remarkable-linux/drivers/rtc/rtc-sysfs.c
David Brownell 8a0bdfd7a0 rtc-cmos alarm acts as oneshot
Start making the rtc-cmos alarm act more like a oneshot alarm by disabling
that alarm after its IRQ fires.  (ACPI hooks are also needed.)

The Linux RTC framework has previously been a bit vague in this area, but
any other behavior is problematic and not very portable.  RTCs with full
YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM[:SS] alarms won't have a problem here.  Only ones with
partial match criteria, with the most visible example being the PC RTC, get
confused.  (Because the criteria will match repeatedly.)

Update comments relating to that oneshot behavior and timezone handling.
(Timezones are another issue that's mostly visible with rtc-cmos.  That's
because PCs often dual-boot MS-Windows, which likes its RTC to match local
wall-clock time instead of UTC.)

Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Cc: Alessandro Zummo <a.zummo@towertech.it>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2008-02-06 10:41:13 -08:00

225 lines
5.5 KiB
C

/*
* RTC subsystem, sysfs interface
*
* Copyright (C) 2005 Tower Technologies
* Author: Alessandro Zummo <a.zummo@towertech.it>
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as
* published by the Free Software Foundation.
*/
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/rtc.h>
#include "rtc-core.h"
/* device attributes */
/*
* NOTE: RTC times displayed in sysfs use the RTC's timezone. That's
* ideally UTC. However, PCs that also boot to MS-Windows normally use
* the local time and change to match daylight savings time. That affects
* attributes including date, time, since_epoch, and wakealarm.
*/
static ssize_t
rtc_sysfs_show_name(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
return sprintf(buf, "%s\n", to_rtc_device(dev)->name);
}
static ssize_t
rtc_sysfs_show_date(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
ssize_t retval;
struct rtc_time tm;
retval = rtc_read_time(to_rtc_device(dev), &tm);
if (retval == 0) {
retval = sprintf(buf, "%04d-%02d-%02d\n",
tm.tm_year + 1900, tm.tm_mon + 1, tm.tm_mday);
}
return retval;
}
static ssize_t
rtc_sysfs_show_time(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
ssize_t retval;
struct rtc_time tm;
retval = rtc_read_time(to_rtc_device(dev), &tm);
if (retval == 0) {
retval = sprintf(buf, "%02d:%02d:%02d\n",
tm.tm_hour, tm.tm_min, tm.tm_sec);
}
return retval;
}
static ssize_t
rtc_sysfs_show_since_epoch(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
ssize_t retval;
struct rtc_time tm;
retval = rtc_read_time(to_rtc_device(dev), &tm);
if (retval == 0) {
unsigned long time;
rtc_tm_to_time(&tm, &time);
retval = sprintf(buf, "%lu\n", time);
}
return retval;
}
static ssize_t
rtc_sysfs_show_max_user_freq(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", to_rtc_device(dev)->max_user_freq);
}
static ssize_t
rtc_sysfs_set_max_user_freq(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr,
const char *buf, size_t n)
{
struct rtc_device *rtc = to_rtc_device(dev);
unsigned long val = simple_strtoul(buf, NULL, 0);
if (val >= 4096 || val == 0)
return -EINVAL;
rtc->max_user_freq = (int)val;
return n;
}
static struct device_attribute rtc_attrs[] = {
__ATTR(name, S_IRUGO, rtc_sysfs_show_name, NULL),
__ATTR(date, S_IRUGO, rtc_sysfs_show_date, NULL),
__ATTR(time, S_IRUGO, rtc_sysfs_show_time, NULL),
__ATTR(since_epoch, S_IRUGO, rtc_sysfs_show_since_epoch, NULL),
__ATTR(max_user_freq, S_IRUGO | S_IWUSR, rtc_sysfs_show_max_user_freq,
rtc_sysfs_set_max_user_freq),
{ },
};
static ssize_t
rtc_sysfs_show_wakealarm(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
ssize_t retval;
unsigned long alarm;
struct rtc_wkalrm alm;
/* Don't show disabled alarms. For uniformity, RTC alarms are
* conceptually one-shot, even though some common RTCs (on PCs)
* don't actually work that way.
*
* NOTE: RTC implementations where the alarm doesn't match an
* exact YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM[:SS] date *must* disable their RTC
* alarms after they trigger, to ensure one-shot semantics.
*/
retval = rtc_read_alarm(to_rtc_device(dev), &alm);
if (retval == 0 && alm.enabled) {
rtc_tm_to_time(&alm.time, &alarm);
retval = sprintf(buf, "%lu\n", alarm);
}
return retval;
}
static ssize_t
rtc_sysfs_set_wakealarm(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr,
const char *buf, size_t n)
{
ssize_t retval;
unsigned long now, alarm;
struct rtc_wkalrm alm;
struct rtc_device *rtc = to_rtc_device(dev);
/* Only request alarms that trigger in the future. Disable them
* by writing another time, e.g. 0 meaning Jan 1 1970 UTC.
*/
retval = rtc_read_time(rtc, &alm.time);
if (retval < 0)
return retval;
rtc_tm_to_time(&alm.time, &now);
alarm = simple_strtoul(buf, NULL, 0);
if (alarm > now) {
/* Avoid accidentally clobbering active alarms; we can't
* entirely prevent that here, without even the minimal
* locking from the /dev/rtcN api.
*/
retval = rtc_read_alarm(rtc, &alm);
if (retval < 0)
return retval;
if (alm.enabled)
return -EBUSY;
alm.enabled = 1;
} else {
alm.enabled = 0;
/* Provide a valid future alarm time. Linux isn't EFI,
* this time won't be ignored when disabling the alarm.
*/
alarm = now + 300;
}
rtc_time_to_tm(alarm, &alm.time);
retval = rtc_set_alarm(rtc, &alm);
return (retval < 0) ? retval : n;
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(wakealarm, S_IRUGO | S_IWUSR,
rtc_sysfs_show_wakealarm, rtc_sysfs_set_wakealarm);
/* The reason to trigger an alarm with no process watching it (via sysfs)
* is its side effect: waking from a system state like suspend-to-RAM or
* suspend-to-disk. So: no attribute unless that side effect is possible.
* (Userspace may disable that mechanism later.)
*/
static inline int rtc_does_wakealarm(struct rtc_device *rtc)
{
if (!device_can_wakeup(rtc->dev.parent))
return 0;
return rtc->ops->set_alarm != NULL;
}
void rtc_sysfs_add_device(struct rtc_device *rtc)
{
int err;
/* not all RTCs support both alarms and wakeup */
if (!rtc_does_wakealarm(rtc))
return;
err = device_create_file(&rtc->dev, &dev_attr_wakealarm);
if (err)
dev_err(rtc->dev.parent,
"failed to create alarm attribute, %d\n", err);
}
void rtc_sysfs_del_device(struct rtc_device *rtc)
{
/* REVISIT did we add it successfully? */
if (rtc_does_wakealarm(rtc))
device_remove_file(&rtc->dev, &dev_attr_wakealarm);
}
void __init rtc_sysfs_init(struct class *rtc_class)
{
rtc_class->dev_attrs = rtc_attrs;
}