Commit e58cbfd2 authored by William Breathitt Gray's avatar William Breathitt Gray Committed by Jonathan Cameron

docs: driver-api: generic-counter: Update Count and Signal data types

Count data is now always represented as an unsigned integer, while
Signal data is either SIGNAL_LOW or SIGNAL_HIGH. In addition,
clarification changes and additions are made to better explain the
theory of the Generic Counter interface and its use.
Signed-off-by: default avatarWilliam Breathitt Gray <vilhelm.gray@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarJonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron@huawei.com>
parent d49e6ee2
......@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ Generic Counter Interface
Introduction
============
Counter devices are prevalent within a diverse spectrum of industries.
Counter devices are prevalent among a diverse spectrum of industries.
The ubiquitous presence of these devices necessitates a common interface
and standard of interaction and exposure. This driver API attempts to
resolve the issue of duplicate code found among existing counter device
......@@ -26,23 +26,72 @@ the Generic Counter interface.
There are three core components to a counter:
* Count:
Count data for a set of Signals.
* Signal:
Input data that is evaluated by the counter to determine the count
data.
Stream of data to be evaluated by the counter.
* Synapse:
The association of a Signal with a respective Count.
Association of a Signal, and evaluation trigger, with a Count.
* Count:
Accumulation of the effects of connected Synapses.
SIGNAL
------
A Signal represents a stream of data. This is the input data that is
evaluated by the counter to determine the count data; e.g. a quadrature
signal output line of a rotary encoder. Not all counter devices provide
user access to the Signal data, so exposure is optional for drivers.
When the Signal data is available for user access, the Generic Counter
interface provides the following available signal values:
* SIGNAL_LOW:
Signal line is in a low state.
* SIGNAL_HIGH:
Signal line is in a high state.
A Signal may be associated with one or more Counts.
SYNAPSE
-------
A Synapse represents the association of a Signal with a Count. Signal
data affects respective Count data, and the Synapse represents this
relationship.
The Synapse action mode specifies the Signal data condition that
triggers the respective Count's count function evaluation to update the
count data. The Generic Counter interface provides the following
available action modes:
* None:
Signal does not trigger the count function. In Pulse-Direction count
function mode, this Signal is evaluated as Direction.
* Rising Edge:
Low state transitions to high state.
* Falling Edge:
High state transitions to low state.
* Both Edges:
Any state transition.
A counter is defined as a set of input signals associated with count
data that are generated by the evaluation of the state of the associated
input signals as defined by the respective count functions. Within the
context of the Generic Counter interface, a counter consists of Counts
each associated with a set of Signals, whose respective Synapse
instances represent the count function update conditions for the
associated Counts.
A Synapse associates one Signal with one Count.
COUNT
-----
A Count represents the count data for a set of Signals. The Generic
Counter interface provides the following available count data types:
* COUNT_POSITION:
Unsigned integer value representing position.
A Count represents the accumulation of the effects of connected
Synapses; i.e. the count data for a set of Signals. The Generic
Counter interface represents the count data as a natural number.
A Count has a count function mode which represents the update behavior
for the count data. The Generic Counter interface provides the following
......@@ -86,60 +135,7 @@ available count function modes:
Any state transition on either quadrature pair signals updates the
respective count. Quadrature encoding determines the direction.
A Count has a set of one or more associated Signals.
SIGNAL
------
A Signal represents a counter input data; this is the input data that is
evaluated by the counter to determine the count data; e.g. a quadrature
signal output line of a rotary encoder. Not all counter devices provide
user access to the Signal data.
The Generic Counter interface provides the following available signal
data types for when the Signal data is available for user access:
* SIGNAL_LEVEL:
Signal line state level. The following states are possible:
- SIGNAL_LEVEL_LOW:
Signal line is in a low state.
- SIGNAL_LEVEL_HIGH:
Signal line is in a high state.
A Signal may be associated with one or more Counts.
SYNAPSE
-------
A Synapse represents the association of a Signal with a respective
Count. Signal data affects respective Count data, and the Synapse
represents this relationship.
The Synapse action mode specifies the Signal data condition which
triggers the respective Count's count function evaluation to update the
count data. The Generic Counter interface provides the following
available action modes:
* None:
Signal does not trigger the count function. In Pulse-Direction count
function mode, this Signal is evaluated as Direction.
* Rising Edge:
Low state transitions to high state.
* Falling Edge:
High state transitions to low state.
* Both Edges:
Any state transition.
A counter is defined as a set of input signals associated with count
data that are generated by the evaluation of the state of the associated
input signals as defined by the respective count functions. Within the
context of the Generic Counter interface, a counter consists of Counts
each associated with a set of Signals, whose respective Synapse
instances represent the count function update conditions for the
associated Counts.
A Count has a set of one or more associated Synapses.
Paradigm
========
......@@ -286,10 +282,36 @@ if device memory-managed registration is desired.
Extension sysfs attributes can be created for auxiliary functionality
and data by passing in defined counter_device_ext, counter_count_ext,
and counter_signal_ext structures. In these cases, the
counter_device_ext structure is used for global configuration of the
respective Counter device, while the counter_count_ext and
counter_signal_ext structures allow for auxiliary exposure and
configuration of a specific Count or Signal respectively.
counter_device_ext structure is used for global/miscellaneous exposure
and configuration of the respective Counter device, while the
counter_count_ext and counter_signal_ext structures allow for auxiliary
exposure and configuration of a specific Count or Signal respectively.
Determining the type of extension to create is a matter of scope.
* Signal extensions are attributes that expose information/control
specific to a Signal. These types of attributes will exist under a
Signal's directory in sysfs.
For example, if you have an invert feature for a Signal, you can have
a Signal extension called "invert" that toggles that feature:
/sys/bus/counter/devices/counterX/signalY/invert
* Count extensions are attributes that expose information/control
specific to a Count. These type of attributes will exist under a
Count's directory in sysfs.
For example, if you want to pause/unpause a Count from updating, you
can have a Count extension called "enable" that toggles such:
/sys/bus/counter/devices/counterX/countY/enable
* Device extensions are attributes that expose information/control
non-specific to a particular Count or Signal. This is where you would
put your global features or other miscellanous functionality.
For example, if your device has an overtemp sensor, you can report the
chip overheated via a device extension called "error_overtemp":
/sys/bus/counter/devices/counterX/error_overtemp
Architecture
============
......
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