Some devices are designed and manufactured with some components having multiple drop-in replacement options. These components are often connected to the mainboard via ribbon cables, having the same signals and pin assignments across all options. These may include the display panel and touchscreen on laptops and tablets, and the trackpad on laptops. Sometimes which component option is used in a particular device can be detected by some firmware provided identifier, other times that information is not available, and the kernel has to try to probe each device. This change attempts to make the "probe each device" case cleaner. The current approach is to have all options added and enabled in the device tree. The kernel would then bind each device and run each driver's probe function. This works, but has been broken before due to the introduction of asynchronous probing, causing multiple instances requesting "shared" resources, such as pinmuxes, GPIO pins, interrupt lines, at the same time, with only one instance succeeding. Work arounds for these include moving the pinmux to the parent I2C controller, using GPIO hogs or pinmux settings to keep the GPIO pins in some fixed configuration, and requesting the interrupt line very late. Such configurations can be seen on the MT8183 Krane Chromebook tablets, and the Qualcomm sc8280xp-based Lenovo Thinkpad 13S. Instead of this delicate dance between drivers and device tree quirks, this change introduces a simple I2C component prober. For any given class of devices on the same I2C bus, it will go through all of them, doing a simple I2C read transfer and see which one of them responds. It will then enable the device that responds. This requires some minor modifications in the existing device tree. The status for all the device nodes for the component options must be set to "failed-needs-probe-xxx". This makes it clear that some mechanism is needed to enable one of them, and also prevents the prober and device drivers running at the same time. Signed-off-by: Chen-Yu Tsai <wenst@xxxxxxxxxxxx> --- drivers/of/Kconfig | 13 ++++ drivers/of/Makefile | 1 + drivers/of/hw_prober.c | 154 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 3 files changed, 168 insertions(+) create mode 100644 drivers/of/hw_prober.c diff --git a/drivers/of/Kconfig b/drivers/of/Kconfig index da9826accb1b..269d20d51936 100644 --- a/drivers/of/Kconfig +++ b/drivers/of/Kconfig @@ -102,4 +102,17 @@ config OF_OVERLAY config OF_NUMA bool +config HW_PROBER + bool "Hardware Prober driver" + select I2C + select OF_DYNAMIC + help + Some devices will have multiple drop-in options for one component. + In many cases the different options are indistinguishable by the + kernel without actually probing each possible option. + + This driver is meant to handle the probing of such components, and + update the running device tree such that the correct variant is + made available. + endif # OF diff --git a/drivers/of/Makefile b/drivers/of/Makefile index eff624854575..ed3875cdc554 100644 --- a/drivers/of/Makefile +++ b/drivers/of/Makefile @@ -12,6 +12,7 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_OF_RESERVED_MEM) += of_reserved_mem.o obj-$(CONFIG_OF_RESOLVE) += resolver.o obj-$(CONFIG_OF_OVERLAY) += overlay.o obj-$(CONFIG_OF_NUMA) += of_numa.o +obj-$(CONFIG_HW_PROBER) += hw_prober.o ifdef CONFIG_KEXEC_FILE ifdef CONFIG_OF_FLATTREE diff --git a/drivers/of/hw_prober.c b/drivers/of/hw_prober.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..442da6eff896 --- /dev/null +++ b/drivers/of/hw_prober.c @@ -0,0 +1,154 @@ +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only +/* + * hw_prober.c - Hardware prober driver + * + * Copyright (c) 2023 Google LLC + */ + +#include <linux/array_size.h> +#include <linux/i2c.h> +#include <linux/of.h> +#include <linux/platform_device.h> + +#define DRV_NAME "hw_prober" + +/** + * struct hw_prober_entry - Holds an entry for the hardware prober + * + * @compatible: compatible string to match against the machine + * @prober: prober function to call when machine matches + * @data: extra data for the prober function + */ +struct hw_prober_entry { + const char *compatible; + int (*prober)(struct platform_device *pdev, const void *data); + const void *data; +}; + +/* + * Some devices, such as Google Hana Chromebooks, are produced by multiple + * vendors each using their preferred components. This prober assumes such + * drop-in parts are on dedicated I2C busses, have non-conflicting addresses, + * and can be directly probed by seeing which address responds without needing + * regulators or GPIOs being enabled or toggled. + */ +static int i2c_component_prober(struct platform_device *pdev, const void *data) +{ + const char *node_name = data; + struct device_node *node, *i2c_node; + struct i2c_adapter *i2c; + int ret = 0; + + node = of_find_node_by_name(NULL, node_name); + if (!node) + return dev_err_probe(&pdev->dev, -ENODEV, "Could not find %s device node\n", + node_name); + + i2c_node = of_get_next_parent(node); + if (strcmp(i2c_node->name, "i2c")) { + of_node_put(i2c_node); + return dev_err_probe(&pdev->dev, -EINVAL, "%s device isn't on I2C bus\n", + node_name); + } + + for_each_child_of_node(i2c_node, node) { + if (!of_node_name_prefix(node, node_name)) + continue; + if (!of_device_is_fail(node)) { + /* device tree has component already enabled */ + of_node_put(node); + of_node_put(i2c_node); + return 0; + } + } + + i2c = of_get_i2c_adapter_by_node(i2c_node); + if (!i2c) { + of_node_put(i2c_node); + return dev_err_probe(&pdev->dev, -EPROBE_DEFER, "Couldn't get I2C adapter\n"); + } + + for_each_child_of_node(i2c_node, node) { + struct property *prop; + union i2c_smbus_data data; + u32 addr; + + if (!of_node_name_prefix(node, node_name)) + continue; + if (of_property_read_u32(node, "reg", &addr)) + continue; + if (i2c_smbus_xfer(i2c, addr, 0, I2C_SMBUS_READ, 0, I2C_SMBUS_BYTE, &data) < 0) + continue; + + dev_info(&pdev->dev, "Enabling %pOF\n", node); + + prop = kzalloc(sizeof(*prop), GFP_KERNEL); + if (!prop) { + ret = -ENOMEM; + of_node_put(node); + break; + } + + prop->name = "status"; + prop->length = 5; + prop->value = "okay"; + + /* Found a device that is responding */ + ret = of_update_property(node, prop); + if (ret) + kfree(prop); + + of_node_put(node); + break; + } + + i2c_put_adapter(i2c); + of_node_put(i2c_node); + + return ret; +} + +static const struct hw_prober_entry hw_prober_platforms[] = { + { .compatible = "google,hana", .prober = i2c_component_prober, .data = "touchscreen" }, + { .compatible = "google,hana", .prober = i2c_component_prober, .data = "trackpad" }, +}; + +static int hw_prober_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) +{ + for (int i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(hw_prober_platforms); i++) + if (of_machine_is_compatible(hw_prober_platforms[i].compatible)) { + int ret; + + ret = hw_prober_platforms[i].prober(pdev, hw_prober_platforms[i].data); + if (ret) + return ret; + } + + return 0; +} + +static struct platform_driver hw_prober_driver = { + .probe = hw_prober_probe, + .driver = { + .name = DRV_NAME, + }, +}; + +static int __init hw_prober_driver_init(void) +{ + struct platform_device *pdev; + int ret; + + ret = platform_driver_register(&hw_prober_driver); + if (ret) + return ret; + + pdev = platform_device_register_simple(DRV_NAME, -1, NULL, 0); + if (!IS_ERR(pdev)) + return 0; + + platform_driver_unregister(&hw_prober_driver); + + return PTR_ERR(pdev); +} +device_initcall(hw_prober_driver_init); -- 2.42.0.869.gea05f2083d-goog