Add documentation for the Surface Aggregator subsystem and its client drivers, giving an overview of the subsystem, its use-cases, its internal structure and internal API, as well as its external API for writing client drivers. Signed-off-by: Maximilian Luz <luzmaximilian@xxxxxxxxx> --- Changes in v1 (from RFC): - change SPDX identifier to GPL-2.0+ (was GPL-2.0-or-later) - fix typos Changes in v2: - add architectural overview for core driver internals - reorder chapters - improve wording --- Documentation/driver-api/index.rst | 1 + .../surface_aggregator/client-api.rst | 38 ++ .../driver-api/surface_aggregator/client.rst | 393 ++++++++++++ .../surface_aggregator/clients/index.rst | 10 + .../driver-api/surface_aggregator/index.rst | 21 + .../surface_aggregator/internal-api.rst | 67 ++ .../surface_aggregator/internal.rst | 577 ++++++++++++++++++ .../surface_aggregator/overview.rst | 77 +++ .../driver-api/surface_aggregator/ssh.rst | 344 +++++++++++ MAINTAINERS | 1 + 10 files changed, 1529 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/client-api.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/client.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/clients/index.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/index.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/internal-api.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/internal.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/overview.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/ssh.rst diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/index.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/index.rst index f357f3eb400c..699dc7cac0fb 100644 --- a/Documentation/driver-api/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/index.rst @@ -97,6 +97,7 @@ available subsections can be seen below. rfkill serial/index sm501 + surface_aggregator/index switchtec sync_file vfio-mediated-device diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/client-api.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/client-api.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..8e0b000d0e64 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/client-api.rst @@ -0,0 +1,38 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ + +=============================== +Client Driver API Documentation +=============================== + +.. contents:: + :depth: 2 + + +Serial Hub Communication +======================== + +.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/surface_aggregator/serial_hub.h + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/ssh_packet_layer.c + :export: + + +Controller and Core Interface +============================= + +.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/surface_aggregator/controller.h + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/controller.c + :export: + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/core.c + :export: + + +Client Bus and Client Device API +================================ + +.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/surface_aggregator/device.h + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/bus.c + :export: diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/client.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/client.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..26d13085a117 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/client.rst @@ -0,0 +1,393 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ + +.. |ssam_controller| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_controller <ssam_controller>` +.. |ssam_device| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_device <ssam_device>` +.. |ssam_device_driver| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_device_driver <ssam_device_driver>` +.. |ssam_client_bind| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_client_bind` +.. |ssam_client_link| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_client_link` +.. |ssam_get_controller| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_get_controller` +.. |ssam_controller_get| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_controller_get` +.. |ssam_controller_put| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_controller_put` +.. |ssam_device_alloc| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_device_alloc` +.. |ssam_device_add| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_device_add` +.. |ssam_device_remove| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_device_remove` +.. |ssam_device_driver_register| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_device_driver_register` +.. |ssam_device_driver_unregister| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_device_driver_unregister` +.. |module_ssam_device_driver| replace:: :c:func:`module_ssam_device_driver` +.. |SSAM_DEVICE| replace:: :c:func:`SSAM_DEVICE` +.. |ssam_notifier_register| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_notifier_register` +.. |ssam_notifier_unregister| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_notifier_unregister` +.. |ssam_request_sync| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_request_sync` +.. |ssam_event_mask| replace:: :c:type:`enum ssam_event_mask <ssam_event_mask>` + + +====================== +Writing Client Drivers +====================== + +For the API documentation, refer to: + +.. toctree:: + :maxdepth: 2 + + client-api + + +Overview +======== + +Client drivers can be set up in two main ways, depending on how the +corresponding device is made available to the system. We specifically +differentiate between devices that are presented to the system via one of +the conventional ways, e.g. as platform devices via ACPI, and devices that +are non-discoverable and instead need to be explicitly provided by some +other mechanism, as discussed further below. + + +Non-SSAM Client Drivers +======================= + +All communication with the SAM EC is handled via the |ssam_controller| +representing that EC to the kernel. Drivers targeting a non-SSAM device (and +thus not being a |ssam_device_driver|) need to explicitly establish a +connection/relation to that controller. This can be done via the +|ssam_client_bind| function. Said function returns a reference to the SSAM +controller, but, more importantly, also establishes a device link between +client device and controller (this can also be done separate via +|ssam_client_link|). It is important to do this, as it, first, guarantees +that the returned controller is valid for use in the client driver for as +long as this driver is bound to its device, i.e. that the driver gets +unbound before the controller ever becomes invalid, and, second, as it +ensures correct suspend/resume ordering. This setup should be done in the +driver's probe function, and may be used to defer probing in case the SSAM +subsystem is not ready yet, for example: + +.. code-block:: c + + static int client_driver_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) + { + struct ssam_controller *ctrl; + + ctrl = ssam_client_bind(&pdev->dev); + if (IS_ERR(ctrl)) + return PTR_ERR(ctrl) == -ENODEV ? -EPROBE_DEFER : PTR_ERR(ctrl); + + // ... + + return 0; + } + +The controller may be separately obtained via |ssam_get_controller| and its +lifetime be guaranteed via |ssam_controller_get| and |ssam_controller_put|. +Note that none of these functions, however, guarantee that the controller +will not be shut down or suspended. These functions essentially only operate +on the reference, i.e. only guarantee a bare minimum of accessibility +without any guarantees at all on practical operability. + + +Adding SSAM Devices +=================== + +If a device does not already exist/is not already provided via conventional +means, it should be provided as |ssam_device| via the SSAM client device +hub. New devices can be added to this hub by entering their UID into the +corresponding registry. SSAM devices can also be manually allocated via +|ssam_device_alloc|, subsequently to which they have to be added via +|ssam_device_add| and eventually removed via |ssam_device_remove|. By +default, the parent of the device is set to the controller device provided +for allocation, however this may be changed before the device is added. Note +that, when changing the parent device, care must be taken to ensure that the +controller lifetime and suspend/resume ordering guarantees, in the default +setup provided through the parent-child relation, are preserved. If +necessary, by use of |ssam_client_link| as is done for non-SSAM client +drivers and described in more detail above. + +A client device must always be removed by the party which added the +respective device before the controller shuts down. Such removal can be +guaranteed by linking the driver providing the SSAM device to the controller +via |ssam_client_link|, causing it to unbind before the controller driver +unbinds. Client devices registered with the controller as parent are +automatically removed when the controller shuts down, but this should not be +relied upon, especially as this does not extend to client devices with a +different parent. + + +SSAM Client Drivers +=================== + +SSAM client device drivers are, in essence, no different than other device +driver types. They are represented via |ssam_device_driver| and bind to a +|ssam_device| via its UID (:c:type:`struct ssam_device.uid <ssam_device>`) +member and the match table +(:c:type:`struct ssam_device_driver.match_table <ssam_device_driver>`), +which should be set when declaring the driver struct instance. Refer to the +|SSAM_DEVICE| macro documentation for more details on how to define members +of the driver's match table. + +The UID for SSAM client devices consists of a ``domain``, a ``category``, +a ``target``, an ``instance``, and a ``function``. The ``domain`` is used +differentiate between physical SAM devices +(:c:type:`SSAM_DOMAIN_SERIALHUB <ssam_device_domain>`), i.e. devices that can +be accessed via the Surface Serial Hub, and virtual ones +(:c:type:`SSAM_DOMAIN_VIRTUAL <ssam_device_domain>`), such as client-device +hubs, that have no real representation on the SAM EC and are solely used on +the kernel/driver-side. For physical devices, ``category`` represents the +target category, ``target`` the target ID, and ``instance`` the instance ID +used to access the physical SAM device. In addition, ``function`` references +a specific device functionality, but has no meaning to the SAM EC. The +(default) name of a client device is generated based on its UID. + +A driver instance can be registered via |ssam_device_driver_register| and +unregistered via |ssam_device_driver_unregister|. For convenience, the +|module_ssam_device_driver| macro may be used to define module init- and +exit-functions registering the driver. + +The controller associated with a SSAM client device can be found in its +:c:type:`struct ssam_device.ctrl <ssam_device>` member. This reference is +guaranteed to be valid for at least as long as the client driver is bound, +but should also be valid for as long as the client device exists. Note, +however, that access outside of the bound client driver must ensure that the +controller device is not suspended while making any requests or +(un-)registering event notifiers (and thus should generally be avoided). This +is guaranteed when the controller is accessed from inside the bound client +driver. + + +Making Synchronous Requests +=========================== + +Synchronous requests are (currently) the main form of host-initiated +communication with the EC. There are a couple of ways to define and execute +such requests, however, most of them boil down to something similar as shown +in the example below. This example defines a write-read request, meaning +that the caller provides an argument to the SAM EC and receives a response. +The caller needs to know the (maximum) length of the response payload and +provide a buffer for it. + +Care must be taken to ensure that any command payload data passed to the SAM +EC is provided in little-endian format and, similarly, any response payload +data received from it is converted from little-endian to host endianness. + +.. code-block:: c + + int perform_request(struct ssam_controller *ctrl, u32 arg, u32 *ret) + { + struct ssam_request rqst; + struct ssam_response resp; + int status; + + /* Convert request argument to little-endian. */ + __le32 arg_le = cpu_to_le32(arg); + __le32 ret_le = cpu_to_le32(0); + + /* + * Initialize request specification. Replace this with your values. + * The rqst.payload field may be NULL if rqst.length is zero, + * indicating that the request does not have any argument. + * + * Note: The request parameters used here are not valid, i.e. + * they do not correspond to an actual SAM/EC request. + */ + rqst.target_category = SSAM_SSH_TC_SAM; + rqst.target_id = 0x01; + rqst.command_id = 0x02; + rqst.instance_id = 0x03; + rqst.flags = SSAM_REQUEST_HAS_RESPONSE; + rqst.length = sizeof(arg_le); + rqst.payload = (u8 *)&arg_le; + + /* Initialize request response. */ + resp.capacity = sizeof(ret_le); + resp.length = 0; + resp.pointer = (u8 *)&ret_le; + + /* + * Perform actual request. The response pointer may be null in case + * the request does not have any response. This must be consistent + * with the SSAM_REQUEST_HAS_RESPONSE flag set in the specification + * above. + */ + status = ssam_request_sync(ctrl, &rqst, &resp); + + /* + * Alternatively use + * + * ssam_request_sync_onstack(ctrl, &rqst, &resp, sizeof(arg_le)); + * + * to perform the request, allocating the message buffer directly + * on the stack as opposed to allocation via kzalloc(). + */ + + /* + * Convert request response back to native format. Note that in the + * error case, this value is not touched by the SSAM core, i.e. + * 'ret_le' will be zero as specified in its initialization. + */ + *ret = le32_to_cpu(ret_le); + + return status; + } + +Note that |ssam_request_sync| in its essence is a wrapper over lower-level +request primitives, which may also be used to perform requests. Refer to its +implementation and documentation for more details. + +An arguably more user-friendly way of defining such functions is by using +one of the generator macros, for example via: + +.. code-block:: c + + SSAM_DEFINE_SYNC_REQUEST_W(__ssam_tmp_perf_mode_set, __le32, { + .target_category = SSAM_SSH_TC_TMP, + .target_id = 0x01, + .command_id = 0x03, + .instance_id = 0x00, + }); + +This example defines a function + +.. code-block:: c + + int __ssam_tmp_perf_mode_set(struct ssam_controller *ctrl, const __le32 *arg); + +executing the specified request, with the controller passed in when calling +said function. In this example, the argument is provided via the ``arg`` +pointer. Note that the generated function allocates the message buffer on +the stack. Thus, if the argument provided via the request is large, these +kinds of macros should be avoided. Also note that, in contrast to the +previous non-macro example, this function does not do any endianness +conversion, which has to be handled by the caller. Apart from those +differences the function generated by the macro is similar to the one +provided in the non-macro example above. + +The full list of such function-generating macros is + +- :c:func:`SSAM_DEFINE_SYNC_REQUEST_N` for requests without return value and + without argument. +- :c:func:`SSAM_DEFINE_SYNC_REQUEST_R` for requests with return value but no + argument. +- :c:func:`SSAM_DEFINE_SYNC_REQUEST_W` for requests without return value but + with argument. + +Refer to their respective documentation for more details. For each one of +these macros, a special variant is provided, which targets request types +applicable to multiple instances of the same device type: + +- :c:func:`SSAM_DEFINE_SYNC_REQUEST_MD_N` +- :c:func:`SSAM_DEFINE_SYNC_REQUEST_MD_R` +- :c:func:`SSAM_DEFINE_SYNC_REQUEST_MD_W` + +The difference of those macros to the previously mentioned versions is, that +the device target and instance IDs are not fixed for the generated function, +but instead have to be provided by the caller of said function. + +Additionally, variants for direct use with client devices, i.e. +|ssam_device|, are also provided. These can, for example, be used as +follows: + +.. code-block:: c + + SSAM_DEFINE_SYNC_REQUEST_CL_R(ssam_bat_get_sta, __le32, { + .target_category = SSAM_SSH_TC_BAT, + .command_id = 0x01, + }); + +This invocation of the macro defines a function + +.. code-block:: c + + int ssam_bat_get_sta(struct ssam_device *sdev, __le32 *ret); + +executing the specified request, using the device IDs and controller given +in the client device. The full list of such macros for client devices is: + +- :c:func:`SSAM_DEFINE_SYNC_REQUEST_CL_N` +- :c:func:`SSAM_DEFINE_SYNC_REQUEST_CL_R` +- :c:func:`SSAM_DEFINE_SYNC_REQUEST_CL_W` + + +Handling Events +=============== + +To receive events from the SAM EC, an event notifier must be registered for +the desired event via |ssam_notifier_register|. The notifier must be +unregistered via |ssam_notifier_unregister| once it is not required any +more. + +Event notifiers are registered by providing (at minimum) a callback to call +in case an event has been received, the registry specifying how the event +should be enabled, an event ID specifying for which target category and, +optionally and depending on the registry used, for which instance ID events +should be enabled, and finally, flags describing how the EC will send these +events. If the specific registry does not enable events by instance ID, the +instance ID must be set to zero. Additionally, a priority for the respective +notifier may be specified, which determines its order in relation to any +other notifier registered for the same target category. + +By default, event notifiers will receive all events for the specific target +category, regardless of the instance ID specified when registering the +notifier. The core may be instructed to only call a notifier if the target +ID or instance ID (or both) of the event match the ones implied by the +notifier IDs (in case of target ID, the target ID of the registry), by +providing an event mask (see |ssam_event_mask|). + +In general, the target ID of the registry is also the target ID of the +enabled event (with the notable exception being keyboard input events on the +Surface Laptop 1 and 2, which are enabled via a registry with target ID 1, +but provide events with target ID 2). + +A full example for registering an event notifier and handling received +events is provided below: + +.. code-block:: c + + u32 notifier_callback(struct ssam_event_notifier *nf, + const struct ssam_event *event) + { + int status = ... + + /* Handle the event here ... */ + + /* Convert return value and indicate that we handled the event. */ + return ssam_notifier_from_errno(status) | SSAM_NOTIF_HANDLED; + } + + int setup_notifier(struct ssam_device *sdev, + struct ssam_event_notifier *nf) + { + /* Set priority wrt. other handlers of same target category. */ + nf->base.priority = 1; + + /* Set event/notifier callback. */ + nf->base.fn = notifier_callback; + + /* Specify event registry, i.e. how events get enabled/disabled. */ + nf->event.reg = SSAM_EVENT_REGISTRY_KIP; + + /* Specify which event to enable/disable */ + nf->event.id.target_category = sdev->uid.category; + nf->event.id.instance = sdev->uid.instance; + + /* + * Specify for which events the notifier callback gets executed. + * This essentially tells the core if it can skip notifiers that + * don't have target or instance IDs matching those of the event. + */ + nf->event.mask = SSAM_EVENT_MASK_STRICT; + + /* Specify event flags. */ + nf->event.flags = SSAM_EVENT_SEQUENCED; + + return ssam_notifier_register(sdev->ctrl, nf); + } + +Multiple event notifiers can be registered for the same event. The event +handler core takes care of enabling and disabling events when notifiers are +registered and unregistered, by keeping track of how many notifiers for a +specific event (combination of registry, event target category, and event +instance ID) are currently registered. This means that a specific event will +be enabled when the first notifier for it is being registered and disabled +when the last notifier for it is being unregistered. Note that the event +flags are therefore only used on the first registered notifier, however, one +should take care that notifiers for a specific event are always registered +with the same flag and it is considered a bug to do otherwise. diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/clients/index.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/clients/index.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..31e026d96102 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/clients/index.rst @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ + +=========================== +Client Driver Documentation +=========================== + +This is the documentation for client drivers themselves. Refer to +:doc:`../client` for documentation on how to write client drivers. + +.. Place documentation for individual client drivers here. diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/index.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/index.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..6f3e1094904d --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/index.rst @@ -0,0 +1,21 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ + +======================================= +Surface System Aggregator Module (SSAM) +======================================= + +.. toctree:: + :maxdepth: 2 + + overview + client + clients/index + ssh + internal + +.. only:: subproject and html + + Indices + ======= + + * :ref:`genindex` diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/internal-api.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/internal-api.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..639a67b5a392 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/internal-api.rst @@ -0,0 +1,67 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ + +========================== +Internal API Documentation +========================== + +.. contents:: + :depth: 2 + + +Packet Transport Layer +====================== + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/ssh_parser.h + :internal: + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/ssh_parser.c + :internal: + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/ssh_msgb.h + :internal: + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/ssh_packet_layer.h + :internal: + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/ssh_packet_layer.c + :internal: + + +Request Transport Layer +======================= + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/ssh_request_layer.h + :internal: + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/ssh_request_layer.c + :internal: + + +Controller +========== + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/controller.h + :internal: + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/controller.c + :internal: + + +Client Device Bus +================= + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/bus.c + :internal: + + +Core +==== + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/core.c + :internal: + + +Trace Helpers +============= + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/trace.h diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/internal.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/internal.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..72704734982a --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/internal.rst @@ -0,0 +1,577 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ + +.. |ssh_ptl| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssh_ptl <ssh_ptl>` +.. |ssh_ptl_submit| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_ptl_submit` +.. |ssh_ptl_cancel| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_ptl_cancel` +.. |ssh_ptl_shutdown| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_ptl_shutdown` +.. |ssh_ptl_rx_rcvbuf| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_ptl_rx_rcvbuf` +.. |ssh_rtl| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssh_rtl <ssh_rtl>` +.. |ssh_rtl_submit| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_rtl_submit` +.. |ssh_rtl_cancel| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_rtl_cancel` +.. |ssh_rtl_shutdown| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_rtl_shutdown` +.. |ssh_packet| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssh_packet <ssh_packet>` +.. |ssh_packet_get| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_packet_get` +.. |ssh_packet_put| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_packet_put` +.. |ssh_packet_ops| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssh_packet_ops <ssh_packet_ops>` +.. |ssh_packet_base_priority| replace:: :c:type:`enum ssh_packet_base_priority <ssh_packet_base_priority>` +.. |ssh_packet_flags| replace:: :c:type:`enum ssh_packet_flags <ssh_packet_flags>` +.. |SSH_PACKET_PRIORITY| replace:: :c:func:`SSH_PACKET_PRIORITY` +.. |ssh_frame| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssh_frame <ssh_frame>` +.. |ssh_command| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssh_command <ssh_command>` +.. |ssh_request| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssh_request <ssh_request>` +.. |ssh_request_get| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_request_get` +.. |ssh_request_put| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_request_put` +.. |ssh_request_ops| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssh_request_ops <ssh_request_ops>` +.. |ssh_request_init| replace:: :c:func:`ssh_request_init` +.. |ssh_request_flags| replace:: :c:type:`enum ssh_request_flags <ssh_request_flags>` +.. |ssam_controller| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_controller <ssam_controller>` +.. |ssam_device| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_device <ssam_device>` +.. |ssam_device_driver| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_device_driver <ssam_device_driver>` +.. |ssam_client_bind| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_client_bind` +.. |ssam_client_link| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_client_link` +.. |ssam_request_sync| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_request_sync <ssam_request_sync>` +.. |ssam_event_registry| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_event_registry <ssam_event_registry>` +.. |ssam_event_id| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_event_id <ssam_event_id>` +.. |ssam_nf| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_nf <ssam_nf>` +.. |ssam_nf_refcount_inc| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_nf_refcount_inc` +.. |ssam_nf_refcount_dec| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_nf_refcount_dec` +.. |ssam_notifier_register| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_notifier_register` +.. |ssam_notifier_unregister| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_notifier_unregister` +.. |ssam_cplt| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_cplt <ssam_cplt>` +.. |ssam_event_queue| replace:: :c:type:`struct ssam_event_queue <ssam_event_queue>` +.. |ssam_request_sync_submit| replace:: :c:func:`ssam_request_sync_submit` + +===================== +Core Driver Internals +===================== + +Architectural overview of the Surface System Aggregator Module (SSAM) core +and Surface Serial Hub (SSH) driver. For the API documentation, refer to: + +.. toctree:: + :maxdepth: 2 + + internal-api + + +Overview +======== + +The SSAM core implementation is structured in layers, somewhat following the +SSH protocol structure: + +Lower-level packet transport is implemented in the *packet transport layer +(PTL)*, directly building on top of the serial device (serdev) +infrastructure of the kernel. As the name indicates, this layer deals with +the packet transport logic and handles things like packet validation, packet +acknowledgment (ACKing), packet (retransmission) timeouts, and relaying +packet payloads to higher-level layers. + +Above this sits the *request transport layer (RTL)*. This layer is centered +around command-type packet payloads, i.e. requests (sent from host to EC), +responses of the EC to those requests, and events (sent from EC to host). +It, specifically, distinguishes events from request responses, matches +responses to their corresponding requests, and implements request timeouts. + +The *controller* layer is building on top of this and essentially decides +how request responses and, especially, events are dealt with. It provides an +event notifier system, handles event activation/deactivation, provides a +workqueue for event and asynchronous request completion, and also manages +the message counters required for building command messages (``SEQ``, +``RQID``). This layer basically provides a fundamental interface to the SAM +EC for use in other kernel drivers. + +While the controller layer already provides an interface for other kernel +drivers, the client *bus* extends this interface to provide support for +native SSAM devices, i.e. devices that are not defined in ACPI and not +implemented as platform devices, via |ssam_device| and |ssam_device_driver| +simplify management of client devices and client drivers. + +Refer to :doc:`client` for documentation regarding the client device/driver +API and interface options for other kernel drivers. It is recommended to +familiarize oneself with that chapter and the :doc:`ssh` before continuing +with the architectural overview below. + + +Packet Transport Layer +====================== + +The packet transport layer is represented via |ssh_ptl| and is structured +around the following key concepts: + +Packets +------- + +Packets are the fundamental transmission unit of the SSH protocol. They are +managed by the packet transport layer, which is essentially the lowest layer +of the driver and is built upon by other components of the SSAM core. +Packets to be transmitted by the SSAM core are represented via |ssh_packet| +(in contrast, packets received by the core do not have any specific +structure and are managed entirely via the raw |ssh_frame|). + +This structure contains the required fields to manage the packet inside the +transport layer, as well as a reference to the buffer containing the data to +be transmitted (i.e. the message wrapped in |ssh_frame|). Most notably, it +contains an internal reference count, which is used for managing its +lifetime (accessible via |ssh_packet_get| and |ssh_packet_put|). When this +counter reaches zero, the ``release()`` callback provided to the packet via +its |ssh_packet_ops| reference is executed, which may then deallocate the +packet or its enclosing structure (e.g. |ssh_request|). + +In addition to the ``release`` callback, the |ssh_packet_ops| reference also +provides a ``complete()`` callback, which is run once the packet has been +completed and provides the status of this completion, i.e. zero on success +or a negative errno value in case of an error. Once the packet has been +submitted to the packet transport layer, the ``complete()`` callback is +always guaranteed to be executed before the ``release()`` callback, i.e. the +packet will always be completed, either successfully, with an error, or due +to cancellation, before it will be released. + +The state of a packet is managed via its ``state`` flags +(|ssh_packet_flags|), which also contains the packet type. In particular, +the following bits are noteworthy: + +* ``SSH_PACKET_SF_LOCKED_BIT``: This bit is set when completion, either + through error or success, is imminent. It indicates that no further + references of the packet should be taken and any existing references + should be dropped as soon as possible. The process setting this bit is + responsible for removing any references to this packet from the packet + queue and pending set. + +* ``SSH_PACKET_SF_COMPLETED_BIT``: This bit is set by the process running the + ``complete()`` callback and is used to ensure that this callback only runs + once. + +* ``SSH_PACKET_SF_QUEUED_BIT``: This bit is set when the packet is queued on + the packet queue and cleared when it is dequeued. + +* ``SSH_PACKET_SF_PENDING_BIT``: This bit is set when the packet is added to + the pending set and cleared when it is removed from it. + +Packet Queue +------------ + +The packet queue is the first of the two fundamental collections in the +packet transport layer. It is a priority queue, with priority of the +respective packets based on the packet type (major) and number of tries +(minor). See |SSH_PACKET_PRIORITY| for more details on the priority value. + +All packets to be transmitted by the transport layer must be submitted to +this queue via |ssh_ptl_submit|. Note that this includes control packets +sent by the transport layer itself. Internally, data packets can be +re-submitted to this queue due to timeouts or NAK packets sent by the EC. + +Pending Set +----------- + +The pending set is the second of the two fundamental collections in the +packet transport layer. It stores references to packets that have already +been transmitted, but wait for acknowledgment (e.g. the corresponding ACK +packet) by the EC. + +Note that a packet may both be pending and queued if it has been +re-submitted due to a packet acknowledgment timeout or NAK. On such a +re-submission, packets are not removed from the pending set. + +Transmitter Thread +------------------ + +The transmitter thread is responsible for most of the actual work regarding +packet transmission. In each iteration, it (waits for and) checks if the +next packet on the queue (if any) can be transmitted and, if so, removes it +from the queue and increments its counter for the number of transmission +attempts, i.e. tries. If the packet is sequenced, i.e. requires an ACK by +the EC, the packet is added to the pending set. Next, the packet's data is +submitted to the serdev subsystem. In case of an error or timeout during +this submission, the packet is completed by the transmitter thread with the +status value of the callback set accordingly. In case the packet is +unsequenced, i.e. does not require an ACK by the EC, the packet is completed +with success on the transmitter thread. + +Transmission of sequenced packets is limited by the number of concurrently +pending packets, i.e. a limit on how many packets may be waiting for an ACK +from the EC in parallel. This limit is currently set to one (see :doc:`ssh` +for the reasoning behind this). Control packets (i.e. ACK and NAK) can +always be transmitted. + +Receiver Thread +--------------- + +Any data received from the EC is put into a FIFO buffer for further +processing. This processing happens on the receiver thread. The receiver +thread parses and validates the received message into its |ssh_frame| and +corresponding payload. It prepares and submits the necessary ACK (and on +validation error or invalid data NAK) packets for the received messages. + +This thread also handles further processing, such as matching ACK messages +to the corresponding pending packet (via sequence ID) and completing it, as +well as initiating re-submission of all currently pending packets on +receival of a NAK message (re-submission in case of a NAK is similar to +re-submission due to timeout, see below for more details on that). Note that +the successful completion of a sequenced packet will always run on the +receiver thread (whereas any failure-indicating completion will run on the +process where the failure occurred). + +Any payload data is forwarded via a callback to the next upper layer, i.e. +the request transport layer. + +Timeout Reaper +-------------- + +The packet acknowledgment timeout is a per-packet timeout for sequenced +packets, started when the respective packet begins (re-)transmission (i.e. +this timeout is armed once per transmission attempt on the transmitter +thread). It is used to trigger re-submission or, when the number of tries +has been exceeded, cancellation of the packet in question. + +This timeout is handled via a dedicated reaper task, which is essentially a +work item (re-)scheduled to run when the next packet is set to time out. The +work item then checks the set of pending packets for any packets that have +exceeded the timeout and, if there are any remaining packets, re-schedules +itself to the next appropriate point in time. + +If a timeout has been detected by the reaper, the packet will either be +re-submitted if it still has some remaining tries left, or completed with +``-ETIMEDOUT`` as status if not. Note that re-submission, in this case and +triggered by receival of a NAK, means that the packet is added to the queue +with a now incremented number of tries, yielding a higher priority. The +timeout for the packet will be disabled until the next transmission attempt +and the packet remains on the pending set. + +Note that due to transmission and packet acknowledgment timeouts, the packet +transport layer is always guaranteed to make progress, if only through +timing out packets, and will never fully block. + +Concurrency and Locking +----------------------- + +There are two main locks in the packet transport layer: One guarding access +to the packet queue and one guarding access to the pending set. These +collections may only be accessed and modified under the respective lock. If +access to both collections is needed, the pending lock must be acquired +before the queue lock to avoid deadlocks. + +In addition to guarding the collections, after initial packet submission +certain packet fields may only be accessed under one of the locks. +Specifically, the packet priority must only be accessed while holding the +queue lock and the packet timestamp must only be accessed while holding the +pending lock. + +Other parts of the packet transport layer are guarded independently. State +flags are managed by atomic bit operations and, if necessary, memory +barriers. Modifications to the timeout reaper work item and expiration date +are guarded by their own lock. + +The reference of the packet to the packet transport layer (``ptl``) is +somewhat special. It is either set when the upper layer request is submitted +or, if there is none, when the packet is first submitted. After it is set, +it will not change its value. Functions that may run concurrently with +submission, i.e. cancellation, can not rely on the ``ptl`` reference to be +set. Access to it in these functions is guarded by ``READ_ONCE()``, whereas +setting ``ptl`` is equally guarded with ``WRITE_ONCE()`` for symmetry. + +Some packet fields may be read outside of the respective locks guarding +them, specifically priority and state for tracing. In those cases, proper +access is ensured by employing ``WRITE_ONCE()`` and ``READ_ONCE()``. Such +read-only access is only allowed when stale values are not critical. + +With respect to the interface for higher layers, packet submission +(|ssh_ptl_submit|), packet cancellation (|ssh_ptl_cancel|), data receival +(|ssh_ptl_rx_rcvbuf|), and layer shutdown (|ssh_ptl_shutdown|) may always be +executed concurrently with respect to each other. Note that packet +submission may not run concurrently with itself for the same packet. +Equally, shutdown and data receival may also not run concurrently with +themselves (but may run concurrently with each other). + + +Request Transport Layer +======================= + +The request transport layer is represented via |ssh_rtl| and builds on top +of the packet transport layer. It deals with requests, i.e. SSH packets sent +by the host containing a |ssh_command| as frame payload. This layer +separates responses to requests from events, which are also sent by the EC +via a |ssh_command| payload. While responses are handled in this layer, +events are relayed to the next upper layer, i.e. the controller layer, via +the corresponding callback. The request transport layer is structured around +the following key concepts: + +Request +------- + +Requests are packets with a command-type payload, sent from host to EC to +query data from or trigger an action on it (or both simultaneously). They +are represented by |ssh_request|, wrapping the underlying |ssh_packet| +storing its message data (i.e. SSH frame with command payload). Note that +all top-level representations, e.g. |ssam_request_sync| are built upon this +struct. + +As |ssh_request| extends |ssh_packet|, its lifetime is also managed by the +reference counter inside the packet struct (which can be accessed via +|ssh_request_get| and |ssh_request_put|). Once the counter reaches zero, the +``release()`` callback of the |ssh_request_ops| reference of the request is +called. + +Requests can have an optional response that is equally sent via a SSH +message with command-type payload (from EC to host). The party constructing +the request must know if a response is expected and mark this in the request +flags provided to |ssh_request_init|, so that the request transport layer +can wait for this response. + +Similar to |ssh_packet|, |ssh_request| also has a ``complete()`` callback +provided via its request ops reference and is guaranteed to be completed +before it is released once it has been submitted to the request transport +layer via |ssh_rtl_submit|. For a request without a response, successful +completion will occur once the underlying packet has been successfully +transmitted by the packet transport layer (i.e. from within the packet +completion callback). For a request with response, successful completion +will occur once the response has been received and matched to the request +via its request ID (which happens on the packet layer's data-received +callback running on the receiver thread). If the request is completed with +an error, the status value will be set to the corresponding (negative) errno +value. + +The state of a request is again managed via its ``state`` flags +(|ssh_request_flags|), which also encode the request type. In particular, +the following bits are noteworthy: + +* ``SSH_REQUEST_SF_LOCKED_BIT``: This bit is set when completion, either + through error or success, is imminent. It indicates that no further + references of the request should be taken and any existing references + should be dropped as soon as possible. The process setting this bit is + responsible for removing any references to this request from the request + queue and pending set. + +* ``SSH_REQUEST_SF_COMPLETED_BIT``: This bit is set by the process running the + ``complete()`` callback and is used to ensure that this callback only runs + once. + +* ``SSH_REQUEST_SF_QUEUED_BIT``: This bit is set when the request is queued on + the request queue and cleared when it is dequeued. + +* ``SSH_REQUEST_SF_PENDING_BIT``: This bit is set when the request is added to + the pending set and cleared when it is removed from it. + +Request Queue +------------- + +The request queue is the first of the two fundamental collections in the +request transport layer. In contrast to the packet queue of the packet +transport layer, it is not a priority queue and the simple first come first +serve principle applies. + +All requests to be transmitted by the request transport layer must be +submitted to this queue via |ssh_rtl_submit|. Once submitted, requests may +not be re-submitted, and will not be re-submitted automatically on timeout. +Instead, the request is completed with a timeout error. If desired, the +caller can create and submit a new request for another try, but it must not +submit the same request again. + +Pending Set +----------- + +The pending set is the second of the two fundamental collections in the +request transport layer. This collection stores references to all pending +requests, i.e. requests awaiting a response from the EC (similar to what the +pending set of the packet transport layer does for packets). + +Transmitter Task +---------------- + +The transmitter task is scheduled when a new request is available for +transmission. It checks if the next request on the request queue can be +transmitted and, if so, submits its underlying packet to the packet +transport layer. This check ensures that only a limited number of +requests can be pending, i.e. waiting for a response, at the same time. If +the request requires a response, the request is added to the pending set +before its packet is submitted. + +Packet Completion Callback +-------------------------- + +The packet completion callback is executed once the underlying packet of a +request has been completed. In case of an error completion, the +corresponding request is completed with the error value provided in this +callback. + +On successful packet completion, further processing depends on the request. +If the request expects a response, it is marked as transmitted and the +request timeout is started. If the request does not expect a response, it is +completed with success. + +Data-Received Callback +---------------------- + +The data received callback notifies the request transport layer of data +being received by the underlying packet transport layer via a data-type +frame. In general, this is expected to be a command-type payload. + +If the request ID of the command is one of the request IDs reserved for +events (one to ``SSH_NUM_EVENTS``, inclusively), it is forwarded to the +event callback registered in the request transport layer. If the request ID +indicates a response to a request, the respective request is looked up in +the pending set and, if found and marked as transmitted, completed with +success. + +Timeout Reaper +-------------- + +The request-response-timeout is a per-request timeout for requests expecting +a response. It is used to ensure that a request does not wait indefinitely +on a response from the EC and is started after the underlying packet has +been successfully completed. + +This timeout is, similar to the packet acknowledgment timeout on the packet +transport layer, handled via a dedicated reaper task. This task is +essentially a work-item (re-)scheduled to run when the next request is set +to time out. The work item then scans the set of pending requests for any +requests that have timed out and completes them with ``-ETIMEDOUT`` as +status. Requests will not be re-submitted automatically. Instead, the issuer +of the request must construct and submit a new request, if so desired. + +Note that this timeout, in combination with packet transmission and +acknowledgment timeouts, guarantees that the request layer will always make +progress, even if only through timing out packets, and never fully block. + +Concurrency and Locking +----------------------- + +Similar to the packet transport layer, there are two main locks in the +request transport layer: One guarding access to the request queue and one +guarding access to the pending set. These collections may only be accessed +and modified under the respective lock. + +Other parts of the request transport layer are guarded independently. State +flags are (again) managed by atomic bit operations and, if necessary, memory +barriers. Modifications to the timeout reaper work item and expiration date +are guarded by their own lock. + +Some request fields may be read outside of the respective locks guarding +them, specifically the state for tracing. In those cases, proper access is +ensured by employing ``WRITE_ONCE()`` and ``READ_ONCE()``. Such read-only +access is only allowed when stale values are not critical. + +With respect to the interface for higher layers, request submission +(|ssh_rtl_submit|), request cancellation (|ssh_rtl_cancel|), and layer +shutdown (|ssh_rtl_shutdown|) may always be executed concurrently with +respect to each other. Note that request submission may not run concurrently +with itself for the same request (and also may only be called once per +request). Equally, shutdown may also not run concurrently with itself. + + +Controller Layer +================ + +The controller layer extends on the request transport layer to provide an +easy-to-use interface for client drivers. It is represented by +|ssam_controller| and the SSH driver. While the lower level transport layers +take care of transmitting and handling packets and requests, the controller +layer takes on more of a management role. Specifically, it handles device +initialization, power management, and event handling, including event +delivery and registration via the (event) completion system (|ssam_cplt|). + +Event Registration +------------------ + +In general, an event (or rather a class of events) has to be explicitly +requested by the host before the EC will send it (HID input events seem to +be the exception). This is done via an event-enable request (similarly, +events should be disabled via an event-disable request once no longer +desired). + +The specific request used to enable (or disable) an event is given via an +event registry, i.e. the governing authority of this event (so to speak), +represented by |ssam_event_registry|. As parameters to this request, the +target category and, depending on the event registry, instance ID of the +event to be enabled must be provided. This (optional) instance ID must be +zero if the registry does not use it. Together, target category and instance +ID form the event ID, represented by |ssam_event_id|. In short, both, event +registry and event ID, are required to uniquely identify a respective class +of events. + +Note that a further *request ID* parameter must be provided for the +enable-event request. This parameter does not influence the class of events +being enabled, but instead is set as the request ID (RQID) on each event of +this class sent by the EC. It is used to identify events (as a limited +number of request IDs is reserved for use in events only, specifically one +to ``SSH_NUM_EVENTS`` inclusively) and also map events to their specific +class. Currently, the controller always sets this parameter to the target +category specified in |ssam_event_id|. + +As multiple client drivers may rely on the same (or overlapping) classes of +events and enable/disable calls are strictly binary (i.e. on/off), the +controller has to manage access to these events. It does so via reference +counting, storing the counter inside an RB-tree based mapping with event +registry and ID as key (there is no known list of valid event registry and +event ID combinations). See |ssam_nf|, |ssam_nf_refcount_inc|, and +|ssam_nf_refcount_dec| for details. + +This management is done together with notifier registration (described in +the next section) via the top-level |ssam_notifier_register| and +|ssam_notifier_unregister| functions. + +Event Delivery +-------------- + +To receive events, a client driver has to register an event notifier via +|ssam_notifier_register|. This increments the reference counter for that +specific class of events (as detailed in the previous section), enables the +class on the EC (if it has not been enabled already), and installs the +provided notifier callback. + +Notifier callbacks are stored in lists, with one (RCU) list per target +category (provided via the event ID; NB: there is a fixed known number of +target categories). There is no known association from the combination of +event registry and event ID to the command data (target ID, target category, +command ID, and instance ID) that can be provided by an event class, apart +from target category and instance ID given via the event ID. + +Note that due to the way notifiers are (or rather have to be) stored, client +drivers may receive events that they have not requested and need to account +for them. Specifically, they will, by default, receive all events from the +same target category. To simplify dealing with this, filtering of events by +target ID (provided via the event registry) and instance ID (provided via +the event ID) can be requested when registering a notifier. This filtering +is applied when iterating over the notifiers at the time they are executed. + +All notifier callbacks are executed on a dedicated workqueue, the so-called +completion workqueue. After an event has been received via the callback +installed in the request layer (running on the receiver thread of the packet +transport layer), it will be put on its respective event queue +(|ssam_event_queue|). From this event queue the completion work item of that +queue (running on the completion workqueue) will pick up the event and +execute the notifier callback. This is done to avoid blocking on the +receiver thread. + +There is one event queue per combination of target ID and target category. +This is done to ensure that notifier callbacks are executed in sequence for +events of the same target ID and target category. Callbacks can be executed +in parallel for events with a different combination of target ID and target +category. + +Concurrency and Locking +----------------------- + +Most of the concurrency related safety guarantees of the controller are +provided by the lower-level request transport layer. In addition to this, +event (un-)registration is guarded by its own lock. + +Access to the controller state is guarded by the state lock. This lock is a +read/write semaphore. The reader part can be used to ensure that the state +does not change while functions depending on the state to stay the same +(e.g. |ssam_notifier_register|, |ssam_notifier_unregister|, +|ssam_request_sync_submit|, and derivatives) are executed and this guarantee +is not already provided otherwise (e.g. through |ssam_client_bind| or +|ssam_client_link|). The writer part guards any transitions that will change +the state, i.e. initialization, destruction, suspension, and resumption. + +The controller state may be accessed (read-only) outside the state lock for +smoke-testing against invalid API usage (e.g. in |ssam_request_sync_submit|). +Note that such checks are not supposed to (and will not) protect against all +invalid usages, but rather aim to help catch them. In those cases, proper +variable access is ensured by employing ``WRITE_ONCE()`` and ``READ_ONCE()``. + +Assuming any preconditions on the state not changing have been satisfied, +all non-initialization and non-shutdown functions may run concurrently with +each other. This includes |ssam_notifier_register|, |ssam_notifier_unregister|, +|ssam_request_sync_submit|, as well as all functions building on top of those. diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/overview.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/overview.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..1e9d57e50063 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/overview.rst @@ -0,0 +1,77 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ + +======== +Overview +======== + +The Surface/System Aggregator Module (SAM, SSAM) is an (arguably *the*) +embedded controller (EC) on Microsoft Surface devices. It has been originally +introduced on 4th generation devices (Surface Pro 4, Surface Book 1), but +its responsibilities and feature-set have since been expanded significantly +with the following generations. + + +Features and Integration +======================== + +Not much is currently known about SAM on 4th generation devices (Surface Pro +4, Surface Book 1), due to the use of a different communication interface +between host and EC (as detailed below). On 5th (Surface Pro 2017, Surface +Book 2, Surface Laptop 1) and later generation devices, SAM is responsible +for providing battery information (both current status and static values, +such as maximum capacity etc.), as well as an assortment of temperature +sensors (e.g. skin temperature) and cooling/performance-mode setting to the +host. On the Surface Book 2, specifically, it additionally provides an +interface for properly handling clipboard detachment (i.e. separating the +display part from the keyboard part of the device), on the Surface Laptop 1 +and 2 it is required for keyboard HID input. This HID subsystem has been +restructured for 7th generation devices and on those, specifically Surface +Laptop 3 and Surface Book 3, is responsible for all major HID input (i.e. +keyboard and touchpad). + +While features have not changed much on a coarse level since the 5th +generation, internal interfaces have undergone some rather large changes. On +5th and 6th generation devices, both battery and temperature information is +exposed to ACPI via a shim driver (referred to as Surface ACPI Notify, or +SAN), translating ACPI generic serial bus write-/read-accesses to SAM +requests. On 7th generation devices, this additional layer is gone and these +devices require a driver hooking directly into the SAM interface. Equally, +on newer generations, less devices are declared in ACPI, making them a bit +harder to discover and requiring us to hard-code a sort of device registry. +Due to this, a SSAM bus and subsystem with client devices +(:c:type:`struct ssam_device <ssam_device>`) has been implemented. + + +Communication +============= + +The type of communication interface between host and EC depends on the +generation of the Surface device. On 4th generation devices, host and EC +communicate via HID, specifically using a HID-over-I2C device, whereas on +5th and later generations, communication takes place via a USART serial +device. In accordance to the drivers found on other operating systems, we +refer to the serial device and its driver as Surface Serial Hub (SSH). When +needed, we differentiate between both types of SAM by referring to them as +SAM-over-SSH and SAM-over-HID. + +Currently, this subsystem only supports SAM-over-SSH. The SSH communication +interface is described in more detail below. The HID interface has not been +reverse engineered yet and it is, at the moment, unclear how many (and +which) concepts of the SSH interface detailed below can be transferred to +it. + +Surface Serial Hub +------------------ + +As already elaborated above, the Surface Serial Hub (SSH) is the +communication interface for SAM on 5th- and all later-generation Surface +devices. On the highest level, communication can be separated into two main +types: Requests, messages sent from host to EC that may trigger a direct +response from the EC (explicitly associated with the request), and events +(sometimes also referred to as notifications), sent from EC to host without +being a direct response to a previous request. We may also refer to requests +without response as commands. In general, events need to be enabled via one +of multiple dedicated requests before they are sent by the EC. + +See :doc:`ssh` for a more technical protocol documentation and +:doc:`internal` for an overview of the internal driver architecture. diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/ssh.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/ssh.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..bf007d6c9873 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/ssh.rst @@ -0,0 +1,344 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ + +.. |u8| replace:: :c:type:`u8 <u8>` +.. |u16| replace:: :c:type:`u16 <u16>` +.. |TYPE| replace:: ``TYPE`` +.. |LEN| replace:: ``LEN`` +.. |SEQ| replace:: ``SEQ`` +.. |SYN| replace:: ``SYN`` +.. |NAK| replace:: ``NAK`` +.. |ACK| replace:: ``ACK`` +.. |DATA| replace:: ``DATA`` +.. |DATA_SEQ| replace:: ``DATA_SEQ`` +.. |DATA_NSQ| replace:: ``DATA_NSQ`` +.. |TC| replace:: ``TC`` +.. |TID| replace:: ``TID`` +.. |IID| replace:: ``IID`` +.. |RQID| replace:: ``RQID`` +.. |CID| replace:: ``CID`` + +=========================== +Surface Serial Hub Protocol +=========================== + +The Surface Serial Hub (SSH) is the central communication interface for the +embedded Surface Aggregator Module controller (SAM or EC), found on newer +Surface generations. We will refer to this protocol and interface as +SAM-over-SSH, as opposed to SAM-over-HID for the older generations. + +On Surface devices with SAM-over-SSH, SAM is connected to the host via UART +and defined in ACPI as device with ID ``MSHW0084``. On these devices, +significant functionality is provided via SAM, including access to battery +and power information and events, thermal read-outs and events, and many +more. For Surface Laptops, keyboard input is handled via HID directed +through SAM, on the Surface Laptop 3 and Surface Book 3 this also includes +touchpad input. + +Note that the standard disclaimer for this subsystem also applies to this +document: All of this has been reverse-engineered and may thus be erroneous +and/or incomplete. + +All CRCs used in the following are two-byte ``crc_ccitt_false(0xffff, ...)``. +All multi-byte values are little-endian, there is no implicit padding between +values. + + +SSH Packet Protocol: Definitions +================================ + +The fundamental communication unit of the SSH protocol is a frame +(:c:type:`struct ssh_frame <ssh_frame>`). A frame consists of the following +fields, packed together and in order: + +.. flat-table:: SSH Frame + :widths: 1 1 4 + :header-rows: 1 + + * - Field + - Type + - Description + + * - |TYPE| + - |u8| + - Type identifier of the frame. + + * - |LEN| + - |u16| + - Length of the payload associated with the frame. + + * - |SEQ| + - |u8| + - Sequence ID (see explanation below). + +Each frame structure is followed by a CRC over this structure. The CRC over +the frame structure (|TYPE|, |LEN|, and |SEQ| fields) is placed directly +after the frame structure and before the payload. The payload is followed by +its own CRC (over all payload bytes). If the payload is not present (i.e. +the frame has ``LEN=0``), the CRC of the payload is still present and will +evaluate to ``0xffff``. The |LEN| field does not include any of the CRCs, it +equals the number of bytes inbetween the CRC of the frame and the CRC of the +payload. + +Additionally, the following fixed two-byte sequences are used: + +.. flat-table:: SSH Byte Sequences + :widths: 1 1 4 + :header-rows: 1 + + * - Name + - Value + - Description + + * - |SYN| + - ``[0xAA, 0x55]`` + - Synchronization bytes. + +A message consists of |SYN|, followed by the frame (|TYPE|, |LEN|, |SEQ| and +CRC) and, if specified in the frame (i.e. ``LEN > 0``), payload bytes, +followed finally, regardless if the payload is present, the payload CRC. The +messages corresponding to an exchange are, in part, identified by having the +same sequence ID (|SEQ|), stored inside the frame (more on this in the next +section). The sequence ID is a wrapping counter. + +A frame can have the following types +(:c:type:`enum ssh_frame_type <ssh_frame_type>`): + +.. flat-table:: SSH Frame Types + :widths: 1 1 4 + :header-rows: 1 + + * - Name + - Value + - Short Description + + * - |NAK| + - ``0x04`` + - Sent on error in previously received message. + + * - |ACK| + - ``0x40`` + - Sent to acknowledge receival of |DATA| frame. + + * - |DATA_SEQ| + - ``0x80`` + - Sent to transfer data. Sequenced. + + * - |DATA_NSQ| + - ``0x00`` + - Same as |DATA_SEQ|, but does not need to be ACKed. + +Both |NAK|- and |ACK|-type frames are used to control flow of messages and +thus do not carry a payload. |DATA_SEQ|- and |DATA_NSQ|-type frames on the +other hand must carry a payload. The flow sequence and interaction of +different frame types will be described in more depth in the next section. + + +SSH Packet Protocol: Flow Sequence +================================== + +Each exchange begins with |SYN|, followed by a |DATA_SEQ|- or +|DATA_NSQ|-type frame, followed by its CRC, payload, and payload CRC. In +case of a |DATA_NSQ|-type frame, the exchange is then finished. In case of a +|DATA_SEQ|-type frame, the receiving party has to acknowledge receival of +the frame by responding with a message containing an |ACK|-type frame with +the same sequence ID of the |DATA| frame. In other words, the sequence ID of +the |ACK| frame specifies the |DATA| frame to be acknowledged. In case of an +error, e.g. an invalid CRC, the receiving party responds with a message +containing an |NAK|-type frame. As the sequence ID of the previous data +frame, for which an error is indicated via the |NAK| frame, cannot be relied +upon, the sequence ID of the |NAK| frame should not be used and is set to +zero. After receival of an |NAK| frame, the sending party should re-send all +outstanding (non-ACKed) messages. + +Sequence IDs are not synchronized between the two parties, meaning that they +are managed independently for each party. Identifying the messages +corresponding to a single exchange thus relies on the sequence ID as well as +the type of the message, and the context. Specifically, the sequence ID is +used to associate an ``ACK`` with its ``DATA_SEQ``-type frame, but not +``DATA_SEQ``- or ``DATA_NSQ``-type frames with other ``DATA``- type frames. + +An example exchange might look like this: + +:: + + tx: -- SYN FRAME(D) CRC(F) PAYLOAD CRC(P) ----------------------------- + rx: ------------------------------------- SYN FRAME(A) CRC(F) CRC(P) -- + +where both frames have the same sequence ID (``SEQ``). Here, ``FRAME(D)`` +indicates a |DATA_SEQ|-type frame, ``FRAME(A)`` an ``ACK``-type frame, +``CRC(F)`` the CRC over the previous frame, ``CRC(P)`` the CRC over the +previous payload. In case of an error, the exchange would look like this: + +:: + + tx: -- SYN FRAME(D) CRC(F) PAYLOAD CRC(P) ----------------------------- + rx: ------------------------------------- SYN FRAME(N) CRC(F) CRC(P) -- + +upon which the sender should re-send the message. ``FRAME(N)`` indicates an +|NAK|-type frame. Note that the sequence ID of the |NAK|-type frame is fixed +to zero. For |DATA_NSQ|-type frames, both exchanges are the same: + +:: + + tx: -- SYN FRAME(DATA_NSQ) CRC(F) PAYLOAD CRC(P) ---------------------- + rx: ------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Here, an error can be detected, but not corrected or indicated to the +sending party. These exchanges are symmetric, i.e. switching ``rx`` and +``tx`` results again in a valid exchange. Currently, no longer exchanges are +known. + + +Commands: Requests, Responses, and Events +========================================= + +Commands are sent as payload inside a data frame. Currently, this is the +only known payload type of |DATA| frames, with a payload-type value of +``0x80`` (:c:type:`SSH_PLD_TYPE_CMD <ssh_payload_type>`). + +The command-type payload (:c:type:`struct ssh_command <ssh_command>`) +consists of an eight-byte command structure, followed by optional and +variable length command data. The length of this optional data is derived +from the frame payload length given in the corresponding frame, i.e. it is +``frame.len - sizeof(struct ssh_command)``. The command struct contains the +following fields, packed together and in order: + +.. flat-table:: SSH Command + :widths: 1 1 4 + :header-rows: 1 + + * - Field + - Type + - Description + + * - |TYPE| + - |u8| + - Type of the payload. For commands always ``0x80``. + + * - |TC| + - |u8| + - Target category. + + * - |TID| (out) + - |u8| + - Target ID for outgoing (host to EC) commands. + + * - |TID| (in) + - |u8| + - Target ID for incoming (EC to host) commands. + + * - |IID| + - |u8| + - Instance ID. + + * - |RQID| + - |u16| + - Request ID. + + * - |CID| + - |u8| + - Command ID. + +The command struct and data, in general, does not contain any failure +detection mechanism (e.g. CRCs), this is solely done on the frame level. + +Command-type payloads are used by the host to send commands and requests to +the EC as well as by the EC to send responses and events back to the host. +We differentiate between requests (sent by the host), responses (sent by the +EC in response to a request), and events (sent by the EC without a preceding +request). + +Commands and events are uniquely identified by their target category +(``TC``) and command ID (``CID``). The target category specifies a general +category for the command (e.g. system in general, vs. battery and AC, vs. +temperature, and so on), while the command ID specifies the command inside +that category. Only the combination of |TC| + |CID| is unique. Additionally, +commands have an instance ID (``IID``), which is used to differentiate +between different sub-devices. For example ``TC=3`` ``CID=1`` is a +request to get the temperature on a thermal sensor, where |IID| specifies +the respective sensor. If the instance ID is not used, it should be set to +zero. If instance IDs are used, they, in general, start with a value of one, +whereas zero may be used for instance independent queries, if applicable. A +response to a request should have the same target category, command ID, and +instance ID as the corresponding request. + +Responses are matched to their corresponding request via the request ID +(``RQID``) field. This is a 16 bit wrapping counter similar to the sequence +ID on the frames. Note that the sequence ID of the frames for a +request-response pair does not match. Only the request ID has to match. +Frame-protocol wise these are two separate exchanges, and may even be +separated, e.g. by an event being sent after the request but before the +response. Not all commands produce a response, and this is not detectable by +|TC| + |CID|. It is the responsibility of the issuing party to wait for a +response (or signal this to the communication framework, as is done in +SAN/ACPI via the ``SNC`` flag). + +Events are identified by unique and reserved request IDs. These IDs should +not be used by the host when sending a new request. They are used on the +host to, first, detect events and, second, match them with a registered +event handler. Request IDs for events are chosen by the host and directed to +the EC when setting up and enabling an event source (via the +enable-event-source request). The EC then uses the specified request ID for +events sent from the respective source. Note that an event should still be +identified by its target category, command ID, and, if applicable, instance +ID, as a single event source can send multiple different event types. In +general, however, a single target category should map to a single reserved +event request ID. + +Furthermore, requests, responses, and events have an associated target ID +(``TID``). This target ID is split into output (host to EC) and input (EC to +host) fields, with the respecting other field (e.g. output field on incoming +messages) set to zero. Two ``TID`` values are known: Primary (``0x01``) and +secondary (``0x02``). In general, the response to a request should have the +same ``TID`` value, however, the field (output vs. input) should be used in +accordance to the direction in which the response is sent (i.e. on the input +field, as responses are generally sent from the EC to the host). + +Note that, even though requests and events should be uniquely identifiable +by target category and command ID alone, the EC may require specific +target ID and instance ID values to accept a command. A command that is +accepted for ``TID=1``, for example, may not be accepted for ``TID=2`` +and vice versa. + + +Limitations and Observations +============================ + +The protocol can, in theory, handle up to ``U8_MAX`` frames in parallel, +with up to ``U16_MAX`` pending requests (neglecting request IDs reserved for +events). In practice, however, this is more limited. From our testing +(although via a python and thus a user-space program), it seems that the EC +can handle up to four requests (mostly) reliably in parallel at a certain +time. With five or more requests in parallel, consistent discarding of +commands (ACKed frame but no command response) has been observed. For five +simultaneous commands, this reproducibly resulted in one command being +dropped and four commands being handled. + +However, it has also been noted that, even with three requests in parallel, +occasional frame drops happen. Apart from this, with a limit of three +pending requests, no dropped commands (i.e. command being dropped but frame +carrying command being ACKed) have been observed. In any case, frames (and +possibly also commands) should be re-sent by the host if a certain timeout +is exceeded. This is done by the EC for frames with a timeout of one second, +up to two re-tries (i.e. three transmissions in total). The limit of +re-tries also applies to received NAKs, and, in a worst case scenario, can +lead to entire messages being dropped. + +While this also seems to work fine for pending data frames as long as no +transmission failures occur, implementation and handling of these seems to +depend on the assumption that there is only one non-acknowledged data frame. +In particular, the detection of repeated frames relies on the last sequence +number. This means that, if a frame that has been successfully received by +the EC is sent again, e.g. due to the host not receiving an |ACK|, the EC +will only detect this if it has the sequence ID of the last frame received +by the EC. As an example: Sending two frames with ``SEQ=0`` and ``SEQ=1`` +followed by a repetition of ``SEQ=0`` will not detect the second ``SEQ=0`` +frame as such, and thus execute the command in this frame each time it has +been received, i.e. twice in this example. Sending ``SEQ=0``, ``SEQ=1`` and +then repeating ``SEQ=1`` will detect the second ``SEQ=1`` as repetition of +the first one and ignore it, thus executing the contained command only once. + +In conclusion, this suggests a limit of at most one pending un-ACKed frame +(per party, effectively leading to synchronous communication regarding +frames) and at most three pending commands. The limit to synchronous frame +transfers seems to be consistent with behavior observed on Windows. diff --git a/MAINTAINERS b/MAINTAINERS index 64730461f4df..ff5d60875cec 100644 --- a/MAINTAINERS +++ b/MAINTAINERS @@ -11697,6 +11697,7 @@ M: Maximilian Luz <luzmaximilian@xxxxxxxxx> S: Maintained W: https://github.com/linux-surface/surface-aggregator-module C: irc://chat.freenode.net/##linux-surface +F: Documentation/driver-api/surface_aggregator/ F: drivers/platform/surface/aggregator/ F: include/linux/surface_aggregator/ -- 2.29.2