| How USB works with driver model |
| =============================== |
| |
| Introduction |
| ------------ |
| |
| Driver model USB support makes use of existing features but changes how |
| drivers are found. This document provides some information intended to help |
| understand how things work with USB in U-Boot when driver model is enabled. |
| |
| |
| Enabling driver model for USB |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| A new CONFIG_DM_USB option is provided to enable driver model for USB. This |
| causes the USB uclass to be included, and drops the equivalent code in |
| usb.c. In particular the usb_init() function is then implemented by the |
| uclass. |
| |
| |
| Support for EHCI and XHCI |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| So far OHCI is not supported. Both EHCI and XHCI drivers should be declared |
| as drivers in the USB uclass. For example: |
| |
| static const struct udevice_id ehci_usb_ids[] = { |
| { .compatible = "nvidia,tegra20-ehci", .data = USB_CTLR_T20 }, |
| { .compatible = "nvidia,tegra30-ehci", .data = USB_CTLR_T30 }, |
| { .compatible = "nvidia,tegra114-ehci", .data = USB_CTLR_T114 }, |
| { } |
| }; |
| |
| U_BOOT_DRIVER(usb_ehci) = { |
| .name = "ehci_tegra", |
| .id = UCLASS_USB, |
| .of_match = ehci_usb_ids, |
| .ofdata_to_platdata = ehci_usb_ofdata_to_platdata, |
| .probe = tegra_ehci_usb_probe, |
| .remove = tegra_ehci_usb_remove, |
| .ops = &ehci_usb_ops, |
| .platdata_auto_alloc_size = sizeof(struct usb_platdata), |
| .priv_auto_alloc_size = sizeof(struct fdt_usb), |
| .flags = DM_FLAG_ALLOC_PRIV_DMA, |
| }; |
| |
| Here ehci_usb_ids is used to list the controllers that the driver supports. |
| Each has its own data value. Controllers must be in the UCLASS_USB uclass. |
| |
| The ofdata_to_platdata() method allows the controller driver to grab any |
| necessary settings from the device tree. |
| |
| The ops here are ehci_usb_ops. All EHCI drivers will use these same ops in |
| most cases, since they are all EHCI-compatible. For EHCI there are also some |
| special operations that can be overridden when calling ehci_register(). |
| |
| The driver can use priv_auto_alloc_size to set the size of its private data. |
| This can hold run-time information needed by the driver for operation. It |
| exists when the device is probed (not when it is bound) and is removed when |
| the driver is removed. |
| |
| Note that usb_platdata is currently only used to deal with setting up a bus |
| in USB device mode (OTG operation). It can be omitted if that is not |
| supported. |
| |
| The driver's probe() method should do the basic controller init and then |
| call ehci_register() to register itself as an EHCI device. It should call |
| ehci_deregister() in the remove() method. Registering a new EHCI device |
| does not by itself cause the bus to be scanned. |
| |
| The old ehci_hcd_init() function is no-longer used. Nor is it necessary to |
| set up the USB controllers from board init code. When 'usb start' is used, |
| each controller will be probed and its bus scanned. |
| |
| XHCI works in a similar way. |
| |
| |
| Data structures |
| --------------- |
| |
| The following primary data structures are in use: |
| |
| - struct usb_device |
| This holds information about a device on the bus. All devices have |
| this structure, even the root hub. The controller itself does not |
| have this structure. You can access it for a device 'dev' with |
| dev_get_parentdata(dev). It matches the old structure except that the |
| parent and child information is not present (since driver model |
| handles that). Once the device is set up, you can find the device |
| descriptor and current configuration descriptor in this structure. |
| |
| - struct usb_platdata |
| This holds platform data for a controller. So far this is only used |
| as a work-around for controllers which can act as USB devices in OTG |
| mode, since the gadget framework does not use driver model. |
| |
| - struct usb_dev_platdata |
| This holds platform data for a device. You can access it for a |
| device 'dev' with dev_get_parent_platdata(dev). It holds the device |
| address and speed - anything that can be determined before the device |
| driver is actually set up. When probing the bus this structure is |
| used to provide essential information to the device driver. |
| |
| - struct usb_bus_priv |
| This is private information for each controller, maintained by the |
| controller uclass. It is mostly used to keep track of the next |
| device address to use. |
| |
| Of these, only struct usb_device was used prior to driver model. |
| |
| |
| USB buses |
| --------- |
| |
| Given a controller, you know the bus - it is the one attached to the |
| controller. Each controller handles exactly one bus. Every controller has a |
| root hub attached to it. This hub, which is itself a USB device, can provide |
| one or more 'ports' to which additional devices can be attached. It is |
| possible to power up a hub and find out which of its ports have devices |
| attached. |
| |
| Devices are given addresses starting at 1. The root hub is always address 1, |
| and from there the devices are numbered in sequence. The USB uclass takes |
| care of this numbering automatically during enumeration. |
| |
| USB devices are enumerated by finding a device on a particular hub, and |
| setting its address to the next available address. The USB bus stretches out |
| in a tree structure, potentially with multiple hubs each with several ports |
| and perhaps other hubs. Some hubs will have their own power since otherwise |
| the 5V 500mA power supplied by the controller will not be sufficient to run |
| very many devices. |
| |
| Enumeration in U-Boot takes a long time since devices are probed one at a |
| time, and each is given sufficient time to wake up and announce itself. The |
| timeouts are set for the slowest device. |
| |
| Up to 127 devices can be on each bus. USB has four bus speeds: low |
| (1.5Mbps), full (12Mbps), high (480Mbps) which is only available with USB2 |
| and newer (EHCI), and super (5Gbps) which is only available with USB3 and |
| newer (XHCI). If you connect a super-speed device to a high-speed hub, you |
| will only get high-speed. |
| |
| |
| USB operations |
| -------------- |
| |
| As before driver model, messages can be sent using submit_bulk_msg() and the |
| like. These are now implemented by the USB uclass and route through the |
| controller drivers. Note that messages are not sent to the driver of the |
| device itself - i.e. they don't pass down the stack to the controller. |
| U-Boot simply finds the controller to which the device is attached, and sends |
| the message there with an appropriate 'pipe' value so it can be addressed |
| properly. Having said that, the USB device which should receive the message |
| is passed in to the driver methods, for use by sandbox. This design decision |
| is open for review and the code impact of changing it is small since the |
| methods are typically implemented by the EHCI and XHCI stacks. |
| |
| Controller drivers (in UCLASS_USB) themselves provide methods for sending |
| each message type. For XHCI an additional alloc_device() method is provided |
| since XHCI needs to allocate a device context before it can even read the |
| device's descriptor. |
| |
| These methods use a 'pipe' which is a collection of bit fields used to |
| describe the type of message, direction of transfer and the intended |
| recipient (device number). |
| |
| |
| USB Devices |
| ----------- |
| |
| USB devices are found using a simple algorithm which works through the |
| available hubs in a depth-first search. Devices can be in any uclass, but |
| are attached to a parent hub (or controller in the case of the root hub) and |
| so have parent data attached to them (this is struct usb_device). |
| |
| By the time the device's probe() method is called, it is enumerated and is |
| ready to talk to the host. |
| |
| The enumeration process needs to work out which driver to attach to each USB |
| device. It does this by examining the device class, interface class, vendor |
| ID, product ID, etc. See struct usb_driver_entry for how drivers are matched |
| with USB devices - you can use the USB_DEVICE() macro to declare a USB |
| driver. For example, usb_storage.c defines a USB_DEVICE() to handle storage |
| devices, and it will be used for all USB devices which match. |
| |
| |
| |
| Technical details on enumeration flow |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| It is useful to understand precisely how a USB bus is enumerating to avoid |
| confusion when dealing with USB devices. |
| |
| Device initialisation happens roughly like this: |
| |
| - At some point the 'usb start' command is run |
| - This calls usb_init() which works through each controller in turn |
| - The controller is probed(). This does no enumeration. |
| - Then usb_scan_bus() is called. This calls usb_scan_device() to scan the |
| (only) device that is attached to the controller - a root hub |
| - usb_scan_device() sets up a fake struct usb_device and calls |
| usb_setup_device(), passing the port number to be scanned, in this case port |
| 0 |
| - usb_setup_device() first calls usb_prepare_device() to set the device |
| address, then usb_select_config() to select the first configuration |
| - at this point the device is enumerated but we do not have a real struct |
| udevice for it. But we do have the descriptor in struct usb_device so we can |
| use this to figure out what driver to use |
| - back in usb_scan_device(), we call usb_find_child() to try to find an |
| existing device which matches the one we just found on the bus. This can |
| happen if the device is mentioned in the device tree, or if we previously |
| scanned the bus and so the device was created before |
| - if usb_find_child() does not find an existing device, we call |
| usb_find_and_bind_driver() which tries to bind one |
| - usb_find_and_bind_driver() searches all available USB drivers (declared |
| with USB_DEVICE()). If it finds a match it binds that driver to create a new |
| device. |
| - If it does not, it binds a generic driver. A generic driver is good enough |
| to allow access to the device (sending it packets, etc.) but all |
| functionality will need to be implemented outside the driver model. |
| - in any case, when usb_find_child() and/or usb_find_and_bind_driver() are |
| done, we have a device with the correct uclass. At this point we want to |
| probe the device |
| - first we store basic information about the new device (address, port, |
| speed) in its parent platform data. We cannot store it its private data |
| since that will not exist until the device is probed. |
| - then we call device_probe() which probes the device |
| - the first probe step is actually the USB controller's (or USB hubs's) |
| child_pre_probe() method. This gets called before anything else and is |
| intended to set up a child device ready to be used with its parent bus. For |
| USB this calls usb_child_pre_probe() which grabs the information that was |
| stored in the parent platform data and stores it in the parent private data |
| (which is struct usb_device, a real one this time). It then calls |
| usb_select_config() again to make sure that everything about the device is |
| set up |
| - note that we have called usb_select_config() twice. This is inefficient |
| but the alternative is to store additional information in the platform data. |
| The time taken is minimal and this way is simpler |
| - at this point the device is set up and ready for use so far as the USB |
| subsystem is concerned |
| - the device's probe() method is then called. It can send messages and do |
| whatever else it wants to make the device work. |
| |
| Note that the first device is always a root hub, and this must be scanned to |
| find any devices. The above steps will have created a hub (UCLASS_USB_HUB), |
| given it address 1 and set the configuration. |
| |
| For hubs, the hub uclass has a post_probe() method. This means that after |
| any hub is probed, the uclass gets to do some processing. In this case |
| usb_hub_post_probe() is called, and the following steps take place: |
| |
| - usb_hub_post_probe() calls usb_hub_scan() to scan the hub, which in turn |
| calls usb_hub_configure() |
| - hub power is enabled |
| - we loop through each port on the hub, performing the same steps for each |
| - first, check if there is a device present. This happens in |
| usb_hub_port_connect_change(). If so, then usb_scan_device() is called to |
| scan the device, passing the appropriate port number. |
| - you will recognise usb_scan_device() from the steps above. It sets up the |
| device ready for use. If it is a hub, it will scan that hub before it |
| continues here (recursively, depth-first) |
| - once all hub ports are scanned in this way, the hub is ready for use and |
| all of its downstream devices also |
| - additional controllers are scanned in the same way |
| |
| The above method has some nice properties: |
| |
| - the bus enumeration happens by virtue of driver model's natural device flow |
| - most logic is in the USB controller and hub uclasses; the actual device |
| drivers do not need to know they are on a USB bus, at least so far as |
| enumeration goes |
| - hub scanning happens automatically after a hub is probed |
| |
| |
| Hubs |
| ---- |
| |
| USB hubs are scanned as in the section above. While hubs have their own |
| uclass, they share some common elements with controllers: |
| |
| - they both attach private data to their children (struct usb_device, |
| accessible for a child with dev_get_parentdata(child)) |
| - they both use usb_child_pre_probe() to set up their children as proper USB |
| devices |
| |
| |
| Example - Mass Storage |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| As an example of a USB device driver, see usb_storage.c. It uses its own |
| uclass and declares itself as follows: |
| |
| U_BOOT_DRIVER(usb_mass_storage) = { |
| .name = "usb_mass_storage", |
| .id = UCLASS_MASS_STORAGE, |
| .of_match = usb_mass_storage_ids, |
| .probe = usb_mass_storage_probe, |
| }; |
| |
| static const struct usb_device_id mass_storage_id_table[] = { |
| { .match_flags = USB_DEVICE_ID_MATCH_INT_CLASS, |
| .bInterfaceClass = USB_CLASS_MASS_STORAGE}, |
| { } /* Terminating entry */ |
| }; |
| |
| USB_DEVICE(usb_mass_storage, mass_storage_id_table); |
| |
| The USB_DEVICE() macro attaches the given table of matching information to |
| the given driver. Note that the driver is declared in U_BOOT_DRIVER() as |
| 'usb_mass_storage' and this must match the first parameter of USB_DEVICE. |
| |
| When usb_find_and_bind_driver() is called on a USB device with the |
| bInterfaceClass value of USB_CLASS_MASS_STORAGE, it will automatically find |
| this driver and use it. |
| |
| |
| Counter-example: USB Ethernet |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| As an example of the old way of doing things, see usb_ether.c. When the bus |
| is scanned, all Ethernet devices will be created as generic USB devices (in |
| uclass UCLASS_USB_DEV_GENERIC). Then, when the scan is completed, |
| usb_host_eth_scan() will be called. This looks through all the devices on |
| each bus and manually figures out which are Ethernet devices in the ways of |
| yore. |
| |
| In fact, usb_ether should be moved to driver model. Each USB Ethernet driver |
| (e.g drivers/usb/eth/asix.c) should include a USB_DEVICE() declaration, so |
| that it will be found as part of normal USB enumeration. Then, instead of a |
| generic USB driver, a real (driver-model-aware) driver will be used. Since |
| Ethernet now supports driver model, this should be fairly easy to achieve, |
| and then usb_ether.c and the usb_host_eth_scan() will melt away. |
| |
| |
| Sandbox |
| ------- |
| |
| All driver model uclasses must have tests and USB is no exception. To |
| achieve this, a sandbox USB controller is provided. This can make use of |
| emulation drivers which pretend to be USB devices. Emulations are provided |
| for a hub and a flash stick. These are enough to create a pretend USB bus |
| (defined by the sandbox device tree sandbox.dts) which can be scanned and |
| used. |
| |
| Tests in test/dm/usb.c make use of this feature. It allows much of the USB |
| stack to be tested without real hardware being needed. |
| |
| Here is an example device tree fragment: |
| |
| usb@1 { |
| compatible = "sandbox,usb"; |
| hub { |
| compatible = "usb-hub"; |
| usb,device-class = <USB_CLASS_HUB>; |
| hub-emul { |
| compatible = "sandbox,usb-hub"; |
| #address-cells = <1>; |
| #size-cells = <0>; |
| flash-stick { |
| reg = <0>; |
| compatible = "sandbox,usb-flash"; |
| sandbox,filepath = "flash.bin"; |
| }; |
| }; |
| }; |
| }; |
| |
| This defines a single controller, containing a root hub (which is required). |
| The hub is emulated by a hub emulator, and the emulated hub has a single |
| flash stick to emulate on one of its ports. |
| |
| When 'usb start' is used, the following 'dm tree' output will be available: |
| |
| usb [ + ] `-- usb@1 |
| usb_hub [ + ] `-- hub |
| usb_emul [ + ] |-- hub-emul |
| usb_emul [ + ] | `-- flash-stick |
| usb_mass_st [ + ] `-- usb_mass_storage |
| |
| |
| This may look confusing. Most of it mirrors the device tree, but the |
| 'usb_mass_storage' device is not in the device tree. This is created by |
| usb_find_and_bind_driver() based on the USB_DRIVER in usb_storage.c. While |
| 'flash-stick' is the emulation device, 'usb_mass_storage' is the real U-Boot |
| USB device driver that talks to it. |
| |
| |
| Future work |
| ----------- |
| |
| It is pretty uncommon to have a large USB bus with lots of hubs on an |
| embedded system. In fact anything other than a root hub is uncommon. Still |
| it would be possible to speed up enumeration in two ways: |
| |
| - breadth-first search would allow devices to be reset and probed in |
| parallel to some extent |
| - enumeration could be lazy, in the sense that we could enumerate just the |
| root hub at first, then only progress to the next 'level' when a device is |
| used that we cannot find. This could be made easier if the devices were |
| statically declared in the device tree (which is acceptable for production |
| boards where the same, known, things are on each bus). |
| |
| But in common cases the current algorithm is sufficient. |
| |
| Other things that need doing: |
| - Convert usb_ether to use driver model as described above |
| - Test that keyboards work (and convert to driver model) |
| - Move the USB gadget framework to driver model |
| - Implement OHCI in driver model |
| - Implement USB PHYs in driver model |
| - Work out a clever way to provide lazy init for USB devices |
| |
| -- |
| Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org> |
| 23-Mar-15 |