diff options
author | Ernst Schwab <eschwab@online.de> | 2010-06-28 17:49:29 -0700 |
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committer | Grant Likely <grant.likely@secretlab.ca> | 2010-06-28 17:49:29 -0700 |
commit | cf32b71e981ca63e8f349d8585ca2a3583b556e0 (patch) | |
tree | e704942f6843114446c73478a79e615a57d2eb49 /net | |
parent | 7e27d6e778cd87b6f2415515d7127eba53fe5d02 (diff) |
spi/mmc_spi: SPI bus locking API, using mutex
SPI bus locking API to allow exclusive access to the SPI bus, especially, but
not limited to, for the mmc_spi driver.
Coded according to an outline from Grant Likely; here is his
specification (accidentally swapped function names corrected):
It requires 3 things to be added to struct spi_master.
- 1 Mutex
- 1 spin lock
- 1 flag.
The mutex protects spi_sync, and provides sleeping "for free"
The spinlock protects the atomic spi_async call.
The flag is set when the lock is obtained, and checked while holding
the spinlock in spi_async(). If the flag is checked, then spi_async()
must fail immediately.
The current runtime API looks like this:
spi_async(struct spi_device*, struct spi_message*);
spi_sync(struct spi_device*, struct spi_message*);
The API needs to be extended to this:
spi_async(struct spi_device*, struct spi_message*)
spi_sync(struct spi_device*, struct spi_message*)
spi_bus_lock(struct spi_master*) /* although struct spi_device* might
be easier */
spi_bus_unlock(struct spi_master*)
spi_async_locked(struct spi_device*, struct spi_message*)
spi_sync_locked(struct spi_device*, struct spi_message*)
Drivers can only call the last two if they already hold the spi_master_lock().
spi_bus_lock() obtains the mutex, obtains the spin lock, sets the
flag, and releases the spin lock before returning. It doesn't even
need to sleep while waiting for "in-flight" spi_transactions to
complete because its purpose is to guarantee no additional
transactions are added. It does not guarantee that the bus is idle.
spi_bus_unlock() clears the flag and releases the mutex, which will
wake up any waiters.
The difference between spi_async() and spi_async_locked() is that the
locked version bypasses the check of the lock flag. Both versions
need to obtain the spinlock.
The difference between spi_sync() and spi_sync_locked() is that
spi_sync() must hold the mutex while enqueuing a new transfer.
spi_sync_locked() doesn't because the mutex is already held. Note
however that spi_sync must *not* continue to hold the mutex while
waiting for the transfer to complete, otherwise only one transfer
could be queued up at a time!
Almost no code needs to be written. The current spi_async() and
spi_sync() can probably be renamed to __spi_async() and __spi_sync()
so that spi_async(), spi_sync(), spi_async_locked() and
spi_sync_locked() can just become wrappers around the common code.
spi_sync() is protected by a mutex because it can sleep
spi_async() needs to be protected with a flag and a spinlock because
it can be called atomically and must not sleep
Signed-off-by: Ernst Schwab <eschwab@online.de>
[grant.likely@secretlab.ca: use spin_lock_irqsave()]
Signed-off-by: Grant Likely <grant.likely@secretlab.ca>
Tested-by: Matt Fleming <matt@console-pimps.org>
Tested-by: Antonio Ospite <ospite@studenti.unina.it>
Diffstat (limited to 'net')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions