123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172 |
- FPGA Manager Core
- Alan Tull 2015
- Overview
- ========
- The FPGA manager core exports a set of functions for programming an FPGA with
- an image. The API is manufacturer agnostic. All manufacturer specifics are
- hidden away in a low level driver which registers a set of ops with the core.
- The FPGA image data itself is very manufacturer specific, but for our purposes
- it's just binary data. The FPGA manager core won't parse it.
- API Functions:
- ==============
- To program the FPGA from a file or from a buffer:
- -------------------------------------------------
- int fpga_mgr_buf_load(struct fpga_manager *mgr, u32 flags,
- const char *buf, size_t count);
- Load the FPGA from an image which exists as a buffer in memory.
- int fpga_mgr_firmware_load(struct fpga_manager *mgr, u32 flags,
- const char *image_name);
- Load the FPGA from an image which exists as a file. The image file must be on
- the firmware search path (see the firmware class documentation).
- For both these functions, flags == 0 for normal full reconfiguration or
- FPGA_MGR_PARTIAL_RECONFIG for partial reconfiguration. If successful, the FPGA
- ends up in operating mode. Return 0 on success or a negative error code.
- To get/put a reference to a FPGA manager:
- -----------------------------------------
- struct fpga_manager *of_fpga_mgr_get(struct device_node *node);
- void fpga_mgr_put(struct fpga_manager *mgr);
- Given a DT node, get an exclusive reference to a FPGA manager or release
- the reference.
- To register or unregister the low level FPGA-specific driver:
- -------------------------------------------------------------
- int fpga_mgr_register(struct device *dev, const char *name,
- const struct fpga_manager_ops *mops,
- void *priv);
- void fpga_mgr_unregister(struct device *dev);
- Use of these two functions is described below in "How To Support a new FPGA
- device."
- How to write an image buffer to a supported FPGA
- ================================================
- /* Include to get the API */
- #include <linux/fpga/fpga-mgr.h>
- /* device node that specifies the FPGA manager to use */
- struct device_node *mgr_node = ...
- /* FPGA image is in this buffer. count is size of the buffer. */
- char *buf = ...
- int count = ...
- /* flags indicates whether to do full or partial reconfiguration */
- int flags = 0;
- int ret;
- /* Get exclusive control of FPGA manager */
- struct fpga_manager *mgr = of_fpga_mgr_get(mgr_node);
- /* Load the buffer to the FPGA */
- ret = fpga_mgr_buf_load(mgr, flags, buf, count);
- /* Release the FPGA manager */
- fpga_mgr_put(mgr);
- How to write an image file to a supported FPGA
- ==============================================
- /* Include to get the API */
- #include <linux/fpga/fpga-mgr.h>
- /* device node that specifies the FPGA manager to use */
- struct device_node *mgr_node = ...
- /* FPGA image is in this file which is in the firmware search path */
- const char *path = "fpga-image-9.rbf"
- /* flags indicates whether to do full or partial reconfiguration */
- int flags = 0;
- int ret;
- /* Get exclusive control of FPGA manager */
- struct fpga_manager *mgr = of_fpga_mgr_get(mgr_node);
- /* Get the firmware image (path) and load it to the FPGA */
- ret = fpga_mgr_firmware_load(mgr, flags, path);
- /* Release the FPGA manager */
- fpga_mgr_put(mgr);
- How to support a new FPGA device
- ================================
- To add another FPGA manager, write a driver that implements a set of ops. The
- probe function calls fpga_mgr_register(), such as:
- static const struct fpga_manager_ops socfpga_fpga_ops = {
- .write_init = socfpga_fpga_ops_configure_init,
- .write = socfpga_fpga_ops_configure_write,
- .write_complete = socfpga_fpga_ops_configure_complete,
- .state = socfpga_fpga_ops_state,
- };
- static int socfpga_fpga_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
- {
- struct device *dev = &pdev->dev;
- struct socfpga_fpga_priv *priv;
- int ret;
- priv = devm_kzalloc(dev, sizeof(*priv), GFP_KERNEL);
- if (!priv)
- return -ENOMEM;
- /* ... do ioremaps, get interrupts, etc. and save
- them in priv... */
- return fpga_mgr_register(dev, "Altera SOCFPGA FPGA Manager",
- &socfpga_fpga_ops, priv);
- }
- static int socfpga_fpga_remove(struct platform_device *pdev)
- {
- fpga_mgr_unregister(&pdev->dev);
- return 0;
- }
- The ops will implement whatever device specific register writes are needed to
- do the programming sequence for this particular FPGA. These ops return 0 for
- success or negative error codes otherwise.
- The programming sequence is:
- 1. .write_init
- 2. .write (may be called once or multiple times)
- 3. .write_complete
- The .write_init function will prepare the FPGA to receive the image data.
- The .write function writes a buffer to the FPGA. The buffer may be contain the
- whole FPGA image or may be a smaller chunk of an FPGA image. In the latter
- case, this function is called multiple times for successive chunks.
- The .write_complete function is called after all the image has been written
- to put the FPGA into operating mode.
- The ops include a .state function which will read the hardware FPGA manager and
- return a code of type enum fpga_mgr_states. It doesn't result in a change in
- hardware state.
|