Commit 86ae4503 authored by Andrew Morton's avatar Andrew Morton Committed by Linus Torvalds

[PATCH] more documentation for request_firmware()

From: Manuel Estrada Sainz <ranty@debian.org>

Add some higher level docs to Documentation/firmware_class/README.
parent 2e710fbb
......@@ -15,6 +15,71 @@
3) Some people, like the Debian crowd, don't consider some firmware free
enough and remove entire drivers (e.g.: keyspan).
High level behavior (mixed):
============================
kernel(driver): calls request_firmware(&fw_entry, $FIRMWARE, device)
userspace:
- /sys/class/firmware/xxx/{loading,data} appear.
- hotplug gets called with a firmware identifier in $FIRMWARE
and the usual hotplug environment.
- hotplug: echo 1 > /sys/class/firmware/xxx/loading
kernel: Discard any previous partial load.
userspace:
- hotplug: cat appropriate_firmware_image > \
/sys/class/firmware/xxx/data
kernel: grows a buffer in PAGE_SIZE increments to hold the image as it
comes in.
userspace:
- hotplug: echo 0 > /sys/class/firmware/xxx/loading
kernel: request_firmware() returns and the driver has the firmware
image in fw_entry->{data,size}. If something went wrong
request_firmware() returns non-zero and fw_entry is set to
NULL.
kernel(driver): Driver code calls release_firmware(fw_entry) releasing
the firmware image and any related resource.
High level behavior (driver code):
==================================
if(request_firmware(&fw_entry, $FIRMWARE, device) == 0)
copy_fw_to_device(fw_entry->data, fw_entry->size);
release(fw_entry);
Sample/simple hotplug script:
============================
# Both $DEVPATH and $FIRMWARE are already provided in the environment.
HOTPLUG_FW_DIR=/usr/lib/hotplug/firmware/
echo 1 > /sysfs/$DEVPATH/loading
cat $HOTPLUG_FW_DIR/$FIRMWARE > /sysfs/$DEVPATH/data
echo 0 > /sysfs/$DEVPATH/loading
Random notes:
============
- "echo -1 > /sys/class/firmware/xxx/loading" will cancel the load at
once and make request_firmware() return with error.
- firmware_data_read() and firmware_loading_show() are just provided
for testing and completeness, they are not called in normal use.
- There is also /sys/class/firmware/timeout which holds a timeout in
seconds for the whole load operation.
- request_firmware_nowait() is also provided for convenience in
non-user contexts.
about in-kernel persistence:
---------------------------
Under some circumstances, as explained below, it would be interesting to keep
......@@ -56,3 +121,4 @@
Note: If persistence is implemented on top of initramfs,
register_firmware() may not be appropriate.
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