Hello Andy, On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 16:23:53 +0200 Andy Shevchenko <andriy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Jan 18, 2023 at 02:40:25PM +0200, Tomi Valkeinen wrote: > > From: Luca Ceresoli <luca@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > An ATR is a device that looks similar to an i2c-mux: it has an I2C > > slave "upstream" port and N master "downstream" ports, and forwards > > transactions from upstream to the appropriate downstream port. But is > > is different in that the forwarded transaction has a different slave > > is is ? > > > address. The address used on the upstream bus is called the "alias" > > and is (potentially) different from the physical slave address of the > > downstream chip. > > > > Add a helper file (just like i2c-mux.c for a mux or switch) to allow > > implementing ATR features in a device driver. The helper takes care or > > adapter creation/destruction and translates addresses at each transaction. > > ... > > > +A typical example follows. > > + > > +Topology:: > > + > > + Slave X @ 0x10 > > + .-----. | > > + .-----. | |---+---- B > > + | CPU |--A--| ATR | > > + `-----' | |---+---- C > > + `-----' | > > + Slave Y @ 0x10 > > + > > +Alias table: > > + > > +.. table:: > > + > > + ====== ===== > > + Client Alias > > + ====== ===== > > + X 0x20 > > + Y 0x30 > > + ====== ===== > > + > > +Transaction: > > + > > + - Slave X driver sends a transaction (on adapter B), slave address 0x10 > > + - ATR driver rewrites messages with address 0x20, forwards to adapter A > > + - Physical I2C transaction on bus A, slave address 0x20 > > + - ATR chip propagates transaction on bus B with address translated to 0x10 > > + - Slave X chip replies on bus B > > + - ATR chip forwards reply on bus A > > + - ATR driver rewrites messages with address 0x10 > > + - Slave X driver gets back the msgs[], with reply and address 0x10 > > I'm not sure I got the real / virtual status of the adapters. Are the B and C > virtual ones, while A is the real? Let me reply, as I wrote these docs back at the times and thus I feel guilty in case that's unclear. :) I don't like the word "virtual" in this situation. A, B and C are all physical busses, made of copper and run by electrons on PCBs. B and C are the "remote" or "downstream" busses (w.r.t. the CPU), where the i2c devices are and where transactions happen using the address that the chip responds to. A is the "local" or "upstream" bus that is driven directly by the CPU (*) and where address aliases are used. Using aliases there is necessary because using address 0x10 would be ambiguous as there are two 0x10 chips out there. (*) There could be more layers of course, but still A is "closer to the CPU than B and C", for the sake of completeness. ... > > +void i2c_atr_set_driver_data(struct i2c_atr *atr, void *data) > > +{ > > + atr->priv = data; > > +} > > +EXPORT_SYMBOL_NS_GPL(i2c_atr_set_driver_data, I2C_ATR); > > + > > +void *i2c_atr_get_driver_data(struct i2c_atr *atr) > > +{ > > + return atr->priv; > > +} > > +EXPORT_SYMBOL_NS_GPL(i2c_atr_get_driver_data, I2C_ATR); > > Just to be sure: Is it really _driver_ data and not _device instance_ data? It is device instance data indeed. I don't remember why this got changed, but in v3 it was i2c_atr_set_clientdata(). [v3] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20220206115939.3091265-3-luca@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ -- Luca Ceresoli, Bootlin Embedded Linux and Kernel engineering https://bootlin.com