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- Hardware Spinlock Framework
- 1. Introduction
- Hardware spinlock modules provide hardware assistance for synchronization
- and mutual exclusion between heterogeneous processors and those not operating
- under a single, shared operating system.
- For example, OMAP4 has dual Cortex-A9, dual Cortex-M3 and a C64x+ DSP,
- each of which is running a different Operating System (the master, A9,
- is usually running Linux and the slave processors, the M3 and the DSP,
- are running some flavor of RTOS).
- A generic hwspinlock framework allows platform-independent drivers to use
- the hwspinlock device in order to access data structures that are shared
- between remote processors, that otherwise have no alternative mechanism
- to accomplish synchronization and mutual exclusion operations.
- This is necessary, for example, for Inter-processor communications:
- on OMAP4, cpu-intensive multimedia tasks are offloaded by the host to the
- remote M3 and/or C64x+ slave processors (by an IPC subsystem called Syslink).
- To achieve fast message-based communications, a minimal kernel support
- is needed to deliver messages arriving from a remote processor to the
- appropriate user process.
- This communication is based on simple data structures that is shared between
- the remote processors, and access to it is synchronized using the hwspinlock
- module (remote processor directly places new messages in this shared data
- structure).
- A common hwspinlock interface makes it possible to have generic, platform-
- independent, drivers.
- 2. User API
- struct hwspinlock *hwspin_lock_request(void);
- - dynamically assign an hwspinlock and return its address, or NULL
- in case an unused hwspinlock isn't available. Users of this
- API will usually want to communicate the lock's id to the remote core
- before it can be used to achieve synchronization.
- Should be called from a process context (might sleep).
- struct hwspinlock *hwspin_lock_request_specific(unsigned int id);
- - assign a specific hwspinlock id and return its address, or NULL
- if that hwspinlock is already in use. Usually board code will
- be calling this function in order to reserve specific hwspinlock
- ids for predefined purposes.
- Should be called from a process context (might sleep).
- int of_hwspin_lock_get_id(struct device_node *np, int index);
- - retrieve the global lock id for an OF phandle-based specific lock.
- This function provides a means for DT users of a hwspinlock module
- to get the global lock id of a specific hwspinlock, so that it can
- be requested using the normal hwspin_lock_request_specific() API.
- The function returns a lock id number on success, -EPROBE_DEFER if
- the hwspinlock device is not yet registered with the core, or other
- error values.
- Should be called from a process context (might sleep).
- int hwspin_lock_free(struct hwspinlock *hwlock);
- - free a previously-assigned hwspinlock; returns 0 on success, or an
- appropriate error code on failure (e.g. -EINVAL if the hwspinlock
- is already free).
- Should be called from a process context (might sleep).
- int hwspin_lock_timeout(struct hwspinlock *hwlock, unsigned int timeout);
- - lock a previously-assigned hwspinlock with a timeout limit (specified in
- msecs). If the hwspinlock is already taken, the function will busy loop
- waiting for it to be released, but give up when the timeout elapses.
- Upon a successful return from this function, preemption is disabled so
- the caller must not sleep, and is advised to release the hwspinlock as
- soon as possible, in order to minimize remote cores polling on the
- hardware interconnect.
- Returns 0 when successful and an appropriate error code otherwise (most
- notably -ETIMEDOUT if the hwspinlock is still busy after timeout msecs).
- The function will never sleep.
- int hwspin_lock_timeout_irq(struct hwspinlock *hwlock, unsigned int timeout);
- - lock a previously-assigned hwspinlock with a timeout limit (specified in
- msecs). If the hwspinlock is already taken, the function will busy loop
- waiting for it to be released, but give up when the timeout elapses.
- Upon a successful return from this function, preemption and the local
- interrupts are disabled, so the caller must not sleep, and is advised to
- release the hwspinlock as soon as possible.
- Returns 0 when successful and an appropriate error code otherwise (most
- notably -ETIMEDOUT if the hwspinlock is still busy after timeout msecs).
- The function will never sleep.
- int hwspin_lock_timeout_irqsave(struct hwspinlock *hwlock, unsigned int to,
- unsigned long *flags);
- - lock a previously-assigned hwspinlock with a timeout limit (specified in
- msecs). If the hwspinlock is already taken, the function will busy loop
- waiting for it to be released, but give up when the timeout elapses.
- Upon a successful return from this function, preemption is disabled,
- local interrupts are disabled and their previous state is saved at the
- given flags placeholder. The caller must not sleep, and is advised to
- release the hwspinlock as soon as possible.
- Returns 0 when successful and an appropriate error code otherwise (most
- notably -ETIMEDOUT if the hwspinlock is still busy after timeout msecs).
- The function will never sleep.
- int hwspin_trylock(struct hwspinlock *hwlock);
- - attempt to lock a previously-assigned hwspinlock, but immediately fail if
- it is already taken.
- Upon a successful return from this function, preemption is disabled so
- caller must not sleep, and is advised to release the hwspinlock as soon as
- possible, in order to minimize remote cores polling on the hardware
- interconnect.
- Returns 0 on success and an appropriate error code otherwise (most
- notably -EBUSY if the hwspinlock was already taken).
- The function will never sleep.
- int hwspin_trylock_irq(struct hwspinlock *hwlock);
- - attempt to lock a previously-assigned hwspinlock, but immediately fail if
- it is already taken.
- Upon a successful return from this function, preemption and the local
- interrupts are disabled so caller must not sleep, and is advised to
- release the hwspinlock as soon as possible.
- Returns 0 on success and an appropriate error code otherwise (most
- notably -EBUSY if the hwspinlock was already taken).
- The function will never sleep.
- int hwspin_trylock_irqsave(struct hwspinlock *hwlock, unsigned long *flags);
- - attempt to lock a previously-assigned hwspinlock, but immediately fail if
- it is already taken.
- Upon a successful return from this function, preemption is disabled,
- the local interrupts are disabled and their previous state is saved
- at the given flags placeholder. The caller must not sleep, and is advised
- to release the hwspinlock as soon as possible.
- Returns 0 on success and an appropriate error code otherwise (most
- notably -EBUSY if the hwspinlock was already taken).
- The function will never sleep.
- void hwspin_unlock(struct hwspinlock *hwlock);
- - unlock a previously-locked hwspinlock. Always succeed, and can be called
- from any context (the function never sleeps). Note: code should _never_
- unlock an hwspinlock which is already unlocked (there is no protection
- against this).
- void hwspin_unlock_irq(struct hwspinlock *hwlock);
- - unlock a previously-locked hwspinlock and enable local interrupts.
- The caller should _never_ unlock an hwspinlock which is already unlocked.
- Doing so is considered a bug (there is no protection against this).
- Upon a successful return from this function, preemption and local
- interrupts are enabled. This function will never sleep.
- void
- hwspin_unlock_irqrestore(struct hwspinlock *hwlock, unsigned long *flags);
- - unlock a previously-locked hwspinlock.
- The caller should _never_ unlock an hwspinlock which is already unlocked.
- Doing so is considered a bug (there is no protection against this).
- Upon a successful return from this function, preemption is reenabled,
- and the state of the local interrupts is restored to the state saved at
- the given flags. This function will never sleep.
- int hwspin_lock_get_id(struct hwspinlock *hwlock);
- - retrieve id number of a given hwspinlock. This is needed when an
- hwspinlock is dynamically assigned: before it can be used to achieve
- mutual exclusion with a remote cpu, the id number should be communicated
- to the remote task with which we want to synchronize.
- Returns the hwspinlock id number, or -EINVAL if hwlock is null.
- 3. Typical usage
- #include <linux/hwspinlock.h>
- #include <linux/err.h>
- int hwspinlock_example1(void)
- {
- struct hwspinlock *hwlock;
- int ret;
- /* dynamically assign a hwspinlock */
- hwlock = hwspin_lock_request();
- if (!hwlock)
- ...
- id = hwspin_lock_get_id(hwlock);
- /* probably need to communicate id to a remote processor now */
- /* take the lock, spin for 1 sec if it's already taken */
- ret = hwspin_lock_timeout(hwlock, 1000);
- if (ret)
- ...
- /*
- * we took the lock, do our thing now, but do NOT sleep
- */
- /* release the lock */
- hwspin_unlock(hwlock);
- /* free the lock */
- ret = hwspin_lock_free(hwlock);
- if (ret)
- ...
- return ret;
- }
- int hwspinlock_example2(void)
- {
- struct hwspinlock *hwlock;
- int ret;
- /*
- * assign a specific hwspinlock id - this should be called early
- * by board init code.
- */
- hwlock = hwspin_lock_request_specific(PREDEFINED_LOCK_ID);
- if (!hwlock)
- ...
- /* try to take it, but don't spin on it */
- ret = hwspin_trylock(hwlock);
- if (!ret) {
- pr_info("lock is already taken\n");
- return -EBUSY;
- }
- /*
- * we took the lock, do our thing now, but do NOT sleep
- */
- /* release the lock */
- hwspin_unlock(hwlock);
- /* free the lock */
- ret = hwspin_lock_free(hwlock);
- if (ret)
- ...
- return ret;
- }
- 4. API for implementors
- int hwspin_lock_register(struct hwspinlock_device *bank, struct device *dev,
- const struct hwspinlock_ops *ops, int base_id, int num_locks);
- - to be called from the underlying platform-specific implementation, in
- order to register a new hwspinlock device (which is usually a bank of
- numerous locks). Should be called from a process context (this function
- might sleep).
- Returns 0 on success, or appropriate error code on failure.
- int hwspin_lock_unregister(struct hwspinlock_device *bank);
- - to be called from the underlying vendor-specific implementation, in order
- to unregister an hwspinlock device (which is usually a bank of numerous
- locks).
- Should be called from a process context (this function might sleep).
- Returns the address of hwspinlock on success, or NULL on error (e.g.
- if the hwspinlock is still in use).
- 5. Important structs
- struct hwspinlock_device is a device which usually contains a bank
- of hardware locks. It is registered by the underlying hwspinlock
- implementation using the hwspin_lock_register() API.
- /**
- * struct hwspinlock_device - a device which usually spans numerous hwspinlocks
- * @dev: underlying device, will be used to invoke runtime PM api
- * @ops: platform-specific hwspinlock handlers
- * @base_id: id index of the first lock in this device
- * @num_locks: number of locks in this device
- * @lock: dynamically allocated array of 'struct hwspinlock'
- */
- struct hwspinlock_device {
- struct device *dev;
- const struct hwspinlock_ops *ops;
- int base_id;
- int num_locks;
- struct hwspinlock lock[0];
- };
- struct hwspinlock_device contains an array of hwspinlock structs, each
- of which represents a single hardware lock:
- /**
- * struct hwspinlock - this struct represents a single hwspinlock instance
- * @bank: the hwspinlock_device structure which owns this lock
- * @lock: initialized and used by hwspinlock core
- * @priv: private data, owned by the underlying platform-specific hwspinlock drv
- */
- struct hwspinlock {
- struct hwspinlock_device *bank;
- spinlock_t lock;
- void *priv;
- };
- When registering a bank of locks, the hwspinlock driver only needs to
- set the priv members of the locks. The rest of the members are set and
- initialized by the hwspinlock core itself.
- 6. Implementation callbacks
- There are three possible callbacks defined in 'struct hwspinlock_ops':
- struct hwspinlock_ops {
- int (*trylock)(struct hwspinlock *lock);
- void (*unlock)(struct hwspinlock *lock);
- void (*relax)(struct hwspinlock *lock);
- };
- The first two callbacks are mandatory:
- The ->trylock() callback should make a single attempt to take the lock, and
- return 0 on failure and 1 on success. This callback may _not_ sleep.
- The ->unlock() callback releases the lock. It always succeed, and it, too,
- may _not_ sleep.
- The ->relax() callback is optional. It is called by hwspinlock core while
- spinning on a lock, and can be used by the underlying implementation to force
- a delay between two successive invocations of ->trylock(). It may _not_ sleep.
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