From: Hans Verkuil <hans.verkuil@xxxxxxxxx> Document the new core error injection callbacks. Signed-off-by: Hans Verkuil <hans.verkuil@xxxxxxxxx> --- Documentation/media/kapi/cec-core.rst | 72 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 71 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/Documentation/media/kapi/cec-core.rst b/Documentation/media/kapi/cec-core.rst index 62b9a1448177..a9f53f069a2d 100644 --- a/Documentation/media/kapi/cec-core.rst +++ b/Documentation/media/kapi/cec-core.rst @@ -110,11 +110,14 @@ your driver: void (*adap_status)(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct seq_file *file); void (*adap_free)(struct cec_adapter *adap); + /* Error injection callbacks */ + ... + /* High-level callbacks */ ... }; -The five low-level ops deal with various aspects of controlling the CEC adapter +The seven low-level ops deal with various aspects of controlling the CEC adapter hardware: @@ -286,6 +289,70 @@ handling the receive interrupt. The framework expects to see the cec_transmit_do call before the cec_received_msg call, otherwise it can get confused if the received message was in reply to the transmitted message. +Optional: Implementing Error Injection Support +---------------------------------------------- + +If the CEC adapter supports Error Injection functionality, then that can +be exposed through the Error Injection callbacks: + +.. code-block:: none + + struct cec_adap_ops { + /* Low-level callbacks */ + ... + + /* Error injection callbacks */ + int (*error_inj_show)(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct seq_file *sf); + bool (*error_inj_parse_line)(struct cec_adapter *adap, char *line); + + /* High-level CEC message callback */ + ... + }; + +If both callbacks are set, then an ``error-inj`` file will appear in debugfs. +The basic syntax is as follows: + +Leading spaces/tabs are ignored. If the next character is a ``#`` or the end of the +line was reached, then the whole line is ignored. Otherwise a command is expected. + +This basic parsing is done in the CEC Framework. It is up to the driver to decide +what commands to implement. The only requirement is that the command ``clear`` without +any arguments must be implemented and that it will remove all current error injection +commands. + +This ensures that you can always do ``echo clear >error-inj`` to clear any error +injections without having to know the details of the driver-specific commands. + +Note that the output of ``error-inj`` shall be valid as input to ``error-inj``. +So this must work: + +.. code-block:: none + + $ cat error-inj >einj.txt + $ cat einj.txt >error-inj + +The first callback is called when this file is read and it should show the +the current error injection state: + +.. c:function:: + int (*error_inj_show)(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct seq_file *sf); + +It is recommended that it starts with a comment block with basic usage +information. It returns 0 for success and an error otherwise. + +The second callback will parse commands written to the ``error-inj`` file: + +.. c:function:: + bool (*error_inj_parse_line)(struct cec_adapter *adap, char *line); + +The ``line`` argument points to the start of the command. Any leading +spaces or tabs have already been skipped. It is a single line only (so there +are no embedded newlines) and it is 0-terminated. The callback is free to +modify the contents of the buffer. It is only called for lines containing a +command, so this callback is never called for empty lines or comment lines. + +Return true if the command was valid or false if there were syntax errors. + Implementing the High-Level CEC Adapter --------------------------------------- @@ -298,6 +365,9 @@ CEC protocol driven. The following high-level callbacks are available: /* Low-level callbacks */ ... + /* Error injection callbacks */ + ... + /* High-level CEC message callback */ int (*received)(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct cec_msg *msg); }; -- 2.15.1