Message ID | 20210618075243.42046-3-stephan@gerhold.net (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Superseded |
Delegated to: | Netdev Maintainers |
Headers | show |
Series | net: wwan: Add RPMSG WWAN CTRL driver | expand |
Context | Check | Description |
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netdev/cover_letter | success | Link |
netdev/fixes_present | success | Link |
netdev/patch_count | success | Link |
netdev/tree_selection | success | Clearly marked for net-next |
netdev/subject_prefix | success | Link |
netdev/cc_maintainers | success | CCed 8 of 8 maintainers |
netdev/source_inline | success | Was 0 now: 0 |
netdev/verify_signedoff | success | Link |
netdev/module_param | success | Was 0 now: 0 |
netdev/build_32bit | success | Errors and warnings before: 0 this patch: 0 |
netdev/kdoc | success | Errors and warnings before: 0 this patch: 0 |
netdev/verify_fixes | success | Link |
netdev/checkpatch | success | total: 0 errors, 0 warnings, 0 checks, 185 lines checked |
netdev/build_allmodconfig_warn | success | Errors and warnings before: 0 this patch: 0 |
netdev/header_inline | success | Link |
Hey Stephan, > +static const struct rpmsg_device_id rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_id_table[] = { > + /* RPMSG channels for Qualcomm SoCs with integrated modem */ > + { .name = "DATA5_CNTL", .driver_data = WWAN_PORT_QMI }, > + { .name = "DATA4", .driver_data = WWAN_PORT_AT }, > + {}, > +}; If I understand this properly, now these rpmsg backed control ports would be automatically exposed without the need of a userspace CLI tool to do that (rpmsgexport). And if I recall correctly, DATA5_CNTL and DATA4 were the only channels actively exported with udev actions using rpmsgexport in postmarketos, but that didn't mean someone could add additional rules to export other channels (i.e. as per the ModemManager port type hint rules, DATA[0-9]*_CNTL as QMI and DATA[0-9]* as AT, except for DATA40_CNTL and DATA_40 which are the USB tethering related ones). So, does this mean we're limiting the amount of channels exported to only one QMI control port and one AT control port? Not saying that's wrong, but maybe it makes sense to add a comment somewhere specifying that explicitly. Also, would it make sense to have some way to trigger the export of additional channels somehow via userspace? e.g. something like rpmsgexport but using the wwan subsystem. I'm not sure if that's a true need anywhere or just over-engineering the solution, truth be told.
Hi Aleksander! On Fri, Jun 18, 2021 at 10:21:18AM +0200, Aleksander Morgado wrote: > > +static const struct rpmsg_device_id rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_id_table[] = { > > + /* RPMSG channels for Qualcomm SoCs with integrated modem */ > > + { .name = "DATA5_CNTL", .driver_data = WWAN_PORT_QMI }, > > + { .name = "DATA4", .driver_data = WWAN_PORT_AT }, > > + {}, > > +}; > > If I understand this properly, now these rpmsg backed control ports > would be automatically exposed without the need of a userspace CLI > tool to do that (rpmsgexport). > Yep, that's the main advantage compared to the current approach. > And if I recall correctly, DATA5_CNTL and DATA4 were the only channels > actively exported with udev actions using rpmsgexport in postmarketos, > but that didn't mean someone could add additional rules to export > other channels (i.e. as per the ModemManager port type hint rules, > DATA[0-9]*_CNTL as QMI and DATA[0-9]* as AT, except for DATA40_CNTL > and DATA_40 which are the USB tethering related ones). > Yep. > So, does this mean we're limiting the amount of channels exported to > only one QMI control port and one AT control port? Yep, but I think: - It's easy to extend this with additional ports later if someone has a real use case for that. - It's still possible to export via rpmsgexport. > Not saying that's wrong, but maybe it makes sense to add a comment > somewhere specifying that explicitly. Given that these channels were only found through reverse engineering, saying that DATA*_CNTL/DATA* are fully equivalent QMI/AT ports is just a theory, I have no proof for this. Generally these channels had some fixed use case on the original Android system, for example DATA1 (AT) seems to have been often used for Bluetooth Dial-Up Networking (DUN) while DATA4 was often more general purpose. Perhaps DATA* are all fully equivalent, independent AT channels at the end, or perhaps DATA1/DATA4 behave slightly differently because there were some special requirements for Bluetooth DUN. I have no way to tell. And it can vary from device to device since we're stuck with device-specific (and usually signed) firmware. Another example: I have seen DATA11 on some devices, but it does not seem to work as AT port for some reason, there is no reply at all from the modem on that channel. Perhaps it needs to be activated somehow, perhaps it's not an AT channel at all, I have no way to tell. My point is: Here I'm only enabling what is proven to work on all devices (used in postmarketOS for more than a year). I have insufficient data to vouch for the reliability of any other channel. I cannot say if the channels are really independent, or influence each other somehow. As far as I understand, we currently do not have any use case for having multiple QMI/AT ports exposed for ModemManager, right? And if someone does have a use case, perhaps exposing them through the WWAN subsystem is not even what they want, perhaps they want to forward them through USB or something. > Also, would it make sense to have some way to trigger the export of > additional channels somehow via userspace? e.g. something like > rpmsgexport but using the wwan subsystem. I'm not sure if that's a > true need anywhere or just over-engineering the solution, truth be > told. So personally I think we should keep this simple and limited to existing use cases. If someone shows up with different requirements we can investigate this further. If I send a v3 I will check if I can clarify this in the commit message somewhat. I actually had something related in there but removed it shortly before submitting the patch because I thought it's mostly just speculation and the message was already quite long. Oh well :) Stephan
Hey, > > So, does this mean we're limiting the amount of channels exported to > > only one QMI control port and one AT control port? > > Yep, but I think: > - It's easy to extend this with additional ports later > if someone has a real use case for that. > - It's still possible to export via rpmsgexport. > Ah, that's good then, if we can have the rpmsgexport fallback, there shouldn't be any issue. > > Not saying that's wrong, but maybe it makes sense to add a comment > > somewhere specifying that explicitly. > > Given that these channels were only found through reverse engineering, > saying that DATA*_CNTL/DATA* are fully equivalent QMI/AT ports is just > a theory, I have no proof for this. Generally these channels had some > fixed use case on the original Android system, for example DATA1 (AT) > seems to have been often used for Bluetooth Dial-Up Networking (DUN) > while DATA4 was often more general purpose. > > Perhaps DATA* are all fully equivalent, independent AT channels at the > end, or perhaps DATA1/DATA4 behave slightly differently because there > were some special requirements for Bluetooth DUN. I have no way to tell. > And it can vary from device to device since we're stuck with > device-specific (and usually signed) firmware. > > Another example: I have seen DATA11 on some devices, but it does not > seem to work as AT port for some reason, there is no reply at all > from the modem on that channel. Perhaps it needs to be activated > somehow, perhaps it's not an AT channel at all, I have no way to tell. > > My point is: Here I'm only enabling what is proven to work on all > devices (used in postmarketOS for more than a year). I have insufficient > data to vouch for the reliability of any other channel. I cannot say if > the channels are really independent, or influence each other somehow. > Fair enough; I think your approach is the correct one, just enable what's known to work. > As far as I understand, we currently do not have any use case for having > multiple QMI/AT ports exposed for ModemManager, right? And if someone > does have a use case, perhaps exposing them through the WWAN subsystem > is not even what they want, perhaps they want to forward them through > USB or something. > There is no such usecase in MM; having one single QMI port in MM is more than enough, and having the extra AT port gives some functionalities that we don't yet support in QMI (e.g. voice call management). We don't gain anything extra by having more QMI or more AT ports at this moment. > > Also, would it make sense to have some way to trigger the export of > > additional channels somehow via userspace? e.g. something like > > rpmsgexport but using the wwan subsystem. I'm not sure if that's a > > true need anywhere or just over-engineering the solution, truth be > > told. > > So personally I think we should keep this simple and limited to existing > use cases. If someone shows up with different requirements we can > investigate this further. > Yes, I think I'm on that same boat. > If I send a v3 I will check if I can clarify this in the commit > message somewhat. I actually had something related in there but removed > it shortly before submitting the patch because I thought it's mostly > just speculation and the message was already quite long. Oh well :) > Heh :) Thanks!
diff --git a/MAINTAINERS b/MAINTAINERS index 183cc61e2dc0..fbf792962d7b 100644 --- a/MAINTAINERS +++ b/MAINTAINERS @@ -15587,6 +15587,13 @@ F: include/linux/rpmsg/ F: include/uapi/linux/rpmsg.h F: samples/rpmsg/ +REMOTE PROCESSOR MESSAGING (RPMSG) WWAN CONTROL DRIVER +M: Stephan Gerhold <stephan@gerhold.net> +L: netdev@vger.kernel.org +L: linux-remoteproc@vger.kernel.org +S: Maintained +F: drivers/net/wwan/rpmsg_wwan_ctrl.c + RENESAS CLOCK DRIVERS M: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert+renesas@glider.be> L: linux-renesas-soc@vger.kernel.org diff --git a/drivers/net/wwan/Kconfig b/drivers/net/wwan/Kconfig index 249b3f1ed62b..de9384326bc8 100644 --- a/drivers/net/wwan/Kconfig +++ b/drivers/net/wwan/Kconfig @@ -38,6 +38,24 @@ config MHI_WWAN_CTRL To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module will be called mhi_wwan_ctrl. +config RPMSG_WWAN_CTRL + tristate "RPMSG WWAN control driver" + depends on RPMSG + help + RPMSG WWAN CTRL allows modems available via RPMSG channels to expose + different modem protocols/ports to userspace, including AT and QMI. + These protocols can be accessed directly from userspace + (e.g. AT commands) or via libraries/tools (e.g. libqmi, libqcdm...). + + This is mainly used for modems integrated into many Qualcomm SoCs, + e.g. for AT and QMI on Qualcomm MSM8916 or MSM8974. Note that many + newer Qualcomm SoCs (e.g. SDM845) still provide an AT port through + this driver but the QMI messages can only be sent through + QRTR network sockets (CONFIG_QRTR). + + To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module will be + called rpmsg_wwan_ctrl. + config IOSM tristate "IOSM Driver for Intel M.2 WWAN Device" depends on INTEL_IOMMU diff --git a/drivers/net/wwan/Makefile b/drivers/net/wwan/Makefile index 83dd3482ffc3..d90ac33abaef 100644 --- a/drivers/net/wwan/Makefile +++ b/drivers/net/wwan/Makefile @@ -9,4 +9,5 @@ wwan-objs += wwan_core.o obj-$(CONFIG_WWAN_HWSIM) += wwan_hwsim.o obj-$(CONFIG_MHI_WWAN_CTRL) += mhi_wwan_ctrl.o +obj-$(CONFIG_RPMSG_WWAN_CTRL) += rpmsg_wwan_ctrl.o obj-$(CONFIG_IOSM) += iosm/ diff --git a/drivers/net/wwan/rpmsg_wwan_ctrl.c b/drivers/net/wwan/rpmsg_wwan_ctrl.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..de226cdb69fd --- /dev/null +++ b/drivers/net/wwan/rpmsg_wwan_ctrl.c @@ -0,0 +1,143 @@ +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only +/* Copyright (c) 2021, Stephan Gerhold <stephan@gerhold.net> */ +#include <linux/kernel.h> +#include <linux/mod_devicetable.h> +#include <linux/module.h> +#include <linux/platform_device.h> +#include <linux/rpmsg.h> +#include <linux/wwan.h> + +struct rpmsg_wwan_dev { + /* Lower level is a rpmsg dev, upper level is a wwan port */ + struct rpmsg_device *rpdev; + struct wwan_port *wwan_port; + struct rpmsg_endpoint *ept; +}; + +static int rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_callback(struct rpmsg_device *rpdev, + void *buf, int len, void *priv, u32 src) +{ + struct rpmsg_wwan_dev *rpwwan = priv; + struct sk_buff *skb; + + skb = alloc_skb(len, GFP_ATOMIC); + if (!skb) + return -ENOMEM; + + skb_put_data(skb, buf, len); + wwan_port_rx(rpwwan->wwan_port, skb); + return 0; +} + +static int rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_start(struct wwan_port *port) +{ + struct rpmsg_wwan_dev *rpwwan = wwan_port_get_drvdata(port); + struct rpmsg_channel_info chinfo = { + .src = rpwwan->rpdev->src, + .dst = RPMSG_ADDR_ANY, + }; + + strncpy(chinfo.name, rpwwan->rpdev->id.name, RPMSG_NAME_SIZE); + rpwwan->ept = rpmsg_create_ept(rpwwan->rpdev, rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_callback, + rpwwan, chinfo); + if (!rpwwan->ept) + return -EREMOTEIO; + + return 0; +} + +static void rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_stop(struct wwan_port *port) +{ + struct rpmsg_wwan_dev *rpwwan = wwan_port_get_drvdata(port); + + rpmsg_destroy_ept(rpwwan->ept); + rpwwan->ept = NULL; +} + +static int rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_tx(struct wwan_port *port, struct sk_buff *skb) +{ + struct rpmsg_wwan_dev *rpwwan = wwan_port_get_drvdata(port); + int ret; + + ret = rpmsg_trysend(rpwwan->ept, skb->data, skb->len); + if (ret) + return ret; + + consume_skb(skb); + return 0; +} + +static const struct wwan_port_ops rpmsg_wwan_pops = { + .start = rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_start, + .stop = rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_stop, + .tx = rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_tx, +}; + +static struct device *rpmsg_wwan_find_parent(struct device *dev) +{ + /* Select first platform device as parent for the WWAN ports. + * On Qualcomm platforms this is usually the platform device that + * represents the modem remote processor. This might need to be + * adjusted when adding device IDs for other platforms. + */ + for (dev = dev->parent; dev; dev = dev->parent) { + if (dev_is_platform(dev)) + return dev; + } + return NULL; +} + +static int rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_probe(struct rpmsg_device *rpdev) +{ + struct rpmsg_wwan_dev *rpwwan; + struct wwan_port *port; + struct device *parent; + + parent = rpmsg_wwan_find_parent(&rpdev->dev); + if (!parent) + return -ENODEV; + + rpwwan = devm_kzalloc(&rpdev->dev, sizeof(*rpwwan), GFP_KERNEL); + if (!rpwwan) + return -ENOMEM; + + rpwwan->rpdev = rpdev; + dev_set_drvdata(&rpdev->dev, rpwwan); + + /* Register as a wwan port, id.driver_data contains wwan port type */ + port = wwan_create_port(parent, rpdev->id.driver_data, + &rpmsg_wwan_pops, rpwwan); + if (IS_ERR(port)) + return PTR_ERR(port); + + rpwwan->wwan_port = port; + + return 0; +}; + +static void rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_remove(struct rpmsg_device *rpdev) +{ + struct rpmsg_wwan_dev *rpwwan = dev_get_drvdata(&rpdev->dev); + + wwan_remove_port(rpwwan->wwan_port); +} + +static const struct rpmsg_device_id rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_id_table[] = { + /* RPMSG channels for Qualcomm SoCs with integrated modem */ + { .name = "DATA5_CNTL", .driver_data = WWAN_PORT_QMI }, + { .name = "DATA4", .driver_data = WWAN_PORT_AT }, + {}, +}; +MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(rpmsg, rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_id_table); + +static struct rpmsg_driver rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_driver = { + .drv.name = "rpmsg_wwan_ctrl", + .id_table = rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_id_table, + .probe = rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_probe, + .remove = rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_remove, +}; +module_rpmsg_driver(rpmsg_wwan_ctrl_driver); + +MODULE_LICENSE("GPL v2"); +MODULE_DESCRIPTION("RPMSG WWAN CTRL Driver"); +MODULE_AUTHOR("Stephan Gerhold <stephan@gerhold.net>");
The remote processor messaging (rpmsg) subsystem provides an interface to communicate with other remote processors. On many Qualcomm SoCs this is used to communicate with an integrated modem DSP that implements most of the modem functionality and provides high-level protocols like QMI or AT to allow controlling the modem. For QMI, most older Qualcomm SoCs (e.g. MSM8916/MSM8974) have a standalone "DATA5_CNTL" channel that allows exchanging QMI messages. Note that newer SoCs (e.g. SDM845) only allow exchanging QMI messages via a shared QRTR channel that is available via a socket API on Linux. For AT, the "DATA4" channel accepts at least a limited set of AT commands, on many older and newer Qualcomm SoCs, although QMI is typically the preferred control protocol. Note that the data path (network interface) is entirely separate from the control path and varies between Qualcomm SoCs, e.g. "IPA" on newer Qualcomm SoCs or "BAM-DMUX" on some older ones. The RPMSG WWAN CTRL driver exposes the QMI/AT control ports via the WWAN subsystem, and therefore allows userspace like ModemManager to set up the modem. Until now, ModemManager had to use the RPMSG-specific rpmsg-char where the channels must be explicitly exposed as a char device first and don't show up directly in sysfs. The driver is a fairly simple glue layer between WWAN and RPMSG and is mostly based on the existing mhi_wwan_ctrl.c and rpmsg_char.c. Cc: Loic Poulain <loic.poulain@linaro.org> Cc: Bjorn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Stephan Gerhold <stephan@gerhold.net> --- Changes in v2: None --- Notes from v1: I have mainly tested this driver on Qualcomm MSM8916 with the qcom_smd RPMSG provider, together with both ModemManager and oFono in userspace. Note that this driver can also work somewhat with the "glink" RPMSG provider on newer SoCs (mainly for AT ports), but for some reason dynamically opening and closing channels like this driver and rpmsg-char do is horribly broken there. I'm hoping someone with more experience and hardware can fix that later. --- MAINTAINERS | 7 ++ drivers/net/wwan/Kconfig | 18 ++++ drivers/net/wwan/Makefile | 1 + drivers/net/wwan/rpmsg_wwan_ctrl.c | 143 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 4 files changed, 169 insertions(+) create mode 100644 drivers/net/wwan/rpmsg_wwan_ctrl.c