This change takes the comment from the commit that introduces the IIO high-speed buffer API, and formats it into rst format. Signed-off-by: Alexandru Ardelean <alexandru.ardelean@xxxxxxxxxx> --- Documentation/iio/iio_high_speed_buffers.rst | 100 +++++++++++++++++++ Documentation/iio/index.rst | 2 + include/uapi/linux/iio/buffer.h | 5 + 3 files changed, 107 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/iio/iio_high_speed_buffers.rst diff --git a/Documentation/iio/iio_high_speed_buffers.rst b/Documentation/iio/iio_high_speed_buffers.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..f326e68efe49 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/iio/iio_high_speed_buffers.rst @@ -0,0 +1,100 @@ +=================================== +Industrial IO High-Speed Buffer API +=================================== + +1. Overview +=========== + +Industrial IO supports access to buffers via an mmap interface. The +advantage of the mmap based interface compared to the read() based +interface is that it avoids an extra copy of the data between kernel and +userspace. This is particular useful for high-speed devices which produce +several megabytes or even gigabytes of data per second. + +The data for the mmap interface is managed at the granularity of so called +blocks. A block is a contiguous region of memory (at the moment both +physically and virtually contiguous). Reducing the granularity from byte +level to block level is done to reduce the userspace-kernelspace +synchronization overhead since performing syscalls for each byte at a +data-rate of a few megabytes is not feasible. + +This of course leads to a slightly increased latency. For this reason an +application can choose the size of the blocks as well as how many blocks it +allocates. E.g. two blocks would be a traditional double buffering scheme. +But using a higher number might be necessary to avoid underflow/overflow +situations in the presence of scheduling latencies. + +A block can either be owned by kernel space or userspace. When owned by +userspace it is safe to access the data in the block and process it. When +owned by kernel space the block can be in one of 3 states: + +* It can be in the incoming queue where all blocks submitted from userspace + are placed and are waiting to be processed by the kernel driver. +* It can be currently being processed by the kernel driver, this means it is + actively placing capturing data in it (usually using DMA). +* Or it can be in the outgoing queue where all blocks that have been + processed by the kernel are placed. Userspace can dequeue the blocks as + necessary. + +2. Interface +============ + +As part of the interface 5 IOCTLs are used to manage the blocks and exchange +them between userspace and kernelspace. The IOCTLs can be accessed through +a open file descriptor to a IIO device. + +* **IIO_BUFFER_BLOCK_ALLOC_IOCTL(struct iio_buffer_block_alloc_req *)**: + Allocates new blocks. Can be called multiple times if necessary. A newly + allocated block is initially owned by userspace. + +* **IIO_BUFFER_BLOCK_FREE_IOCTL(void)**: + Frees all previously allocated blocks. If the backing memory of a block is + still in use by a kernel driver (i.e. active DMA transfer) it will be + freed once the kernel driver has released it. + +* **IIO_BUFFER_BLOCK_QUERY_IOCTL(struct iio_buffer_block *)**: + Queries information about a block. The id of the block about which + information is to be queried needs to be set by userspace. + +* **IIO_BUFFER_BLOCK_ENQUEUE_IOCTL(struct iio_buffer_block *)**: + Places a block on the incoming queue. This transfers ownership of the + block from userspace to kernelspace. Userspace must populate the id field + of the block to indicate which block to enqueue. + +* **IIO_BUFFER_BLOCK_DEQUEUE_IOCTL(struct iio_buffer_block *)**: + Removes the first block from the outgoing queue. This transfers ownership + of the block from kernelspace to userspace. Kernelspace will populate all + fields of the block. If the queue is empty and the file descriptor is set + to blocking the IOCTL will block until a new block is available on the + outgoing queue. + +3. Usage +======== + +To access the data stored in a block by userspace the block must be mapped +to the process's memory. This is done by calling mmap() on the IIO device +file descriptor. Each block has a unique offset assigned to it which should +be passed to the mmap interface. E.g. + + mmap(0, block.size, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, fd, + block.offset); + +A typical workflow for the new interface is: + + BLOCK_ALLOC + + foreach block + BLOCK_QUERY block + mmap block.data.offset + BLOCK_ENQUEUE block + + enable buffer + + while !done + BLOCK_DEQUEUE block + process data + BLOCK_ENQUEUE block + + disable buffer + + BLOCK_FREE diff --git a/Documentation/iio/index.rst b/Documentation/iio/index.rst index 58b7a4ebac51..aaba78770b47 100644 --- a/Documentation/iio/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/iio/index.rst @@ -9,4 +9,6 @@ Industrial I/O iio_configfs + iio_high_speed_buffers + ep93xx_adc diff --git a/include/uapi/linux/iio/buffer.h b/include/uapi/linux/iio/buffer.h index 8c1a2f27e5a2..d8c64210c9cc 100644 --- a/include/uapi/linux/iio/buffer.h +++ b/include/uapi/linux/iio/buffer.h @@ -5,6 +5,11 @@ #ifndef _UAPI_IIO_BUFFER_H_ #define _UAPI_IIO_BUFFER_H_ +/** + * See for more details: + * Documentation/iio/iio_high_speed_buffers.rst + */ + /** * struct iio_buffer_block_alloc_req - Descriptor for allocating IIO buffer blocks * @type: type of block(s) to allocate (currently unused, reserved) -- 2.17.1