cachepc-linux

Fork of AMDESE/linux with modifications for CachePC side-channel attack
git clone https://git.sinitax.com/sinitax/cachepc-linux
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overlay-notes.rst (5365B)


      1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
      2
      3========================
      4Devicetree Overlay Notes
      5========================
      6
      7This document describes the implementation of the in-kernel
      8device tree overlay functionality residing in drivers/of/overlay.c and is a
      9companion document to Documentation/devicetree/dynamic-resolution-notes.rst[1]
     10
     11How overlays work
     12-----------------
     13
     14A Devicetree's overlay purpose is to modify the kernel's live tree, and
     15have the modification affecting the state of the kernel in a way that
     16is reflecting the changes.
     17Since the kernel mainly deals with devices, any new device node that result
     18in an active device should have it created while if the device node is either
     19disabled or removed all together, the affected device should be deregistered.
     20
     21Lets take an example where we have a foo board with the following base tree::
     22
     23    ---- foo.dts ---------------------------------------------------------------
     24	/* FOO platform */
     25	/dts-v1/;
     26	/ {
     27		compatible = "corp,foo";
     28
     29		/* shared resources */
     30		res: res {
     31		};
     32
     33		/* On chip peripherals */
     34		ocp: ocp {
     35			/* peripherals that are always instantiated */
     36			peripheral1 { ... };
     37		};
     38	};
     39    ---- foo.dts ---------------------------------------------------------------
     40
     41The overlay bar.dts,
     42::
     43
     44    ---- bar.dts - overlay target location by label ----------------------------
     45	/dts-v1/;
     46	/plugin/;
     47	&ocp {
     48		/* bar peripheral */
     49		bar {
     50			compatible = "corp,bar";
     51			... /* various properties and child nodes */
     52		};
     53	};
     54    ---- bar.dts ---------------------------------------------------------------
     55
     56when loaded (and resolved as described in [1]) should result in foo+bar.dts::
     57
     58    ---- foo+bar.dts -----------------------------------------------------------
     59	/* FOO platform + bar peripheral */
     60	/ {
     61		compatible = "corp,foo";
     62
     63		/* shared resources */
     64		res: res {
     65		};
     66
     67		/* On chip peripherals */
     68		ocp: ocp {
     69			/* peripherals that are always instantiated */
     70			peripheral1 { ... };
     71
     72			/* bar peripheral */
     73			bar {
     74				compatible = "corp,bar";
     75				... /* various properties and child nodes */
     76			};
     77		};
     78	};
     79    ---- foo+bar.dts -----------------------------------------------------------
     80
     81As a result of the overlay, a new device node (bar) has been created
     82so a bar platform device will be registered and if a matching device driver
     83is loaded the device will be created as expected.
     84
     85If the base DT was not compiled with the -@ option then the "&ocp" label
     86will not be available to resolve the overlay node(s) to the proper location
     87in the base DT. In this case, the target path can be provided. The target
     88location by label syntax is preferred because the overlay can be applied to
     89any base DT containing the label, no matter where the label occurs in the DT.
     90
     91The above bar.dts example modified to use target path syntax is::
     92
     93    ---- bar.dts - overlay target location by explicit path --------------------
     94	/dts-v1/;
     95	/plugin/;
     96	&{/ocp} {
     97		/* bar peripheral */
     98		bar {
     99			compatible = "corp,bar";
    100			... /* various properties and child nodes */
    101		}
    102	};
    103    ---- bar.dts ---------------------------------------------------------------
    104
    105
    106Overlay in-kernel API
    107--------------------------------
    108
    109The API is quite easy to use.
    110
    1111) Call of_overlay_fdt_apply() to create and apply an overlay changeset. The
    112   return value is an error or a cookie identifying this overlay.
    113
    1142) Call of_overlay_remove() to remove and cleanup the overlay changeset
    115   previously created via the call to of_overlay_fdt_apply(). Removal of an
    116   overlay changeset that is stacked by another will not be permitted.
    117
    118Finally, if you need to remove all overlays in one-go, just call
    119of_overlay_remove_all() which will remove every single one in the correct
    120order.
    121
    122There is the option to register notifiers that get called on
    123overlay operations. See of_overlay_notifier_register/unregister and
    124enum of_overlay_notify_action for details.
    125
    126A notifier callback for OF_OVERLAY_PRE_APPLY, OF_OVERLAY_POST_APPLY, or
    127OF_OVERLAY_PRE_REMOVE may store pointers to a device tree node in the overlay
    128or its content but these pointers must not persist past the notifier callback
    129for OF_OVERLAY_POST_REMOVE.  The memory containing the overlay will be
    130kfree()ed after OF_OVERLAY_POST_REMOVE notifiers are called.  Note that the
    131memory will be kfree()ed even if the notifier for OF_OVERLAY_POST_REMOVE
    132returns an error.
    133
    134The changeset notifiers in drivers/of/dynamic.c are a second type of notifier
    135that could be triggered by applying or removing an overlay.  These notifiers
    136are not allowed to store pointers to a device tree node in the overlay
    137or its content.  The overlay code does not protect against such pointers
    138remaining active when the memory containing the overlay is freed as a result
    139of removing the overlay.
    140
    141Any other code that retains a pointer to the overlay nodes or data is
    142considered to be a bug because after removing the overlay the pointer
    143will refer to freed memory.
    144
    145Users of overlays must be especially aware of the overall operations that
    146occur on the system to ensure that other kernel code does not retain any
    147pointers to the overlay nodes or data.  Any example of an inadvertent use
    148of such pointers is if a driver or subsystem module is loaded after an
    149overlay has been applied, and the driver or subsystem scans the entire
    150devicetree or a large portion of it, including the overlay nodes.