xref: /rk3399_rockchip-uboot/doc/driver-model/README.txt (revision 756ac0bb1526c8c661ad3ff673cd17c7602ab46e)
1Driver Model
2============
3
4This README contains high-level information about driver model, a unified
5way of declaring and accessing drivers in U-Boot. The original work was done
6by:
7
8   Marek Vasut <marex@denx.de>
9   Pavel Herrmann <morpheus.ibis@gmail.com>
10   Viktor Křivák <viktor.krivak@gmail.com>
11   Tomas Hlavacek <tmshlvck@gmail.com>
12
13This has been both simplified and extended into the current implementation
14by:
15
16   Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
17
18
19Terminology
20-----------
21
22Uclass - a group of devices which operate in the same way. A uclass provides
23	a way of accessing individual devices within the group, but always
24	using the same interface. For example a GPIO uclass provides
25	operations for get/set value. An I2C uclass may have 10 I2C ports,
26	4 with one driver, and 6 with another.
27
28Driver - some code which talks to a peripheral and presents a higher-level
29	interface to it.
30
31Device - an instance of a driver, tied to a particular port or peripheral.
32
33
34How to try it
35-------------
36
37Build U-Boot sandbox and run it:
38
39   make sandbox_config
40   make
41   ./u-boot
42
43   (type 'reset' to exit U-Boot)
44
45
46There is a uclass called 'demo'. This uclass handles
47saying hello, and reporting its status. There are two drivers in this
48uclass:
49
50   - simple: Just prints a message for hello, doesn't implement status
51   - shape: Prints shapes and reports number of characters printed as status
52
53The demo class is pretty simple, but not trivial. The intention is that it
54can be used for testing, so it will implement all driver model features and
55provide good code coverage of them. It does have multiple drivers, it
56handles parameter data and platdata (data which tells the driver how
57to operate on a particular platform) and it uses private driver data.
58
59To try it, see the example session below:
60
61=>demo hello 1
62Hello '@' from 07981110: red 4
63=>demo status 2
64Status: 0
65=>demo hello 2
66g
67r@
68e@@
69e@@@
70n@@@@
71g@@@@@
72=>demo status 2
73Status: 21
74=>demo hello 4 ^
75  y^^^
76 e^^^^^
77l^^^^^^^
78l^^^^^^^
79 o^^^^^
80  w^^^
81=>demo status 4
82Status: 36
83=>
84
85
86Running the tests
87-----------------
88
89The intent with driver model is that the core portion has 100% test coverage
90in sandbox, and every uclass has its own test. As a move towards this, tests
91are provided in test/dm. To run them, try:
92
93   ./test/dm/test-dm.sh
94
95You should see something like this:
96
97    <...U-Boot banner...>
98    Running 27 driver model tests
99    Test: dm_test_autobind
100    Test: dm_test_autoprobe
101    Test: dm_test_bus_children
102    Device 'd-test': seq 3 is in use by 'b-test'
103    Device 'c-test@0': seq 0 is in use by 'a-test'
104    Device 'c-test@1': seq 1 is in use by 'd-test'
105    Test: dm_test_bus_children_funcs
106    Test: dm_test_bus_children_iterators
107    Test: dm_test_bus_parent_data
108    Test: dm_test_bus_parent_ops
109    Test: dm_test_children
110    Test: dm_test_fdt
111    Device 'd-test': seq 3 is in use by 'b-test'
112    Test: dm_test_fdt_offset
113    Test: dm_test_fdt_pre_reloc
114    Test: dm_test_fdt_uclass_seq
115    Device 'd-test': seq 3 is in use by 'b-test'
116    Device 'a-test': seq 0 is in use by 'd-test'
117    Test: dm_test_gpio
118    extra-gpios: get_value: error: gpio b5 not reserved
119    Test: dm_test_gpio_anon
120    Test: dm_test_gpio_requestf
121    Test: dm_test_leak
122    Test: dm_test_lifecycle
123    Test: dm_test_operations
124    Test: dm_test_ordering
125    Test: dm_test_platdata
126    Test: dm_test_pre_reloc
127    Test: dm_test_remove
128    Test: dm_test_spi_find
129    Invalid chip select 0:0 (err=-19)
130    SF: Failed to get idcodes
131    Device 'name-emul': seq 0 is in use by 'name-emul'
132    SF: Detected M25P16 with page size 256 Bytes, erase size 64 KiB, total 2 MiB
133    Test: dm_test_spi_flash
134    2097152 bytes written in 0 ms
135    SF: Detected M25P16 with page size 256 Bytes, erase size 64 KiB, total 2 MiB
136    SPI flash test:
137    0 erase: 0 ticks, 65536000 KiB/s 524288.000 Mbps
138    1 check: 0 ticks, 65536000 KiB/s 524288.000 Mbps
139    2 write: 0 ticks, 65536000 KiB/s 524288.000 Mbps
140    3 read: 0 ticks, 65536000 KiB/s 524288.000 Mbps
141    Test passed
142    0 erase: 0 ticks, 65536000 KiB/s 524288.000 Mbps
143    1 check: 0 ticks, 65536000 KiB/s 524288.000 Mbps
144    2 write: 0 ticks, 65536000 KiB/s 524288.000 Mbps
145    3 read: 0 ticks, 65536000 KiB/s 524288.000 Mbps
146    Test: dm_test_spi_xfer
147    SF: Detected M25P16 with page size 256 Bytes, erase size 64 KiB, total 2 MiB
148    Test: dm_test_uclass
149    Test: dm_test_uclass_before_ready
150    Failures: 0
151
152
153What is going on?
154-----------------
155
156Let's start at the top. The demo command is in common/cmd_demo.c. It does
157the usual command processing and then:
158
159	struct udevice *demo_dev;
160
161	ret = uclass_get_device(UCLASS_DEMO, devnum, &demo_dev);
162
163UCLASS_DEMO means the class of devices which implement 'demo'. Other
164classes might be MMC, or GPIO, hashing or serial. The idea is that the
165devices in the class all share a particular way of working. The class
166presents a unified view of all these devices to U-Boot.
167
168This function looks up a device for the demo uclass. Given a device
169number we can find the device because all devices have registered with
170the UCLASS_DEMO uclass.
171
172The device is automatically activated ready for use by uclass_get_device().
173
174Now that we have the device we can do things like:
175
176	return demo_hello(demo_dev, ch);
177
178This function is in the demo uclass. It takes care of calling the 'hello'
179method of the relevant driver. Bearing in mind that there are two drivers,
180this particular device may use one or other of them.
181
182The code for demo_hello() is in drivers/demo/demo-uclass.c:
183
184int demo_hello(struct udevice *dev, int ch)
185{
186	const struct demo_ops *ops = device_get_ops(dev);
187
188	if (!ops->hello)
189		return -ENOSYS;
190
191	return ops->hello(dev, ch);
192}
193
194As you can see it just calls the relevant driver method. One of these is
195in drivers/demo/demo-simple.c:
196
197static int simple_hello(struct udevice *dev, int ch)
198{
199	const struct dm_demo_pdata *pdata = dev_get_platdata(dev);
200
201	printf("Hello from %08x: %s %d\n", map_to_sysmem(dev),
202	       pdata->colour, pdata->sides);
203
204	return 0;
205}
206
207
208So that is a trip from top (command execution) to bottom (driver action)
209but it leaves a lot of topics to address.
210
211
212Declaring Drivers
213-----------------
214
215A driver declaration looks something like this (see
216drivers/demo/demo-shape.c):
217
218static const struct demo_ops shape_ops = {
219	.hello = shape_hello,
220	.status = shape_status,
221};
222
223U_BOOT_DRIVER(demo_shape_drv) = {
224	.name	= "demo_shape_drv",
225	.id	= UCLASS_DEMO,
226	.ops	= &shape_ops,
227	.priv_data_size = sizeof(struct shape_data),
228};
229
230
231This driver has two methods (hello and status) and requires a bit of
232private data (accessible through dev_get_priv(dev) once the driver has
233been probed). It is a member of UCLASS_DEMO so will register itself
234there.
235
236In U_BOOT_DRIVER it is also possible to specify special methods for bind
237and unbind, and these are called at appropriate times. For many drivers
238it is hoped that only 'probe' and 'remove' will be needed.
239
240The U_BOOT_DRIVER macro creates a data structure accessible from C,
241so driver model can find the drivers that are available.
242
243The methods a device can provide are documented in the device.h header.
244Briefly, they are:
245
246    bind - make the driver model aware of a device (bind it to its driver)
247    unbind - make the driver model forget the device
248    ofdata_to_platdata - convert device tree data to platdata - see later
249    probe - make a device ready for use
250    remove - remove a device so it cannot be used until probed again
251
252The sequence to get a device to work is bind, ofdata_to_platdata (if using
253device tree) and probe.
254
255
256Platform Data
257-------------
258
259Platform data is like Linux platform data, if you are familiar with that.
260It provides the board-specific information to start up a device.
261
262Why is this information not just stored in the device driver itself? The
263idea is that the device driver is generic, and can in principle operate on
264any board that has that type of device. For example, with modern
265highly-complex SoCs it is common for the IP to come from an IP vendor, and
266therefore (for example) the MMC controller may be the same on chips from
267different vendors. It makes no sense to write independent drivers for the
268MMC controller on each vendor's SoC, when they are all almost the same.
269Similarly, we may have 6 UARTs in an SoC, all of which are mostly the same,
270but lie at different addresses in the address space.
271
272Using the UART example, we have a single driver and it is instantiated 6
273times by supplying 6 lots of platform data. Each lot of platform data
274gives the driver name and a pointer to a structure containing information
275about this instance - e.g. the address of the register space. It may be that
276one of the UARTS supports RS-485 operation - this can be added as a flag in
277the platform data, which is set for this one port and clear for the rest.
278
279Think of your driver as a generic piece of code which knows how to talk to
280a device, but needs to know where it is, any variant/option information and
281so on. Platform data provides this link between the generic piece of code
282and the specific way it is bound on a particular board.
283
284Examples of platform data include:
285
286   - The base address of the IP block's register space
287   - Configuration options, like:
288         - the SPI polarity and maximum speed for a SPI controller
289         - the I2C speed to use for an I2C device
290         - the number of GPIOs available in a GPIO device
291
292Where does the platform data come from? It is either held in a structure
293which is compiled into U-Boot, or it can be parsed from the Device Tree
294(see 'Device Tree' below).
295
296For an example of how it can be compiled in, see demo-pdata.c which
297sets up a table of driver names and their associated platform data.
298The data can be interpreted by the drivers however they like - it is
299basically a communication scheme between the board-specific code and
300the generic drivers, which are intended to work on any board.
301
302Drivers can access their data via dev->info->platdata. Here is
303the declaration for the platform data, which would normally appear
304in the board file.
305
306	static const struct dm_demo_cdata red_square = {
307		.colour = "red",
308		.sides = 4.
309	};
310	static const struct driver_info info[] = {
311		{
312			.name = "demo_shape_drv",
313			.platdata = &red_square,
314		},
315	};
316
317	demo1 = driver_bind(root, &info[0]);
318
319
320Device Tree
321-----------
322
323While platdata is useful, a more flexible way of providing device data is
324by using device tree. With device tree we replace the above code with the
325following device tree fragment:
326
327	red-square {
328		compatible = "demo-shape";
329		colour = "red";
330		sides = <4>;
331	};
332
333This means that instead of having lots of U_BOOT_DEVICE() declarations in
334the board file, we put these in the device tree. This approach allows a lot
335more generality, since the same board file can support many types of boards
336(e,g. with the same SoC) just by using different device trees. An added
337benefit is that the Linux device tree can be used, thus further simplifying
338the task of board-bring up either for U-Boot or Linux devs (whoever gets to
339the board first!).
340
341The easiest way to make this work it to add a few members to the driver:
342
343	.platdata_auto_alloc_size = sizeof(struct dm_test_pdata),
344	.ofdata_to_platdata = testfdt_ofdata_to_platdata,
345
346The 'auto_alloc' feature allowed space for the platdata to be allocated
347and zeroed before the driver's ofdata_to_platdata() method is called. The
348ofdata_to_platdata() method, which the driver write supplies, should parse
349the device tree node for this device and place it in dev->platdata. Thus
350when the probe method is called later (to set up the device ready for use)
351the platform data will be present.
352
353Note that both methods are optional. If you provide an ofdata_to_platdata
354method then it will be called first (during activation). If you provide a
355probe method it will be called next. See Driver Lifecycle below for more
356details.
357
358If you don't want to have the platdata automatically allocated then you
359can leave out platdata_auto_alloc_size. In this case you can use malloc
360in your ofdata_to_platdata (or probe) method to allocate the required memory,
361and you should free it in the remove method.
362
363
364Declaring Uclasses
365------------------
366
367The demo uclass is declared like this:
368
369U_BOOT_CLASS(demo) = {
370	.id		= UCLASS_DEMO,
371};
372
373It is also possible to specify special methods for probe, etc. The uclass
374numbering comes from include/dm/uclass.h. To add a new uclass, add to the
375end of the enum there, then declare your uclass as above.
376
377
378Device Sequence Numbers
379-----------------------
380
381U-Boot numbers devices from 0 in many situations, such as in the command
382line for I2C and SPI buses, and the device names for serial ports (serial0,
383serial1, ...). Driver model supports this numbering and permits devices
384to be locating by their 'sequence'. This numbering unique identifies a
385device in its uclass, so no two devices within a particular uclass can have
386the same sequence number.
387
388Sequence numbers start from 0 but gaps are permitted. For example, a board
389may have I2C buses 0, 1, 4, 5 but no 2 or 3. The choice of how devices are
390numbered is up to a particular board, and may be set by the SoC in some
391cases. While it might be tempting to automatically renumber the devices
392where there are gaps in the sequence, this can lead to confusion and is
393not the way that U-Boot works.
394
395Each device can request a sequence number. If none is required then the
396device will be automatically allocated the next available sequence number.
397
398To specify the sequence number in the device tree an alias is typically
399used.
400
401aliases {
402	serial2 = "/serial@22230000";
403};
404
405This indicates that in the uclass called "serial", the named node
406("/serial@22230000") will be given sequence number 2. Any command or driver
407which requests serial device 2 will obtain this device.
408
409Some devices represent buses where the devices on the bus are numbered or
410addressed. For example, SPI typically numbers its slaves from 0, and I2C
411uses a 7-bit address. In these cases the 'reg' property of the subnode is
412used, for example:
413
414{
415	aliases {
416		spi2 = "/spi@22300000";
417	};
418
419	spi@22300000 {
420		#address-cells = <1>;
421		#size-cells = <1>;
422		spi-flash@0 {
423			reg = <0>;
424			...
425		}
426		eeprom@1 {
427			reg = <1>;
428		};
429	};
430
431In this case we have a SPI bus with two slaves at 0 and 1. The SPI bus
432itself is numbered 2. So we might access the SPI flash with:
433
434	sf probe 2:0
435
436and the eeprom with
437
438	sspi 2:1 32 ef
439
440These commands simply need to look up the 2nd device in the SPI uclass to
441find the right SPI bus. Then, they look at the children of that bus for the
442right sequence number (0 or 1 in this case).
443
444Typically the alias method is used for top-level nodes and the 'reg' method
445is used only for buses.
446
447Device sequence numbers are resolved when a device is probed. Before then
448the sequence number is only a request which may or may not be honoured,
449depending on what other devices have been probed. However the numbering is
450entirely under the control of the board author so a conflict is generally
451an error.
452
453
454Bus Drivers
455-----------
456
457A common use of driver model is to implement a bus, a device which provides
458access to other devices. Example of buses include SPI and I2C. Typically
459the bus provides some sort of transport or translation that makes it
460possible to talk to the devices on the bus.
461
462Driver model provides a few useful features to help with implementing
463buses. Firstly, a bus can request that its children store some 'parent
464data' which can be used to keep track of child state. Secondly, the bus can
465define methods which are called when a child is probed or removed. This is
466similar to the methods the uclass driver provides.
467
468Here an explanation of how a bus fits with a uclass may be useful. Consider
469a USB bus with several devices attached to it, each from a different (made
470up) uclass:
471
472   xhci_usb (UCLASS_USB)
473      eth (UCLASS_ETHERNET)
474      camera (UCLASS_CAMERA)
475      flash (UCLASS_FLASH_STORAGE)
476
477Each of the devices is connected to a different address on the USB bus.
478The bus device wants to store this address and some other information such
479as the bus speed for each device.
480
481To achieve this, the bus device can use dev->parent_priv in each of its
482three children. This can be auto-allocated if the bus driver has a non-zero
483value for per_child_auto_alloc_size. If not, then the bus device can
484allocate the space itself before the child device is probed.
485
486Also the bus driver can define the child_pre_probe() and child_post_remove()
487methods to allow it to do some processing before the child is activated or
488after it is deactivated.
489
490Note that the information that controls this behaviour is in the bus's
491driver, not the child's. In fact it is possible that child has no knowledge
492that it is connected to a bus. The same child device may even be used on two
493different bus types. As an example. the 'flash' device shown above may also
494be connected on a SATA bus or standalone with no bus:
495
496   xhci_usb (UCLASS_USB)
497      flash (UCLASS_FLASH_STORAGE)  - parent data/methods defined by USB bus
498
499   sata (UCLASS_SATA)
500      flash (UCLASS_FLASH_STORAGE)  - parent data/methods defined by SATA bus
501
502   flash (UCLASS_FLASH_STORAGE)  - no parent data/methods (not on a bus)
503
504Above you can see that the driver for xhci_usb/sata controls the child's
505bus methods. In the third example the device is not on a bus, and therefore
506will not have these methods at all. Consider the case where the flash
507device defines child methods. These would be used for *its* children, and
508would be quite separate from the methods defined by the driver for the bus
509that the flash device is connetced to. The act of attaching a device to a
510parent device which is a bus, causes the device to start behaving like a
511bus device, regardless of its own views on the matter.
512
513The uclass for the device can also contain data private to that uclass.
514But note that each device on the bus may be a memeber of a different
515uclass, and this data has nothing to do with the child data for each child
516on the bus.
517
518
519Driver Lifecycle
520----------------
521
522Here are the stages that a device goes through in driver model. Note that all
523methods mentioned here are optional - e.g. if there is no probe() method for
524a device then it will not be called. A simple device may have very few
525methods actually defined.
526
5271. Bind stage
528
529A device and its driver are bound using one of these two methods:
530
531   - Scan the U_BOOT_DEVICE() definitions. U-Boot It looks up the
532name specified by each, to find the appropriate driver. It then calls
533device_bind() to create a new device and bind' it to its driver. This will
534call the device's bind() method.
535
536   - Scan through the device tree definitions. U-Boot looks at top-level
537nodes in the the device tree. It looks at the compatible string in each node
538and uses the of_match part of the U_BOOT_DRIVER() structure to find the
539right driver for each node. It then calls device_bind() to bind the
540newly-created device to its driver (thereby creating a device structure).
541This will also call the device's bind() method.
542
543At this point all the devices are known, and bound to their drivers. There
544is a 'struct udevice' allocated for all devices. However, nothing has been
545activated (except for the root device). Each bound device that was created
546from a U_BOOT_DEVICE() declaration will hold the platdata pointer specified
547in that declaration. For a bound device created from the device tree,
548platdata will be NULL, but of_offset will be the offset of the device tree
549node that caused the device to be created. The uclass is set correctly for
550the device.
551
552The device's bind() method is permitted to perform simple actions, but
553should not scan the device tree node, not initialise hardware, nor set up
554structures or allocate memory. All of these tasks should be left for
555the probe() method.
556
557Note that compared to Linux, U-Boot's driver model has a separate step of
558probe/remove which is independent of bind/unbind. This is partly because in
559U-Boot it may be expensive to probe devices and we don't want to do it until
560they are needed, or perhaps until after relocation.
561
5622. Activation/probe
563
564When a device needs to be used, U-Boot activates it, by following these
565steps (see device_probe()):
566
567   a. If priv_auto_alloc_size is non-zero, then the device-private space
568   is allocated for the device and zeroed. It will be accessible as
569   dev->priv. The driver can put anything it likes in there, but should use
570   it for run-time information, not platform data (which should be static
571   and known before the device is probed).
572
573   b. If platdata_auto_alloc_size is non-zero, then the platform data space
574   is allocated. This is only useful for device tree operation, since
575   otherwise you would have to specific the platform data in the
576   U_BOOT_DEVICE() declaration. The space is allocated for the device and
577   zeroed. It will be accessible as dev->platdata.
578
579   c. If the device's uclass specifies a non-zero per_device_auto_alloc_size,
580   then this space is allocated and zeroed also. It is allocated for and
581   stored in the device, but it is uclass data. owned by the uclass driver.
582   It is possible for the device to access it.
583
584   d. If the device's immediate parent specifies a per_child_auto_alloc_size
585   then this space is allocated. This is intended for use by the parent
586   device to keep track of things related to the child. For example a USB
587   flash stick attached to a USB host controller would likely use this
588   space. The controller can hold information about the USB state of each
589   of its children.
590
591   e. All parent devices are probed. It is not possible to activate a device
592   unless its predecessors (all the way up to the root device) are activated.
593   This means (for example) that an I2C driver will require that its bus
594   be activated.
595
596   f. The device's sequence number is assigned, either the requested one
597   (assuming no conflicts) or the next available one if there is a conflict
598   or nothing particular is requested.
599
600   g. If the driver provides an ofdata_to_platdata() method, then this is
601   called to convert the device tree data into platform data. This should
602   do various calls like fdtdec_get_int(gd->fdt_blob, dev->of_offset, ...)
603   to access the node and store the resulting information into dev->platdata.
604   After this point, the device works the same way whether it was bound
605   using a device tree node or U_BOOT_DEVICE() structure. In either case,
606   the platform data is now stored in the platdata structure. Typically you
607   will use the platdata_auto_alloc_size feature to specify the size of the
608   platform data structure, and U-Boot will automatically allocate and zero
609   it for you before entry to ofdata_to_platdata(). But if not, you can
610   allocate it yourself in ofdata_to_platdata(). Note that it is preferable
611   to do all the device tree decoding in ofdata_to_platdata() rather than
612   in probe(). (Apart from the ugliness of mixing configuration and run-time
613   data, one day it is possible that U-Boot will cache platformat data for
614   devices which are regularly de/activated).
615
616   h. The device's probe() method is called. This should do anything that
617   is required by the device to get it going. This could include checking
618   that the hardware is actually present, setting up clocks for the
619   hardware and setting up hardware registers to initial values. The code
620   in probe() can access:
621
622      - platform data in dev->platdata (for configuration)
623      - private data in dev->priv (for run-time state)
624      - uclass data in dev->uclass_priv (for things the uclass stores
625        about this device)
626
627   Note: If you don't use priv_auto_alloc_size then you will need to
628   allocate the priv space here yourself. The same applies also to
629   platdata_auto_alloc_size. Remember to free them in the remove() method.
630
631   i. The device is marked 'activated'
632
633   j. The uclass's post_probe() method is called, if one exists. This may
634   cause the uclass to do some housekeeping to record the device as
635   activated and 'known' by the uclass.
636
6373. Running stage
638
639The device is now activated and can be used. From now until it is removed
640all of the above structures are accessible. The device appears in the
641uclass's list of devices (so if the device is in UCLASS_GPIO it will appear
642as a device in the GPIO uclass). This is the 'running' state of the device.
643
6444. Removal stage
645
646When the device is no-longer required, you can call device_remove() to
647remove it. This performs the probe steps in reverse:
648
649   a. The uclass's pre_remove() method is called, if one exists. This may
650   cause the uclass to do some housekeeping to record the device as
651   deactivated and no-longer 'known' by the uclass.
652
653   b. All the device's children are removed. It is not permitted to have
654   an active child device with a non-active parent. This means that
655   device_remove() is called for all the children recursively at this point.
656
657   c. The device's remove() method is called. At this stage nothing has been
658   deallocated so platform data, private data and the uclass data will all
659   still be present. This is where the hardware can be shut down. It is
660   intended that the device be completely inactive at this point, For U-Boot
661   to be sure that no hardware is running, it should be enough to remove
662   all devices.
663
664   d. The device memory is freed (platform data, private data, uclass data,
665   parent data).
666
667   Note: Because the platform data for a U_BOOT_DEVICE() is defined with a
668   static pointer, it is not de-allocated during the remove() method. For
669   a device instantiated using the device tree data, the platform data will
670   be dynamically allocated, and thus needs to be deallocated during the
671   remove() method, either:
672
673      1. if the platdata_auto_alloc_size is non-zero, the deallocation
674      happens automatically within the driver model core; or
675
676      2. when platdata_auto_alloc_size is 0, both the allocation (in probe()
677      or preferably ofdata_to_platdata()) and the deallocation in remove()
678      are the responsibility of the driver author.
679
680   e. The device sequence number is set to -1, meaning that it no longer
681   has an allocated sequence. If the device is later reactivated and that
682   sequence number is still free, it may well receive the name sequence
683   number again. But from this point, the sequence number previously used
684   by this device will no longer exist (think of SPI bus 2 being removed
685   and bus 2 is no longer available for use).
686
687   f. The device is marked inactive. Note that it is still bound, so the
688   device structure itself is not freed at this point. Should the device be
689   activated again, then the cycle starts again at step 2 above.
690
6915. Unbind stage
692
693The device is unbound. This is the step that actually destroys the device.
694If a parent has children these will be destroyed first. After this point
695the device does not exist and its memory has be deallocated.
696
697
698Data Structures
699---------------
700
701Driver model uses a doubly-linked list as the basic data structure. Some
702nodes have several lists running through them. Creating a more efficient
703data structure might be worthwhile in some rare cases, once we understand
704what the bottlenecks are.
705
706
707Changes since v1
708----------------
709
710For the record, this implementation uses a very similar approach to the
711original patches, but makes at least the following changes:
712
713- Tried to aggressively remove boilerplate, so that for most drivers there
714is little or no 'driver model' code to write.
715- Moved some data from code into data structure - e.g. store a pointer to
716the driver operations structure in the driver, rather than passing it
717to the driver bind function.
718- Rename some structures to make them more similar to Linux (struct udevice
719instead of struct instance, struct platdata, etc.)
720- Change the name 'core' to 'uclass', meaning U-Boot class. It seems that
721this concept relates to a class of drivers (or a subsystem). We shouldn't
722use 'class' since it is a C++ reserved word, so U-Boot class (uclass) seems
723better than 'core'.
724- Remove 'struct driver_instance' and just use a single 'struct udevice'.
725This removes a level of indirection that doesn't seem necessary.
726- Built in device tree support, to avoid the need for platdata
727- Removed the concept of driver relocation, and just make it possible for
728the new driver (created after relocation) to access the old driver data.
729I feel that relocation is a very special case and will only apply to a few
730drivers, many of which can/will just re-init anyway. So the overhead of
731dealing with this might not be worth it.
732- Implemented a GPIO system, trying to keep it simple
733
734
735Pre-Relocation Support
736----------------------
737
738For pre-relocation we simply call the driver model init function. Only
739drivers marked with DM_FLAG_PRE_RELOC or the device tree
740'u-boot,dm-pre-reloc' flag are initialised prior to relocation. This helps
741to reduce the driver model overhead.
742
743Then post relocation we throw that away and re-init driver model again.
744For drivers which require some sort of continuity between pre- and
745post-relocation devices, we can provide access to the pre-relocation
746device pointers, but this is not currently implemented (the root device
747pointer is saved but not made available through the driver model API).
748
749
750Things to punt for later
751------------------------
752
753- SPL support - this will have to be present before many drivers can be
754converted, but it seems like we can add it once we are happy with the
755core implementation.
756
757That is not to say that no thinking has gone into this - in fact there
758is quite a lot there. However, getting these right is non-trivial and
759there is a high cost associated with going down the wrong path.
760
761For SPL, it may be possible to fit in a simplified driver model with only
762bind and probe methods, to reduce size.
763
764Uclasses are statically numbered at compile time. It would be possible to
765change this to dynamic numbering, but then we would require some sort of
766lookup service, perhaps searching by name. This is slightly less efficient
767so has been left out for now. One small advantage of dynamic numbering might
768be fewer merge conflicts in uclass-id.h.
769
770
771Simon Glass
772sjg@chromium.org
773April 2013
774Updated 7-May-13
775Updated 14-Jun-13
776Updated 18-Oct-13
777Updated 5-Nov-13
778