zephyr/include/device.h
Peter Bigot b29abe3710 device: add API to visit required devices
The static device dependencies from devicetree are not the only ones
that might be present at runtime.  Add API that allows visiting
required devices without assuming that handles for or pointers to them
can be accessed as a static contiguous sequence.

Signed-off-by: Peter Bigot <peter.bigot@nordicsemi.no>
2021-03-11 08:53:18 -05:00

1091 lines
35 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (c) 2015 Intel Corporation.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
*/
#ifndef ZEPHYR_INCLUDE_DEVICE_H_
#define ZEPHYR_INCLUDE_DEVICE_H_
/**
* @brief Device Driver APIs
* @defgroup io_interfaces Device Driver APIs
* @{
* @}
*/
/**
* @brief Device Model APIs
* @defgroup device_model Device Model APIs
* @{
*/
#include <init.h>
#include <sys/device_mmio.h>
#include <sys/util.h>
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/** @brief Type used to represent devices and functions.
*
* The extreme values and zero have special significance. Negative
* values identify functionality that does not correspond to a Zephyr
* device, such as the system clock or a SYS_INIT() function.
*/
typedef int16_t device_handle_t;
/** @brief Flag value used in lists of device handles to separate
* distinct groups.
*
* This is the minimum value for the device_handle_t type.
*/
#define DEVICE_HANDLE_SEP INT16_MIN
/** @brief Flag value used in lists of device handles to indicate the
* end of the list.
*
* This is the maximum value for the device_handle_t type.
*/
#define DEVICE_HANDLE_ENDS INT16_MAX
/** @brief Flag value used to identify an unknown device. */
#define DEVICE_HANDLE_NULL 0
#define Z_DEVICE_MAX_NAME_LEN 48
/**
* @def DEVICE_NAME_GET
*
* @brief Expands to the full name of a global device object
*
* @details Return the full name of a device object symbol created by
* DEVICE_DEFINE(), using the dev_name provided to DEVICE_DEFINE().
*
* It is meant to be used for declaring extern symbols pointing on device
* objects before using the DEVICE_GET macro to get the device object.
*
* @param name The same as dev_name provided to DEVICE_DEFINE()
*
* @return The expanded name of the device object created by DEVICE_DEFINE()
*/
#define DEVICE_NAME_GET(name) _CONCAT(__device_, name)
/**
* @def SYS_DEVICE_DEFINE
*
* @brief Run an initialization function at boot at specified priority,
* and define device PM control function.
*
* @details Invokes DEVICE_DEFINE() with no power management support
* (@p pm_control_fn), no API (@p api_ptr), and a device name derived from
* the @p init_fn name (@p dev_name).
*/
#define SYS_DEVICE_DEFINE(drv_name, init_fn, pm_control_fn, level, prio) \
DEVICE_DEFINE(Z_SYS_NAME(init_fn), drv_name, init_fn, \
pm_control_fn, \
NULL, NULL, level, prio, NULL)
/**
* @def DEVICE_INIT
*
* @brief Invoke DEVICE_DEFINE() with no power management support (@p
* pm_control_fn) and no API (@p api_ptr).
*/
#define DEVICE_INIT(dev_name, drv_name, init_fn, \
data_ptr, cfg_ptr, level, prio) \
__DEPRECATED_MACRO \
DEVICE_DEFINE(dev_name, drv_name, init_fn, NULL, \
data_ptr, cfg_ptr, level, prio, NULL)
/**
* @def DEVICE_AND_API_INIT
*
* @brief Invoke DEVICE_DEFINE() with no power management support (@p
* pm_control_fn).
*/
#define DEVICE_AND_API_INIT(dev_name, drv_name, init_fn, \
data_ptr, cfg_ptr, level, prio, api_ptr) \
__DEPRECATED_MACRO \
DEVICE_DEFINE(dev_name, drv_name, init_fn, \
NULL, \
data_ptr, cfg_ptr, level, prio, api_ptr)
/**
* @def DEVICE_DEFINE
*
* @brief Create device object and set it up for boot time initialization,
* with the option to device_pm_control. In case of Device Idle Power
* Management is enabled, make sure the device is in suspended state after
* initialization.
*
* @details This macro defines a device object that is automatically
* configured by the kernel during system initialization. Note that
* devices set up with this macro will not be accessible from user mode
* since the API is not specified;
*
* @param dev_name Device name. This must be less than Z_DEVICE_MAX_NAME_LEN
* characters (including terminating NUL) in order to be looked up from user
* mode with device_get_binding().
*
* @param drv_name The name this instance of the driver exposes to
* the system.
*
* @param init_fn Address to the init function of the driver.
*
* @param pm_control_fn Pointer to device_pm_control function.
* Can be empty function (device_pm_control_nop) if not implemented.
*
* @param data_ptr Pointer to the device's private data.
*
* @param cfg_ptr The address to the structure containing the
* configuration information for this instance of the driver.
*
* @param level The initialization level. See SYS_INIT() for
* details.
*
* @param prio Priority within the selected initialization level. See
* SYS_INIT() for details.
*
* @param api_ptr Provides an initial pointer to the API function struct
* used by the driver. Can be NULL.
*/
#define DEVICE_DEFINE(dev_name, drv_name, init_fn, pm_control_fn, \
data_ptr, cfg_ptr, level, prio, api_ptr) \
Z_DEVICE_DEFINE(DT_INVALID_NODE, dev_name, drv_name, init_fn, \
pm_control_fn, \
data_ptr, cfg_ptr, level, prio, api_ptr)
/**
* @def DEVICE_DT_NAME
*
* @brief Return a string name for a devicetree node.
*
* @details This macro returns a string literal usable as a device name
* from a devicetree node. If the node has a "label" property, its value is
* returned. Otherwise, the node's full "node-name@@unit-address" name is
* returned.
*
* @param node_id The devicetree node identifier.
*/
#define DEVICE_DT_NAME(node_id) \
DT_PROP_OR(node_id, label, DT_NODE_FULL_NAME(node_id))
/**
* @def DEVICE_DT_DEFINE
*
* @brief Like DEVICE_DEFINE but taking metadata from a devicetree node.
*
* @details This macro defines a device object that is automatically
* configured by the kernel during system initialization. The device
* object name is derived from the node identifier (encoding the
* devicetree path to the node), and the driver name is from the @p
* label property of the devicetree node.
*
* The device is declared with extern visibility, so device objects
* defined through this API can be obtained directly through
* DEVICE_DT_GET() using @p node_id. Before using the pointer the
* referenced object should be checked using device_is_ready().
*
* @param node_id The devicetree node identifier.
*
* @param init_fn Address to the init function of the driver.
*
* @param pm_control_fn Pointer to device_pm_control function.
* Can be empty function (device_pm_control_nop) if not implemented.
*
* @param data_ptr Pointer to the device's private data.
*
* @param cfg_ptr The address to the structure containing the
* configuration information for this instance of the driver.
*
* @param level The initialization level. See SYS_INIT() for
* details.
*
* @param prio Priority within the selected initialization level. See
* SYS_INIT() for details.
*
* @param api_ptr Provides an initial pointer to the API function struct
* used by the driver. Can be NULL.
*/
#define DEVICE_DT_DEFINE(node_id, init_fn, pm_control_fn, \
data_ptr, cfg_ptr, level, prio, \
api_ptr, ...) \
Z_DEVICE_DEFINE(node_id, Z_DEVICE_DT_DEV_NAME(node_id), \
DEVICE_DT_NAME(node_id), init_fn, \
pm_control_fn, \
data_ptr, cfg_ptr, level, prio, \
api_ptr, __VA_ARGS__)
/**
* @def DEVICE_DT_INST_DEFINE
*
* @brief Like DEVICE_DT_DEFINE for an instance of a DT_DRV_COMPAT compatible
*
* @param inst instance number. This is replaced by
* <tt>DT_DRV_COMPAT(inst)</tt> in the call to DEVICE_DT_DEFINE.
*
* @param ... other parameters as expected by DEVICE_DT_DEFINE.
*/
#define DEVICE_DT_INST_DEFINE(inst, ...) \
DEVICE_DT_DEFINE(DT_DRV_INST(inst), __VA_ARGS__)
/**
* @def DEVICE_DT_NAME_GET
*
* @brief The name of the struct device object for @p node_id
*
* @details Return the full name of a device object symbol created by
* DEVICE_DT_DEFINE(), using the dev_name derived from @p node_id
*
* It is meant to be used for declaring extern symbols pointing on device
* objects before using the DEVICE_DT_GET macro to get the device object.
*
* @param node_id The same as node_id provided to DEVICE_DT_DEFINE()
*
* @return The expanded name of the device object created by
* DEVICE_DT_DEFINE()
*/
#define DEVICE_DT_NAME_GET(node_id) DEVICE_NAME_GET(Z_DEVICE_DT_DEV_NAME(node_id))
/**
* @def DEVICE_DT_GET
*
* @brief Obtain a pointer to a device object by @p node_id
*
* @details Return the address of a device object created by
* DEVICE_DT_INIT(), using the dev_name derived from @p node_id
*
* @param node_id The same as node_id provided to DEVICE_DT_DEFINE()
*
* @return A pointer to the device object created by DEVICE_DT_DEFINE()
*/
#define DEVICE_DT_GET(node_id) (&DEVICE_DT_NAME_GET(node_id))
/** @def DEVICE_DT_INST_GET
*
* @brief Obtain a pointer to a device object for an instance of a
* DT_DRV_COMPAT compatible
*
* @param inst instance number
*/
#define DEVICE_DT_INST_GET(inst) DEVICE_DT_GET(DT_DRV_INST(inst))
/**
* @def DEVICE_DT_GET_ANY
*
* @brief Obtain a pointer to a device object by devicetree compatible
*
* If any enabled devicetree node has the given compatible and a
* device object was created from it, this returns that device.
*
* If there no such devices, this returns NULL.
*
* If there are multiple, this returns an arbitrary one.
*
* If this returns non-NULL, the device must be checked for readiness
* before use, e.g. with device_is_ready().
*
* @param compat lowercase-and-underscores devicetree compatible
* @return a pointer to a device, or NULL
*/
#define DEVICE_DT_GET_ANY(compat) \
COND_CODE_1(DT_HAS_COMPAT_STATUS_OKAY(compat), \
(DEVICE_DT_GET(DT_INST(0, compat))), \
(NULL))
/**
* @def DEVICE_GET
*
* @brief Obtain a pointer to a device object by name
*
* @details Return the address of a device object created by
* DEVICE_DEFINE(), using the dev_name provided to DEVICE_DEFINE().
*
* @param name The same as dev_name provided to DEVICE_DEFINE()
*
* @return A pointer to the device object created by DEVICE_DEFINE()
*/
#define DEVICE_GET(name) (&DEVICE_NAME_GET(name))
/** @def DEVICE_DECLARE
*
* @brief Declare a static device object
*
* This macro can be used at the top-level to declare a device, such
* that DEVICE_GET() may be used before the full declaration in
* DEVICE_DEFINE().
*
* This is often useful when configuring interrupts statically in a
* device's init or per-instance config function, as the init function
* itself is required by DEVICE_DEFINE() and use of DEVICE_GET()
* inside it creates a circular dependency.
*
* @param name Device name
*/
#define DEVICE_DECLARE(name) static const struct device DEVICE_NAME_GET(name)
typedef void (*device_pm_cb)(const struct device *dev,
int status, void *context, void *arg);
/**
* @brief Device PM info
*/
struct device_pm {
/** Pointer to the device */
const struct device *dev;
/** Lock to synchronize the get/put operations */
struct k_sem lock;
/* Following are packed fields protected by #lock. */
/** Device pm enable flag */
bool enable : 1;
/* Following are packed fields accessed with atomic bit operations. */
atomic_t atomic_flags;
/** Device usage count */
atomic_t usage;
/** Device idle internal power state */
atomic_t fsm_state;
/** Work object for asynchronous calls */
struct k_work work;
/** Event object to listen to the sync request events */
struct k_poll_event event;
/** Signal to notify the Async API callers */
struct k_poll_signal signal;
};
/** Bit position in device_pm::atomic_flags that records whether the
* device is busy.
*/
#define DEVICE_PM_ATOMIC_FLAGS_BUSY_BIT 0
/**
* @brief Runtime device dynamic structure (in RAM) per driver instance
*
* Fields in this are expected to be default-initialized to zero. The
* kernel driver infrastructure and driver access functions are
* responsible for ensuring that any non-zero initialization is done
* before they are accessed.
*/
struct device_state {
/** Non-negative result of initializing the device.
*
* The absolute value returned when the device initialization
* function was invoked, or `UINT8_MAX` if the value exceeds
* an 8-bit integer. If initialized is also set, a zero value
* indicates initialization succeeded.
*/
unsigned int init_res : 8;
/** Indicates the device initialization function has been
* invoked.
*/
bool initialized : 1;
#ifdef CONFIG_PM_DEVICE
/* Power management data */
struct device_pm pm;
#endif /* CONFIG_PM_DEVICE */
};
/**
* @brief Runtime device structure (in ROM) per driver instance
*/
struct device {
/** Name of the device instance */
const char *name;
/** Address of device instance config information */
const void *config;
/** Address of the API structure exposed by the device instance */
const void *api;
/** Address of the common device state */
struct device_state * const state;
/** Address of the device instance private data */
void * const data;
/** optional pointer to handles associated with the device.
*
* This encodes a sequence of sets of device handles that have
* some relationship to this node. The individual sets are
* extracted with dedicated API, such as
* device_required_handles_get().
*/
const device_handle_t *const handles;
#ifdef CONFIG_PM_DEVICE
/** Power Management function */
int (*device_pm_control)(const struct device *dev, uint32_t command,
void *context, device_pm_cb cb, void *arg);
/** Pointer to device instance power management data */
struct device_pm * const pm;
#endif
};
/**
* @brief Get the handle for a given device
*
* @param dev the device for which a handle is desired.
*
* @return the handle for the device, or DEVICE_HANDLE_NULL if the
* device does not have an associated handle.
*/
static inline device_handle_t
device_handle_get(const struct device *dev)
{
device_handle_t ret = DEVICE_HANDLE_NULL;
extern const struct device __device_start[];
/* TODO: If/when devices can be constructed that are not part of the
* fixed sequence we'll need another solution.
*/
if (dev != NULL) {
ret = 1 + (device_handle_t)(dev - __device_start);
}
return ret;
}
/**
* @brief Get the device corresponding to a handle.
*
* @param dev_handle the device handle
*
* @return the device that has that handle, or a null pointer if @p
* dev_handle does not identify a device.
*/
static inline const struct device *
device_from_handle(device_handle_t dev_handle)
{
extern const struct device __device_start[];
extern const struct device __device_end[];
const struct device *dev = NULL;
size_t numdev = __device_end - __device_start;
if ((dev_handle > 0) && ((size_t)dev_handle < numdev)) {
dev = &__device_start[dev_handle - 1];
}
return dev;
}
/**
* @brief Prototype for functions used when iterating over a set of devices.
*
* Such a function may be used in API that identifies a set of devices and
* provides a visitor API supporting caller-specific interaction with each
* device in the set.
*
* The visit is said to succeed if the visitor returns a non-negative value.
*
* @param dev a device in the set being iterated
*
* @param context state used to support the visitor function
*
* @return A non-negative number to allow walking to continue, and a negative
* error code to case the iteration to stop.
*/
typedef int (*device_visitor_callback_t)(const struct device *dev, void *context);
/**
* @brief Get the set of handles for devicetree dependencies of this device.
*
* These are the device dependencies inferred from devicetree.
*
* @param dev the device for which dependencies are desired.
*
* @param count pointer to a place to store the number of devices provided at
* the returned pointer. The value is not set if the call returns a null
* pointer. The value may be set to zero.
*
* @return a pointer to a sequence of @p *count device handles, or a null
* pointer if @p dh does not provide dependency information.
*/
static inline const device_handle_t *
device_required_handles_get(const struct device *dev,
size_t *count)
{
const device_handle_t *rv = dev->handles;
if (rv != NULL) {
size_t i = 0;
while ((rv[i] != DEVICE_HANDLE_ENDS)
&& (rv[i] != DEVICE_HANDLE_SEP)) {
++i;
}
*count = i;
}
return rv;
}
/**
* @brief Visit every device that @p dev directly requires.
*
* Zephyr maintains information about which devices are directly required by
* another device; for example an I2C-based sensor driver will require an I2C
* controller for communication. Required devices can derive from
* statically-defined devicetree relationships or dependencies registered
* at runtime.
*
* This API supports operating on the set of required devices. Example uses
* include making sure required devices are ready before the requiring device
* is used, and releasing them when the requiring device is no longer needed.
*
* There is no guarantee on the order in which required devices are visited.
*
* If the @p visitor function returns a negative value iteration is halted,
* and the returned value from the visitor is returned from this function.
*
* @note This API is not available to unprivileged threads.
*
* @param dev a device of interest. The devices that this device depends on
* will be used as the set of devices to visit. This parameter must not be
* null.
*
* @param visitor_cb the function that should be invoked on each device in the
* dependency set. This parameter must not be null.
*
* @param context state that is passed through to the visitor function. This
* parameter may be null if @p visitor tolerates a null @p context.
*
* @return The number of devices that were visited if all visits succeed, or
* the negative value returned from the first visit that did not succeed.
*/
int device_required_foreach(const struct device *dev,
device_visitor_callback_t visitor_cb,
void *context);
/**
* @brief Retrieve the device structure for a driver by name
*
* @details Device objects are created via the DEVICE_DEFINE() macro and
* placed in memory by the linker. If a driver needs to bind to another driver
* it can use this function to retrieve the device structure of the lower level
* driver by the name the driver exposes to the system.
*
* @param name device name to search for. A null pointer, or a pointer to an
* empty string, will cause NULL to be returned.
*
* @return pointer to device structure; NULL if not found or cannot be used.
*/
__syscall const struct device *device_get_binding(const char *name);
/** @brief Get access to the static array of static devices.
*
* @param devices where to store the pointer to the array of
* statically allocated devices. The array must not be mutated
* through this pointer.
*
* @return the number of statically allocated devices.
*/
size_t z_device_get_all_static(const struct device * *devices);
/** @brief Determine whether a device has been successfully initialized.
*
* @param dev pointer to the device in question.
*
* @return true if and only if the device is available for use.
*/
bool z_device_ready(const struct device *dev);
/** @brief Determine whether a device is ready for use
*
* This is the implementation underlying `device_usable_check()`, without the
* overhead of a syscall wrapper.
*
* @param dev pointer to the device in question.
*
* @return a non-positive integer as documented in device_usable_check().
*/
static inline int z_device_usable_check(const struct device *dev)
{
return z_device_ready(dev) ? 0 : -ENODEV;
}
/** @brief Determine whether a device is ready for use.
*
* This checks whether a device can be used, returning 0 if it can, and
* distinct error values that identify the reason if it cannot.
*
* @retval 0 if the device is usable.
* @retval -ENODEV if the device has not been initialized, or the
* initialization failed.
* @retval other negative error codes to indicate additional conditions that
* make the device unusable.
*/
__syscall int device_usable_check(const struct device *dev);
static inline int z_impl_device_usable_check(const struct device *dev)
{
return z_device_usable_check(dev);
}
/** @brief Verify that a device is ready for use.
*
* Indicates whether the provided device pointer is for a device known to be
* in a state where it can be used with its standard API.
*
* This can be used with device pointers captured from DEVICE_DT_GET(), which
* does not include the readiness checks of device_get_binding(). At minimum
* this means that the device has been successfully initialized, but it may
* take on further conditions (e.g. is not powered down).
*
* @param dev pointer to the device in question.
*
* @retval true if the device is ready for use.
* @retval false if the device is not ready for use.
*/
static inline bool device_is_ready(const struct device *dev)
{
return device_usable_check(dev) == 0;
}
static inline bool z_impl_device_is_ready(const struct device *dev)
{
return z_device_ready(dev);
}
/**
* @}
*/
/**
* @brief Device Power Management APIs
* @defgroup device_power_management_api Device Power Management APIs
* @ingroup power_management_api
* @{
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_PM_DEVICE
/** @def DEVICE_PM_ACTIVE_STATE
*
* @brief device is in ACTIVE power state
*
* @details Normal operation of the device. All device context is retained.
*/
#define DEVICE_PM_ACTIVE_STATE 1
/** @def DEVICE_PM_LOW_POWER_STATE
*
* @brief device is in LOW power state
*
* @details Device context is preserved by the HW and need not be
* restored by the driver.
*/
#define DEVICE_PM_LOW_POWER_STATE 2
/** @def DEVICE_PM_SUSPEND_STATE
*
* @brief device is in SUSPEND power state
*
* @details Most device context is lost by the hardware.
* Device drivers must save and restore or reinitialize any context
* lost by the hardware
*/
#define DEVICE_PM_SUSPEND_STATE 3
/** @def DEVICE_PM_FORCE_SUSPEND_STATE
*
* @brief device is in force SUSPEND power state
*
* @details Driver puts the device in suspended state after
* completing the ongoing transactions and will not process any
* queued work or will not take any new requests for processing.
* Most device context is lost by the hardware. Device drivers must
* save and restore or reinitialize any context lost by the hardware.
*/
#define DEVICE_PM_FORCE_SUSPEND_STATE 4
/** @def DEVICE_PM_OFF_STATE
*
* @brief device is in OFF power state
*
* @details - Power has been fully removed from the device.
* The device context is lost when this state is entered, so the OS
* software will reinitialize the device when powering it back on
*/
#define DEVICE_PM_OFF_STATE 5
/* Constants defining support device power commands */
#define DEVICE_PM_SET_POWER_STATE 1
#define DEVICE_PM_GET_POWER_STATE 2
#endif /* CONFIG_PM_DEVICE */
/**
* @brief Get name of device PM state
*
* @param state State id which name should be returned
*/
const char *device_pm_state_str(uint32_t state);
/**
* @brief Indicate that the device is in the middle of a transaction
*
* Called by a device driver to indicate that it is in the middle of a
* transaction.
*
* @param busy_dev Pointer to device structure of the driver instance.
*/
void device_busy_set(const struct device *busy_dev);
/**
* @brief Indicate that the device has completed its transaction
*
* Called by a device driver to indicate the end of a transaction.
*
* @param busy_dev Pointer to device structure of the driver instance.
*/
void device_busy_clear(const struct device *busy_dev);
#ifdef CONFIG_PM_DEVICE
/*
* Device PM functions
*/
/**
* @brief No-op function to initialize unimplemented hook
*
* This function should be used to initialize device hook
* for which a device has no PM operations.
*
* @param unused_device Unused
* @param unused_ctrl_command Unused
* @param unused_context Unused
* @param cb Unused
* @param unused_arg Unused
*
* @retval -ENOTSUP for all operations.
*/
int device_pm_control_nop(const struct device *unused_device,
uint32_t unused_ctrl_command,
void *unused_context,
device_pm_cb cb,
void *unused_arg);
/**
* @brief Call the set power state function of a device
*
* Called by the application or power management service to let the device do
* required operations when moving to the required power state
* Note that devices may support just some of the device power states
* @param dev Pointer to device structure of the driver instance.
* @param device_power_state Device power state to be set
* @param cb Callback function to notify device power status
* @param arg Caller passed argument to callback function
*
* @retval 0 If successful in queuing the request or changing the state.
* @retval Errno Negative errno code if failure. Callback will not be called.
*/
static inline int device_set_power_state(const struct device *dev,
uint32_t device_power_state,
device_pm_cb cb, void *arg)
{
if (dev->device_pm_control) {
return dev->device_pm_control(dev,
DEVICE_PM_SET_POWER_STATE,
&device_power_state, cb, arg);
} else {
return device_pm_control_nop(dev,
DEVICE_PM_SET_POWER_STATE,
&device_power_state, cb, arg);
}
}
/**
* @brief Call the get power state function of a device
*
* This function lets the caller know the current device
* power state at any time. This state will be one of the defined
* power states allowed for the devices in that system
*
* @param dev pointer to device structure of the driver instance.
* @param device_power_state Device power state to be filled by the device
*
* @retval 0 If successful.
* @retval Errno Negative errno code if failure.
*/
static inline int device_get_power_state(const struct device *dev,
uint32_t *device_power_state)
{
if (dev->device_pm_control) {
return dev->device_pm_control(dev,
DEVICE_PM_GET_POWER_STATE,
device_power_state, NULL, NULL);
} else {
return device_pm_control_nop(dev,
DEVICE_PM_GET_POWER_STATE,
device_power_state, NULL, NULL);
}
}
/**
* @brief Gets the device structure list array and device count
*
* Called by the Power Manager application to get the list of
* device structures associated with the devices in the system.
* The PM app would use this list to create its own sorted list
* based on the order it wishes to suspend or resume the devices.
*
* @param device_list Pointer to receive the device list array
* @param device_count Pointer to receive the device count
*
* @deprecated in 2.4 release, replace with z_device_get_all_static()
*/
__deprecated static inline void device_list_get(const struct device * *device_list,
int *device_count)
{
*device_count = z_device_get_all_static(device_list);
}
/**
* @brief Check if any device is in the middle of a transaction
*
* Called by an application to see if any device is in the middle
* of a critical transaction that cannot be interrupted.
*
* @retval 0 if no device is busy
* @retval -EBUSY if any device is busy
*/
int device_any_busy_check(void);
/**
* @brief Check if a specific device is in the middle of a transaction
*
* Called by an application to see if a particular device is in the
* middle of a critical transaction that cannot be interrupted.
*
* @param chk_dev Pointer to device structure of the specific device driver
* the caller is interested in.
* @retval 0 if the device is not busy
* @retval -EBUSY if the device is busy
*/
int device_busy_check(const struct device *chk_dev);
#ifdef CONFIG_PM_DEVICE_IDLE
/* Device PM states */
enum device_pm_state {
DEVICE_PM_STATE_ACTIVE = 1,
DEVICE_PM_STATE_SUSPENDED,
DEVICE_PM_STATE_SUSPENDING,
DEVICE_PM_STATE_RESUMING,
};
/**
* @brief Enable device idle PM
*
* Called by a device driver to enable device idle power management.
* The device might be asynchronously suspended if Idle PM is enabled
* when the device is not use.
*
* @param dev Pointer to device structure of the specific device driver
* the caller is interested in.
*/
void device_pm_enable(const struct device *dev);
/**
* @brief Disable device idle PM
*
* Called by a device driver to disable device idle power management.
* The device might be asynchronously resumed if Idle PM is disabled
*
* @param dev Pointer to device structure of the specific device driver
* the caller is interested in.
*/
void device_pm_disable(const struct device *dev);
/**
* @brief Call device resume asynchronously based on usage count
*
* Called by a device driver to mark the device as being used.
* This API will asynchronously bring the device to resume state
* if it not already in active state.
*
* @param dev Pointer to device structure of the specific device driver
* the caller is interested in.
* @retval 0 If successfully queued the Async request. If queued,
* the caller need to wait on the poll event linked to device
* pm signal mechanism to know the completion of resume operation.
* @retval Errno Negative errno code if failure.
*/
int device_pm_get(const struct device *dev);
/**
* @brief Call device resume synchronously based on usage count
*
* Called by a device driver to mark the device as being used. It
* will bring up or resume the device if it is in suspended state
* based on the device usage count. This call is blocked until the
* device PM state is changed to resume.
*
* @param dev Pointer to device structure of the specific device driver
* the caller is interested in.
* @retval 0 If successful.
* @retval Errno Negative errno code if failure.
*/
int device_pm_get_sync(const struct device *dev);
/**
* @brief Call device suspend asynchronously based on usage count
*
* Called by a device driver to mark the device as being released.
* This API asynchronously put the device to suspend state if
* it not already in suspended state.
*
* @param dev Pointer to device structure of the specific device driver
* the caller is interested in.
* @retval 0 If successfully queued the Async request. If queued,
* the caller need to wait on the poll event linked to device pm
* signal mechanism to know the completion of suspend operation.
* @retval Errno Negative errno code if failure.
*/
int device_pm_put(const struct device *dev);
/**
* @brief Call device suspend synchronously based on usage count
*
* Called by a device driver to mark the device as being released. It
* will put the device to suspended state if is is in active state
* based on the device usage count. This call is blocked until the
* device PM state is changed to resume.
*
* @param dev Pointer to device structure of the specific device driver
* the caller is interested in.
* @retval 0 If successful.
* @retval Errno Negative errno code if failure.
*/
int device_pm_put_sync(const struct device *dev);
#else
static inline void device_pm_enable(const struct device *dev) { }
static inline void device_pm_disable(const struct device *dev) { }
static inline int device_pm_get(const struct device *dev) { return -ENOTSUP; }
static inline int device_pm_get_sync(const struct device *dev) { return -ENOTSUP; }
static inline int device_pm_put(const struct device *dev) { return -ENOTSUP; }
static inline int device_pm_put_sync(const struct device *dev) { return -ENOTSUP; }
#endif
#else
#define device_pm_control_nop(...) NULL
#endif
/**
* @}
*/
/* Node paths can exceed the maximum size supported by device_get_binding() in user mode,
* so synthesize a unique dev_name from the devicetree node.
*
* The ordinal used in this name can be mapped to the path by
* examining zephyr/include/generated/device_extern.h header. If the
* format of this conversion changes, gen_defines should be updated to
* match it.
*/
#define Z_DEVICE_DT_DEV_NAME(node_id) _CONCAT(dts_ord_, DT_DEP_ORD(node_id))
/* Synthesize a unique name for the device state associated with
* dev_name.
*/
#define Z_DEVICE_STATE_NAME(dev_name) _CONCAT(__devstate_, dev_name)
/** Synthesize the name of the object that holds device ordinal and
* dependency data. If the object doesn't come from a devicetree
* node, use dev_name.
*/
#define Z_DEVICE_HANDLE_NAME(node_id, dev_name) \
_CONCAT(__devicehdl_, \
COND_CODE_1(DT_NODE_EXISTS(node_id), \
(node_id), \
(dev_name)))
#define Z_DEVICE_EXTRA_HANDLES(...) \
FOR_EACH_NONEMPTY_TERM(IDENTITY, (,), __VA_ARGS__)
/* Construct objects that are referenced from struct device. These
* include power management and dependency handles.
*/
#define Z_DEVICE_DEFINE_PRE(node_id, dev_name, ...) \
Z_DEVICE_DEFINE_HANDLES(node_id, dev_name, __VA_ARGS__)
/* Initial build provides a record that associates the device object
* with its devicetree ordinal, and provides the dependency ordinals.
* These are provided as weak definitions (to prevent the reference
* from being captured when the original object file is compiled), and
* in a distinct pass1 section (which will be replaced by
* postprocessing).
*
* It is also (experimentally) necessary to provide explicit alignment
* on each object. Otherwise x86-64 builds will introduce padding
* between objects in the same input section in individual object
* files, which will be retained in subsequent links both wasting
* space and resulting in aggregate size changes relative to pass2
* when all objects will be in the same input section.
*
* The build assert will fail if device_handle_t changes size, which
* means the alignment directives in the linker scripts and in
* `gen_handles.py` must be updated.
*/
BUILD_ASSERT(sizeof(device_handle_t) == 2, "fix the linker scripts");
#define Z_DEVICE_DEFINE_HANDLES(node_id, dev_name, ...) \
extern const device_handle_t \
Z_DEVICE_HANDLE_NAME(node_id, dev_name)[]; \
const device_handle_t \
__aligned(sizeof(device_handle_t)) \
__attribute__((__weak__, \
__section__(".__device_handles_pass1"))) \
Z_DEVICE_HANDLE_NAME(node_id, dev_name)[] = { \
COND_CODE_1(DT_NODE_EXISTS(node_id), ( \
DT_DEP_ORD(node_id), \
DT_REQUIRES_DEP_ORDS(node_id) \
), ( \
DEVICE_HANDLE_NULL, \
)) \
DEVICE_HANDLE_SEP, \
Z_DEVICE_EXTRA_HANDLES(__VA_ARGS__) \
DEVICE_HANDLE_ENDS, \
};
#define Z_DEVICE_DEFINE_INIT(node_id, dev_name, pm_control_fn) \
.handles = Z_DEVICE_HANDLE_NAME(node_id, dev_name), \
Z_DEVICE_DEFINE_PM_INIT(dev_name, pm_control_fn)
/* Like DEVICE_DEFINE but takes a node_id AND a dev_name, and trailing
* dependency handles that come from outside devicetree.
*/
#define Z_DEVICE_DEFINE(node_id, dev_name, drv_name, init_fn, pm_control_fn, \
data_ptr, cfg_ptr, level, prio, api_ptr, ...) \
static struct device_state Z_DEVICE_STATE_NAME(dev_name); \
Z_DEVICE_DEFINE_PRE(node_id, dev_name, __VA_ARGS__) \
COND_CODE_1(DT_NODE_EXISTS(node_id), (), (static)) \
const Z_DECL_ALIGN(struct device) \
DEVICE_NAME_GET(dev_name) __used \
__attribute__((__section__(".device_" #level STRINGIFY(prio)))) = { \
.name = drv_name, \
.config = (cfg_ptr), \
.api = (api_ptr), \
.state = &Z_DEVICE_STATE_NAME(dev_name), \
.data = (data_ptr), \
Z_DEVICE_DEFINE_INIT(node_id, dev_name, pm_control_fn) \
}; \
BUILD_ASSERT(sizeof(Z_STRINGIFY(drv_name)) <= Z_DEVICE_MAX_NAME_LEN, \
Z_STRINGIFY(DEVICE_NAME_GET(drv_name)) " too long"); \
Z_INIT_ENTRY_DEFINE(DEVICE_NAME_GET(dev_name), init_fn, \
(&DEVICE_NAME_GET(dev_name)), level, prio)
#ifdef CONFIG_PM_DEVICE
#define Z_DEVICE_DEFINE_PM_INIT(dev_name, pm_control_fn) \
.device_pm_control = (pm_control_fn), \
.pm = &Z_DEVICE_STATE_NAME(dev_name).pm,
#else
#define Z_DEVICE_DEFINE_PM_INIT(dev_name, pm_control_fn)
#endif
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
/* device_extern is generated based on devicetree nodes */
#include <device_extern.h>
#include <syscalls/device.h>
#endif /* ZEPHYR_INCLUDE_DEVICE_H_ */