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Now that we support driver_override as a driver-core feature through struct device and struct bus_type, add some documentation in the context of how a device / driver binding is established. Reviewed-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260303115720.48783-3-dakr@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@kernel.org>
150 lines
5.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
150 lines
5.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
==============
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Driver Binding
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==============
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Driver binding is the process of associating a device with a device
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driver that can control it. Bus drivers have typically handled this
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because there have been bus-specific structures to represent the
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devices and the drivers. With generic device and device driver
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structures, most of the binding can take place using common code.
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Bus
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~~~
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The bus type structure contains a list of all devices that are on that bus
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type in the system. When device_register is called for a device, it is
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inserted into the end of this list. The bus object also contains a
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list of all drivers of that bus type. When driver_register is called
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for a driver, it is inserted at the end of this list. These are the
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two events which trigger driver binding.
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device_register
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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When a new device is added, the bus's list of drivers is iterated over
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to find one that supports it. In order to determine that, the device
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ID of the device must match one of the device IDs that the driver
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supports. The format and semantics for comparing IDs is bus-specific.
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Instead of trying to derive a complex state machine and matching
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algorithm, it is up to the bus driver to provide a callback to compare
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a device against the IDs of a driver. The bus returns 1 if a match was
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found; 0 otherwise.
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int match(struct device * dev, struct device_driver * drv);
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If a match is found, the device's driver field is set to the driver
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and the driver's probe callback is called. This gives the driver a
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chance to verify that it really does support the hardware, and that
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it's in a working state.
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Device Class
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Upon the successful completion of probe, the device is registered with
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the class to which it belongs. Device drivers belong to one and only one
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class, and that is set in the driver's devclass field.
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devclass_add_device is called to enumerate the device within the class
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and actually register it with the class, which happens with the
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class's register_dev callback.
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Driver
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~~~~~~
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When a driver is attached to a device, the driver's probe() function is
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called. Within probe(), the driver initializes the device and allocates
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and initializes per-device data structures. This per-device state is
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associated with the device object for as long as the driver remains bound
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to it. Conceptually, this per-device data together with the binding to
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the device can be thought of as an instance of the driver.
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sysfs
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~~~~~
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A symlink is created in the bus's 'devices' directory that points to
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the device's directory in the physical hierarchy.
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A symlink is created in the driver's 'devices' directory that points
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to the device's directory in the physical hierarchy.
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A directory for the device is created in the class's directory. A
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symlink is created in that directory that points to the device's
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physical location in the sysfs tree.
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A symlink can be created (though this isn't done yet) in the device's
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physical directory to either its class directory, or the class's
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top-level directory. One can also be created to point to its driver's
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directory also.
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driver_register
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The process is almost identical for when a new driver is added.
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The bus's list of devices is iterated over to find a match. Devices
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that already have a driver are skipped. All the devices are iterated
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over, to bind as many devices as possible to the driver.
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Removal
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~~~~~~~
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When a device is removed, the reference count for it will eventually
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go to 0. When it does, the remove callback of the driver is called. It
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is removed from the driver's list of devices and the reference count
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of the driver is decremented. All symlinks between the two are removed.
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When a driver is removed, the list of devices that it supports is
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iterated over, and the driver's remove callback is called for each
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one. The device is removed from that list and the symlinks removed.
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Driver Override
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Userspace may override the standard matching by writing a driver name to
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a device's ``driver_override`` sysfs attribute. When set, only a driver
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whose name matches the override will be considered during binding. This
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bypasses all bus-specific matching (OF, ACPI, ID tables, etc.).
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The override may be cleared by writing an empty string, which returns
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the device to standard matching rules. Writing to ``driver_override``
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does not automatically unbind the device from its current driver or
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make any attempt to load the specified driver.
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Buses opt into this mechanism by setting the ``driver_override`` flag in
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their ``struct bus_type``::
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const struct bus_type example_bus_type = {
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...
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.driver_override = true,
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};
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When the flag is set, the driver core automatically creates the
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``driver_override`` sysfs attribute for every device on that bus.
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The bus's ``match()`` callback should check the override before performing
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its own matching, using ``device_match_driver_override()``::
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static int example_match(struct device *dev, const struct device_driver *drv)
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{
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int ret;
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ret = device_match_driver_override(dev, drv);
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if (ret >= 0)
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return ret;
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/* Fall through to bus-specific matching... */
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}
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``device_match_driver_override()`` returns > 0 if the override matches
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the given driver, 0 if the override is set but does not match, or < 0 if
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no override is set at all.
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Additional helpers are available:
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- ``device_set_driver_override()`` - set or clear the override from kernel code.
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- ``device_has_driver_override()`` - check whether an override is set.
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