevent, but it’s not easy to connect the event to the old and new device. Device nodes are not renamed at all, there isn’t even support for that in the kernel now.
In the meantime, during renaming, your target name might be taken by another driver, creating conflicts. Or the old name is taken directly after you renamed it – then you get events for the same DEVPATH, before you even see the “move” event. It’s just a mess, and nothing new should ever rely on kernel device renaming. Besides that, it’s not even implemented now for other things than (driver-core wise very simple) network devices.
We are currently about to change network renaming in udev to completely disallow renaming of devices in the same namespace as the kernel uses, because we can’t solve the problems properly, that arise with swapping names of multiple interfaces without races. Means, renaming of eth[0-9]* will only be allowed to some other name than eth[0-9]*, for the aforementioned reasons.
Make up a “real” name in the driver before you register anything, or add some other attributes for userspace to find the device, or use udev to add symlinks – but never rename kernel devices later, it’s a complete mess. We don’t even want to get into that and try to implement the missing pieces in the core. We really have other pieces to fix in the driver core mess. :)
Note
Don’t call this function. Currently, the networking layer calls this function, but that will change. The following text from Kay Sievers offers some insight:
-
int
device_move
(struct device *dev, struct device *new_parent, enum dpm_order dpm_order)¶ moves a device to a new parent
Parameters
struct device *dev
- the pointer to the
struct device
to be moved struct device *new_parent
- the new parent of the device (can be NULL)
enum dpm_order dpm_order
- how to reorder the dpm_list
-
int
device_change_owner
(struct device *dev, kuid_t kuid, kgid_t kgid)¶ change the owner of an existing device.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
kuid_t kuid
- new owner’s kuid
kgid_t kgid
- new owner’s kgid
Description
This changes the owner of dev and its corresponding sysfs entries to kuid/kgid. This function closely mirrors how dev was added via driver core.
Returns 0 on success or error code on failure.
-
int
dev_err_probe
(const struct device *dev, int err, const char *fmt, ...)¶ probe error check and log helper
Parameters
const struct device *dev
- the pointer to the
struct device
int err
- error value to test
const char *fmt
- printf-style format string
...
- arguments as specified in the format string
Description
This helper implements common pattern present in probe functions for error checking: print debug or error message depending if the error value is -EPROBE_DEFER and propagate error upwards. In case of -EPROBE_DEFER it sets also defer probe reason, which can be checked later by reading devices_deferred debugfs attribute. It replaces code sequence:
if (err != -EPROBE_DEFER)
dev_err(dev, ...);
else
dev_dbg(dev, ...);
return err;
with:
return dev_err_probe(dev, err, ...);
Returns err.
-
void
set_primary_fwnode
(struct device *dev, struct fwnode_handle *fwnode)¶ Change the primary firmware node of a given device.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- Device to handle.
struct fwnode_handle *fwnode
- New primary firmware node of the device.
Description
Set the device’s firmware node pointer to fwnode, but if a secondary firmware node of the device is present, preserve it.
- Valid fwnode cases are:
- primary –> secondary –> -ENODEV
- primary –> NULL
- secondary –> -ENODEV
- NULL
-
void
set_secondary_fwnode
(struct device *dev, struct fwnode_handle *fwnode)¶ Change the secondary firmware node of a given device.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- Device to handle.
struct fwnode_handle *fwnode
- New secondary firmware node of the device.
Description
If a primary firmware node of the device is present, set its secondary pointer to fwnode. Otherwise, set the device’s firmware node pointer to fwnode.
-
void
device_set_of_node_from_dev
(struct device *dev, const struct device *dev2)¶ reuse device-tree node of another device
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device whose device-tree node is being set
const struct device *dev2
- device whose device-tree node is being reused
Description
Takes another reference to the new device-tree node after first dropping any reference held to the old node.
-
void
register_syscore_ops
(struct syscore_ops *ops)¶ Register a set of system core operations.
Parameters
struct syscore_ops *ops
- System core operations to register.
-
void
unregister_syscore_ops
(struct syscore_ops *ops)¶ Unregister a set of system core operations.
Parameters
struct syscore_ops *ops
- System core operations to unregister.
-
int
syscore_suspend
(void)¶ Execute all the registered system core suspend callbacks.
Parameters
void
- no arguments
Description
This function is executed with one CPU on-line and disabled interrupts.
-
void
syscore_resume
(void)¶ Execute all the registered system core resume callbacks.
Parameters
void
- no arguments
Description
This function is executed with one CPU on-line and disabled interrupts.
-
struct class *
__class_create
(struct module *owner, const char *name, struct lock_class_key *key)¶ create a struct class structure
Parameters
struct module *owner
- pointer to the module that is to “own” this struct class
const char *name
- pointer to a string for the name of this class.
struct lock_class_key *key
- the lock_class_key for this class; used by mutex lock debugging
Description
This is used to create a struct class pointer that can then be used
in calls to device_create()
.
Returns struct class
pointer on success, or ERR_PTR() on error.
Note, the pointer created here is to be destroyed when finished by
making a call to class_destroy()
.
-
void
class_destroy
(struct class *cls)¶ destroys a struct class structure
Parameters
struct class *cls
- pointer to the struct class that is to be destroyed
Description
Note, the pointer to be destroyed must have been created with a call to class_create().
-
void
class_dev_iter_init
(struct class_dev_iter *iter, struct class *class, struct device *start, const struct device_type *type)¶ initialize class device iterator
Parameters
struct class_dev_iter *iter
- class iterator to initialize
struct class *class
- the class we wanna iterate over
struct device *start
- the device to start iterating from, if any
const struct device_type *type
- device_type of the devices to iterate over, NULL for all
Description
Initialize class iterator iter such that it iterates over devices of class. If start is set, the list iteration will start there, otherwise if it is NULL, the iteration starts at the beginning of the list.
Parameters
struct class_dev_iter *iter
- class iterator to proceed
Description
Proceed iter to the next device and return it. Returns NULL if iteration is complete.
The returned device is referenced and won’t be released till iterator is proceed to the next device or exited. The caller is free to do whatever it wants to do with the device including calling back into class code.
-
void
class_dev_iter_exit
(struct class_dev_iter *iter)¶ finish iteration
Parameters
struct class_dev_iter *iter
- class iterator to finish
Description
Finish an iteration. Always call this function after iteration is complete whether the iteration ran till the end or not.
-
int
class_for_each_device
(struct class *class, struct device *start, void *data, int (*fn)(struct device *, void *))¶ device iterator
Parameters
struct class *class
- the class we’re iterating
struct device *start
- the device to start with in the list, if any.
void *data
- data for the callback
int (*fn)(struct device *, void *)
- function to be called for each device
Description
Iterate over class’s list of devices, and call fn for each, passing it data. If start is set, the list iteration will start there, otherwise if it is NULL, the iteration starts at the beginning of the list.
We check the return of fn each time. If it returns anything other than 0, we break out and return that value.
fn is allowed to do anything including calling back into class code. There’s no locking restriction.
-
struct device *
class_find_device
(struct class *class, struct device *start, const void *data, int (*match)(struct device *, const void *))¶ device iterator for locating a particular device
Parameters
struct class *class
- the class we’re iterating
struct device *start
- Device to begin with
const void *data
- data for the match function
int (*match)(struct device *, const void *)
- function to check device
Description
This is similar to the class_for_each_dev() function above, but it returns a reference to a device that is ‘found’ for later use, as determined by the match callback.
The callback should return 0 if the device doesn’t match and non-zero if it does. If the callback returns non-zero, this function will return to the caller and not iterate over any more devices.
Note, you will need to drop the reference with put_device()
after use.
match is allowed to do anything including calling back into class code. There’s no locking restriction.
-
struct class_compat *
class_compat_register
(const char *name)¶ register a compatibility class
Parameters
const char *name
- the name of the class
Description
Compatibility class are meant as a temporary user-space compatibility workaround when converting a family of class devices to a bus devices.
-
void
class_compat_unregister
(struct class_compat *cls)¶ unregister a compatibility class
Parameters
struct class_compat *cls
- the class to unregister
-
int
class_compat_create_link
(struct class_compat *cls, struct device *dev, struct device *device_link)¶ create a compatibility class device link to a bus device
Parameters
struct class_compat *cls
- the compatibility class
struct device *dev
- the target bus device
struct device *device_link
- an optional device to which a “device” link should be created
-
void
class_compat_remove_link
(struct class_compat *cls, struct device *dev, struct device *device_link)¶ remove a compatibility class device link to a bus device
Parameters
struct class_compat *cls
- the compatibility class
struct device *dev
- the target bus device
struct device *device_link
- an optional device to which a “device” link was previously created
-
struct
node_access_nodes
¶ Access class device to hold user visible relationships to other nodes.
Definition
struct node_access_nodes {
struct device dev;
struct list_head list_node;
unsigned access;
#ifdef CONFIG_HMEM_REPORTING;
struct node_hmem_attrs hmem_attrs;
#endif;
};
Members
dev
- Device for this memory access class
list_node
- List element in the node’s access list
access
- The access class rank
hmem_attrs
- Heterogeneous memory performance attributes
-
void
node_set_perf_attrs
(unsigned int nid, struct node_hmem_attrs *hmem_attrs, unsigned access)¶ Set the performance values for given access class
Parameters
unsigned int nid
- Node identifier to be set
struct node_hmem_attrs *hmem_attrs
- Heterogeneous memory performance attributes
unsigned access
- The access class the for the given attributes
-
struct
node_cache_info
¶ Internal tracking for memory node caches
Definition
struct node_cache_info {
struct device dev;
struct list_head node;
struct node_cache_attrs cache_attrs;
};
Members
dev
- Device represeting the cache level
node
- List element for tracking in the node
cache_attrs
- Attributes for this cache level
-
void
node_add_cache
(unsigned int nid, struct node_cache_attrs *cache_attrs)¶ add cache attribute to a memory node
Parameters
unsigned int nid
- Node identifier that has new cache attributes
struct node_cache_attrs *cache_attrs
- Attributes for the cache being added
-
void
unregister_node
(struct node *node)¶ unregister a node device
Parameters
struct node *node
- node going away
Description
Unregisters a node device node. All the devices on the node must be unregistered before calling this function.
-
int
register_memory_node_under_compute_node
(unsigned int mem_nid, unsigned int cpu_nid, unsigned access)¶ link memory node to its compute node for a given access class.
Parameters
unsigned int mem_nid
- Memory node number
unsigned int cpu_nid
- Cpu node number
unsigned access
- Access class to register
Description
For use with platforms that may have separate memory and compute nodes. This function will export node relationships linking which memory initiator nodes can access memory targets at a given ranked access class.
-
int
transport_class_register
(struct transport_class *tclass)¶ register an initial transport class
Parameters
struct transport_class *tclass
- a pointer to the transport class structure to be initialised
Description
The transport class contains an embedded class which is used to identify it. The caller should initialise this structure with zeros and then generic class must have been initialised with the actual transport class unique name. There’s a macro DECLARE_TRANSPORT_CLASS() to do this (declared classes still must be registered).
Returns 0 on success or error on failure.
-
void
transport_class_unregister
(struct transport_class *tclass)¶ unregister a previously registered class
Parameters
struct transport_class *tclass
- The transport class to unregister
Description
Must be called prior to deallocating the memory for the transport class.
-
int
anon_transport_class_register
(struct anon_transport_class *atc)¶ register an anonymous class
Parameters
struct anon_transport_class *atc
- The anon transport class to register
Description
The anonymous transport class contains both a transport class and a container. The idea of an anonymous class is that it never actually has any device attributes associated with it (and thus saves on container storage). So it can only be used for triggering events. Use prezero and then use DECLARE_ANON_TRANSPORT_CLASS() to initialise the anon transport class storage.
-
void
anon_transport_class_unregister
(struct anon_transport_class *atc)¶ unregister an anon class
Parameters
struct anon_transport_class *atc
- Pointer to the anon transport class to unregister
Description
Must be called prior to deallocating the memory for the anon transport class.
-
void
transport_setup_device
(struct device *dev)¶ declare a new dev for transport class association but don’t make it visible yet.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- the generic device representing the entity being added
Description
Usually, dev represents some component in the HBA system (either the HBA itself or a device remote across the HBA bus). This routine is simply a trigger point to see if any set of transport classes wishes to associate with the added device. This allocates storage for the class device and initialises it, but does not yet add it to the system or add attributes to it (you do this with transport_add_device). If you have no need for a separate setup and add operations, use transport_register_device (see transport_class.h).
Parameters
struct device *dev
- the generic device representing the entity being added
Description
Usually, dev represents some component in the HBA system (either the HBA itself or a device remote across the HBA bus). This routine is simply a trigger point used to add the device to the system and register attributes for it.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- generic device representing device to be configured
Description
The idea of configure is simply to provide a point within the setup process to allow the transport class to extract information from a device after it has been setup. This is used in SCSI because we have to have a setup device to begin using the HBA, but after we send the initial inquiry, we use configure to extract the device parameters. The device need not have been added to be configured.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- generic device to remove
Description
This call removes the visibility of the device (to the user from sysfs), but does not destroy it. To eliminate a device entirely you must also call transport_destroy_device. If you don’t need to do remove and destroy as separate operations, use transport_unregister_device() (see transport_class.h) which will perform both calls for you.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device to eliminate from the transport class.
Description
This call triggers the elimination of storage associated with the transport classdev. Note: all it really does is relinquish a reference to the classdev. The memory will not be freed until the last reference goes to zero. Note also that the classdev retains a reference count on dev, so dev too will remain for as long as the transport class device remains around.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
Description
Allow manual attachment of a driver to a device. Caller must have already set dev->driver.
Note that this does not modify the bus reference count. Please verify that is accounted for before calling this. (It is ok to call with no other effort from a driver’s probe() method.)
This function must be called with the device lock held.
-
void
wait_for_device_probe
(void)¶
Parameters
void
- no arguments
Description
Wait for device probing to be completed.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
Description
Walk the list of drivers that the bus has and call driver_probe_device() for each pair. If a compatible pair is found, break out and return.
Returns 1 if the device was bound to a driver; 0 if no matching driver was found; -ENODEV if the device is not registered.
When called for a USB interface, dev->parent lock must be held.
-
int
driver_attach
(struct device_driver *drv)¶ try to bind driver to devices.
Parameters
struct device_driver *drv
- driver.
Description
Walk the list of devices that the bus has on it and try to match the driver with each one. If driver_probe_device() returns 0 and the dev->driver is set, we’ve found a compatible pair.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device.
Description
Manually detach device from driver. When called for a USB interface, dev->parent lock must be held.
If this function is to be called with dev->parent lock held, ensure that the device’s consumers are unbound in advance or that their locks can be acquired under the dev->parent lock.
-
struct platform_device *
platform_device_register_resndata
(struct device *parent, const char *name, int id, const struct resource *res, unsigned int num, const void *data, size_t size)¶ add a platform-level device with resources and platform-specific data
Parameters
struct device *parent
- parent device for the device we’re adding
const char *name
- base name of the device we’re adding
int id
- instance id
const struct resource *res
- set of resources that needs to be allocated for the device
unsigned int num
- number of resources
const void *data
- platform specific data for this platform device
size_t size
- size of platform specific data
Description
Returns struct platform_device
pointer on success, or ERR_PTR() on error.
-
struct platform_device *
platform_device_register_simple
(const char *name, int id, const struct resource *res, unsigned int num)¶ add a platform-level device and its resources
Parameters
const char *name
- base name of the device we’re adding
int id
- instance id
const struct resource *res
- set of resources that needs to be allocated for the device
unsigned int num
- number of resources
Description
This function creates a simple platform device that requires minimal resource and memory management. Canned release function freeing memory allocated for the device allows drivers using such devices to be unloaded without waiting for the last reference to the device to be dropped.
This interface is primarily intended for use with legacy drivers which probe hardware directly. Because such drivers create sysfs device nodes themselves, rather than letting system infrastructure handle such device enumeration tasks, they don’t fully conform to the Linux driver model. In particular, when such drivers are built as modules, they can’t be “hotplugged”.
Returns struct platform_device
pointer on success, or ERR_PTR() on error.
-
struct platform_device *
platform_device_register_data
(struct device *parent, const char *name, int id, const void *data, size_t size)¶ add a platform-level device with platform-specific data
Parameters
struct device *parent
- parent device for the device we’re adding
const char *name
- base name of the device we’re adding
int id
- instance id
const void *data
- platform specific data for this platform device
size_t size
- size of platform specific data
Description
This function creates a simple platform device that requires minimal resource and memory management. Canned release function freeing memory allocated for the device allows drivers using such devices to be unloaded without waiting for the last reference to the device to be dropped.
Returns struct platform_device
pointer on success, or ERR_PTR() on error.
-
struct resource *
platform_get_resource
(struct platform_device *dev, unsigned int type, unsigned int num)¶ get a resource for a device
Parameters
struct platform_device *dev
- platform device
unsigned int type
- resource type
unsigned int num
- resource index
Return
a pointer to the resource or NULL on failure.
-
void __iomem *
devm_platform_get_and_ioremap_resource
(struct platform_device *pdev, unsigned int index, struct resource **res)¶ call devm_ioremap_resource() for a platform device and get resource
Parameters
struct platform_device *pdev
- platform device to use both for memory resource lookup as well as resource management
unsigned int index
- resource index
struct resource **res
- optional output parameter to store a pointer to the obtained resource.
Return
a pointer to the remapped memory or an ERR_PTR() encoded error code on failure.
-
void __iomem *
devm_platform_ioremap_resource
(struct platform_device *pdev, unsigned int index)¶ call devm_ioremap_resource() for a platform device
Parameters
struct platform_device *pdev
- platform device to use both for memory resource lookup as well as resource management
unsigned int index
- resource index
Return
a pointer to the remapped memory or an ERR_PTR() encoded error code on failure.
-
void __iomem *
devm_platform_ioremap_resource_byname
(struct platform_device *pdev, const char *name)¶ call devm_ioremap_resource for a platform device, retrieve the resource by name
Parameters
struct platform_device *pdev
- platform device to use both for memory resource lookup as well as resource management
const char *name
- name of the resource
Return
a pointer to the remapped memory or an ERR_PTR() encoded error code on failure.
-
int
platform_get_irq_optional
(struct platform_device *dev, unsigned int num)¶ get an optional IRQ for a device
Parameters
struct platform_device *dev
- platform device
unsigned int num
- IRQ number index
Description
Gets an IRQ for a platform device. Device drivers should check the return
value for errors so as to not pass a negative integer value to the
request_irq()
APIs. This is the same as platform_get_irq()
, except that it
does not print an error message if an IRQ can not be obtained.
For example:
int irq = platform_get_irq_optional(pdev, 0);
if (irq < 0)
return irq;
Return
non-zero IRQ number on success, negative error number on failure.
-
int
platform_get_irq
(struct platform_device *dev, unsigned int num)¶ get an IRQ for a device
Parameters
struct platform_device *dev
- platform device
unsigned int num
- IRQ number index
Description
Gets an IRQ for a platform device and prints an error message if finding the
IRQ fails. Device drivers should check the return value for errors so as to
not pass a negative integer value to the request_irq()
APIs.
For example:
int irq = platform_get_irq(pdev, 0);
if (irq < 0)
return irq;
Return
non-zero IRQ number on success, negative error number on failure.
-
int
platform_irq_count
(struct platform_device *dev)¶ Count the number of IRQs a platform device uses
Parameters
struct platform_device *dev
- platform device
Return
Number of IRQs a platform device uses or EPROBE_DEFER
-
int
devm_platform_get_irqs_affinity
(struct platform_device *dev, struct irq_affinity *affd, unsigned int minvec, unsigned int maxvec, int **irqs)¶ devm method to get a set of IRQs for a device using an interrupt affinity descriptor
Parameters
struct platform_device *dev
- platform device pointer
struct irq_affinity *affd
- affinity descriptor
unsigned int minvec
- minimum count of interrupt vectors
unsigned int maxvec
- maximum count of interrupt vectors
int **irqs
- pointer holder for IRQ numbers
Description
Gets a set of IRQs for a platform device, and updates IRQ afffinty according to the passed affinity descriptor
Return
Number of vectors on success, negative error number on failure.
-
struct resource *
platform_get_resource_byname
(struct platform_device *dev, unsigned int type, const char *name)¶ get a resource for a device by name
Parameters
struct platform_device *dev
- platform device
unsigned int type
- resource type
const char *name
- resource name
-
int
platform_get_irq_byname
(struct platform_device *dev, const char *name)¶ get an IRQ for a device by name
Parameters
struct platform_device *dev
- platform device
const char *name
- IRQ name
Description
Get an IRQ like platform_get_irq()
, but then by name rather then by index.
Return
non-zero IRQ number on success, negative error number on failure.
-
int
platform_get_irq_byname_optional
(struct platform_device *dev, const char *name)¶ get an optional IRQ for a device by name
Parameters
struct platform_device *dev
- platform device
const char *name
- IRQ name
Description
Get an optional IRQ by name like platform_get_irq_byname()
. Except that it
does not print an error message if an IRQ can not be obtained.
Return
non-zero IRQ number on success, negative error number on failure.
-
int
platform_add_devices
(struct platform_device **devs, int num)¶ add a numbers of platform devices
Parameters
struct platform_device **devs
- array of platform devices to add
int num
- number of platform devices in array
-
void
platform_device_put
(struct platform_device *pdev)¶ destroy a platform device
Parameters
struct platform_device *pdev
- platform device to free
Description
Free all memory associated with a platform device. This function must _only_ be externally called in error cases. All other usage is a bug.
-
struct platform_device *
platform_device_alloc
(const char *name, int id)¶ create a platform device
Parameters
const char *name
- base name of the device we’re adding
int id
- instance id
Description
Create a platform device object which can have other objects attached to it, and which will have attached objects freed when it is released.
-
int
platform_device_add_resources
(struct platform_device *pdev, const struct resource *res, unsigned int num)¶ add resources to a platform device
Parameters
struct platform_device *pdev
- platform device allocated by platform_device_alloc to add resources to
const struct resource *res
- set of resources that needs to be allocated for the device
unsigned int num
- number of resources
Description
Add a copy of the resources to the platform device. The memory associated with the resources will be freed when the platform device is released.
-
int
platform_device_add_data
(struct platform_device *pdev, const void *data, size_t size)¶ add platform-specific data to a platform device
Parameters
struct platform_device *pdev
- platform device allocated by platform_device_alloc to add resources to
const void *data
- platform specific data for this platform device
size_t size
- size of platform specific data
Description
Add a copy of platform specific data to the platform device’s platform_data pointer. The memory associated with the platform data will be freed when the platform device is released.
-
int
platform_device_add_properties
(struct platform_device *pdev, const struct property_entry *properties)¶ add built-in properties to a platform device
Parameters
struct platform_device *pdev
- platform device to add properties to
const struct property_entry *properties
- null terminated array of properties to add
Description
The function will take deep copy of properties and attach the copy to the platform device. The memory associated with properties will be freed when the platform device is released.
-
int
platform_device_add
(struct platform_device *pdev)¶ add a platform device to device hierarchy
Parameters
struct platform_device *pdev
- platform device we’re adding
Description
This is part 2 of platform_device_register()
, though may be called
separately _iff_ pdev was allocated by platform_device_alloc()
.
-
void
platform_device_del
(struct platform_device *pdev)¶ remove a platform-level device
Parameters
struct platform_device *pdev
- platform device we’re removing
Description
Note that this function will also release all memory- and port-based resources owned by the device (dev->resource). This function must _only_ be externally called in error cases. All other usage is a bug.
-
int
platform_device_register
(struct platform_device *pdev)¶ add a platform-level device
Parameters
struct platform_device *pdev
- platform device we’re adding
-
void
platform_device_unregister
(struct platform_device *pdev)¶ unregister a platform-level device
Parameters
struct platform_device *pdev
- platform device we’re unregistering
Description
Unregistration is done in 2 steps. First we release all resources
and remove it from the subsystem, then we drop reference count by
calling platform_device_put()
.
-
struct platform_device *
platform_device_register_full
(const struct platform_device_info *pdevinfo)¶ add a platform-level device with resources and platform-specific data
Parameters
const struct platform_device_info *pdevinfo
- data used to create device
Description
Returns struct platform_device
pointer on success, or ERR_PTR() on error.
-
int
__platform_driver_register
(struct platform_driver *drv, struct module *owner)¶ register a driver for platform-level devices
Parameters
struct platform_driver *drv
- platform driver structure
struct module *owner
- owning module/driver
-
void
platform_driver_unregister
(struct platform_driver *drv)¶ unregister a driver for platform-level devices
Parameters
struct platform_driver *drv
- platform driver structure
-
int
__platform_driver_probe
(struct platform_driver *drv, int (*probe)(struct platform_device *), struct module *module)¶ register driver for non-hotpluggable device
Parameters
struct platform_driver *drv
- platform driver structure
int (*probe)(struct platform_device *)
- the driver probe routine, probably from an __init section
struct module *module
- module which will be the owner of the driver
Description
Use this instead of platform_driver_register() when you know the device is not hotpluggable and has already been registered, and you want to remove its run-once probe() infrastructure from memory after the driver has bound to the device.
One typical use for this would be with drivers for controllers integrated into system-on-chip processors, where the controller devices have been configured as part of board setup.
Note that this is incompatible with deferred probing.
Returns zero if the driver registered and bound to a device, else returns a negative error code and with the driver not registered.
-
struct platform_device *
__platform_create_bundle
(struct platform_driver *driver, int (*probe)(struct platform_device *), struct resource *res, unsigned int n_res, const void *data, size_t size, struct module *module)¶ register driver and create corresponding device
Parameters
struct platform_driver *driver
- platform driver structure
int (*probe)(struct platform_device *)
- the driver probe routine, probably from an __init section
struct resource *res
- set of resources that needs to be allocated for the device
unsigned int n_res
- number of resources
const void *data
- platform specific data for this platform device
size_t size
- size of platform specific data
struct module *module
- module which will be the owner of the driver
Description
Use this in legacy-style modules that probe hardware directly and register a single platform device and corresponding platform driver.
Returns struct platform_device
pointer on success, or ERR_PTR() on error.
-
int
__platform_register_drivers
(struct platform_driver * const *drivers, unsigned int count, struct module *owner)¶ register an array of platform drivers
Parameters
struct platform_driver * const *drivers
- an array of drivers to register
unsigned int count
- the number of drivers to register
struct module *owner
- module owning the drivers
Description
Registers platform drivers specified by an array. On failure to register a
driver, all previously registered drivers will be unregistered. Callers of
this API should use platform_unregister_drivers()
to unregister drivers in
the reverse order.
Return
0 on success or a negative error code on failure.
-
void
platform_unregister_drivers
(struct platform_driver * const *drivers, unsigned int count)¶ unregister an array of platform drivers
Parameters
struct platform_driver * const *drivers
- an array of drivers to unregister
unsigned int count
- the number of drivers to unregister
Description
Unregisters platform drivers specified by an array. This is typically used to complement an earlier call to platform_register_drivers(). Drivers are unregistered in the reverse order in which they were registered.
-
struct device *
platform_find_device_by_driver
(struct device *start, const struct device_driver *drv)¶ Find a platform device with a given driver.
Parameters
struct device *start
- The device to start the search from.
const struct device_driver *drv
- The device driver to look for.
-
int
bus_for_each_dev
(struct bus_type *bus, struct device *start, void *data, int (*fn)(struct device *, void *))¶ device iterator.
Parameters
struct bus_type *bus
- bus type.
struct device *start
- device to start iterating from.
void *data
- data for the callback.
int (*fn)(struct device *, void *)
- function to be called for each device.
Description
Iterate over bus’s list of devices, and call fn for each, passing it data. If start is not NULL, we use that device to begin iterating from.
We check the return of fn each time. If it returns anything other than 0, we break out and return that value.
NOTE
The device that returns a non-zero value is not retained in any way, nor is its refcount incremented. If the caller needs to retain this data, it should do so, and increment the reference count in the supplied callback.
-
struct device *
bus_find_device
(struct bus_type *bus, struct device *start, const void *data, int (*match)(struct device *dev, const void *data))¶ device iterator for locating a particular device.
Parameters
struct bus_type *bus
- bus type
struct device *start
- Device to begin with
const void *data
- Data to pass to match function
int (*match)(struct device *dev, const void *data)
- Callback function to check device
Description
This is similar to the bus_for_each_dev()
function above, but it
returns a reference to a device that is ‘found’ for later use, as
determined by the match callback.
The callback should return 0 if the device doesn’t match and non-zero if it does. If the callback returns non-zero, this function will return to the caller and not iterate over any more devices.
-
struct device *
subsys_find_device_by_id
(struct bus_type *subsys, unsigned int id, struct device *hint)¶ find a device with a specific enumeration number
Parameters
struct bus_type *subsys
- subsystem
unsigned int id
- index ‘id’ in
struct device
struct device *hint
- device to check first
Description
Check the hint’s next object and if it is a match return it directly, otherwise, fall back to a full list search. Either way a reference for the returned object is taken.
-
int
bus_for_each_drv
(struct bus_type *bus, struct device_driver *start, void *data, int (*fn)(struct device_driver *, void *))¶ driver iterator
Parameters
struct bus_type *bus
- bus we’re dealing with.
struct device_driver *start
- driver to start iterating on.
void *data
- data to pass to the callback.
int (*fn)(struct device_driver *, void *)
- function to call for each driver.
Description
This is nearly identical to the device iterator above. We iterate over each driver that belongs to bus, and call fn for each. If fn returns anything but 0, we break out and return it. If start is not NULL, we use it as the head of the list.
NOTE
we don’t return the driver that returns a non-zero value, nor do we leave the reference count incremented for that driver. If the caller needs to know that info, it must set it in the callback. It must also be sure to increment the refcount so it doesn’t disappear before returning to the caller.
-
int
bus_rescan_devices
(struct bus_type *bus)¶ rescan devices on the bus for possible drivers
Parameters
struct bus_type *bus
- the bus to scan.
Description
This function will look for devices on the bus with no driver
attached and rescan it against existing drivers to see if it matches
any by calling device_attach()
for the unbound devices.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- the device to reprobe
Description
This function detaches the attached driver (if any) for the given device and restarts the driver probing process. It is intended to use if probing criteria changed during a devices lifetime and driver attachment should change accordingly.
-
int
bus_register
(struct bus_type *bus)¶ register a driver-core subsystem
Parameters
struct bus_type *bus
- bus to register
Description
Once we have that, we register the bus with the kobject infrastructure, then register the children subsystems it has: the devices and drivers that belong to the subsystem.
-
void
bus_unregister
(struct bus_type *bus)¶ remove a bus from the system
Parameters
struct bus_type *bus
- bus.
Description
Unregister the child subsystems and the bus itself. Finally, we call bus_put() to release the refcount
-
void
subsys_dev_iter_init
(struct subsys_dev_iter *iter, struct bus_type *subsys, struct device *start, const struct device_type *type)¶ initialize subsys device iterator
Parameters
struct subsys_dev_iter *iter
- subsys iterator to initialize
struct bus_type *subsys
- the subsys we wanna iterate over
struct device *start
- the device to start iterating from, if any
const struct device_type *type
- device_type of the devices to iterate over, NULL for all
Description
Initialize subsys iterator iter such that it iterates over devices of subsys. If start is set, the list iteration will start there, otherwise if it is NULL, the iteration starts at the beginning of the list.
Parameters
struct subsys_dev_iter *iter
- subsys iterator to proceed
Description
Proceed iter to the next device and return it. Returns NULL if iteration is complete.
The returned device is referenced and won’t be released till iterator is proceed to the next device or exited. The caller is free to do whatever it wants to do with the device including calling back into subsys code.
-
void
subsys_dev_iter_exit
(struct subsys_dev_iter *iter)¶ finish iteration
Parameters
struct subsys_dev_iter *iter
- subsys iterator to finish
Description
Finish an iteration. Always call this function after iteration is complete whether the iteration ran till the end or not.
-
int
subsys_system_register
(struct bus_type *subsys, const struct attribute_group **groups)¶ register a subsystem at /sys/devices/system/
Parameters
struct bus_type *subsys
- system subsystem
const struct attribute_group **groups
- default attributes for the root device
Description
All ‘system’ subsystems have a /sys/devices/system/<name> root device with the name of the subsystem. The root device can carry subsystem- wide attributes. All registered devices are below this single root device and are named after the subsystem with a simple enumeration number appended. The registered devices are not explicitly named; only ‘id’ in the device needs to be set.
Do not use this interface for anything new, it exists for compatibility with bad ideas only. New subsystems should use plain subsystems; and add the subsystem-wide attributes should be added to the subsystem directory itself and not some create fake root-device placed in /sys/devices/system/<name>.
-
int
subsys_virtual_register
(struct bus_type *subsys, const struct attribute_group **groups)¶ register a subsystem at /sys/devices/virtual/
Parameters
struct bus_type *subsys
- virtual subsystem
const struct attribute_group **groups
- default attributes for the root device
Description
All ‘virtual’ subsystems have a /sys/devices/system/<name> root device with the name of the subystem. The root device can carry subsystem-wide attributes. All registered devices are below this single root device. There’s no restriction on device naming. This is for kernel software constructs which need sysfs interface.
Device Drivers DMA Management¶
-
void
dmam_free_coherent
(struct device *dev, size_t size, void *vaddr, dma_addr_t dma_handle)¶ Managed dma_free_coherent()
Parameters
struct device *dev
- Device to free coherent memory for
size_t size
- Size of allocation
void *vaddr
- Virtual address of the memory to free
dma_addr_t dma_handle
- DMA handle of the memory to free
Description
Managed dma_free_coherent().
-
void *
dmam_alloc_attrs
(struct device *dev, size_t size, dma_addr_t *dma_handle, gfp_t gfp, unsigned long attrs)¶ Managed dma_alloc_attrs()
Parameters
struct device *dev
- Device to allocate non_coherent memory for
size_t size
- Size of allocation
dma_addr_t *dma_handle
- Out argument for allocated DMA handle
gfp_t gfp
- Allocation flags
unsigned long attrs
- Flags in the DMA_ATTR_* namespace.
Description
Managed dma_alloc_attrs(). Memory allocated using this function will be automatically released on driver detach.
Return
Pointer to allocated memory on success, NULL on failure.
Parameters
struct device *dev
- device to check
Description
Returns true
if dev supports dma_mmap_coherent() and dma_mmap_attrs()
to
map DMA allocations to userspace.
-
int
dma_mmap_attrs
(struct device *dev, struct vm_area_struct *vma, void *cpu_addr, dma_addr_t dma_addr, size_t size, unsigned long attrs)¶ map a coherent DMA allocation into user space
Parameters
struct device *dev
- valid
struct device
pointer, or NULL for ISA and EISA-like devices struct vm_area_struct *vma
- vm_area_struct describing requested user mapping
void *cpu_addr
- kernel CPU-view address returned from dma_alloc_attrs
dma_addr_t dma_addr
- device-view address returned from dma_alloc_attrs
size_t size
- size of memory originally requested in dma_alloc_attrs
unsigned long attrs
- attributes of mapping properties requested in dma_alloc_attrs
Description
Map a coherent DMA buffer previously allocated by dma_alloc_attrs into user space. The coherent DMA buffer must not be freed by the driver until the user space mapping has been released.
Device drivers PnP support¶
-
int
pnp_register_protocol
(struct pnp_protocol *protocol)¶ adds a pnp protocol to the pnp layer
Parameters
struct pnp_protocol *protocol
pointer to the corresponding pnp_protocol structure
Ex protocols: ISAPNP, PNPBIOS, etc
-
void
pnp_unregister_protocol
(struct pnp_protocol *protocol)¶ removes a pnp protocol from the pnp layer
Parameters
struct pnp_protocol *protocol
- pointer to the corresponding pnp_protocol structure
-
struct pnp_dev *
pnp_request_card_device
(struct pnp_card_link *clink, const char *id, struct pnp_dev *from)¶ Searches for a PnP device under the specified card
Parameters
struct pnp_card_link *clink
- pointer to the card link, cannot be NULL
const char *id
- pointer to a PnP ID structure that explains the rules for finding the device
struct pnp_dev *from
- Starting place to search from. If NULL it will start from the beginning.
-
void
pnp_release_card_device
(struct pnp_dev *dev)¶ call this when the driver no longer needs the device
Parameters
struct pnp_dev *dev
- pointer to the PnP device structure
-
int
pnp_register_card_driver
(struct pnp_card_driver *drv)¶ registers a PnP card driver with the PnP Layer
Parameters
struct pnp_card_driver *drv
- pointer to the driver to register
-
void
pnp_unregister_card_driver
(struct pnp_card_driver *drv)¶ unregisters a PnP card driver from the PnP Layer
Parameters
struct pnp_card_driver *drv
- pointer to the driver to unregister
-
struct pnp_id *
pnp_add_id
(struct pnp_dev *dev, const char *id)¶ adds an EISA id to the specified device
Parameters
struct pnp_dev *dev
- pointer to the desired device
const char *id
- pointer to an EISA id string
-
int
pnp_start_dev
(struct pnp_dev *dev)¶ low-level start of the PnP device
Parameters
struct pnp_dev *dev
- pointer to the desired device
Description
assumes that resources have already been allocated
-
int
pnp_stop_dev
(struct pnp_dev *dev)¶ low-level disable of the PnP device
Parameters
struct pnp_dev *dev
- pointer to the desired device
Description
does not free resources
-
int
pnp_activate_dev
(struct pnp_dev *dev)¶ activates a PnP device for use
Parameters
struct pnp_dev *dev
- pointer to the desired device
Description
does not validate or set resources so be careful.
-
int
pnp_disable_dev
(struct pnp_dev *dev)¶ disables device
Parameters
struct pnp_dev *dev
- pointer to the desired device
Description
inform the correct pnp protocol so that resources can be used by other devices
-
int
pnp_is_active
(struct pnp_dev *dev)¶ Determines if a device is active based on its current resources
Parameters
struct pnp_dev *dev
- pointer to the desired PnP device
Userspace IO devices¶
Parameters
struct uio_info *info
- UIO device capabilities
-
int
__uio_register_device
(struct module *owner, struct device *parent, struct uio_info *info)¶ register a new userspace IO device
Parameters
struct module *owner
- module that creates the new device
struct device *parent
- parent device
struct uio_info *info
- UIO device capabilities
Description
returns zero on success or a negative error code.
-
int
__devm_uio_register_device
(struct module *owner, struct device *parent, struct uio_info *info)¶ Resource managed
uio_register_device()
Parameters
struct module *owner
- module that creates the new device
struct device *parent
- parent device
struct uio_info *info
- UIO device capabilities
Description
returns zero on success or a negative error code.
Parameters
struct uio_info *info
- UIO device capabilities
-
struct
uio_mem
¶ description of a UIO memory region
Definition
struct uio_mem {
const char *name;
phys_addr_t addr;
unsigned long offs;
resource_size_t size;
int memtype;
void __iomem *internal_addr;
struct uio_map *map;
};
Members
name
- name of the memory region for identification
addr
- address of the device’s memory rounded to page size (phys_addr is used since addr can be logical, virtual, or physical & phys_addr_t should always be large enough to handle any of the address types)
offs
- offset of device memory within the page
size
- size of IO (multiple of page size)
memtype
- type of memory addr points to
internal_addr
- ioremap-ped version of addr, for driver internal use
map
- for use by the UIO core only.
-
struct
uio_port
¶ description of a UIO port region
Definition
struct uio_port {
const char *name;
unsigned long start;
unsigned long size;
int porttype;
struct uio_portio *portio;
};
Members
name
- name of the port region for identification
start
- start of port region
size
- size of port region
porttype
- type of port (see UIO_PORT_* below)
portio
- for use by the UIO core only.
-
struct
uio_info
¶ UIO device capabilities
Definition
struct uio_info {
struct uio_device *uio_dev;
const char *name;
const char *version;
struct uio_mem mem[MAX_UIO_MAPS];
struct uio_port port[MAX_UIO_PORT_REGIONS];
long irq;
unsigned long irq_flags;
void *priv;
irqreturn_t (*handler)(int irq, struct uio_info *dev_info);
int (*mmap)(struct uio_info *info, struct vm_area_struct *vma);
int (*open)(struct uio_info *info, struct inode *inode);
int (*release)(struct uio_info *info, struct inode *inode);
int (*irqcontrol)(struct uio_info *info, s32 irq_on);
};
Members
uio_dev
- the UIO device this info belongs to
name
- device name
version
- device driver version
mem
- list of mappable memory regions, size==0 for end of list
port
- list of port regions, size==0 for end of list
irq
- interrupt number or UIO_IRQ_CUSTOM
irq_flags
- flags for
request_irq()
priv
- optional private data
handler
- the device’s irq handler
mmap
- mmap operation for this uio device
open
- open operation for this uio device
release
- release operation for this uio device
irqcontrol
- disable/enable irqs when 0/1 is written to /dev/uioX
-
uio_register_device
(parent, info)¶ register a new userspace IO device
Parameters
parent
- parent device
info
- UIO device capabilities
Description
returns zero on success or a negative error code.
-
devm_uio_register_device
(parent, info)¶ Resource managed
uio_register_device()
Parameters
parent
- parent device
info
- UIO device capabilities
Description
returns zero on success or a negative error code.