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staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
/*
*
* Intel Management Engine Interface (Intel MEI) Linux driver
* Copyright (c) 2003-2012, Intel Corporation.
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* under the terms and conditions of the GNU General Public License,
* version 2, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for
* more details.
*
*/
#define pr_fmt(fmt) KBUILD_MODNAME ": " fmt
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/moduleparam.h>
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/device.h>
#include <linux/fs.h>
#include <linux/errno.h>
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/fcntl.h>
#include <linux/aio.h>
#include <linux/pci.h>
#include <linux/poll.h>
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/ioctl.h>
#include <linux/cdev.h>
#include <linux/sched.h>
#include <linux/uuid.h>
#include <linux/compat.h>
#include <linux/jiffies.h>
#include <linux/interrupt.h>
#include <linux/miscdevice.h>
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
#include "mei_dev.h"
#include <linux/mei.h>
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
#include "interface.h"
/* AMT device is a singleton on the platform */
static struct pci_dev *mei_pdev;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
/* mei_pci_tbl - PCI Device ID Table */
static DEFINE_PCI_DEVICE_TABLE(mei_pci_tbl) = {
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_82946GZ)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_82G35)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_82Q965)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_82G965)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_82GM965)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_82GME965)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9_82Q35)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9_82G33)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9_82Q33)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9_82X38)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9_3200)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9_6)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9_7)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9_8)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9_9)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9_10)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9M_1)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9M_2)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9M_3)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH9M_4)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH10_1)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH10_2)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH10_3)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_ICH10_4)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_IBXPK_1)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_IBXPK_2)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_CPT_1)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_PBG_1)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_PPT_1)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_PPT_2)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_PPT_3)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_LPT)},
{PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, MEI_DEV_ID_LPT_LP)},
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
/* required last entry */
{0, }
};
MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(pci, mei_pci_tbl);
static DEFINE_MUTEX(mei_mutex);
/**
* mei_clear_list - removes all callbacks associated with file
* from mei_cb_list
*
* @dev: device structure.
* @file: file structure
* @mei_cb_list: callbacks list
*
* mei_clear_list is called to clear resources associated with file
* when application calls close function or Ctrl-C was pressed
*
* returns true if callback removed from the list, false otherwise
*/
static bool mei_clear_list(struct mei_device *dev,
struct file *file, struct list_head *mei_cb_list)
{
struct mei_cl_cb *cb_pos = NULL;
struct mei_cl_cb *cb_next = NULL;
struct file *file_temp;
bool removed = false;
/* list all list member */
list_for_each_entry_safe(cb_pos, cb_next, mei_cb_list, list) {
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
file_temp = (struct file *)cb_pos->file_object;
/* check if list member associated with a file */
if (file_temp == file) {
/* remove member from the list */
list_del(&cb_pos->list);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
/* check if cb equal to current iamthif cb */
if (dev->iamthif_current_cb == cb_pos) {
dev->iamthif_current_cb = NULL;
/* send flow control to iamthif client */
mei_send_flow_control(dev, &dev->iamthif_cl);
}
/* free all allocated buffers */
mei_io_cb_free(cb_pos);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
cb_pos = NULL;
removed = true;
}
}
return removed;
}
/**
* mei_clear_lists - removes all callbacks associated with file
*
* @dev: device structure
* @file: file structure
*
* mei_clear_lists is called to clear resources associated with file
* when application calls close function or Ctrl-C was pressed
*
* returns true if callback removed from the list, false otherwise
*/
static bool mei_clear_lists(struct mei_device *dev, struct file *file)
{
bool removed = false;
/* remove callbacks associated with a file */
mei_clear_list(dev, file, &dev->amthi_cmd_list.list);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
if (mei_clear_list(dev, file,
&dev->amthi_read_complete_list.list))
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
removed = true;
mei_clear_list(dev, file, &dev->ctrl_rd_list.list);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
if (mei_clear_list(dev, file, &dev->ctrl_wr_list.list))
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
removed = true;
if (mei_clear_list(dev, file, &dev->write_waiting_list.list))
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
removed = true;
if (mei_clear_list(dev, file, &dev->write_list.list))
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
removed = true;
/* check if iamthif_current_cb not NULL */
if (dev->iamthif_current_cb && !removed) {
/* check file and iamthif current cb association */
if (dev->iamthif_current_cb->file_object == file) {
/* remove cb */
mei_io_cb_free(dev->iamthif_current_cb);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
dev->iamthif_current_cb = NULL;
removed = true;
}
}
return removed;
}
/**
* find_read_list_entry - find read list entry
*
* @dev: device structure
* @file: pointer to file structure
*
* returns cb on success, NULL on error
*/
static struct mei_cl_cb *find_read_list_entry(
struct mei_device *dev,
struct mei_cl *cl)
{
struct mei_cl_cb *pos = NULL;
struct mei_cl_cb *next = NULL;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "remove read_list CB\n");
list_for_each_entry_safe(pos, next, &dev->read_list.list, list) {
struct mei_cl *cl_temp;
cl_temp = (struct mei_cl *)pos->file_private;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
if (mei_cl_cmp_id(cl, cl_temp))
return pos;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
}
return NULL;
}
/**
* mei_open - the open function
*
* @inode: pointer to inode structure
* @file: pointer to file structure
*
* returns 0 on success, <0 on error
*/
static int mei_open(struct inode *inode, struct file *file)
{
struct mei_cl *cl;
struct mei_device *dev;
unsigned long cl_id;
int err;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
err = -ENODEV;
if (!mei_pdev)
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
goto out;
dev = pci_get_drvdata(mei_pdev);
if (!dev)
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
goto out;
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
err = -ENOMEM;
cl = mei_cl_allocate(dev);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
if (!cl)
goto out_unlock;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
err = -ENODEV;
if (dev->dev_state != MEI_DEV_ENABLED) {
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "dev_state != MEI_ENABLED dev_state = %s\n",
mei_dev_state_str(dev->dev_state));
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
goto out_unlock;
}
err = -EMFILE;
if (dev->open_handle_count >= MEI_MAX_OPEN_HANDLE_COUNT) {
dev_err(&dev->pdev->dev, "open_handle_count exceded %d",
MEI_MAX_OPEN_HANDLE_COUNT);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
goto out_unlock;
}
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
cl_id = find_first_zero_bit(dev->host_clients_map, MEI_CLIENTS_MAX);
if (cl_id >= MEI_CLIENTS_MAX) {
dev_err(&dev->pdev->dev, "client_id exceded %d",
MEI_CLIENTS_MAX) ;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
goto out_unlock;
}
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
cl->host_client_id = cl_id;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "client_id = %d\n", cl->host_client_id);
dev->open_handle_count++;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
list_add_tail(&cl->link, &dev->file_list);
set_bit(cl->host_client_id, dev->host_clients_map);
cl->state = MEI_FILE_INITIALIZING;
cl->sm_state = 0;
file->private_data = cl;
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
return nonseekable_open(inode, file);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
out_unlock:
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
kfree(cl);
out:
return err;
}
/**
* mei_release - the release function
*
* @inode: pointer to inode structure
* @file: pointer to file structure
*
* returns 0 on success, <0 on error
*/
static int mei_release(struct inode *inode, struct file *file)
{
struct mei_cl *cl = file->private_data;
struct mei_cl_cb *cb;
struct mei_device *dev;
int rets = 0;
if (WARN_ON(!cl || !cl->dev))
return -ENODEV;
dev = cl->dev;
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
if (cl != &dev->iamthif_cl) {
if (cl->state == MEI_FILE_CONNECTED) {
cl->state = MEI_FILE_DISCONNECTING;
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev,
"disconnecting client host client = %d, "
"ME client = %d\n",
cl->host_client_id,
cl->me_client_id);
rets = mei_disconnect_host_client(dev, cl);
}
mei_cl_flush_queues(cl);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "remove client host client = %d, ME client = %d\n",
cl->host_client_id,
cl->me_client_id);
if (dev->open_handle_count > 0) {
clear_bit(cl->host_client_id, dev->host_clients_map);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
dev->open_handle_count--;
}
mei_remove_client_from_file_list(dev, cl->host_client_id);
/* free read cb */
cb = NULL;
if (cl->read_cb) {
cb = find_read_list_entry(dev, cl);
/* Remove entry from read list */
if (cb)
list_del(&cb->list);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
cb = cl->read_cb;
cl->read_cb = NULL;
}
file->private_data = NULL;
if (cb) {
mei_io_cb_free(cb);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
cb = NULL;
}
kfree(cl);
} else {
if (dev->open_handle_count > 0)
dev->open_handle_count--;
if (dev->iamthif_file_object == file &&
dev->iamthif_state != MEI_IAMTHIF_IDLE) {
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "amthi canceled iamthif state %d\n",
dev->iamthif_state);
dev->iamthif_canceled = true;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
if (dev->iamthif_state == MEI_IAMTHIF_READ_COMPLETE) {
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "run next amthi iamthif cb\n");
mei_run_next_iamthif_cmd(dev);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
}
}
if (mei_clear_lists(dev, file))
dev->iamthif_state = MEI_IAMTHIF_IDLE;
}
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
return rets;
}
/**
* mei_read - the read function.
*
* @file: pointer to file structure
* @ubuf: pointer to user buffer
* @length: buffer length
* @offset: data offset in buffer
*
* returns >=0 data length on success , <0 on error
*/
static ssize_t mei_read(struct file *file, char __user *ubuf,
size_t length, loff_t *offset)
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
{
struct mei_cl *cl = file->private_data;
struct mei_cl_cb *cb_pos = NULL;
struct mei_cl_cb *cb = NULL;
struct mei_device *dev;
int i;
int rets;
int err;
if (WARN_ON(!cl || !cl->dev))
return -ENODEV;
dev = cl->dev;
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
if (dev->dev_state != MEI_DEV_ENABLED) {
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
rets = -ENODEV;
goto out;
}
if ((cl->sm_state & MEI_WD_STATE_INDEPENDENCE_MSG_SENT) == 0) {
/* Do not allow to read watchdog client */
i = mei_me_cl_by_uuid(dev, &mei_wd_guid);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
if (i >= 0) {
struct mei_me_client *me_client = &dev->me_clients[i];
if (cl->me_client_id == me_client->client_id) {
rets = -EBADF;
goto out;
}
}
} else {
cl->sm_state &= ~MEI_WD_STATE_INDEPENDENCE_MSG_SENT;
}
if (cl == &dev->iamthif_cl) {
rets = amthi_read(dev, file, ubuf, length, offset);
goto out;
}
if (cl->read_cb && cl->read_cb->buf_idx > *offset) {
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
cb = cl->read_cb;
goto copy_buffer;
} else if (cl->read_cb && cl->read_cb->buf_idx > 0 &&
cl->read_cb->buf_idx <= *offset) {
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
cb = cl->read_cb;
rets = 0;
goto free;
} else if ((!cl->read_cb || !cl->read_cb->buf_idx) && *offset > 0) {
/*Offset needs to be cleaned for contiguous reads*/
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
*offset = 0;
rets = 0;
goto out;
}
err = mei_start_read(dev, cl);
if (err && err != -EBUSY) {
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev,
"mei start read failure with status = %d\n", err);
rets = err;
goto out;
}
if (MEI_READ_COMPLETE != cl->reading_state &&
!waitqueue_active(&cl->rx_wait)) {
if (file->f_flags & O_NONBLOCK) {
rets = -EAGAIN;
goto out;
}
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
if (wait_event_interruptible(cl->rx_wait,
(MEI_READ_COMPLETE == cl->reading_state ||
MEI_FILE_INITIALIZING == cl->state ||
MEI_FILE_DISCONNECTED == cl->state ||
MEI_FILE_DISCONNECTING == cl->state))) {
if (signal_pending(current))
return -EINTR;
return -ERESTARTSYS;
}
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
if (MEI_FILE_INITIALIZING == cl->state ||
MEI_FILE_DISCONNECTED == cl->state ||
MEI_FILE_DISCONNECTING == cl->state) {
rets = -EBUSY;
goto out;
}
}
cb = cl->read_cb;
if (!cb) {
rets = -ENODEV;
goto out;
}
if (cl->reading_state != MEI_READ_COMPLETE) {
rets = 0;
goto out;
}
/* now copy the data to user space */
copy_buffer:
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "cb->response_buffer size - %d\n",
cb->response_buffer.size);
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "cb->buf_idx - %lu\n", cb->buf_idx);
if (length == 0 || ubuf == NULL || *offset > cb->buf_idx) {
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
rets = -EMSGSIZE;
goto free;
}
/* length is being truncated to PAGE_SIZE,
* however buf_idx may point beyond that */
length = min_t(size_t, length, cb->buf_idx - *offset);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
if (copy_to_user(ubuf, cb->response_buffer.data + *offset, length)) {
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
rets = -EFAULT;
goto free;
}
rets = length;
*offset += length;
if ((unsigned long)*offset < cb->buf_idx)
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
goto out;
free:
cb_pos = find_read_list_entry(dev, cl);
/* Remove entry from read list */
if (cb_pos)
list_del(&cb_pos->list);
mei_io_cb_free(cb);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
cl->reading_state = MEI_IDLE;
cl->read_cb = NULL;
cl->read_pending = 0;
out:
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "end mei read rets= %d\n", rets);
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
return rets;
}
/**
* mei_write - the write function.
*
* @file: pointer to file structure
* @ubuf: pointer to user buffer
* @length: buffer length
* @offset: data offset in buffer
*
* returns >=0 data length on success , <0 on error
*/
static ssize_t mei_write(struct file *file, const char __user *ubuf,
size_t length, loff_t *offset)
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
{
struct mei_cl *cl = file->private_data;
struct mei_cl_cb *write_cb = NULL;
struct mei_msg_hdr mei_hdr;
struct mei_device *dev;
unsigned long timeout = 0;
int rets;
int i;
if (WARN_ON(!cl || !cl->dev))
return -ENODEV;
dev = cl->dev;
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
if (dev->dev_state != MEI_DEV_ENABLED) {
rets = -ENODEV;
goto unlock_dev;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
}
i = mei_me_cl_by_id(dev, cl->me_client_id);
if (i < 0) {
rets = -ENODEV;
goto unlock_dev;
}
if (length > dev->me_clients[i].props.max_msg_length || length <= 0) {
rets = -EMSGSIZE;
goto unlock_dev;
}
if (cl->state != MEI_FILE_CONNECTED) {
rets = -ENODEV;
dev_err(&dev->pdev->dev, "host client = %d, is not connected to ME client = %d",
cl->host_client_id, cl->me_client_id);
goto unlock_dev;
}
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
if (cl == &dev->iamthif_cl) {
write_cb = find_amthi_read_list_entry(dev, file);
if (write_cb) {
timeout = write_cb->read_time +
msecs_to_jiffies(IAMTHIF_READ_TIMER);
if (time_after(jiffies, timeout) ||
cl->reading_state == MEI_READ_COMPLETE) {
*offset = 0;
list_del(&write_cb->list);
mei_io_cb_free(write_cb);
write_cb = NULL;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
}
}
}
/* free entry used in read */
if (cl->reading_state == MEI_READ_COMPLETE) {
*offset = 0;
write_cb = find_read_list_entry(dev, cl);
if (write_cb) {
list_del(&write_cb->list);
mei_io_cb_free(write_cb);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
write_cb = NULL;
cl->reading_state = MEI_IDLE;
cl->read_cb = NULL;
cl->read_pending = 0;
}
} else if (cl->reading_state == MEI_IDLE && !cl->read_pending)
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
*offset = 0;
write_cb = mei_io_cb_init(cl, file);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
if (!write_cb) {
dev_err(&dev->pdev->dev, "write cb allocation failed\n");
rets = -ENOMEM;
goto unlock_dev;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
}
rets = mei_io_cb_alloc_req_buf(write_cb, length);
if (rets)
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
goto unlock_dev;
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "cb request size = %zd\n", length);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
rets = copy_from_user(write_cb->request_buffer.data, ubuf, length);
if (rets)
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
goto unlock_dev;
cl->sm_state = 0;
if (length == 4 &&
((memcmp(mei_wd_state_independence_msg[0],
write_cb->request_buffer.data, 4) == 0) ||
(memcmp(mei_wd_state_independence_msg[1],
write_cb->request_buffer.data, 4) == 0) ||
(memcmp(mei_wd_state_independence_msg[2],
write_cb->request_buffer.data, 4) == 0)))
cl->sm_state |= MEI_WD_STATE_INDEPENDENCE_MSG_SENT;
if (cl == &dev->iamthif_cl) {
rets = mei_io_cb_alloc_resp_buf(write_cb, dev->iamthif_mtu);
if (rets)
goto unlock_dev;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
write_cb->major_file_operations = MEI_IOCTL;
if (!list_empty(&dev->amthi_cmd_list.list) ||
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
dev->iamthif_state != MEI_IAMTHIF_IDLE) {
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "amthi_state = %d\n",
(int) dev->iamthif_state);
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "add amthi cb to amthi cmd waiting list\n");
list_add_tail(&write_cb->list, &dev->amthi_cmd_list.list);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
} else {
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "call amthi write\n");
rets = amthi_write(dev, write_cb);
if (rets) {
dev_err(&dev->pdev->dev, "amthi write failed with status = %d\n",
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
rets);
goto unlock_dev;
}
}
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
return length;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
}
write_cb->major_file_operations = MEI_WRITE;
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "host client = %d, ME client = %d\n",
cl->host_client_id, cl->me_client_id);
rets = mei_flow_ctrl_creds(dev, cl);
if (rets < 0)
goto unlock_dev;
if (rets && dev->mei_host_buffer_is_empty) {
rets = 0;
dev->mei_host_buffer_is_empty = false;
if (length > mei_hbuf_max_data(dev)) {
mei_hdr.length = mei_hbuf_max_data(dev);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
mei_hdr.msg_complete = 0;
} else {
mei_hdr.length = length;
mei_hdr.msg_complete = 1;
}
mei_hdr.host_addr = cl->host_client_id;
mei_hdr.me_addr = cl->me_client_id;
mei_hdr.reserved = 0;
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "call mei_write_message header=%08x.\n",
*((u32 *) &mei_hdr));
if (mei_write_message(dev, &mei_hdr,
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
(unsigned char *) (write_cb->request_buffer.data),
mei_hdr.length)) {
rets = -ENODEV;
goto unlock_dev;
}
cl->writing_state = MEI_WRITING;
write_cb->buf_idx = mei_hdr.length;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
if (mei_hdr.msg_complete) {
if (mei_flow_ctrl_reduce(dev, cl)) {
rets = -ENODEV;
goto unlock_dev;
}
list_add_tail(&write_cb->list, &dev->write_waiting_list.list);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
} else {
list_add_tail(&write_cb->list, &dev->write_list.list);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
}
} else {
write_cb->buf_idx = 0;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
cl->writing_state = MEI_WRITING;
list_add_tail(&write_cb->list, &dev->write_list.list);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
}
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
return length;
unlock_dev:
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
mei_io_cb_free(write_cb);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
return rets;
}
/**
* mei_ioctl - the IOCTL function
*
* @file: pointer to file structure
* @cmd: ioctl command
* @data: pointer to mei message structure
*
* returns 0 on success , <0 on error
*/
static long mei_ioctl(struct file *file, unsigned int cmd, unsigned long data)
{
struct mei_device *dev;
struct mei_cl *cl = file->private_data;
struct mei_connect_client_data *connect_data = NULL;
int rets;
if (cmd != IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT)
return -EINVAL;
if (WARN_ON(!cl || !cl->dev))
return -ENODEV;
dev = cl->dev;
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "IOCTL cmd = 0x%x", cmd);
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
if (dev->dev_state != MEI_DEV_ENABLED) {
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
rets = -ENODEV;
goto out;
}
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, ": IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT.\n");
connect_data = kzalloc(sizeof(struct mei_connect_client_data),
GFP_KERNEL);
if (!connect_data) {
rets = -ENOMEM;
goto out;
}
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "copy connect data from user\n");
if (copy_from_user(connect_data, (char __user *)data,
sizeof(struct mei_connect_client_data))) {
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "failed to copy data from userland\n");
rets = -EFAULT;
goto out;
}
rets = mei_ioctl_connect_client(file, connect_data);
/* if all is ok, copying the data back to user. */
if (rets)
goto out;
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "copy connect data to user\n");
if (copy_to_user((char __user *)data, connect_data,
sizeof(struct mei_connect_client_data))) {
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "failed to copy data to userland\n");
rets = -EFAULT;
goto out;
}
out:
kfree(connect_data);
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
return rets;
}
/**
* mei_compat_ioctl - the compat IOCTL function
*
* @file: pointer to file structure
* @cmd: ioctl command
* @data: pointer to mei message structure
*
* returns 0 on success , <0 on error
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_COMPAT
static long mei_compat_ioctl(struct file *file,
unsigned int cmd, unsigned long data)
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
{
return mei_ioctl(file, cmd, (unsigned long)compat_ptr(data));
}
#endif
/**
* mei_poll - the poll function
*
* @file: pointer to file structure
* @wait: pointer to poll_table structure
*
* returns poll mask
*/
static unsigned int mei_poll(struct file *file, poll_table *wait)
{
struct mei_cl *cl = file->private_data;
struct mei_device *dev;
unsigned int mask = 0;
if (WARN_ON(!cl || !cl->dev))
return mask;
dev = cl->dev;
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
if (dev->dev_state != MEI_DEV_ENABLED)
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
goto out;
if (cl == &dev->iamthif_cl) {
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
poll_wait(file, &dev->iamthif_cl.wait, wait);
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
if (dev->iamthif_state == MEI_IAMTHIF_READ_COMPLETE &&
dev->iamthif_file_object == file) {
mask |= (POLLIN | POLLRDNORM);
dev_dbg(&dev->pdev->dev, "run next amthi cb\n");
mei_run_next_iamthif_cmd(dev);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
}
goto out;
}
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
poll_wait(file, &cl->tx_wait, wait);
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
if (MEI_WRITE_COMPLETE == cl->writing_state)
mask |= (POLLIN | POLLRDNORM);
out:
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
return mask;
}
/*
* file operations structure will be used for mei char device.
*/
static const struct file_operations mei_fops = {
.owner = THIS_MODULE,
.read = mei_read,
.unlocked_ioctl = mei_ioctl,
#ifdef CONFIG_COMPAT
.compat_ioctl = mei_compat_ioctl,
#endif
.open = mei_open,
.release = mei_release,
.write = mei_write,
.poll = mei_poll,
.llseek = no_llseek
};
/*
* Misc Device Struct
*/
static struct miscdevice mei_misc_device = {
.name = "mei",
.fops = &mei_fops,
.minor = MISC_DYNAMIC_MINOR,
};
/**
* mei_quirk_probe - probe for devices that doesn't valid ME interface
* @pdev: PCI device structure
* @ent: entry into pci_device_table
*
* returns true if ME Interface is valid, false otherwise
*/
static bool __devinit mei_quirk_probe(struct pci_dev *pdev,
const struct pci_device_id *ent)
{
u32 reg;
if (ent->device == MEI_DEV_ID_PBG_1) {
pci_read_config_dword(pdev, 0x48, &reg);
/* make sure that bit 9 is up and bit 10 is down */
if ((reg & 0x600) == 0x200) {
dev_info(&pdev->dev, "Device doesn't have valid ME Interface\n");
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
/**
* mei_probe - Device Initialization Routine
*
* @pdev: PCI device structure
* @ent: entry in kcs_pci_tbl
*
* returns 0 on success, <0 on failure.
*/
static int __devinit mei_probe(struct pci_dev *pdev,
const struct pci_device_id *ent)
{
struct mei_device *dev;
int err;
mutex_lock(&mei_mutex);
if (!mei_quirk_probe(pdev, ent)) {
err = -ENODEV;
goto end;
}
if (mei_pdev) {
err = -EEXIST;
goto end;
}
/* enable pci dev */
err = pci_enable_device(pdev);
if (err) {
dev_err(&pdev->dev, "failed to enable pci device.\n");
goto end;
}
/* set PCI host mastering */
pci_set_master(pdev);
/* pci request regions for mei driver */
err = pci_request_regions(pdev, KBUILD_MODNAME);
if (err) {
dev_err(&pdev->dev, "failed to get pci regions.\n");
goto disable_device;
}
/* allocates and initializes the mei dev structure */
dev = mei_device_init(pdev);
if (!dev) {
err = -ENOMEM;
goto release_regions;
}
/* mapping IO device memory */
dev->mem_addr = pci_iomap(pdev, 0, 0);
if (!dev->mem_addr) {
dev_err(&pdev->dev, "mapping I/O device memory failure.\n");
err = -ENOMEM;
goto free_device;
}
pci_enable_msi(pdev);
/* request and enable interrupt */
if (pci_dev_msi_enabled(pdev))
err = request_threaded_irq(pdev->irq,
NULL,
mei_interrupt_thread_handler,
IRQF_ONESHOT, KBUILD_MODNAME, dev);
else
err = request_threaded_irq(pdev->irq,
mei_interrupt_quick_handler,
mei_interrupt_thread_handler,
IRQF_SHARED, KBUILD_MODNAME, dev);
if (err) {
dev_err(&pdev->dev, "request_threaded_irq failure. irq = %d\n",
pdev->irq);
goto disable_msi;
}
INIT_DELAYED_WORK(&dev->timer_work, mei_timer);
if (mei_hw_init(dev)) {
dev_err(&pdev->dev, "init hw failure.\n");
err = -ENODEV;
goto release_irq;
}
err = misc_register(&mei_misc_device);
if (err)
goto release_irq;
mei_pdev = pdev;
pci_set_drvdata(pdev, dev);
schedule_delayed_work(&dev->timer_work, HZ);
mutex_unlock(&mei_mutex);
pr_debug("initialization successful.\n");
return 0;
release_irq:
/* disable interrupts */
dev->host_hw_state = mei_hcsr_read(dev);
mei_disable_interrupts(dev);
flush_scheduled_work();
free_irq(pdev->irq, dev);
disable_msi:
pci_disable_msi(pdev);
pci_iounmap(pdev, dev->mem_addr);
free_device:
kfree(dev);
release_regions:
pci_release_regions(pdev);
disable_device:
pci_disable_device(pdev);
end:
mutex_unlock(&mei_mutex);
dev_err(&pdev->dev, "initialization failed.\n");
return err;
}
/**
* mei_remove - Device Removal Routine
*
* @pdev: PCI device structure
*
* mei_remove is called by the PCI subsystem to alert the driver
* that it should release a PCI device.
*/
static void __devexit mei_remove(struct pci_dev *pdev)
{
struct mei_device *dev;
if (mei_pdev != pdev)
return;
dev = pci_get_drvdata(pdev);
if (!dev)
return;
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
cancel_delayed_work(&dev->timer_work);
mei_wd_stop(dev);
mei_pdev = NULL;
if (dev->iamthif_cl.state == MEI_FILE_CONNECTED) {
dev->iamthif_cl.state = MEI_FILE_DISCONNECTING;
mei_disconnect_host_client(dev, &dev->iamthif_cl);
}
if (dev->wd_cl.state == MEI_FILE_CONNECTED) {
dev->wd_cl.state = MEI_FILE_DISCONNECTING;
mei_disconnect_host_client(dev, &dev->wd_cl);
}
/* Unregistering watchdog device */
mei_watchdog_unregister(dev);
/* remove entry if already in list */
dev_dbg(&pdev->dev, "list del iamthif and wd file list.\n");
mei_remove_client_from_file_list(dev, dev->wd_cl.host_client_id);
mei_remove_client_from_file_list(dev, dev->iamthif_cl.host_client_id);
dev->iamthif_current_cb = NULL;
dev->me_clients_num = 0;
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
flush_scheduled_work();
/* disable interrupts */
mei_disable_interrupts(dev);
free_irq(pdev->irq, dev);
pci_disable_msi(pdev);
pci_set_drvdata(pdev, NULL);
if (dev->mem_addr)
pci_iounmap(pdev, dev->mem_addr);
kfree(dev);
pci_release_regions(pdev);
pci_disable_device(pdev);
misc_deregister(&mei_misc_device);
}
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
#ifdef CONFIG_PM
static int mei_pci_suspend(struct device *device)
{
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(device);
struct mei_device *dev = pci_get_drvdata(pdev);
int err;
if (!dev)
return -ENODEV;
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
cancel_delayed_work(&dev->timer_work);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
/* Stop watchdog if exists */
err = mei_wd_stop(dev);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
/* Set new mei state */
if (dev->dev_state == MEI_DEV_ENABLED ||
dev->dev_state == MEI_DEV_RECOVERING_FROM_RESET) {
dev->dev_state = MEI_DEV_POWER_DOWN;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
mei_reset(dev, 0);
}
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
free_irq(pdev->irq, dev);
pci_disable_msi(pdev);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
return err;
}
static int mei_pci_resume(struct device *device)
{
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(device);
struct mei_device *dev;
int err;
dev = pci_get_drvdata(pdev);
if (!dev)
return -ENODEV;
pci_enable_msi(pdev);
/* request and enable interrupt */
if (pci_dev_msi_enabled(pdev))
err = request_threaded_irq(pdev->irq,
NULL,
mei_interrupt_thread_handler,
IRQF_ONESHOT, KBUILD_MODNAME, dev);
else
err = request_threaded_irq(pdev->irq,
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
mei_interrupt_quick_handler,
mei_interrupt_thread_handler,
IRQF_SHARED, KBUILD_MODNAME, dev);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
if (err) {
dev_err(&pdev->dev, "request_threaded_irq failed: irq = %d.\n",
pdev->irq);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
return err;
}
mutex_lock(&dev->device_lock);
dev->dev_state = MEI_DEV_POWER_UP;
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
mei_reset(dev, 1);
mutex_unlock(&dev->device_lock);
/* Start timer if stopped in suspend */
schedule_delayed_work(&dev->timer_work, HZ);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
return err;
}
static SIMPLE_DEV_PM_OPS(mei_pm_ops, mei_pci_suspend, mei_pci_resume);
#define MEI_PM_OPS (&mei_pm_ops)
#else
#define MEI_PM_OPS NULL
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
#endif /* CONFIG_PM */
/*
* PCI driver structure
*/
static struct pci_driver mei_driver = {
.name = KBUILD_MODNAME,
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
.id_table = mei_pci_tbl,
.probe = mei_probe,
.remove = __devexit_p(mei_remove),
.shutdown = __devexit_p(mei_remove),
.driver.pm = MEI_PM_OPS,
};
module_pci_driver(mei_driver);
staging/mei: PCI device and char driver support. contains module entries and PCI driver and char device definitions (using file_operations, pci_driver struts). The HW interface is exposed on PCI interface. PCI: The MEI HW resources are memory map 32 bit registers (Host and ME Status Registers and Data Registers) and interrupt (shared, with Intel GFX on some chipsets and USB2 controller on others). The device is part of the chipsets and cannot be hotplugged. The MEI device present is determined by BIOS configuration. Probe: The driver starts the init MEI flow, that is explained in the patch "MEI driver init flow" [06/10], then schedules a timer that handles timeouts and watchdog heartbeats. Remove: The driver closes all connections and stops the watchdog. The driver expose char device that supports: open, release, write, read, ioctl, poll. Open: Upon open the driver allocates HOST data structure on behalf of application which will resides in the file's private data and assign a host ID number which will identify messages between driver client instance and MEI client. The driver also checks readiness of the device. The number of simultaneously opened instances is limited to 253. (255 - (amthi + watchdog)) Release: In release the driver sends a Disconnect Command to ME feature and clean all the data structs. IOCTL: MEI adds new IOCTL: (IOCTL_MEI_CONNECT_CLIENT) The IOCTL links the current file descriptor to ME feature. This is done by sending MEI Bus command: 'hbm_client_connect_request' to the ME and waiting for an answer :'hbm_client_connect_response'. Upon answer reception the driver updates its and HOST data structures in file structure to indicate that the file descriptor is associated to ME feature. Each ME feature is represented by UUID which is given as an input parameter to the IOCTL, upon success connect command the IOCTL will return the ME feature properties. ME can reject CONNECT commands due to several reasons, most common are: Invalid UUID ME or feature does not exists in ME. No More Connection allowed to this is feature, usually only one connection is allowed. Write: Upon write, the driver splits the user data into several MEI messages up to 512 bytes each and sends it to the HW. If the user wants to write data to AMTHI ME feature then the drivers routes the messages through AMTHI queues. Read: In read the driver checks is a connection exists to current file descriptor and then wait until a data is available. Message might be received (by interrupt from ME) in multiple chunks. Only complete message is released to the application. Poll: Nothing special here. Waiting for see if we have data available for reading. Signed-off-by: Tomas Winkler <tomas.winkler@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Itzhak Tzeel-Krupp <itzhak.tzeel-krupp@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Oren Weil <oren.jer.weil@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-05-15 04:43:41 -06:00
MODULE_AUTHOR("Intel Corporation");
MODULE_DESCRIPTION("Intel(R) Management Engine Interface");
MODULE_LICENSE("GPL v2");