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authorJean Delvare <khali@linux-fr.org>2005-10-26 21:39:40 +0200
committerGreg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>2005-10-28 14:02:14 -0700
commitc3df5806cdae6fac678c662b527cb974bef4b60c (patch)
treea510da8447852247907dd6896cdf51c7e3d60844 /Documentation/hwmon/lm90
parent8256fe0f40f1cd72f80f2c46fe0ab1638f03a98d (diff)
[PATCH] hwmon: Add PEC support to the lm90 driver
Add PEC support to the lm90 driver. Only the ADM1032 chip supports it, and in a rather tricky way, which is why this patch comes with documentation reinforcements. At least, this demonstrates that the new PEC support logic in i2c-core can properly deal with chips with partial PEC support. As enabling PEC causes a significant performance drop, it can be disabled through a sysfs file (unsurprisingly named "pec"). Signed-off-by: Jean Delvare <khali@linux-fr.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/hwmon/lm90')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/hwmon/lm9039
1 files changed, 37 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/hwmon/lm90 b/Documentation/hwmon/lm90
index 2c4cf39471f..70abf93ea37 100644
--- a/Documentation/hwmon/lm90
+++ b/Documentation/hwmon/lm90
@@ -71,8 +71,8 @@ increased resolution of the remote temperature measurement.
The different chipsets of the family are not strictly identical, although
very similar. This driver doesn't handle any specific feature for now,
-but could if there ever was a need for it. For reference, here comes a
-non-exhaustive list of specific features:
+with the exception of SMBus PEC. For reference, here comes a non-exhaustive
+list of specific features:
LM90:
* Filter and alert configuration register at 0xBF.
@@ -91,6 +91,7 @@ ADM1032:
* Conversion averaging.
* Up to 64 conversions/s.
* ALERT is triggered by open remote sensor.
+ * SMBus PEC support for Write Byte and Receive Byte transactions.
ADT7461
* Extended temperature range (breaks compatibility)
@@ -119,3 +120,37 @@ The lm90 driver will not update its values more frequently than every
other second; reading them more often will do no harm, but will return
'old' values.
+PEC Support
+-----------
+
+The ADM1032 is the only chip of the family which supports PEC. It does
+not support PEC on all transactions though, so some care must be taken.
+
+When reading a register value, the PEC byte is computed and sent by the
+ADM1032 chip. However, in the case of a combined transaction (SMBus Read
+Byte), the ADM1032 computes the CRC value over only the second half of
+the message rather than its entirety, because it thinks the first half
+of the message belongs to a different transaction. As a result, the CRC
+value differs from what the SMBus master expects, and all reads fail.
+
+For this reason, the lm90 driver will enable PEC for the ADM1032 only if
+the bus supports the SMBus Send Byte and Receive Byte transaction types.
+These transactions will be used to read register values, instead of
+SMBus Read Byte, and PEC will work properly.
+
+Additionally, the ADM1032 doesn't support SMBus Send Byte with PEC.
+Instead, it will try to write the PEC value to the register (because the
+SMBus Send Byte transaction with PEC is similar to a Write Byte transaction
+without PEC), which is not what we want. Thus, PEC is explicitely disabled
+on SMBus Send Byte transactions in the lm90 driver.
+
+PEC on byte data transactions represents a significant increase in bandwidth
+usage (+33% for writes, +25% for reads) in normal conditions. With the need
+to use two SMBus transaction for reads, this overhead jumps to +50%. Worse,
+two transactions will typically mean twice as much delay waiting for
+transaction completion, effectively doubling the register cache refresh time.
+I guess reliability comes at a price, but it's quite expensive this time.
+
+So, as not everyone might enjoy the slowdown, PEC can be disabled through
+sysfs. Just write 0 to the "pec" file and PEC will be disabled. Write 1
+to that file to enable PEC again.