Introduction of the Platform Environment Control Interface (PECI) bus device driver. PECI is a one-wire bus interface that provides a communication channel between Intel processor and chipset components to external monitoring or control devices. PECI is designed to support the following sideband functions: * Processor and DRAM thermal management - Processor fan speed control is managed by comparing Digital Thermal Sensor (DTS) thermal readings acquired via PECI against the processor-specific fan speed control reference point, or TCONTROL. Both TCONTROL and DTS thermal readings are accessible via the processor PECI client. These variables are referenced to a common temperature, the TCC activation point, and are both defined as negative offsets from that reference. - PECI based access to the processor package configuration space provides a means for Baseboard Management Controllers (BMC) or other platform management devices to actively manage the processor and memory power and thermal features. * Platform Manageability - Platform manageability functions including thermal, power, and error monitoring. Note that platform 'power' management includes monitoring and control for both the processor and DRAM subsystem to assist with data center power limiting. - PECI allows read access to certain error registers in the processor MSR space and status monitoring registers in the PCI configuration space within the processor and downstream devices. - PECI permits writes to certain registers in the processor PCI configuration space. * Processor Interface Tuning and Diagnostics - Processor interface tuning and diagnostics capabilities (Intel(c) Interconnect BIST). The processors Intel(c) Interconnect Built In Self Test (Intel(c) IBIST) allows for infield diagnostic capabilities in the Intel UPI and memory controller interfaces. PECI provides a port to execute these diagnostics via its PCI Configuration read and write capabilities. * Failure Analysis - Output the state of the processor after a failure for analysis via Crashdump. PECI uses a single wire for self-clocking and data transfer. The bus requires no additional control lines. The physical layer is a self-clocked one-wire bus that begins each bit with a driven, rising edge from an idle level near zero volts. The duration of the signal driven high depends on whether the bit value is a logic '0' or logic '1'. PECI also includes variable data transfer rate established with every message. In this way, it is highly flexible even though underlying logic is simple. The interface design was optimized for interfacing to Intel processor and chipset components in both single processor and multiple processor environments. The single wire interface provides low board routing overhead for the multiple load connections in the congested routing area near the processor and chipset components. Bus speed, error checking, and low protocol overhead provides adequate link bandwidth and reliability to transfer critical device operating conditions and configuration information. This implementation provides the basic framework to add PECI extensions to the Linux bus and device models. A hardware specific 'Adapter' driver can be attached to the PECI bus to provide sideband functions described above. It is also possible to access all devices on an adapter from userspace through the /dev interface. A device specific 'Client' driver also can be attached to the PECI bus so each processor client's features can be supported by the 'Client' driver through an adapter connection in the bus. This patch set includes Aspeed 24xx/25xx PECI driver and a generic PECI hwmon driver as the first implementation for both adapter and client drivers on the PECI bus framework. v1 -> v2 - Additionally implemented a core driver to support PECI linux bus driver model. - Modified Aspeed PECI driver to make that to be an adapter driver in PECI bus. - Modified PECI hwmon driver to make that to be a client driver in PECI bus. - Simplified hwmon driver attribute labels and removed redundant strings. - Removed core_nums from device tree setting of hwmon driver and modified core number detection logic to check the resolved_core register in client CPU's local PCI configuration area. - Removed dimm_nums from device tree setting of hwmon driver and added populated DIMM detection logic to support dynamic creation. - Removed indexing gap on core temperature and DIMM temperature attributes. - Improved hwmon registration and dynamic attribute creation logic. - Fixed structure definitions in PECI uapi header to make that use __u8, __u16 and etc. - Modified wait_for_completion_interruptible_timeout error handling logic in Aspeed PECI driver to deliver errors correctly. - Removed low-level xfer command from ioctl and kept only high-level PECI command suite as ioctls. - Fixed I/O timeout logic in Aspeed PECI driver using ktime. - Added a function into hwmon driver to simplify update delay checking. - Added a function into hwmon driver to convert 10.6 to millidegree. - Dropped non-standard attributes in hwmon driver. - Fixed OF table for hwmon to make it indicate as a PECI client of Intel CPU target. - Added a maintainer of PECI subsystem into MAINTAINERS document. Thanks, -Jae Jae Hyun Yoo (8): drivers/peci: Add support for PECI bus driver core Documentations: dt-bindings: Add a document of PECI adapter driver for Aspeed AST24xx/25xx SoCs ARM: dts: aspeed: peci: Add PECI node drivers/peci: Add a PECI adapter driver for Aspeed AST24xx/AST25xx Documentation: dt-bindings: Add a document for PECI hwmon client driver Documentation: hwmon: Add a document for a PECI hwmon client driver drivers/hwmon: Add a generic PECI hwmon client driver Add a maintainer for the PECI subsystem .../devicetree/bindings/hwmon/peci-hwmon.txt | 27 + .../devicetree/bindings/peci/peci-aspeed.txt | 73 ++ Documentation/hwmon/peci-hwmon | 73 ++ MAINTAINERS | 9 + arch/arm/boot/dts/aspeed-g4.dtsi | 25 + arch/arm/boot/dts/aspeed-g5.dtsi | 25 + drivers/Kconfig | 2 + drivers/Makefile | 1 + drivers/hwmon/Kconfig | 10 + drivers/hwmon/Makefile | 1 + drivers/hwmon/peci-hwmon.c | 928 ++++++++++++++ drivers/peci/Kconfig | 39 + drivers/peci/Makefile | 9 + drivers/peci/peci-aspeed.c | 510 ++++++++ drivers/peci/peci-core.c | 1337 ++++++++++++++++ include/linux/peci.h | 97 ++ include/uapi/linux/peci-ioctl.h | 207 +++ 17 files changed, 3373 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/hwmon/peci-hwmon.txt create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/peci/peci-aspeed.txt create mode 100644 Documentation/hwmon/peci-hwmon create mode 100644 drivers/hwmon/peci-hwmon.c create mode 100644 drivers/peci/Kconfig create mode 100644 drivers/peci/Makefile create mode 100644 drivers/peci/peci-aspeed.c create mode 100644 drivers/peci/peci-core.c create mode 100644 include/linux/peci.h create mode 100644 include/uapi/linux/peci-ioctl.h -- 2.16.1 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html