Blame view

kernel/linux-rt-4.4.41/Documentation/w1/w1.netlink 6.94 KB
5113f6f70   김현기   kernel add
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
  Userspace communication protocol over connector [1].
  
  
  Message types.
  =============
  
  There are three types of messages between w1 core and userspace:
  1. Events. They are generated each time a new master or slave device
  	is found either due to automatic or requested search.
  2. Userspace commands.
  3. Replies to userspace commands.
  
  
  Protocol.
  ========
  
  [struct cn_msg] - connector header.
  	Its length field is equal to size of the attached data
  [struct w1_netlink_msg] - w1 netlink header.
  	__u8 type 	- message type.
  			W1_LIST_MASTERS
  				list current bus masters
  			W1_SLAVE_ADD/W1_SLAVE_REMOVE
  				slave add/remove events
  			W1_MASTER_ADD/W1_MASTER_REMOVE
  				master add/remove events
  			W1_MASTER_CMD
  				userspace command for bus master
  				device (search/alarm search)
  			W1_SLAVE_CMD
  				userspace command for slave device
  				(read/write/touch)
  	__u8 status	- error indication from kernel
  	__u16 len	- size of data attached to this header data
  	union {
  		__u8 id[8];			 - slave unique device id
  		struct w1_mst {
  			__u32		id;	 - master's id
  			__u32		res;	 - reserved
  		} mst;
  	} id;
  
  [struct w1_netlink_cmd] - command for given master or slave device.
  	__u8 cmd	- command opcode.
  			W1_CMD_READ 	- read command
  			W1_CMD_WRITE	- write command
  			W1_CMD_SEARCH	- search command
  			W1_CMD_ALARM_SEARCH - alarm search command
  			W1_CMD_TOUCH	- touch command
  				(write and sample data back to userspace)
  			W1_CMD_RESET	- send bus reset
  			W1_CMD_SLAVE_ADD	- add slave to kernel list
  			W1_CMD_SLAVE_REMOVE	- remove slave from kernel list
  			W1_CMD_LIST_SLAVES	- get slaves list from kernel
  	__u8 res	- reserved
  	__u16 len	- length of data for this command
  		For read command data must be allocated like for write command
  	__u8 data[0]	- data for this command
  
  
  Each connector message can include one or more w1_netlink_msg with
  zero or more attached w1_netlink_cmd messages.
  
  For event messages there are no w1_netlink_cmd embedded structures,
  only connector header and w1_netlink_msg strucutre with "len" field
  being zero and filled type (one of event types) and id:
  either 8 bytes of slave unique id in host order,
  or master's id, which is assigned to bus master device
  when it is added to w1 core.
  
  Currently replies to userspace commands are only generated for read
  command request. One reply is generated exactly for one w1_netlink_cmd
  read request. Replies are not combined when sent - i.e. typical reply
  messages looks like the following:
  
  [cn_msg][w1_netlink_msg][w1_netlink_cmd]
  cn_msg.len = sizeof(struct w1_netlink_msg) +
  	     sizeof(struct w1_netlink_cmd) +
  	     cmd->len;
  w1_netlink_msg.len = sizeof(struct w1_netlink_cmd) + cmd->len;
  w1_netlink_cmd.len = cmd->len;
  
  Replies to W1_LIST_MASTERS should send a message back to the userspace
  which will contain list of all registered master ids in the following
  format:
  
  	cn_msg (CN_W1_IDX.CN_W1_VAL as id, len is equal to sizeof(struct
  	w1_netlink_msg) plus number of masters multiplied by 4)
  	w1_netlink_msg (type: W1_LIST_MASTERS, len is equal to
  		number of masters multiplied by 4 (u32 size))
  	id0 ... idN
  
  	Each message is at most 4k in size, so if number of master devices
  	exceeds this, it will be split into several messages.
  
  W1 search and alarm search commands.
  request:
  [cn_msg]
    [w1_netlink_msg type = W1_MASTER_CMD
    	id is equal to the bus master id to use for searching]
    [w1_netlink_cmd cmd = W1_CMD_SEARCH or W1_CMD_ALARM_SEARCH]
  
  reply:
    [cn_msg, ack = 1 and increasing, 0 means the last message,
    	seq is equal to the request seq]
    [w1_netlink_msg type = W1_MASTER_CMD]
    [w1_netlink_cmd cmd = W1_CMD_SEARCH or W1_CMD_ALARM_SEARCH
  	len is equal to number of IDs multiplied by 8]
    [64bit-id0 ... 64bit-idN]
  Length in each header corresponds to the size of the data behind it, so
  w1_netlink_cmd->len = N * 8; where N is number of IDs in this message.
  	Can be zero.
  w1_netlink_msg->len = sizeof(struct w1_netlink_cmd) + N * 8;
  cn_msg->len = sizeof(struct w1_netlink_msg) +
  	      sizeof(struct w1_netlink_cmd) +
  	      N*8;
  
  W1 reset command.
  [cn_msg]
    [w1_netlink_msg type = W1_MASTER_CMD
    	id is equal to the bus master id to use for searching]
    [w1_netlink_cmd cmd = W1_CMD_RESET]
  
  
  Command status replies.
  ======================
  
  Each command (either root, master or slave with or without w1_netlink_cmd
  structure) will be 'acked' by the w1 core. Format of the reply is the same
  as request message except that length parameters do not account for data
  requested by the user, i.e. read/write/touch IO requests will not contain
  data, so w1_netlink_cmd.len will be 0, w1_netlink_msg.len will be size
  of the w1_netlink_cmd structure and cn_msg.len will be equal to the sum
  of the sizeof(struct w1_netlink_msg) and sizeof(struct w1_netlink_cmd).
  If reply is generated for master or root command (which do not have
  w1_netlink_cmd attached), reply will contain only cn_msg and w1_netlink_msg
  structures.
  
  w1_netlink_msg.status field will carry positive error value
  (EINVAL for example) or zero in case of success.
  
  All other fields in every structure will mirror the same parameters in the
  request message (except lengths as described above).
  
  Status reply is generated for every w1_netlink_cmd embedded in the
  w1_netlink_msg, if there are no w1_netlink_cmd structures,
  reply will be generated for the w1_netlink_msg.
  
  All w1_netlink_cmd command structures are handled in every w1_netlink_msg,
  even if there were errors, only length mismatch interrupts message processing.
  
  
  Operation steps in w1 core when new command is received.
  =======================================================
  
  When new message (w1_netlink_msg) is received w1 core detects if it is
  master or slave request, according to w1_netlink_msg.type field.
  Then master or slave device is searched for.
  When found, master device (requested or those one on where slave device
  is found) is locked. If slave command is requested, then reset/select
  procedure is started to select given device.
  
  Then all requested in w1_netlink_msg operations are performed one by one.
  If command requires reply (like read command) it is sent on command completion.
  
  When all commands (w1_netlink_cmd) are processed master device is unlocked
  and next w1_netlink_msg header processing started.
  
  
  Connector [1] specific documentation.
  ====================================
  
  Each connector message includes two u32 fields as "address".
  w1 uses CN_W1_IDX and CN_W1_VAL defined in include/linux/connector.h header.
  Each message also includes sequence and acknowledge numbers.
  Sequence number for event messages is appropriate bus master sequence number
  increased with each event message sent "through" this master.
  Sequence number for userspace requests is set by userspace application.
  Sequence number for reply is the same as was in request, and
  acknowledge number is set to seq+1.
  
  
  Additional documantion, source code examples.
  ============================================
  
  1. Documentation/connector
  2. http://www.ioremap.net/archive/w1
  This archive includes userspace application w1d.c which uses
  read/write/search commands for all master/slave devices found on the bus.