1How to port a SPI driver to driver model
2========================================
3
4Here is a rough step-by-step guide. It is based around converting the
5exynos SPI driver to driver model (DM) and the example code is based
6around U-Boot v2014.10-rc2 (commit be9f643). This has been updated for
7v2015.04.
8
9It is quite long since it includes actual code examples.
10
11Before driver model, SPI drivers have their own private structure which
12contains 'struct spi_slave'. With driver model, 'struct spi_slave' still
13exists, but now it is 'per-child data' for the SPI bus. Each child of the
14SPI bus is a SPI slave. The information that was stored in the
15driver-specific slave structure can now be port in private data for the
16SPI bus.
17
18For example, struct tegra_spi_slave looks like this:
19
20struct tegra_spi_slave {
21	struct spi_slave slave;
22	struct tegra_spi_ctrl *ctrl;
23};
24
25In this case 'slave' will be in per-child data, and 'ctrl' will be in the
26SPI's buses private data.
27
28
290. How long does this take?
30
31You should be able to complete this within 2 hours, including testing but
32excluding preparing the patches. The API is basically the same as before
33with only minor changes:
34
35- methods to set speed and mode are separated out
36- cs_info is used to get information on a chip select
37
38
391. Enable driver mode for SPI and SPI flash
40
41Add these to your board config:
42
43CONFIG_DM_SPI
44CONFIG_DM_SPI_FLASH
45
46
472. Add the skeleton
48
49Put this code at the bottom of your existing driver file:
50
51struct spi_slave *spi_setup_slave(unsigned int busnum, unsigned int cs,
52			unsigned int max_hz, unsigned int mode)
53{
54	return NULL;
55}
56
57struct spi_slave *spi_setup_slave_fdt(const void *blob, int slave_node,
58				      int spi_node)
59{
60	return NULL;
61}
62
63static int exynos_spi_ofdata_to_platdata(struct udevice *dev)
64{
65	return -ENODEV;
66}
67
68static int exynos_spi_probe(struct udevice *dev)
69{
70	return -ENODEV;
71}
72
73static int exynos_spi_remove(struct udevice *dev)
74{
75	return -ENODEV;
76}
77
78static int exynos_spi_claim_bus(struct udevice *dev)
79{
80
81	return -ENODEV;
82}
83
84static int exynos_spi_release_bus(struct udevice *dev)
85{
86
87	return -ENODEV;
88}
89
90static int exynos_spi_xfer(struct udevice *dev, unsigned int bitlen,
91			    const void *dout, void *din, unsigned long flags)
92{
93
94	return -ENODEV;
95}
96
97static int exynos_spi_set_speed(struct udevice *dev, uint speed)
98{
99	return -ENODEV;
100}
101
102static int exynos_spi_set_mode(struct udevice *dev, uint mode)
103{
104	return -ENODEV;
105}
106
107static int exynos_cs_info(struct udevice *bus, uint cs,
108			  struct spi_cs_info *info)
109{
110	return -ENODEV;
111}
112
113static const struct dm_spi_ops exynos_spi_ops = {
114	.claim_bus	= exynos_spi_claim_bus,
115	.release_bus	= exynos_spi_release_bus,
116	.xfer		= exynos_spi_xfer,
117	.set_speed	= exynos_spi_set_speed,
118	.set_mode	= exynos_spi_set_mode,
119	.cs_info	= exynos_cs_info,
120};
121
122static const struct udevice_id exynos_spi_ids[] = {
123	{ .compatible = "samsung,exynos-spi" },
124	{ }
125};
126
127U_BOOT_DRIVER(exynos_spi) = {
128	.name	= "exynos_spi",
129	.id	= UCLASS_SPI,
130	.of_match = exynos_spi_ids,
131	.ops	= &exynos_spi_ops,
132	.ofdata_to_platdata = exynos_spi_ofdata_to_platdata,
133	.probe	= exynos_spi_probe,
134	.remove	= exynos_spi_remove,
135};
136
137
1383. Replace 'exynos' in the above code with your driver name
139
140
1414. #ifdef out all of the code in your driver except for the above
142
143This will allow you to get it building, which means you can work
144incrementally. Since all the methods return an error initially, there is
145less chance that you will accidentally leave something in.
146
147Also, even though your conversion is basically a rewrite, it might help
148reviewers if you leave functions in the same place in the file,
149particularly for large drivers.
150
151
1525. Add some includes
153
154Add these includes to your driver:
155
156#include <dm.h>
157#include <errno.h>
158
159
1606. Build
161
162At this point you should be able to build U-Boot for your board with the
163empty SPI driver. You still have empty methods in your driver, but we will
164write these one by one.
165
1667. Set up your platform data structure
167
168This will hold the information your driver to operate, like its hardware
169address or maximum frequency.
170
171You may already have a struct like this, or you may need to create one
172from some of the #defines or global variables in the driver.
173
174Note that this information is not the run-time information. It should not
175include state that changes. It should be fixed throughout the live of
176U-Boot. Run-time information comes later.
177
178Here is what was in the exynos spi driver:
179
180struct spi_bus {
181	enum periph_id periph_id;
182	s32 frequency;		/* Default clock frequency, -1 for none */
183	struct exynos_spi *regs;
184	int inited;		/* 1 if this bus is ready for use */
185	int node;
186	uint deactivate_delay_us;	/* Delay to wait after deactivate */
187};
188
189Of these, inited is handled by DM and node is the device tree node, which
190DM tells you. The name is not quite right. So in this case we would use:
191
192struct exynos_spi_platdata {
193	enum periph_id periph_id;
194	s32 frequency;		/* Default clock frequency, -1 for none */
195	struct exynos_spi *regs;
196	uint deactivate_delay_us;	/* Delay to wait after deactivate */
197};
198
199
2008a. Write ofdata_to_platdata()   [for device tree only]
201
202This method will convert information in the device tree node into a C
203structure in your driver (called platform data). If you are not using
204device tree, go to 8b.
205
206DM will automatically allocate the struct for us when we are using device
207tree, but we need to tell it the size:
208
209U_BOOT_DRIVER(spi_exynos) = {
210...
211	.platdata_auto_alloc_size = sizeof(struct exynos_spi_platdata),
212
213
214Here is a sample function. It gets a pointer to the platform data and
215fills in the fields from device tree.
216
217static int exynos_spi_ofdata_to_platdata(struct udevice *bus)
218{
219	struct exynos_spi_platdata *plat = bus->platdata;
220	const void *blob = gd->fdt_blob;
221	int node = dev_of_offset(bus);
222
223	plat->regs = (struct exynos_spi *)fdtdec_get_addr(blob, node, "reg");
224	plat->periph_id = pinmux_decode_periph_id(blob, node);
225
226	if (plat->periph_id == PERIPH_ID_NONE) {
227		debug("%s: Invalid peripheral ID %d\n", __func__,
228			plat->periph_id);
229		return -FDT_ERR_NOTFOUND;
230	}
231
232	/* Use 500KHz as a suitable default */
233	plat->frequency = fdtdec_get_int(blob, node, "spi-max-frequency",
234					500000);
235	plat->deactivate_delay_us = fdtdec_get_int(blob, node,
236					"spi-deactivate-delay", 0);
237	debug("%s: regs=%p, periph_id=%d, max-frequency=%d, deactivate_delay=%d\n",
238	      __func__, plat->regs, plat->periph_id, plat->frequency,
239              plat->deactivate_delay_us);
240
241	return 0;
242}
243
244
2458b. Add the platform data  [non-device-tree only]
246
247Specify this data in a U_BOOT_DEVICE() declaration in your board file:
248
249struct exynos_spi_platdata platdata_spi0 = {
250	.periph_id = ...
251	.frequency = ...
252	.regs = ...
253	.deactivate_delay_us = ...
254};
255
256U_BOOT_DEVICE(board_spi0) = {
257	.name = "exynos_spi",
258	.platdata = &platdata_spi0,
259};
260
261You will unfortunately need to put the struct definition into a header file
262in this case so that your board file can use it.
263
264
2659. Add the device private data
266
267Most devices have some private data which they use to keep track of things
268while active. This is the run-time information and needs to be stored in
269a structure. There is probably a structure in the driver that includes a
270'struct spi_slave', so you can use that.
271
272struct exynos_spi_slave {
273	struct spi_slave slave;
274	struct exynos_spi *regs;
275	unsigned int freq;		/* Default frequency */
276	unsigned int mode;
277	enum periph_id periph_id;	/* Peripheral ID for this device */
278	unsigned int fifo_size;
279	int skip_preamble;
280	struct spi_bus *bus;		/* Pointer to our SPI bus info */
281	ulong last_transaction_us;	/* Time of last transaction end */
282};
283
284
285We should rename this to make its purpose more obvious, and get rid of
286the slave structure, so we have:
287
288struct exynos_spi_priv {
289	struct exynos_spi *regs;
290	unsigned int freq;		/* Default frequency */
291	unsigned int mode;
292	enum periph_id periph_id;	/* Peripheral ID for this device */
293	unsigned int fifo_size;
294	int skip_preamble;
295	ulong last_transaction_us;	/* Time of last transaction end */
296};
297
298
299DM can auto-allocate this also:
300
301U_BOOT_DRIVER(spi_exynos) = {
302...
303	.priv_auto_alloc_size = sizeof(struct exynos_spi_priv),
304
305
306Note that this is created before the probe method is called, and destroyed
307after the remove method is called. It will be zeroed when the probe
308method is called.
309
310
31110. Add the probe() and remove() methods
312
313Note: It's a good idea to build repeatedly as you are working, to avoid a
314huge amount of work getting things compiling at the end.
315
316The probe method is supposed to set up the hardware. U-Boot used to use
317spi_setup_slave() to do this. So take a look at this function and see
318what you can copy out to set things up.
319
320
321static int exynos_spi_probe(struct udevice *bus)
322{
323	struct exynos_spi_platdata *plat = dev_get_platdata(bus);
324	struct exynos_spi_priv *priv = dev_get_priv(bus);
325
326	priv->regs = plat->regs;
327	if (plat->periph_id == PERIPH_ID_SPI1 ||
328	    plat->periph_id == PERIPH_ID_SPI2)
329		priv->fifo_size = 64;
330	else
331		priv->fifo_size = 256;
332
333	priv->skip_preamble = 0;
334	priv->last_transaction_us = timer_get_us();
335	priv->freq = plat->frequency;
336	priv->periph_id = plat->periph_id;
337
338	return 0;
339}
340
341This implementation doesn't actually touch the hardware, which is somewhat
342unusual for a driver. In this case we will do that when the device is
343claimed by something that wants to use the SPI bus.
344
345For remove we could shut down the clocks, but in this case there is
346nothing to do. DM frees any memory that it allocated, so we can just
347remove exynos_spi_remove() and its reference in U_BOOT_DRIVER.
348
349
35011. Implement set_speed()
351
352This should set up clocks so that the SPI bus is running at the right
353speed. With the old API spi_claim_bus() would normally do this and several
354of the following functions, so let's look at that function:
355
356int spi_claim_bus(struct spi_slave *slave)
357{
358	struct exynos_spi_slave *spi_slave = to_exynos_spi(slave);
359	struct exynos_spi *regs = spi_slave->regs;
360	u32 reg = 0;
361	int ret;
362
363	ret = set_spi_clk(spi_slave->periph_id,
364					spi_slave->freq);
365	if (ret < 0) {
366		debug("%s: Failed to setup spi clock\n", __func__);
367		return ret;
368	}
369
370	exynos_pinmux_config(spi_slave->periph_id, PINMUX_FLAG_NONE);
371
372	spi_flush_fifo(slave);
373
374	reg = readl(&regs->ch_cfg);
375	reg &= ~(SPI_CH_CPHA_B | SPI_CH_CPOL_L);
376
377	if (spi_slave->mode & SPI_CPHA)
378		reg |= SPI_CH_CPHA_B;
379
380	if (spi_slave->mode & SPI_CPOL)
381		reg |= SPI_CH_CPOL_L;
382
383	writel(reg, &regs->ch_cfg);
384	writel(SPI_FB_DELAY_180, &regs->fb_clk);
385
386	return 0;
387}
388
389
390It sets up the speed, mode, pinmux, feedback delay and clears the FIFOs.
391With DM these will happen in separate methods.
392
393
394Here is an example for the speed part:
395
396static int exynos_spi_set_speed(struct udevice *bus, uint speed)
397{
398	struct exynos_spi_platdata *plat = bus->platdata;
399	struct exynos_spi_priv *priv = dev_get_priv(bus);
400	int ret;
401
402	if (speed > plat->frequency)
403		speed = plat->frequency;
404	ret = set_spi_clk(priv->periph_id, speed);
405	if (ret)
406		return ret;
407	priv->freq = speed;
408	debug("%s: regs=%p, speed=%d\n", __func__, priv->regs, priv->freq);
409
410	return 0;
411}
412
413
41412. Implement set_mode()
415
416This should adjust the SPI mode (polarity, etc.). Again this code probably
417comes from the old spi_claim_bus(). Here is an example:
418
419
420static int exynos_spi_set_mode(struct udevice *bus, uint mode)
421{
422	struct exynos_spi_priv *priv = dev_get_priv(bus);
423	uint32_t reg;
424
425	reg = readl(&priv->regs->ch_cfg);
426	reg &= ~(SPI_CH_CPHA_B | SPI_CH_CPOL_L);
427
428	if (mode & SPI_CPHA)
429		reg |= SPI_CH_CPHA_B;
430
431	if (mode & SPI_CPOL)
432		reg |= SPI_CH_CPOL_L;
433
434	writel(reg, &priv->regs->ch_cfg);
435	priv->mode = mode;
436	debug("%s: regs=%p, mode=%d\n", __func__, priv->regs, priv->mode);
437
438	return 0;
439}
440
441
44213. Implement claim_bus()
443
444This is where a client wants to make use of the bus, so claims it first.
445At this point we need to make sure everything is set up ready for data
446transfer. Note that this function is wholly internal to the driver - at
447present the SPI uclass never calls it.
448
449Here again we look at the old claim function and see some code that is
450needed. It is anything unrelated to speed and mode:
451
452static int exynos_spi_claim_bus(struct udevice *bus)
453{
454	struct exynos_spi_priv *priv = dev_get_priv(bus);
455
456	exynos_pinmux_config(priv->periph_id, PINMUX_FLAG_NONE);
457	spi_flush_fifo(priv->regs);
458
459	writel(SPI_FB_DELAY_180, &priv->regs->fb_clk);
460
461	return 0;
462}
463
464The spi_flush_fifo() function is in the removed part of the code, so we
465need to expose it again (perhaps with an #endif before it and '#if 0'
466after it). It only needs access to priv->regs which is why we have
467passed that in:
468
469/**
470 * Flush spi tx, rx fifos and reset the SPI controller
471 *
472 * @param regs	Pointer to SPI registers
473 */
474static void spi_flush_fifo(struct exynos_spi *regs)
475{
476	clrsetbits_le32(&regs->ch_cfg, SPI_CH_HS_EN, SPI_CH_RST);
477	clrbits_le32(&regs->ch_cfg, SPI_CH_RST);
478	setbits_le32(&regs->ch_cfg, SPI_TX_CH_ON | SPI_RX_CH_ON);
479}
480
481
48214. Implement release_bus()
483
484This releases the bus - in our example the old code in spi_release_bus()
485is a call to spi_flush_fifo, so we add:
486
487static int exynos_spi_release_bus(struct udevice *bus)
488{
489	struct exynos_spi_priv *priv = dev_get_priv(bus);
490
491	spi_flush_fifo(priv->regs);
492
493	return 0;
494}
495
496
49715. Implement xfer()
498
499This is the final method that we need to create, and it is where all the
500work happens. The method parameters are the same as the old spi_xfer() with
501the addition of a 'struct udevice' so conversion is pretty easy. Start
502by copying the contents of spi_xfer() to your new xfer() method and proceed
503from there.
504
505If (flags & SPI_XFER_BEGIN) is non-zero then xfer() normally calls an
506activate function, something like this:
507
508void spi_cs_activate(struct spi_slave *slave)
509{
510	struct exynos_spi_slave *spi_slave = to_exynos_spi(slave);
511
512	/* If it's too soon to do another transaction, wait */
513	if (spi_slave->bus->deactivate_delay_us &&
514	    spi_slave->last_transaction_us) {
515		ulong delay_us;		/* The delay completed so far */
516		delay_us = timer_get_us() - spi_slave->last_transaction_us;
517		if (delay_us < spi_slave->bus->deactivate_delay_us)
518			udelay(spi_slave->bus->deactivate_delay_us - delay_us);
519	}
520
521	clrbits_le32(&spi_slave->regs->cs_reg, SPI_SLAVE_SIG_INACT);
522	debug("Activate CS, bus %d\n", spi_slave->slave.bus);
523	spi_slave->skip_preamble = spi_slave->mode & SPI_PREAMBLE;
524}
525
526The new version looks like this:
527
528static void spi_cs_activate(struct udevice *dev)
529{
530	struct udevice *bus = dev->parent;
531	struct exynos_spi_platdata *pdata = dev_get_platdata(bus);
532	struct exynos_spi_priv *priv = dev_get_priv(bus);
533
534	/* If it's too soon to do another transaction, wait */
535	if (pdata->deactivate_delay_us &&
536	    priv->last_transaction_us) {
537		ulong delay_us;		/* The delay completed so far */
538		delay_us = timer_get_us() - priv->last_transaction_us;
539		if (delay_us < pdata->deactivate_delay_us)
540			udelay(pdata->deactivate_delay_us - delay_us);
541	}
542
543	clrbits_le32(&priv->regs->cs_reg, SPI_SLAVE_SIG_INACT);
544	debug("Activate CS, bus '%s'\n", bus->name);
545	priv->skip_preamble = priv->mode & SPI_PREAMBLE;
546}
547
548All we have really done here is change the pointers and print the device name
549instead of the bus number. Other local static functions can be treated in
550the same way.
551
552
55316. Set up the per-child data and child pre-probe function
554
555To minimise the pain and complexity of the SPI subsystem while the driver
556model change-over is in place, struct spi_slave is used to reference a
557SPI bus slave, even though that slave is actually a struct udevice. In fact
558struct spi_slave is the device's child data. We need to make sure this space
559is available. It is possible to allocate more space that struct spi_slave
560needs, but this is the minimum.
561
562U_BOOT_DRIVER(exynos_spi) = {
563...
564	.per_child_auto_alloc_size	= sizeof(struct spi_slave),
565}
566
567
56817. Optional: Set up cs_info() if you want it
569
570Sometimes it is useful to know whether a SPI chip select is valid, but this
571is not obvious from outside the driver. In this case you can provide a
572method for cs_info() to deal with this. If you don't provide it, then the
573device tree will be used to determine what chip selects are valid.
574
575Return -ENODEV if the supplied chip select is invalid, or 0 if it is valid.
576If you don't provide the cs_info() method, -ENODEV is assumed for all
577chip selects that do not appear in the device tree.
578
579
58018. Test it
581
582Now that you have the code written and it compiles, try testing it using
583the 'sf test' command. You may need to enable CONFIG_CMD_SF_TEST for your
584board.
585
586
58719. Prepare patches and send them to the mailing lists
588
589You can use 'tools/patman/patman' to prepare, check and send patches for
590your work. See the README for details.
591
59220. A little note about SPI uclass features:
593
594The SPI uclass keeps some information about each device 'dev' on the bus:
595
596   struct dm_spi_slave_platdata - this is device_get_parent_platdata(dev)
597		This is where the chip select number is stored, along with
598		the default bus speed and mode. It is automatically read
599		from the device tree in spi_child_post_bind(). It must not
600		be changed at run-time after being set up because platform
601		data is supposed to be immutable at run-time.
602   struct spi_slave - this is device_get_parentdata(dev)
603		Already mentioned above. It holds run-time information about
604		the device.
605
606There are also some SPI uclass methods that get called behind the scenes:
607
608   spi_post_bind() - called when a new bus is bound
609		This scans the device tree for devices on the bus, and binds
610		each one. This in turn causes spi_child_post_bind() to be
611		called for each, which reads the device tree information
612		into the parent (per-child) platform data.
613   spi_child_post_bind() - called when a new child is bound
614		As mentioned above this reads the device tree information
615		into the per-child platform data
616   spi_child_pre_probe() - called before a new child is probed
617		This sets up the mode and speed in struct spi_slave by
618		copying it from the parent's platform data for this child.
619		It also sets the 'dev' pointer, needed to permit passing
620		'struct spi_slave' around the place without needing a
621		separate 'struct udevice' pointer.
622
623The above housekeeping makes it easier to write your SPI driver.
624