1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
2
3=============
4Auxiliary Bus
5=============
6
7In some subsystems, the functionality of the core device (PCI/ACPI/other) is
8too complex for a single device to be managed by a monolithic driver
9(e.g. Sound Open Firmware), multiple devices might implement a common
10intersection of functionality (e.g. NICs + RDMA), or a driver may want to
11export an interface for another subsystem to drive (e.g. SIOV Physical Function
12export Virtual Function management).  A split of the functinoality into child-
13devices representing sub-domains of functionality makes it possible to
14compartmentalize, layer, and distribute domain-specific concerns via a Linux
15device-driver model.
16
17An example for this kind of requirement is the audio subsystem where a single
18IP is handling multiple entities such as HDMI, Soundwire, local devices such as
19mics/speakers etc. The split for the core's functionality can be arbitrary or
20be defined by the DSP firmware topology and include hooks for test/debug. This
21allows for the audio core device to be minimal and focused on hardware-specific
22control and communication.
23
24Each auxiliary_device represents a part of its parent functionality. The
25generic behavior can be extended and specialized as needed by encapsulating an
26auxiliary_device within other domain-specific structures and the use of .ops
27callbacks. Devices on the auxiliary bus do not share any structures and the use
28of a communication channel with the parent is domain-specific.
29
30Note that ops are intended as a way to augment instance behavior within a class
31of auxiliary devices, it is not the mechanism for exporting common
32infrastructure from the parent. Consider EXPORT_SYMBOL_NS() to convey
33infrastructure from the parent module to the auxiliary module(s).
34
35
36When Should the Auxiliary Bus Be Used
37=====================================
38
39The auxiliary bus is to be used when a driver and one or more kernel modules,
40who share a common header file with the driver, need a mechanism to connect and
41provide access to a shared object allocated by the auxiliary_device's
42registering driver.  The registering driver for the auxiliary_device(s) and the
43kernel module(s) registering auxiliary_drivers can be from the same subsystem,
44or from multiple subsystems.
45
46The emphasis here is on a common generic interface that keeps subsystem
47customization out of the bus infrastructure.
48
49One example is a PCI network device that is RDMA-capable and exports a child
50device to be driven by an auxiliary_driver in the RDMA subsystem.  The PCI
51driver allocates and registers an auxiliary_device for each physical
52function on the NIC.  The RDMA driver registers an auxiliary_driver that claims
53each of these auxiliary_devices.  This conveys data/ops published by the parent
54PCI device/driver to the RDMA auxiliary_driver.
55
56Another use case is for the PCI device to be split out into multiple sub
57functions.  For each sub function an auxiliary_device is created.  A PCI sub
58function driver binds to such devices that creates its own one or more class
59devices.  A PCI sub function auxiliary device is likely to be contained in a
60struct with additional attributes such as user defined sub function number and
61optional attributes such as resources and a link to the parent device.  These
62attributes could be used by systemd/udev; and hence should be initialized
63before a driver binds to an auxiliary_device.
64
65A key requirement for utilizing the auxiliary bus is that there is no
66dependency on a physical bus, device, register accesses or regmap support.
67These individual devices split from the core cannot live on the platform bus as
68they are not physical devices that are controlled by DT/ACPI.  The same
69argument applies for not using MFD in this scenario as MFD relies on individual
70function devices being physical devices.
71
72Auxiliary Device
73================
74
75An auxiliary_device represents a part of its parent device's functionality. It
76is given a name that, combined with the registering drivers KBUILD_MODNAME,
77creates a match_name that is used for driver binding, and an id that combined
78with the match_name provide a unique name to register with the bus subsystem.
79
80Registering an auxiliary_device is a two-step process.  First call
81auxiliary_device_init(), which checks several aspects of the auxiliary_device
82struct and performs a device_initialize().  After this step completes, any
83error state must have a call to auxiliary_device_uninit() in its resolution path.
84The second step in registering an auxiliary_device is to perform a call to
85auxiliary_device_add(), which sets the name of the device and add the device to
86the bus.
87
88Unregistering an auxiliary_device is also a two-step process to mirror the
89register process.  First call auxiliary_device_delete(), then call
90auxiliary_device_uninit().
91
92.. code-block:: c
93
94	struct auxiliary_device {
95		struct device dev;
96                const char *name;
97		u32 id;
98	};
99
100If two auxiliary_devices both with a match_name "mod.foo" are registered onto
101the bus, they must have unique id values (e.g. "x" and "y") so that the
102registered devices names are "mod.foo.x" and "mod.foo.y".  If match_name + id
103are not unique, then the device_add fails and generates an error message.
104
105The auxiliary_device.dev.type.release or auxiliary_device.dev.release must be
106populated with a non-NULL pointer to successfully register the auxiliary_device.
107
108The auxiliary_device.dev.parent must also be populated.
109
110Auxiliary Device Memory Model and Lifespan
111------------------------------------------
112
113The registering driver is the entity that allocates memory for the
114auxiliary_device and register it on the auxiliary bus.  It is important to note
115that, as opposed to the platform bus, the registering driver is wholly
116responsible for the management for the memory used for the driver object.
117
118A parent object, defined in the shared header file, contains the
119auxiliary_device.  It also contains a pointer to the shared object(s), which
120also is defined in the shared header.  Both the parent object and the shared
121object(s) are allocated by the registering driver.  This layout allows the
122auxiliary_driver's registering module to perform a container_of() call to go
123from the pointer to the auxiliary_device, that is passed during the call to the
124auxiliary_driver's probe function, up to the parent object, and then have
125access to the shared object(s).
126
127The memory for the auxiliary_device is freed only in its release() callback
128flow as defined by its registering driver.
129
130The memory for the shared object(s) must have a lifespan equal to, or greater
131than, the lifespan of the memory for the auxiliary_device.  The auxiliary_driver
132should only consider that this shared object is valid as long as the
133auxiliary_device is still registered on the auxiliary bus.  It is up to the
134registering driver to manage (e.g. free or keep available) the memory for the
135shared object beyond the life of the auxiliary_device.
136
137The registering driver must unregister all auxiliary devices before its own
138driver.remove() is completed.
139
140Auxiliary Drivers
141=================
142
143Auxiliary drivers follow the standard driver model convention, where
144discovery/enumeration is handled by the core, and drivers
145provide probe() and remove() methods. They support power management
146and shutdown notifications using the standard conventions.
147
148.. code-block:: c
149
150	struct auxiliary_driver {
151		int (*probe)(struct auxiliary_device *,
152                             const struct auxiliary_device_id *id);
153		int (*remove)(struct auxiliary_device *);
154		void (*shutdown)(struct auxiliary_device *);
155		int (*suspend)(struct auxiliary_device *, pm_message_t);
156		int (*resume)(struct auxiliary_device *);
157		struct device_driver driver;
158		const struct auxiliary_device_id *id_table;
159	};
160
161Auxiliary drivers register themselves with the bus by calling
162auxiliary_driver_register(). The id_table contains the match_names of auxiliary
163devices that a driver can bind with.
164
165Example Usage
166=============
167
168Auxiliary devices are created and registered by a subsystem-level core device
169that needs to break up its functionality into smaller fragments. One way to
170extend the scope of an auxiliary_device is to encapsulate it within a domain-
171pecific structure defined by the parent device. This structure contains the
172auxiliary_device and any associated shared data/callbacks needed to establish
173the connection with the parent.
174
175An example is:
176
177.. code-block:: c
178
179        struct foo {
180		struct auxiliary_device auxdev;
181		void (*connect)(struct auxiliary_device *auxdev);
182		void (*disconnect)(struct auxiliary_device *auxdev);
183		void *data;
184        };
185
186The parent device then registers the auxiliary_device by calling
187auxiliary_device_init(), and then auxiliary_device_add(), with the pointer to
188the auxdev member of the above structure. The parent provides a name for the
189auxiliary_device that, combined with the parent's KBUILD_MODNAME, creates a
190match_name that is be used for matching and binding with a driver.
191
192Whenever an auxiliary_driver is registered, based on the match_name, the
193auxiliary_driver's probe() is invoked for the matching devices.  The
194auxiliary_driver can also be encapsulated inside custom drivers that make the
195core device's functionality extensible by adding additional domain-specific ops
196as follows:
197
198.. code-block:: c
199
200	struct my_ops {
201		void (*send)(struct auxiliary_device *auxdev);
202		void (*receive)(struct auxiliary_device *auxdev);
203	};
204
205
206	struct my_driver {
207		struct auxiliary_driver auxiliary_drv;
208		const struct my_ops ops;
209	};
210
211An example of this type of usage is:
212
213.. code-block:: c
214
215	const struct auxiliary_device_id my_auxiliary_id_table[] = {
216		{ .name = "foo_mod.foo_dev" },
217		{ },
218	};
219
220	const struct my_ops my_custom_ops = {
221		.send = my_tx,
222		.receive = my_rx,
223	};
224
225	const struct my_driver my_drv = {
226		.auxiliary_drv = {
227			.name = "myauxiliarydrv",
228			.id_table = my_auxiliary_id_table,
229			.probe = my_probe,
230			.remove = my_remove,
231			.shutdown = my_shutdown,
232		},
233		.ops = my_custom_ops,
234	};
235