cachepc-linux

Fork of AMDESE/linux with modifications for CachePC side-channel attack
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cec-core.rst (18248B)


      1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
      2
      3CEC Kernel Support
      4==================
      5
      6The CEC framework provides a unified kernel interface for use with HDMI CEC
      7hardware. It is designed to handle a multiple types of hardware (receivers,
      8transmitters, USB dongles). The framework also gives the option to decide
      9what to do in the kernel driver and what should be handled by userspace
     10applications. In addition it integrates the remote control passthrough
     11feature into the kernel's remote control framework.
     12
     13
     14The CEC Protocol
     15----------------
     16
     17The CEC protocol enables consumer electronic devices to communicate with each
     18other through the HDMI connection. The protocol uses logical addresses in the
     19communication. The logical address is strictly connected with the functionality
     20provided by the device. The TV acting as the communication hub is always
     21assigned address 0. The physical address is determined by the physical
     22connection between devices.
     23
     24The CEC framework described here is up to date with the CEC 2.0 specification.
     25It is documented in the HDMI 1.4 specification with the new 2.0 bits documented
     26in the HDMI 2.0 specification. But for most of the features the freely available
     27HDMI 1.3a specification is sufficient:
     28
     29https://www.hdmi.org/spec/index
     30
     31
     32CEC Adapter Interface
     33---------------------
     34
     35The struct cec_adapter represents the CEC adapter hardware. It is created by
     36calling cec_allocate_adapter() and deleted by calling cec_delete_adapter():
     37
     38.. c:function::
     39   struct cec_adapter *cec_allocate_adapter(const struct cec_adap_ops *ops, \
     40					    void *priv, const char *name, \
     41					    u32 caps, u8 available_las);
     42
     43.. c:function::
     44   void cec_delete_adapter(struct cec_adapter *adap);
     45
     46To create an adapter you need to pass the following information:
     47
     48ops:
     49	adapter operations which are called by the CEC framework and that you
     50	have to implement.
     51
     52priv:
     53	will be stored in adap->priv and can be used by the adapter ops.
     54	Use cec_get_drvdata(adap) to get the priv pointer.
     55
     56name:
     57	the name of the CEC adapter. Note: this name will be copied.
     58
     59caps:
     60	capabilities of the CEC adapter. These capabilities determine the
     61	capabilities of the hardware and which parts are to be handled
     62	by userspace and which parts are handled by kernelspace. The
     63	capabilities are returned by CEC_ADAP_G_CAPS.
     64
     65available_las:
     66	the number of simultaneous logical addresses that this
     67	adapter can handle. Must be 1 <= available_las <= CEC_MAX_LOG_ADDRS.
     68
     69To obtain the priv pointer use this helper function:
     70
     71.. c:function::
     72	void *cec_get_drvdata(const struct cec_adapter *adap);
     73
     74To register the /dev/cecX device node and the remote control device (if
     75CEC_CAP_RC is set) you call:
     76
     77.. c:function::
     78	int cec_register_adapter(struct cec_adapter *adap, \
     79				 struct device *parent);
     80
     81where parent is the parent device.
     82
     83To unregister the devices call:
     84
     85.. c:function::
     86	void cec_unregister_adapter(struct cec_adapter *adap);
     87
     88Note: if cec_register_adapter() fails, then call cec_delete_adapter() to
     89clean up. But if cec_register_adapter() succeeded, then only call
     90cec_unregister_adapter() to clean up, never cec_delete_adapter(). The
     91unregister function will delete the adapter automatically once the last user
     92of that /dev/cecX device has closed its file handle.
     93
     94
     95Implementing the Low-Level CEC Adapter
     96--------------------------------------
     97
     98The following low-level adapter operations have to be implemented in
     99your driver:
    100
    101.. c:struct:: cec_adap_ops
    102
    103.. code-block:: none
    104
    105	struct cec_adap_ops
    106	{
    107		/* Low-level callbacks */
    108		int (*adap_enable)(struct cec_adapter *adap, bool enable);
    109		int (*adap_monitor_all_enable)(struct cec_adapter *adap, bool enable);
    110		int (*adap_monitor_pin_enable)(struct cec_adapter *adap, bool enable);
    111		int (*adap_log_addr)(struct cec_adapter *adap, u8 logical_addr);
    112		void (*adap_configured)(struct cec_adapter *adap, bool configured);
    113		int (*adap_transmit)(struct cec_adapter *adap, u8 attempts,
    114				      u32 signal_free_time, struct cec_msg *msg);
    115		void (*adap_status)(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct seq_file *file);
    116		void (*adap_free)(struct cec_adapter *adap);
    117
    118		/* Error injection callbacks */
    119		...
    120
    121		/* High-level callback */
    122		...
    123	};
    124
    125The seven low-level ops deal with various aspects of controlling the CEC adapter
    126hardware:
    127
    128
    129To enable/disable the hardware::
    130
    131	int (*adap_enable)(struct cec_adapter *adap, bool enable);
    132
    133This callback enables or disables the CEC hardware. Enabling the CEC hardware
    134means powering it up in a state where no logical addresses are claimed. The
    135physical address will always be valid if CEC_CAP_NEEDS_HPD is set. If that
    136capability is not set, then the physical address can change while the CEC
    137hardware is enabled. CEC drivers should not set CEC_CAP_NEEDS_HPD unless
    138the hardware design requires that as this will make it impossible to wake
    139up displays that pull the HPD low when in standby mode.  The initial
    140state of the CEC adapter after calling cec_allocate_adapter() is disabled.
    141
    142Note that adap_enable must return 0 if enable is false.
    143
    144
    145To enable/disable the 'monitor all' mode::
    146
    147	int (*adap_monitor_all_enable)(struct cec_adapter *adap, bool enable);
    148
    149If enabled, then the adapter should be put in a mode to also monitor messages
    150that are not for us. Not all hardware supports this and this function is only
    151called if the CEC_CAP_MONITOR_ALL capability is set. This callback is optional
    152(some hardware may always be in 'monitor all' mode).
    153
    154Note that adap_monitor_all_enable must return 0 if enable is false.
    155
    156
    157To enable/disable the 'monitor pin' mode::
    158
    159	int (*adap_monitor_pin_enable)(struct cec_adapter *adap, bool enable);
    160
    161If enabled, then the adapter should be put in a mode to also monitor CEC pin
    162changes. Not all hardware supports this and this function is only called if
    163the CEC_CAP_MONITOR_PIN capability is set. This callback is optional
    164(some hardware may always be in 'monitor pin' mode).
    165
    166Note that adap_monitor_pin_enable must return 0 if enable is false.
    167
    168
    169To program a new logical address::
    170
    171	int (*adap_log_addr)(struct cec_adapter *adap, u8 logical_addr);
    172
    173If logical_addr == CEC_LOG_ADDR_INVALID then all programmed logical addresses
    174are to be erased. Otherwise the given logical address should be programmed.
    175If the maximum number of available logical addresses is exceeded, then it
    176should return -ENXIO. Once a logical address is programmed the CEC hardware
    177can receive directed messages to that address.
    178
    179Note that adap_log_addr must return 0 if logical_addr is CEC_LOG_ADDR_INVALID.
    180
    181
    182Called when the adapter is fully configured or unconfigured::
    183
    184	void (*adap_configured)(struct cec_adapter *adap, bool configured);
    185
    186If configured == true, then the adapter is fully configured, i.e. all logical
    187addresses have been successfully claimed. If configured == false, then the
    188adapter is unconfigured. If the driver has to take specific actions after
    189(un)configuration, then that can be done through this optional callback.
    190
    191
    192To transmit a new message::
    193
    194	int (*adap_transmit)(struct cec_adapter *adap, u8 attempts,
    195			     u32 signal_free_time, struct cec_msg *msg);
    196
    197This transmits a new message. The attempts argument is the suggested number of
    198attempts for the transmit.
    199
    200The signal_free_time is the number of data bit periods that the adapter should
    201wait when the line is free before attempting to send a message. This value
    202depends on whether this transmit is a retry, a message from a new initiator or
    203a new message for the same initiator. Most hardware will handle this
    204automatically, but in some cases this information is needed.
    205
    206The CEC_FREE_TIME_TO_USEC macro can be used to convert signal_free_time to
    207microseconds (one data bit period is 2.4 ms).
    208
    209
    210To log the current CEC hardware status::
    211
    212	void (*adap_status)(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct seq_file *file);
    213
    214This optional callback can be used to show the status of the CEC hardware.
    215The status is available through debugfs: cat /sys/kernel/debug/cec/cecX/status
    216
    217To free any resources when the adapter is deleted::
    218
    219	void (*adap_free)(struct cec_adapter *adap);
    220
    221This optional callback can be used to free any resources that might have been
    222allocated by the driver. It's called from cec_delete_adapter.
    223
    224
    225Your adapter driver will also have to react to events (typically interrupt
    226driven) by calling into the framework in the following situations:
    227
    228When a transmit finished (successfully or otherwise)::
    229
    230	void cec_transmit_done(struct cec_adapter *adap, u8 status,
    231			       u8 arb_lost_cnt,  u8 nack_cnt, u8 low_drive_cnt,
    232			       u8 error_cnt);
    233
    234or::
    235
    236	void cec_transmit_attempt_done(struct cec_adapter *adap, u8 status);
    237
    238The status can be one of:
    239
    240CEC_TX_STATUS_OK:
    241	the transmit was successful.
    242
    243CEC_TX_STATUS_ARB_LOST:
    244	arbitration was lost: another CEC initiator
    245	took control of the CEC line and you lost the arbitration.
    246
    247CEC_TX_STATUS_NACK:
    248	the message was nacked (for a directed message) or
    249	acked (for a broadcast message). A retransmission is needed.
    250
    251CEC_TX_STATUS_LOW_DRIVE:
    252	low drive was detected on the CEC bus. This indicates that
    253	a follower detected an error on the bus and requested a
    254	retransmission.
    255
    256CEC_TX_STATUS_ERROR:
    257	some unspecified error occurred: this can be one of ARB_LOST
    258	or LOW_DRIVE if the hardware cannot differentiate or something
    259	else entirely. Some hardware only supports OK and FAIL as the
    260	result of a transmit, i.e. there is no way to differentiate
    261	between the different possible errors. In that case map FAIL
    262	to CEC_TX_STATUS_NACK and not to CEC_TX_STATUS_ERROR.
    263
    264CEC_TX_STATUS_MAX_RETRIES:
    265	could not transmit the message after trying multiple times.
    266	Should only be set by the driver if it has hardware support for
    267	retrying messages. If set, then the framework assumes that it
    268	doesn't have to make another attempt to transmit the message
    269	since the hardware did that already.
    270
    271The hardware must be able to differentiate between OK, NACK and 'something
    272else'.
    273
    274The \*_cnt arguments are the number of error conditions that were seen.
    275This may be 0 if no information is available. Drivers that do not support
    276hardware retry can just set the counter corresponding to the transmit error
    277to 1, if the hardware does support retry then either set these counters to
    2780 if the hardware provides no feedback of which errors occurred and how many
    279times, or fill in the correct values as reported by the hardware.
    280
    281Be aware that calling these functions can immediately start a new transmit
    282if there is one pending in the queue. So make sure that the hardware is in
    283a state where new transmits can be started *before* calling these functions.
    284
    285The cec_transmit_attempt_done() function is a helper for cases where the
    286hardware never retries, so the transmit is always for just a single
    287attempt. It will call cec_transmit_done() in turn, filling in 1 for the
    288count argument corresponding to the status. Or all 0 if the status was OK.
    289
    290When a CEC message was received:
    291
    292.. c:function::
    293	void cec_received_msg(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct cec_msg *msg);
    294
    295Speaks for itself.
    296
    297Implementing the interrupt handler
    298----------------------------------
    299
    300Typically the CEC hardware provides interrupts that signal when a transmit
    301finished and whether it was successful or not, and it provides and interrupt
    302when a CEC message was received.
    303
    304The CEC driver should always process the transmit interrupts first before
    305handling the receive interrupt. The framework expects to see the cec_transmit_done
    306call before the cec_received_msg call, otherwise it can get confused if the
    307received message was in reply to the transmitted message.
    308
    309Optional: Implementing Error Injection Support
    310----------------------------------------------
    311
    312If the CEC adapter supports Error Injection functionality, then that can
    313be exposed through the Error Injection callbacks:
    314
    315.. code-block:: none
    316
    317	struct cec_adap_ops {
    318		/* Low-level callbacks */
    319		...
    320
    321		/* Error injection callbacks */
    322		int (*error_inj_show)(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct seq_file *sf);
    323		bool (*error_inj_parse_line)(struct cec_adapter *adap, char *line);
    324
    325		/* High-level CEC message callback */
    326		...
    327	};
    328
    329If both callbacks are set, then an ``error-inj`` file will appear in debugfs.
    330The basic syntax is as follows:
    331
    332Leading spaces/tabs are ignored. If the next character is a ``#`` or the end of the
    333line was reached, then the whole line is ignored. Otherwise a command is expected.
    334
    335This basic parsing is done in the CEC Framework. It is up to the driver to decide
    336what commands to implement. The only requirement is that the command ``clear`` without
    337any arguments must be implemented and that it will remove all current error injection
    338commands.
    339
    340This ensures that you can always do ``echo clear >error-inj`` to clear any error
    341injections without having to know the details of the driver-specific commands.
    342
    343Note that the output of ``error-inj`` shall be valid as input to ``error-inj``.
    344So this must work:
    345
    346.. code-block:: none
    347
    348	$ cat error-inj >einj.txt
    349	$ cat einj.txt >error-inj
    350
    351The first callback is called when this file is read and it should show the
    352current error injection state::
    353
    354	int (*error_inj_show)(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct seq_file *sf);
    355
    356It is recommended that it starts with a comment block with basic usage
    357information. It returns 0 for success and an error otherwise.
    358
    359The second callback will parse commands written to the ``error-inj`` file::
    360
    361	bool (*error_inj_parse_line)(struct cec_adapter *adap, char *line);
    362
    363The ``line`` argument points to the start of the command. Any leading
    364spaces or tabs have already been skipped. It is a single line only (so there
    365are no embedded newlines) and it is 0-terminated. The callback is free to
    366modify the contents of the buffer. It is only called for lines containing a
    367command, so this callback is never called for empty lines or comment lines.
    368
    369Return true if the command was valid or false if there were syntax errors.
    370
    371Implementing the High-Level CEC Adapter
    372---------------------------------------
    373
    374The low-level operations drive the hardware, the high-level operations are
    375CEC protocol driven. The following high-level callbacks are available:
    376
    377.. code-block:: none
    378
    379	struct cec_adap_ops {
    380		/* Low-level callbacks */
    381		...
    382
    383		/* Error injection callbacks */
    384		...
    385
    386		/* High-level CEC message callback */
    387		int (*received)(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct cec_msg *msg);
    388	};
    389
    390The received() callback allows the driver to optionally handle a newly
    391received CEC message::
    392
    393	int (*received)(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct cec_msg *msg);
    394
    395If the driver wants to process a CEC message, then it can implement this
    396callback. If it doesn't want to handle this message, then it should return
    397-ENOMSG, otherwise the CEC framework assumes it processed this message and
    398it will not do anything with it.
    399
    400
    401CEC framework functions
    402-----------------------
    403
    404CEC Adapter drivers can call the following CEC framework functions:
    405
    406.. c:function::
    407   int cec_transmit_msg(struct cec_adapter *adap, struct cec_msg *msg, \
    408			bool block);
    409
    410Transmit a CEC message. If block is true, then wait until the message has been
    411transmitted, otherwise just queue it and return.
    412
    413.. c:function::
    414   void cec_s_phys_addr(struct cec_adapter *adap, u16 phys_addr, bool block);
    415
    416Change the physical address. This function will set adap->phys_addr and
    417send an event if it has changed. If cec_s_log_addrs() has been called and
    418the physical address has become valid, then the CEC framework will start
    419claiming the logical addresses. If block is true, then this function won't
    420return until this process has finished.
    421
    422When the physical address is set to a valid value the CEC adapter will
    423be enabled (see the adap_enable op). When it is set to CEC_PHYS_ADDR_INVALID,
    424then the CEC adapter will be disabled. If you change a valid physical address
    425to another valid physical address, then this function will first set the
    426address to CEC_PHYS_ADDR_INVALID before enabling the new physical address.
    427
    428.. c:function::
    429   void cec_s_phys_addr_from_edid(struct cec_adapter *adap, \
    430				  const struct edid *edid);
    431
    432A helper function that extracts the physical address from the edid struct
    433and calls cec_s_phys_addr() with that address, or CEC_PHYS_ADDR_INVALID
    434if the EDID did not contain a physical address or edid was a NULL pointer.
    435
    436.. c:function::
    437	int cec_s_log_addrs(struct cec_adapter *adap, \
    438			    struct cec_log_addrs *log_addrs, bool block);
    439
    440Claim the CEC logical addresses. Should never be called if CEC_CAP_LOG_ADDRS
    441is set. If block is true, then wait until the logical addresses have been
    442claimed, otherwise just queue it and return. To unconfigure all logical
    443addresses call this function with log_addrs set to NULL or with
    444log_addrs->num_log_addrs set to 0. The block argument is ignored when
    445unconfiguring. This function will just return if the physical address is
    446invalid. Once the physical address becomes valid, then the framework will
    447attempt to claim these logical addresses.
    448
    449CEC Pin framework
    450-----------------
    451
    452Most CEC hardware operates on full CEC messages where the software provides
    453the message and the hardware handles the low-level CEC protocol. But some
    454hardware only drives the CEC pin and software has to handle the low-level
    455CEC protocol. The CEC pin framework was created to handle such devices.
    456
    457Note that due to the close-to-realtime requirements it can never be guaranteed
    458to work 100%. This framework uses highres timers internally, but if a
    459timer goes off too late by more than 300 microseconds wrong results can
    460occur. In reality it appears to be fairly reliable.
    461
    462One advantage of this low-level implementation is that it can be used as
    463a cheap CEC analyser, especially if interrupts can be used to detect
    464CEC pin transitions from low to high or vice versa.
    465
    466.. kernel-doc:: include/media/cec-pin.h
    467
    468CEC Notifier framework
    469----------------------
    470
    471Most drm HDMI implementations have an integrated CEC implementation and no
    472notifier support is needed. But some have independent CEC implementations
    473that have their own driver. This could be an IP block for an SoC or a
    474completely separate chip that deals with the CEC pin. For those cases a
    475drm driver can install a notifier and use the notifier to inform the
    476CEC driver about changes in the physical address.
    477
    478.. kernel-doc:: include/media/cec-notifier.h