This series depends on [1] and it only build on top of it. The point is to already speed up the reviewing of the framework. That obviously means that all those pacthes were dropped in v2. v1: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-iio/20231204144925.4fe9922f@jic23-huawei/T/#m222f5175273b81dbfe40b7f0daffcdc67d6cb8ff Changes in v2: - Patch 1-2 and 5 * new patches. - Patch 6: * Fixed some docs failures; * Fixed a legacy 'conv' name in one of the function parameters; * Added .request_buffer() and .free_buffer() ops; * Refactored the helper macros; * Added Olivier as Reviewer. - Patch 7: * Use new devm_iio_backend_request_buffer(). - Patch 8: * Implement new .request_buffer() and .free_buffer() ops; Also would like to mention that in v2 I'm experimenting in having the DMA on the backend device (as discussed with David in v1). Does not look to bad but as I said before, I'm not seeing a big issue if we end up having the buffer allocation in the frontend. For the bindings folks: I'm introducing a new io-backends property in the ad9467 bindings but I'm not sure this is the way to do it. Ideally that new property become a generic schema and I'm guessing I should send a PULL to? https://github.com/devicetree-org/dt-schema/blob/main/dtschema/schemas/iio/iio-consumer.yaml (Jonathan, if you think that's not the right place, shout now :)) I'm also deprecating 'adi,adc-dev' as it is not relevant anymore. In the driver code, we are actually breaking ABI but I'm taking a more conservative approach in the bindings. Ideally I would also remove it in the bindings :). As requested here we have a small diagram that illustrated on e typical usage of the new framework: ------------------------------------------------------- ------------------ | ----------- ------------ ------- FPGA | | ADC |------------------------| | AXI ADC |---------| DMA CORE |------| RAM | | | (Frontend/IIO) | Serial Data (eg: LVDS) | |(backend)|---------| |------| | | | |------------------------| ----------- ------------ ------- | ------------------ ------------------------------------------------------- The above is highly focused on ADI usecases. But one can see the idea... The frontend is the real converter and is the one registering and handling all the IIO interfaces. Such a device can then connect to a backend device for further services/configurations. In the above example, the backend device is an high speed core capable of handling the high sample rate of these ADCs so that it can push that data further in the pipeline (typically a DMA core) so the user can process the samples with minimal losses. Jonathan, I was also tempted in including the diagram in the source file. Would that be a good idea? [1]: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-iio/20231207-iio-backend-prep-v2-0-a4a33bc4d70e@xxxxxxxxxx --- Nuno Sa (7): dt-bindings: adc: ad9467: document io-backend property dt-bindings: adc: axi-adc: deprecate 'adi,adc-dev' driver: core: allow modifying device_links flags iio: buffer-dmaengine: export buffer alloc and free functions iio: add the IIO backend framework iio: adc: ad9467: convert to backend framework iio: adc: adi-axi-adc: move to backend framework Olivier Moysan (1): of: property: add device link support for io-backends .../devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/adi,ad9467.yaml | 5 + .../devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/adi,axi-adc.yaml | 4 +- MAINTAINERS | 8 + drivers/base/core.c | 14 +- drivers/iio/Kconfig | 5 + drivers/iio/Makefile | 1 + drivers/iio/adc/Kconfig | 3 +- drivers/iio/adc/ad9467.c | 242 +++++++------ drivers/iio/adc/adi-axi-adc.c | 379 +++++--------------- drivers/iio/buffer/industrialio-buffer-dmaengine.c | 6 +- drivers/iio/industrialio-backend.c | 386 +++++++++++++++++++++ drivers/of/property.c | 2 + include/linux/iio/adc/adi-axi-adc.h | 68 ---- include/linux/iio/backend.h | 68 ++++ include/linux/iio/buffer-dmaengine.h | 4 +- 15 files changed, 727 insertions(+), 468 deletions(-) --- base-commit: 330c0f834ccbdbe6a89da475cb1c56893f3a8363 change-id: 20231120-dev-iio-backend-d14b473a1d9f -- Thanks! - Nuno Sá