Hi Conor, Sorry for the slow reply - I was out of the office for a week... On 3/22/23 11:51, Conor Dooley wrote: > Hey Russ, > > On Mon, Feb 27, 2023 at 10:56:07PM +0000, Conor Dooley wrote: >> On Mon, Feb 27, 2023 at 02:42:30PM -0800, Russ Weight wrote: >>> On 2/27/23 14:16, Conor Dooley wrote: >>>> On Mon, Feb 27, 2023 at 02:04:36PM -0800, Russ Weight wrote: >>>>> On 2/24/23 00:28, Conor Dooley wrote: >>>>>> On Fri, Feb 24, 2023 at 03:57:09PM +0800, Xu Yilun wrote: >>>>>>> On 2023-02-17 at 16:40:17 +0000, Conor Dooley wrote: >>>>>>>> This patchset adds support for the "Auto Update" feature on PolarFire >>>>>>>> SoC that allows for writing an FPGA bistream to the SPI flash connected >>>>>>>> to the system controller. >>>>>>> I haven't fully checked the patches yet, just some quick comments: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Since this feature is just to R/W the flash, and would not affect the >>>>>>> runtime FPGA region, I don't think an FPGA manager is actually needed. >>>>>>> Why not just use the MTD uAPI? There is a set of exsiting MTD uAPI & >>>>>>> MTD tool if I remember correctly. >>>>>> A lack of interest in opening up the system controller to userspace! >>>>>> You're right in that the writing of the image can be done that way, and >>>>>> while I was testing I used the userspace bits of mtd along the way - but >>>>>> for validating that the image we are writing we rely on the system >>>>>> controller. >>>>>> I'm really not interested in exposing the system controller's >>>>>> functionality, especially the bitstream manipulation parts, to userspace >>>>>> due to the risk of input validation bugs, so at least that side of >>>>>> things should remain in the kernel. >>>>>> I suppose I could implement something custom in drivers/soc that does >>>>>> the validation only, and push the rest out to userspace. Just seemed >>>>>> fitting to do the whole lot in drivers/fpga. >>>>> In case you haven't already looked at the new firmware-upload >>>>> support in the firmware-loader, I'll give you some references >>>>> here to see if it fit you needs. This would only support the >>>>> write (not the read) but it would allow the controller to do >>>>> validation on the write. >>>>> >>>>> The is the cover letter which shows a usage example: >>>>> https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20220421212204.36052-1-russell.h.weight@xxxxxxxxx/ >>>>> >>>>> And this is a pointer to the latest documentation for it: >>>>> https://docs.kernel.org/driver-api/firmware/fw_upload.html >>>>> >>>>> The only current user is: drivers/fpga/intel-m10-bmc-sec-update.c >>>> Sounds interesting, I shall go and take a look. Just quickly, when you >>>> say it wouldn't support the read, what exactly do you mean? >>>> The only read that I am really interested in doing is reading the first >>>> 1K of flash as I need to RMW it, but I don't think that that's what you >>>> mean. >>>> Do you mean that I would not be able to dump the firmware using your >>>> fw_upload interface? If so, that's an acceptable constraint IMO. >>> Yes - I mean that you couldn't dump the firmware image from userspace >>> using the fw_upload interface. The sysfs interface allows you to read >>> and write a temporary buffer, but once you "echo 0 > loading", there >>> is no sysfs interface associated with the firmware-loader that would >>> allow you to read the image from flash. Your controller actually does >>> the writes, so RMW in that context is fine. >> Ahh cool. I don't really care about dumping the firmware via such a >> mechanism, so that sounds good to me. >> I'll check out your approach, the immediate thought is that it sounds >> suitable to my use case, so thanks! > Taken me a while to get around to it, but thanks for your suggestion. > Looks like it is suitable for what I am trying to do, so in the middle > of working on another version of this using fw_upload. > The enum return codes from write are a little clumsy, but oh well, could > be worse I suppose. > > Just one thing I noted (although I rarely pay much attention to/rely on > the driver-api docs when recent drivers exist as usable examples) is > that the docs for this stuff is a wee bit out of date due to some API > changes. > In the code example in this document: > https://docs.kernel.org/driver-api/firmware/fw_upload.html > firmware_upload_register() has fewer arguments than it does when you > look at the signature of the function in the documentation right below > it. I saw your patch to fix this. Thanks! - Russ > > Cheers, > Conor.