On 9/19/23 17:53, Jonathan Cameron wrote:
On Tue, 19 Sep 2023 14:28:29 +0300
Matti Vaittinen <mazziesaccount@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 9/18/23 15:56, Matti Vaittinen wrote:
On 9/17/23 13:35, Jonathan Cameron wrote:
On Fri, 15 Sep 2023 09:56:19 +0300
Matti Vaittinen <mazziesaccount@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Support for the ROHM BM1390 pressure sensor. The BM1390GLV-Z can measure
pressures ranging from 300 hPa to 1300 hPa with configurable measurement
averaging and internal FIFO. The sensor does also provide temperature
measurements.
Sensor does also contain IIR filter implemented in HW. The data-sheet
says the IIR filter can be configured to be "weak", "middle" or
"strong". Some RMS noise figures are provided in data sheet but no
accurate maths for the filter configurations is provided. Hence, the IIR
filter configuration is not supported by this driver and the filter is
configured to the "middle" setting (at least not for now).
The FIFO measurement mode is only measuring the pressure and not the
temperature. The driver measures temperature when FIFO is flushed and
simply uses the same measured temperature value to all reported
temperatures. This should not be a problem when temperature is not
changing very rapidly (several degrees C / second) but allows users to
get the temperature measurements from sensor without any additional
logic.
This driver allows the sensor to be used in two muitually exclusive
ways,
1. With trigger (data-ready IRQ).
In this case the FIFO is not used as we get data ready for each
collected
sample. Instead, for each data-ready IRQ we read the sample from sensor
and push it to the IIO buffer.
2. With hardware FIFO and watermark IRQ.
In this case the data-ready is not used but we enable watermark IRQ. At
each watermark IRQ we go and read all samples in FIFO and push them
to the
IIO buffer.
Signed-off-by: Matti Vaittinen <mazziesaccount@xxxxxxxxx>
...
+
+static const unsigned long bm1390_scan_masks[] = {
+ BIT(BM1390_CHAN_PRESSURE) | BIT(BM1390_CHAN_TEMP), 0
Why? Doesn't look hard to support just one or the other?
Normally we only do this sort of limitation when there is a heavily
optimized read routine for a set of channels and it is better
to grab them all and throw away the ones we don't care about.
That doesn't seem to be true here. So if the fifo grabbed both
temp and pressure it would makes sense here, but doesn't seem
like it does.
I have a feeling I have misunderstood how this mask works. I have
assumed all the channels with corresponding mask bit _can_ be enabled
simultaneously, but I have not understood they _must_ all be enabled. I
think I must go back studying this, but if all channels really _must_ be
enabled, then you are correct. It actually makes a lot of sense to
support the pressure values alone, as, according to the data-sheet, the
HW is doing a "MEMS temperature compensation" to the pressure values.
So, my assuimption is the temperature data may not be required to be
captured.
This also means I should revise the scan masks for the BU27008, BU27010
and BU27034 light sensors as I don't think all the users want all the
channels enabled. I wonder how I have not noticed any problems when I
tested those things - did I really always enable all the channels...? @_@
Anyways, Thanks.
Hi Jonathan,
There's something in IIO scan_masks / buffer demuxing that I don't quite
understand
Thank You for the patience and the explanation Jonathan. I have a -
hopefully not totally wrong - feeling I understand this better. I didn't
understand that IIO framework has this extra logic and that
available_scan_masks was not really meant for telling what IIO allows
_users_ to enable - but it was for driver to tell IIO core what the
driver can give. (Naturally this impacts to what IIO allows users to
enable, but not directly). Eg, if I now get it right, the
'available_scan_masks' is information what data flows between driver and
IIO. Similarly, 'active_scan_mask' tells what the IIO core 'expects' to
get from the driver, right? So, in bm1390 case, if I set both:
BIT(BM1390_CHAN_PRESSURE) | BIT(BM1390_CHAN_TEMP),
and
BIT(BM1390_CHAN_PRESSURE),
to 'available_scan_masks', then it means driver is telling IIO it can
give both pressure and temperature, or temperature alone. As a result,
IIO can set either both temp and pressure to 'active_scan_mask' - in
which case driver should push both in the buffers - or just the
pressure, in which case the driver should not push the temperature.
The bm1390 driver as sent in v2 does not do demuxing but always pushes
whole chunk of data and trusts IIO to do demuxing.
Yup. That should work. But in this case you can trivially decide not to read
or fill in the temperature and hence save some bus cycles.
2) I noticed the 'available_scan_masks' was marked as an optional field.
So, I think that if there is no restrictions to which of the channels
can be enabled, then we can omit setting it. This is what I tried.
It appears that when we do not populate the 'available_scan_masks' with the:
>>> +static const unsigned long bm1390_scan_masks[] = {
>>> + BIT(BM1390_CHAN_PRESSURE) | BIT(BM1390_CHAN_TEMP), 0
things change. When I tested enabling only temperature and ran the
iio_generic_buffer -c 20 -N 0 -t bm1390data-rdy-dev0 - the reported
values seemed completely random.
You need to pack the data correctly yourself in the driver.
So it adds small amount of code complexity but potentially saves bus
traffic.
...
Based on this experimenting (and headache obtained from reading the
demuxing code) - the IIO framework does not do channel demuxing if the
'available_scan_masks' is not given? To me this was somewhat unexpected.
Yes. If you don't tell it what channel setups are available (note there can
be lots) you are saying that we support any random combination and have
to do the data packing by hand.
Okay... I think it kind of makes sense to leave an option where the
driver can create buffer as it wants. I am not sure I can wrap my head
around this to the extent that I knew when the IIO does not know what
channels the driver has enabled - and thus, what types of data there
will be - but I can accept the answer that such situations can exist :)
Besides, allowing the driver to do the buffer formatting may allow some
'use-case specific, custom optimizations' when user-space knows what to
expect (for example, regarding the data alignments and ordering to for
example save space).
...This leads to another thing I noticed - and to another question :)
I was experimenting with the bm1390 scan masks and iio_generic_buffer
tool. It seems to me that the iio_generic_buffer does not expect the
padding when the data in buffer is u32 + u16. When I enable the pressure
(32bits) and temperature (16 bits) in bm1390 and keep the time-stamp
disabled, the user-space will get buffer where 2 bytes of padding is
added to each temperature sample so the next pressure sample stays
correctly aligned. I believe kernel side does sane job here.
This, however, did result (at least my version of) the
iio_generic_buffer tool to read garbage values after the first sample.
My assumption is that the iio_generic_buffer does not add the padding
bytes to the end of last data in the scan in order to ensure also the
next scan will be correctly aligned.
I did following change to the iio_generic_buffer:
Author: Matti Vaittinen <mazziesaccount@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thu Sep 21 10:15:19 2023 +0300
tools: iio: iio_generic_buffer ensure alignment
The iio_generic_buffer can return garbage values when the total size of
scan data is not a multiple of largest element in the scan. This can be
demonstrated by reading a scan consisting for example of one 4 byte and
one 2 byte element, where the 4 byte elemnt is first in the buffer.
The IIO generic buffert code does not take into accunt the last two
padding bytes that are needed to ensure that the 4byte data for next
scan is correctly aligned.
Add padding bytes required to align the next sample into the scan size.
Signed-off-by: Matti Vaittinen <mazziesaccount@xxxxxxxxx>
diff --git a/tools/iio/iio_generic_buffer.c b/tools/iio/iio_generic_buffer.c
index 44bbf80f0cfd..fc562799a109 100644
--- a/tools/iio/iio_generic_buffer.c
+++ b/tools/iio/iio_generic_buffer.c
@@ -54,9 +54,12 @@ enum autochan {
static unsigned int size_from_channelarray(struct iio_channel_info
*channels, int num_channels)
{
unsigned int bytes = 0;
- int i = 0;
+ int i = 0, max = 0;
+ unsigned int misalignment;
while (i < num_channels) {
+ if (channels[i].bytes > max)
+ max = channels[i].bytes;
if (bytes % channels[i].bytes == 0)
channels[i].location = bytes;
else
@@ -66,6 +69,16 @@ static unsigned int size_from_channelarray(struct
iio_channel_info *channels, in
bytes = channels[i].location + channels[i].bytes;
i++;
}
+ /*
+ * We wan't the data in next sample to also be properly aligned so
+ * we'll add padding at the end if needed. TODO: should we use fixed
+ * 8 byte alignment instead of the size of the biggest samnple?
+ */
+ misalignment = bytes % max;
+ if (misalignment) {
+ printf("Misalignment %u. Adding Padding %u\n",
misalignment, max - misalignment);
+ bytes += max - misalignment;
+ }
return bytes;
}
I can send this as a proper patch if you guys think it is correct.
Finally, when the watermark IRQ is used, we can't omit reading the
pressure data because clearing the WMI is done based on the pressure
data in FIFO.
Hmm. That is a good reason to keep the available scan masks set.
Add a comment on that next to the mask.
So, I would propose we do:
static const unsigned long bm1390_scan_masks[] = {
BIT(BM1390_CHAN_PRESSURE) | BIT(BM1390_CHAN_TEMP),
BIT(BM1390_CHAN_PRESSURE), 0
Makes sense given need to read the pressure channel.
which better reflects what the hardware is capable of - and, unless I am
missing something, also allows us to offload the buffer demuxing to the IIO.
Still, as mentioned in 1), the
>>> +static const unsigned long bm1390_scan_masks[] = {
>>> + BIT(BM1390_CHAN_PRESSURE) | BIT(BM1390_CHAN_TEMP), 0
does not seem to prevent enabling only the temperature channel - so in
the driver buffer handler we still must unconditionally read the
pressure data regardles the active_scan_mask.
active_scan_mask should match the above - it's separate from what is enabled.
active_scan_mask is on the data capture side of the demux - the buffers
are then fed repacked data reflecting what is enabled.
Cool! So, the driver can rely on IIO asking for the pressure (in
active_scan_mask) after it has correctly set the available scan mask. It
may not be a big thing but I like it. It is enough to take care of
ensuring all required stuff is read from HW in one place (in available
scan masks) and not to worry about it in actual data reading path but
just read stuff IIO is asking to be read. I like it.
Another thing to note is that, when we build the available_scan_mask
array - we should either pay attention to the order of masks - or change
the iio_scan_mask_match() to not accept first matching subset but to go
through all of the masks unless it finds and exactly matching one (and
in general prefer the smallest subset). Not sure this is worth the extra
cycles though.
Thanks again - feel like I've learned something today :)
Yours,
-- Matti Vaittinen
--
Matti Vaittinen
Linux kernel developer at ROHM Semiconductors
Oulu Finland
~~ When things go utterly wrong vim users can always type :help! ~~