1----------------------- 2 Ethernet Driver Guide 3----------------------- 4 5The networking stack in Das U-Boot is designed for multiple network devices 6to be easily added and controlled at runtime. This guide is meant for people 7who wish to review the net driver stack with an eye towards implementing your 8own ethernet device driver. Here we will describe a new pseudo 'APE' driver. 9 10------------------ 11 Driver Functions 12------------------ 13 14All functions you will be implementing in this document have the return value 15meaning of 0 for success and non-zero for failure. 16 17 ---------- 18 Register 19 ---------- 20 21When U-Boot initializes, it will call the common function eth_initialize(). 22This will in turn call the board-specific board_eth_init() (or if that fails, 23the cpu-specific cpu_eth_init()). These board-specific functions can do random 24system handling, but ultimately they will call the driver-specific register 25function which in turn takes care of initializing that particular instance. 26 27Keep in mind that you should code the driver to avoid storing state in global 28data as someone might want to hook up two of the same devices to one board. 29Any such information that is specific to an interface should be stored in a 30private, driver-defined data structure and pointed to by eth->priv (see below). 31 32So the call graph at this stage would look something like: 33board_init() 34 eth_initialize() 35 board_eth_init() / cpu_eth_init() 36 driver_register() 37 initialize eth_device 38 eth_register() 39 40At this point in time, the only thing you need to worry about is the driver's 41register function. The pseudo code would look something like: 42int ape_register(bd_t *bis, int iobase) 43{ 44 struct ape_priv *priv; 45 struct eth_device *dev; 46 47 priv = malloc(sizeof(*priv)); 48 if (priv == NULL) 49 return 1; 50 51 dev = malloc(sizeof(*dev)); 52 if (dev == NULL) { 53 free(priv); 54 return 1; 55 } 56 57 /* setup whatever private state you need */ 58 59 memset(dev, 0, sizeof(*dev)); 60 sprintf(dev->name, "APE"); 61 62 /* if your device has dedicated hardware storage for the 63 * MAC, read it and initialize dev->enetaddr with it 64 */ 65 ape_mac_read(dev->enetaddr); 66 67 dev->iobase = iobase; 68 dev->priv = priv; 69 dev->init = ape_init; 70 dev->halt = ape_halt; 71 dev->send = ape_send; 72 dev->recv = ape_recv; 73 74 eth_register(dev); 75 76#ifdef CONFIG_CMD_MII) 77 miiphy_register(dev->name, ape_mii_read, ape_mii_write); 78#endif 79 80 return 1; 81} 82 83The exact arguments needed to initialize your device are up to you. If you 84need to pass more/less arguments, that's fine. You should also add the 85prototype for your new register function to include/netdev.h. 86 87The return value for this function should be as follows: 88< 0 - failure (hardware failure, not probe failure) 89>=0 - number of interfaces detected 90 91You might notice that many drivers seem to use xxx_initialize() rather than 92xxx_register(). This is the old naming convention and should be avoided as it 93causes confusion with the driver-specific init function. 94 95Other than locating the MAC address in dedicated hardware storage, you should 96not touch the hardware in anyway. That step is handled in the driver-specific 97init function. Remember that we are only registering the device here, we are 98not checking its state or doing random probing. 99 100 ----------- 101 Callbacks 102 ----------- 103 104Now that we've registered with the ethernet layer, we can start getting some 105real work done. You will need four functions: 106 int ape_init(struct eth_device *dev, bd_t *bis); 107 int ape_send(struct eth_device *dev, volatile void *packet, int length); 108 int ape_recv(struct eth_device *dev); 109 int ape_halt(struct eth_device *dev); 110 111The init function checks the hardware (probing/identifying) and gets it ready 112for send/recv operations. You often do things here such as resetting the MAC 113and/or PHY, and waiting for the link to autonegotiate. You should also take 114the opportunity to program the device's MAC address with the dev->enetaddr 115member. This allows the rest of U-Boot to dynamically change the MAC address 116and have the new settings be respected. 117 118The send function does what you think -- transmit the specified packet whose 119size is specified by length (in bytes). You should not return until the 120transmission is complete, and you should leave the state such that the send 121function can be called multiple times in a row. 122 123The recv function should process packets as long as the hardware has them 124readily available before returning. i.e. you should drain the hardware fifo. 125For each packet you receive, you should call the NetReceive() function on it 126along with the packet length. The common code sets up packet buffers for you 127already in the .bss (NetRxPackets), so there should be no need to allocate your 128own. This doesn't mean you must use the NetRxPackets array however; you're 129free to call the NetReceive() function with any buffer you wish. So the pseudo 130code here would look something like: 131int ape_recv(struct eth_device *dev) 132{ 133 int length, i = 0; 134 ... 135 while (packets_are_available()) { 136 ... 137 length = ape_get_packet(&NetRxPackets[i]); 138 ... 139 NetReceive(&NetRxPackets[i], length); 140 ... 141 if (++i >= PKTBUFSRX) 142 i = 0; 143 ... 144 } 145 ... 146 return 0; 147} 148 149The halt function should turn off / disable the hardware and place it back in 150its reset state. It can be called at any time (before any call to the related 151init function), so make sure it can handle this sort of thing. 152 153So the call graph at this stage would look something like: 154some net operation (ping / tftp / whatever...) 155 eth_init() 156 dev->init() 157 eth_send() 158 dev->send() 159 eth_rx() 160 dev->recv() 161 eth_halt() 162 dev->halt() 163 164----------------------------- 165 CONFIG_MII / CONFIG_CMD_MII 166----------------------------- 167 168If your device supports banging arbitrary values on the MII bus (pretty much 169every device does), you should add support for the mii command. Doing so is 170fairly trivial and makes debugging mii issues a lot easier at runtime. 171 172After you have called eth_register() in your driver's register function, add 173a call to miiphy_register() like so: 174#if defined(CONFIG_MII) || defined(CONFIG_CMD_MII) 175 miiphy_register(dev->name, mii_read, mii_write); 176#endif 177 178And then define the mii_read and mii_write functions if you haven't already. 179Their syntax is straightforward: 180 int mii_read(char *devname, uchar addr, uchar reg, ushort *val); 181 int mii_write(char *devname, uchar addr, uchar reg, ushort val); 182 183The read function should read the register 'reg' from the phy at address 'addr' 184and store the result in the pointer 'val'. The implementation for the write 185function should logically follow. 186