WSL2-Linux-Kernel/drivers/comedi/drivers.c

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// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
/*
* module/drivers.c
* functions for manipulating drivers
*
* COMEDI - Linux Control and Measurement Device Interface
* Copyright (C) 1997-2000 David A. Schleef <ds@schleef.org>
* Copyright (C) 2002 Frank Mori Hess <fmhess@users.sourceforge.net>
*/
#include <linux/device.h>
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/errno.h>
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/ioport.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include <linux/dma-direction.h>
#include <linux/interrupt.h>
#include <linux/firmware.h>
#include "comedidev.h"
#include "comedi_internal.h"
struct comedi_driver *comedi_drivers;
/* protects access to comedi_drivers */
DEFINE_MUTEX(comedi_drivers_list_lock);
/**
* comedi_set_hw_dev() - Set hardware device associated with COMEDI device
* @dev: COMEDI device.
* @hw_dev: Hardware device.
*
* For automatically configured COMEDI devices (resulting from a call to
* comedi_auto_config() or one of its wrappers from the low-level COMEDI
* driver), comedi_set_hw_dev() is called automatically by the COMEDI core
* to associate the COMEDI device with the hardware device. It can also be
* called directly by "legacy" low-level COMEDI drivers that rely on the
* %COMEDI_DEVCONFIG ioctl to configure the hardware as long as the hardware
* has a &struct device.
*
* If @dev->hw_dev is NULL, it gets a reference to @hw_dev and sets
* @dev->hw_dev, otherwise, it does nothing. Calling it multiple times
* with the same hardware device is not considered an error. If it gets
* a reference to the hardware device, it will be automatically 'put' when
* the device is detached from COMEDI.
*
* Returns 0 if @dev->hw_dev was NULL or the same as @hw_dev, otherwise
* returns -EEXIST.
*/
int comedi_set_hw_dev(struct comedi_device *dev, struct device *hw_dev)
{
if (hw_dev == dev->hw_dev)
return 0;
if (dev->hw_dev)
return -EEXIST;
dev->hw_dev = get_device(hw_dev);
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_set_hw_dev);
static void comedi_clear_hw_dev(struct comedi_device *dev)
{
put_device(dev->hw_dev);
dev->hw_dev = NULL;
}
/**
* comedi_alloc_devpriv() - Allocate memory for the device private data
* @dev: COMEDI device.
* @size: Size of the memory to allocate.
*
* The allocated memory is zero-filled. @dev->private points to it on
* return. The memory will be automatically freed when the COMEDI device is
* "detached".
*
* Returns a pointer to the allocated memory, or NULL on failure.
*/
void *comedi_alloc_devpriv(struct comedi_device *dev, size_t size)
{
dev->private = kzalloc(size, GFP_KERNEL);
return dev->private;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_alloc_devpriv);
/**
* comedi_alloc_subdevices() - Allocate subdevices for COMEDI device
* @dev: COMEDI device.
* @num_subdevices: Number of subdevices to allocate.
*
* Allocates and initializes an array of &struct comedi_subdevice for the
* COMEDI device. If successful, sets @dev->subdevices to point to the
* first one and @dev->n_subdevices to the number.
*
* Returns 0 on success, -EINVAL if @num_subdevices is < 1, or -ENOMEM if
* failed to allocate the memory.
*/
int comedi_alloc_subdevices(struct comedi_device *dev, int num_subdevices)
{
struct comedi_subdevice *s;
int i;
if (num_subdevices < 1)
return -EINVAL;
s = kcalloc(num_subdevices, sizeof(*s), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!s)
return -ENOMEM;
dev->subdevices = s;
dev->n_subdevices = num_subdevices;
for (i = 0; i < num_subdevices; ++i) {
s = &dev->subdevices[i];
s->device = dev;
s->index = i;
s->async_dma_dir = DMA_NONE;
spin_lock_init(&s->spin_lock);
s->minor = -1;
}
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_alloc_subdevices);
/**
* comedi_alloc_subdev_readback() - Allocate memory for the subdevice readback
* @s: COMEDI subdevice.
*
* This is called by low-level COMEDI drivers to allocate an array to record
* the last values written to a subdevice's analog output channels (at least
* by the %INSN_WRITE instruction), to allow them to be read back by an
* %INSN_READ instruction. It also provides a default handler for the
* %INSN_READ instruction unless one has already been set.
*
* On success, @s->readback points to the first element of the array, which
* is zero-filled. The low-level driver is responsible for updating its
* contents. @s->insn_read will be set to comedi_readback_insn_read()
* unless it is already non-NULL.
*
* Returns 0 on success, -EINVAL if the subdevice has no channels, or
* -ENOMEM on allocation failure.
*/
int comedi_alloc_subdev_readback(struct comedi_subdevice *s)
{
if (!s->n_chan)
return -EINVAL;
s->readback = kcalloc(s->n_chan, sizeof(*s->readback), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!s->readback)
return -ENOMEM;
if (!s->insn_read)
s->insn_read = comedi_readback_insn_read;
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_alloc_subdev_readback);
static void comedi_device_detach_cleanup(struct comedi_device *dev)
{
int i;
struct comedi_subdevice *s;
lockdep_assert_held(&dev->attach_lock);
lockdep_assert_held(&dev->mutex);
if (dev->subdevices) {
for (i = 0; i < dev->n_subdevices; i++) {
s = &dev->subdevices[i];
if (comedi_can_auto_free_spriv(s))
kfree(s->private);
comedi_free_subdevice_minor(s);
if (s->async) {
comedi_buf_alloc(dev, s, 0);
kfree(s->async);
}
kfree(s->readback);
}
kfree(dev->subdevices);
dev->subdevices = NULL;
dev->n_subdevices = 0;
}
kfree(dev->private);
kfree(dev->pacer);
dev->private = NULL;
dev->pacer = NULL;
dev->driver = NULL;
dev->board_name = NULL;
dev->board_ptr = NULL;
dev->mmio = NULL;
dev->iobase = 0;
dev->iolen = 0;
dev->ioenabled = false;
dev->irq = 0;
dev->read_subdev = NULL;
dev->write_subdev = NULL;
dev->open = NULL;
dev->close = NULL;
comedi_clear_hw_dev(dev);
}
staging: comedi: replace __comedi_device_detach() `comedi_device_detach()` does nothing if the `struct comedi_device`'s `attached` member is false, otherwise it calls `__comedi_device_detach()` to do the real work. `__comedi_device_detach()` is called from various other functions in "drivers.c" (`comedi_device_postconfig()`, `comedi_device_attach()`, and `comedi_auto_config()`) to bypass the check for the `attached` member being false. If we make `__comedi_device_detach()` safe to call when the `attached` member is already false, we can remove the check in `comedi_device_detach()`, subsume `__comedi_device_detach()` within `comedi_device_detach()`, and replace all the calls to `__comedi_device_detach()` with calls to `comedi_device_detach()`. In fact, it is already safe to call `__comedi_device_detach()` when the `attached` member is false. We just need to remove the warning message it outputs when the `driver` member is NULL. Then the function becomes idempotent without outputting spurious warnings. (It is idempotent because `dev->driver->detach()` will only be called once at most and the call to `cleanup_device()` is idempotent itself.) Combine `comedi_device_detach()` with `__comedi_device_detach()`, removing the check for the `attached` member being false and removing the warning about the `driver` member being NULL, and replace all calls to `__comedi_device_detach()` with calls to the combined `comedi_device_detach()`. A beneficial side-effect of the above change is that a call to `comedi_device_detach()` will always result in a call to `cleanup_device()` and so always result in a call to `comedi_clear_hw_dev()`. We will make use of this beneficial side-effect in a later patch. Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Reviewed-by: H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-04-04 17:58:58 +04:00
void comedi_device_detach(struct comedi_device *dev)
{
lockdep_assert_held(&dev->mutex);
comedi_device_cancel_all(dev);
down_write(&dev->attach_lock);
dev->attached = false;
dev->detach_count++;
if (dev->driver)
dev->driver->detach(dev);
comedi_device_detach_cleanup(dev);
up_write(&dev->attach_lock);
}
static int poll_invalid(struct comedi_device *dev, struct comedi_subdevice *s)
{
return -EINVAL;
}
static int insn_device_inval(struct comedi_device *dev,
struct comedi_insn *insn, unsigned int *data)
{
return -EINVAL;
}
static unsigned int get_zero_valid_routes(struct comedi_device *dev,
unsigned int n_pairs,
unsigned int *pair_data)
{
return 0;
}
int insn_inval(struct comedi_device *dev, struct comedi_subdevice *s,
struct comedi_insn *insn, unsigned int *data)
{
return -EINVAL;
}
/**
* comedi_readback_insn_read() - A generic (*insn_read) for subdevice readback.
* @dev: COMEDI device.
* @s: COMEDI subdevice.
* @insn: COMEDI instruction.
* @data: Pointer to return the readback data.
*
* Handles the %INSN_READ instruction for subdevices that use the readback
* array allocated by comedi_alloc_subdev_readback(). It may be used
* directly as the subdevice's handler (@s->insn_read) or called via a
* wrapper.
*
* @insn->n is normally 1, which will read a single value. If higher, the
* same element of the readback array will be read multiple times.
*
* Returns @insn->n on success, or -EINVAL if @s->readback is NULL.
*/
int comedi_readback_insn_read(struct comedi_device *dev,
struct comedi_subdevice *s,
struct comedi_insn *insn,
unsigned int *data)
{
unsigned int chan = CR_CHAN(insn->chanspec);
int i;
if (!s->readback)
return -EINVAL;
for (i = 0; i < insn->n; i++)
data[i] = s->readback[chan];
return insn->n;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_readback_insn_read);
staging: comedi: introduce comedi_timeout() Introduce a comedi core helper function to handle the boilerplate needed by the drivers to busy- wait for a condition to occur. Typically this condition is the analog input/output end-of-conversion used with the comedi (*insn_read) and (*insn_write) operations. To use this function, the drivers just need to provide a callback that checks for the desired condition. The callback should return 0 if the condition is met or -EBUSY if it is still waiting. Any other errno will be returned to the caller. If the timeout occurs before the condition is met -ETIMEDOUT will be returned. The parameters to the callback function are the comedi_device, comedi_subdevice, and comedi_insn pointers that were passed to the (*insn_read) or (*insn_write) as well as an unsigned long, driver specific, 'context' that can be used to pass any other information that might be needed in the callback. This 'context' could be anything such as the register offset to read the status or the bits needed to check the status. The comedi_timeout() function itself does not use any of these parameters. This will help remove all the crazy "wait this many loops" used by some of the drivers. It also creates a common errno for comedi to detect when a timeout occurs. ADC/DAC conversion times are typically pretty fast, usually around 100K samples/sec (10 usec). A conservative timeout of 1 second is used in comedi_timeout(). Signed-off-by: H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com> Cc: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2014-02-10 22:49:00 +04:00
/**
* comedi_timeout() - Busy-wait for a driver condition to occur
* @dev: COMEDI device.
* @s: COMEDI subdevice.
* @insn: COMEDI instruction.
* @cb: Callback to check for the condition.
* @context: Private context from the driver.
*
* Busy-waits for up to a second (%COMEDI_TIMEOUT_MS) for the condition or
* some error (other than -EBUSY) to occur. The parameters @dev, @s, @insn,
* and @context are passed to the callback function, which returns -EBUSY to
* continue waiting or some other value to stop waiting (generally 0 if the
* condition occurred, or some error value).
*
* Returns -ETIMEDOUT if timed out, otherwise the return value from the
* callback function.
staging: comedi: introduce comedi_timeout() Introduce a comedi core helper function to handle the boilerplate needed by the drivers to busy- wait for a condition to occur. Typically this condition is the analog input/output end-of-conversion used with the comedi (*insn_read) and (*insn_write) operations. To use this function, the drivers just need to provide a callback that checks for the desired condition. The callback should return 0 if the condition is met or -EBUSY if it is still waiting. Any other errno will be returned to the caller. If the timeout occurs before the condition is met -ETIMEDOUT will be returned. The parameters to the callback function are the comedi_device, comedi_subdevice, and comedi_insn pointers that were passed to the (*insn_read) or (*insn_write) as well as an unsigned long, driver specific, 'context' that can be used to pass any other information that might be needed in the callback. This 'context' could be anything such as the register offset to read the status or the bits needed to check the status. The comedi_timeout() function itself does not use any of these parameters. This will help remove all the crazy "wait this many loops" used by some of the drivers. It also creates a common errno for comedi to detect when a timeout occurs. ADC/DAC conversion times are typically pretty fast, usually around 100K samples/sec (10 usec). A conservative timeout of 1 second is used in comedi_timeout(). Signed-off-by: H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com> Cc: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2014-02-10 22:49:00 +04:00
*/
int comedi_timeout(struct comedi_device *dev,
struct comedi_subdevice *s,
struct comedi_insn *insn,
int (*cb)(struct comedi_device *dev,
struct comedi_subdevice *s,
struct comedi_insn *insn,
unsigned long context),
unsigned long context)
{
unsigned long timeout = jiffies + msecs_to_jiffies(COMEDI_TIMEOUT_MS);
int ret;
while (time_before(jiffies, timeout)) {
ret = cb(dev, s, insn, context);
if (ret != -EBUSY)
return ret; /* success (0) or non EBUSY errno */
cpu_relax();
}
return -ETIMEDOUT;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_timeout);
/**
* comedi_dio_insn_config() - Boilerplate (*insn_config) for DIO subdevices
* @dev: COMEDI device.
* @s: COMEDI subdevice.
* @insn: COMEDI instruction.
* @data: Instruction parameters and return data.
* @mask: io_bits mask for grouped channels, or 0 for single channel.
*
* If @mask is 0, it is replaced with a single-bit mask corresponding to the
* channel number specified by @insn->chanspec. Otherwise, @mask
* corresponds to a group of channels (which should include the specified
* channel) that are always configured together as inputs or outputs.
*
* Partially handles the %INSN_CONFIG_DIO_INPUT, %INSN_CONFIG_DIO_OUTPUTS,
* and %INSN_CONFIG_DIO_QUERY instructions. The first two update
* @s->io_bits to record the directions of the masked channels. The last
* one sets @data[1] to the current direction of the group of channels
* (%COMEDI_INPUT) or %COMEDI_OUTPUT) as recorded in @s->io_bits.
*
* The caller is responsible for updating the DIO direction in the hardware
* registers if this function returns 0.
*
* Returns 0 for a %INSN_CONFIG_DIO_INPUT or %INSN_CONFIG_DIO_OUTPUT
* instruction, @insn->n (> 0) for a %INSN_CONFIG_DIO_QUERY instruction, or
* -EINVAL for some other instruction.
*/
int comedi_dio_insn_config(struct comedi_device *dev,
struct comedi_subdevice *s,
struct comedi_insn *insn,
unsigned int *data,
unsigned int mask)
{
unsigned int chan_mask = 1 << CR_CHAN(insn->chanspec);
if (!mask)
mask = chan_mask;
switch (data[0]) {
case INSN_CONFIG_DIO_INPUT:
s->io_bits &= ~mask;
break;
case INSN_CONFIG_DIO_OUTPUT:
s->io_bits |= mask;
break;
case INSN_CONFIG_DIO_QUERY:
data[1] = (s->io_bits & mask) ? COMEDI_OUTPUT : COMEDI_INPUT;
return insn->n;
default:
return -EINVAL;
}
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_dio_insn_config);
/**
* comedi_dio_update_state() - Update the internal state of DIO subdevices
* @s: COMEDI subdevice.
* @data: The channel mask and bits to update.
*
* Updates @s->state which holds the internal state of the outputs for DIO
* or DO subdevices (up to 32 channels). @data[0] contains a bit-mask of
* the channels to be updated. @data[1] contains a bit-mask of those
* channels to be set to '1'. The caller is responsible for updating the
* outputs in hardware according to @s->state. As a minimum, the channels
* in the returned bit-mask need to be updated.
*
* Returns @mask with non-existent channels removed.
*/
unsigned int comedi_dio_update_state(struct comedi_subdevice *s,
unsigned int *data)
{
unsigned int chanmask = (s->n_chan < 32) ? ((1 << s->n_chan) - 1)
: 0xffffffff;
unsigned int mask = data[0] & chanmask;
unsigned int bits = data[1];
if (mask) {
s->state &= ~mask;
s->state |= (bits & mask);
}
return mask;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_dio_update_state);
/**
staging: comedi: ni_mio_common: Fix divide-by-zero for DIO cmdtest `ni_cdio_cmdtest()` validates Comedi asynchronous commands for the DIO subdevice (subdevice 2) of supported National Instruments M-series cards. It is called when handling the `COMEDI_CMD` and `COMEDI_CMDTEST` ioctls for this subdevice. There are two causes for a possible divide-by-zero error when validating that the `stop_arg` member of the passed-in command is not too large. The first cause for the divide-by-zero is that calls to `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` are only valid once the command has been copied to `s->async->cmd`, but that copy is only done for the `COMEDI_CMD` ioctl. For the `COMEDI_CMDTEST` ioctl, it will use whatever was left there by the previous `COMEDI_CMD` ioctl, if any. (This is very likely, as it is usual for the application to use `COMEDI_CMDTEST` before `COMEDI_CMD`.) If there has been no previous, valid `COMEDI_CMD` for this subdevice, then `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` will return 0, so the subsequent division in `ni_cdio_cmdtest()` of `s->async->prealloc_bufsz / comedi_bytes_per_scan(s)` will be a divide-by-zero error. To fix this error, call a new function `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd(s, cmd)`, based on the existing `comedi_bytes_per_scan(s)` but using a specified `struct comedi_cmd` for its calculations. (Also refactor `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` to call the new function.) Once the first cause for the divide-by-zero has been fixed, the second cause is that `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd()` can legitimately return 0 if the `scan_end_arg` member of the `struct comedi_cmd` being tested is 0. Fix it by only performing the division (and validating that `stop_arg` is no more than the maximum value) if `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd()` returns a non-zero value. The problem was reported on the COMEDI mailing list here: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comedi_list/4t9WlHzMhKM Reported-by: Ivan Vasilyev <grabesstimme@gmail.com> Tested-by: Ivan Vasilyev <grabesstimme@gmail.com> Fixes: f164cbf98fa8 ("staging: comedi: ni_mio_common: add finite regeneration to dio output") Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org> # 4.6+ Cc: Spencer E. Olson <olsonse@umich.edu> Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2019-03-04 17:33:54 +03:00
* comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd() - Get length of asynchronous command "scan" in
* bytes
* @s: COMEDI subdevice.
staging: comedi: ni_mio_common: Fix divide-by-zero for DIO cmdtest `ni_cdio_cmdtest()` validates Comedi asynchronous commands for the DIO subdevice (subdevice 2) of supported National Instruments M-series cards. It is called when handling the `COMEDI_CMD` and `COMEDI_CMDTEST` ioctls for this subdevice. There are two causes for a possible divide-by-zero error when validating that the `stop_arg` member of the passed-in command is not too large. The first cause for the divide-by-zero is that calls to `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` are only valid once the command has been copied to `s->async->cmd`, but that copy is only done for the `COMEDI_CMD` ioctl. For the `COMEDI_CMDTEST` ioctl, it will use whatever was left there by the previous `COMEDI_CMD` ioctl, if any. (This is very likely, as it is usual for the application to use `COMEDI_CMDTEST` before `COMEDI_CMD`.) If there has been no previous, valid `COMEDI_CMD` for this subdevice, then `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` will return 0, so the subsequent division in `ni_cdio_cmdtest()` of `s->async->prealloc_bufsz / comedi_bytes_per_scan(s)` will be a divide-by-zero error. To fix this error, call a new function `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd(s, cmd)`, based on the existing `comedi_bytes_per_scan(s)` but using a specified `struct comedi_cmd` for its calculations. (Also refactor `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` to call the new function.) Once the first cause for the divide-by-zero has been fixed, the second cause is that `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd()` can legitimately return 0 if the `scan_end_arg` member of the `struct comedi_cmd` being tested is 0. Fix it by only performing the division (and validating that `stop_arg` is no more than the maximum value) if `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd()` returns a non-zero value. The problem was reported on the COMEDI mailing list here: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comedi_list/4t9WlHzMhKM Reported-by: Ivan Vasilyev <grabesstimme@gmail.com> Tested-by: Ivan Vasilyev <grabesstimme@gmail.com> Fixes: f164cbf98fa8 ("staging: comedi: ni_mio_common: add finite regeneration to dio output") Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org> # 4.6+ Cc: Spencer E. Olson <olsonse@umich.edu> Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2019-03-04 17:33:54 +03:00
* @cmd: COMEDI command.
*
* Determines the overall scan length according to the subdevice type and the
staging: comedi: ni_mio_common: Fix divide-by-zero for DIO cmdtest `ni_cdio_cmdtest()` validates Comedi asynchronous commands for the DIO subdevice (subdevice 2) of supported National Instruments M-series cards. It is called when handling the `COMEDI_CMD` and `COMEDI_CMDTEST` ioctls for this subdevice. There are two causes for a possible divide-by-zero error when validating that the `stop_arg` member of the passed-in command is not too large. The first cause for the divide-by-zero is that calls to `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` are only valid once the command has been copied to `s->async->cmd`, but that copy is only done for the `COMEDI_CMD` ioctl. For the `COMEDI_CMDTEST` ioctl, it will use whatever was left there by the previous `COMEDI_CMD` ioctl, if any. (This is very likely, as it is usual for the application to use `COMEDI_CMDTEST` before `COMEDI_CMD`.) If there has been no previous, valid `COMEDI_CMD` for this subdevice, then `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` will return 0, so the subsequent division in `ni_cdio_cmdtest()` of `s->async->prealloc_bufsz / comedi_bytes_per_scan(s)` will be a divide-by-zero error. To fix this error, call a new function `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd(s, cmd)`, based on the existing `comedi_bytes_per_scan(s)` but using a specified `struct comedi_cmd` for its calculations. (Also refactor `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` to call the new function.) Once the first cause for the divide-by-zero has been fixed, the second cause is that `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd()` can legitimately return 0 if the `scan_end_arg` member of the `struct comedi_cmd` being tested is 0. Fix it by only performing the division (and validating that `stop_arg` is no more than the maximum value) if `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd()` returns a non-zero value. The problem was reported on the COMEDI mailing list here: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comedi_list/4t9WlHzMhKM Reported-by: Ivan Vasilyev <grabesstimme@gmail.com> Tested-by: Ivan Vasilyev <grabesstimme@gmail.com> Fixes: f164cbf98fa8 ("staging: comedi: ni_mio_common: add finite regeneration to dio output") Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org> # 4.6+ Cc: Spencer E. Olson <olsonse@umich.edu> Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2019-03-04 17:33:54 +03:00
* number of channels in the scan for the specified command.
*
* For digital input, output or input/output subdevices, samples for
* multiple channels are assumed to be packed into one or more unsigned
* short or unsigned int values according to the subdevice's %SDF_LSAMPL
* flag. For other types of subdevice, samples are assumed to occupy a
* whole unsigned short or unsigned int according to the %SDF_LSAMPL flag.
*
* Returns the overall scan length in bytes.
*/
staging: comedi: ni_mio_common: Fix divide-by-zero for DIO cmdtest `ni_cdio_cmdtest()` validates Comedi asynchronous commands for the DIO subdevice (subdevice 2) of supported National Instruments M-series cards. It is called when handling the `COMEDI_CMD` and `COMEDI_CMDTEST` ioctls for this subdevice. There are two causes for a possible divide-by-zero error when validating that the `stop_arg` member of the passed-in command is not too large. The first cause for the divide-by-zero is that calls to `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` are only valid once the command has been copied to `s->async->cmd`, but that copy is only done for the `COMEDI_CMD` ioctl. For the `COMEDI_CMDTEST` ioctl, it will use whatever was left there by the previous `COMEDI_CMD` ioctl, if any. (This is very likely, as it is usual for the application to use `COMEDI_CMDTEST` before `COMEDI_CMD`.) If there has been no previous, valid `COMEDI_CMD` for this subdevice, then `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` will return 0, so the subsequent division in `ni_cdio_cmdtest()` of `s->async->prealloc_bufsz / comedi_bytes_per_scan(s)` will be a divide-by-zero error. To fix this error, call a new function `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd(s, cmd)`, based on the existing `comedi_bytes_per_scan(s)` but using a specified `struct comedi_cmd` for its calculations. (Also refactor `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` to call the new function.) Once the first cause for the divide-by-zero has been fixed, the second cause is that `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd()` can legitimately return 0 if the `scan_end_arg` member of the `struct comedi_cmd` being tested is 0. Fix it by only performing the division (and validating that `stop_arg` is no more than the maximum value) if `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd()` returns a non-zero value. The problem was reported on the COMEDI mailing list here: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comedi_list/4t9WlHzMhKM Reported-by: Ivan Vasilyev <grabesstimme@gmail.com> Tested-by: Ivan Vasilyev <grabesstimme@gmail.com> Fixes: f164cbf98fa8 ("staging: comedi: ni_mio_common: add finite regeneration to dio output") Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org> # 4.6+ Cc: Spencer E. Olson <olsonse@umich.edu> Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2019-03-04 17:33:54 +03:00
unsigned int comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd(struct comedi_subdevice *s,
struct comedi_cmd *cmd)
{
unsigned int num_samples;
unsigned int bits_per_sample;
switch (s->type) {
case COMEDI_SUBD_DI:
case COMEDI_SUBD_DO:
case COMEDI_SUBD_DIO:
bits_per_sample = 8 * comedi_bytes_per_sample(s);
num_samples = DIV_ROUND_UP(cmd->scan_end_arg, bits_per_sample);
break;
default:
num_samples = cmd->scan_end_arg;
break;
}
return comedi_samples_to_bytes(s, num_samples);
}
staging: comedi: ni_mio_common: Fix divide-by-zero for DIO cmdtest `ni_cdio_cmdtest()` validates Comedi asynchronous commands for the DIO subdevice (subdevice 2) of supported National Instruments M-series cards. It is called when handling the `COMEDI_CMD` and `COMEDI_CMDTEST` ioctls for this subdevice. There are two causes for a possible divide-by-zero error when validating that the `stop_arg` member of the passed-in command is not too large. The first cause for the divide-by-zero is that calls to `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` are only valid once the command has been copied to `s->async->cmd`, but that copy is only done for the `COMEDI_CMD` ioctl. For the `COMEDI_CMDTEST` ioctl, it will use whatever was left there by the previous `COMEDI_CMD` ioctl, if any. (This is very likely, as it is usual for the application to use `COMEDI_CMDTEST` before `COMEDI_CMD`.) If there has been no previous, valid `COMEDI_CMD` for this subdevice, then `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` will return 0, so the subsequent division in `ni_cdio_cmdtest()` of `s->async->prealloc_bufsz / comedi_bytes_per_scan(s)` will be a divide-by-zero error. To fix this error, call a new function `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd(s, cmd)`, based on the existing `comedi_bytes_per_scan(s)` but using a specified `struct comedi_cmd` for its calculations. (Also refactor `comedi_bytes_per_scan()` to call the new function.) Once the first cause for the divide-by-zero has been fixed, the second cause is that `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd()` can legitimately return 0 if the `scan_end_arg` member of the `struct comedi_cmd` being tested is 0. Fix it by only performing the division (and validating that `stop_arg` is no more than the maximum value) if `comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd()` returns a non-zero value. The problem was reported on the COMEDI mailing list here: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comedi_list/4t9WlHzMhKM Reported-by: Ivan Vasilyev <grabesstimme@gmail.com> Tested-by: Ivan Vasilyev <grabesstimme@gmail.com> Fixes: f164cbf98fa8 ("staging: comedi: ni_mio_common: add finite regeneration to dio output") Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org> # 4.6+ Cc: Spencer E. Olson <olsonse@umich.edu> Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2019-03-04 17:33:54 +03:00
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd);
/**
* comedi_bytes_per_scan() - Get length of asynchronous command "scan" in bytes
* @s: COMEDI subdevice.
*
* Determines the overall scan length according to the subdevice type and the
* number of channels in the scan for the current command.
*
* For digital input, output or input/output subdevices, samples for
* multiple channels are assumed to be packed into one or more unsigned
* short or unsigned int values according to the subdevice's %SDF_LSAMPL
* flag. For other types of subdevice, samples are assumed to occupy a
* whole unsigned short or unsigned int according to the %SDF_LSAMPL flag.
*
* Returns the overall scan length in bytes.
*/
unsigned int comedi_bytes_per_scan(struct comedi_subdevice *s)
{
struct comedi_cmd *cmd = &s->async->cmd;
return comedi_bytes_per_scan_cmd(s, cmd);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_bytes_per_scan);
2015-10-23 12:56:09 +03:00
static unsigned int __comedi_nscans_left(struct comedi_subdevice *s,
unsigned int nscans)
{
struct comedi_async *async = s->async;
struct comedi_cmd *cmd = &async->cmd;
if (cmd->stop_src == TRIG_COUNT) {
unsigned int scans_left = 0;
if (async->scans_done < cmd->stop_arg)
scans_left = cmd->stop_arg - async->scans_done;
if (nscans > scans_left)
nscans = scans_left;
}
return nscans;
}
/**
* comedi_nscans_left() - Return the number of scans left in the command
* @s: COMEDI subdevice.
* @nscans: The expected number of scans or 0 for all available scans.
*
* If @nscans is 0, it is set to the number of scans available in the
* async buffer.
*
* If the async command has a stop_src of %TRIG_COUNT, the @nscans will be
* checked against the number of scans remaining to complete the command.
*
* The return value will then be either the expected number of scans or the
* number of scans remaining to complete the command, whichever is fewer.
*/
unsigned int comedi_nscans_left(struct comedi_subdevice *s,
unsigned int nscans)
{
if (nscans == 0) {
unsigned int nbytes = comedi_buf_read_n_available(s);
nscans = nbytes / comedi_bytes_per_scan(s);
}
2015-10-23 12:56:09 +03:00
return __comedi_nscans_left(s, nscans);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_nscans_left);
/**
* comedi_nsamples_left() - Return the number of samples left in the command
* @s: COMEDI subdevice.
* @nsamples: The expected number of samples.
*
* Returns the number of samples remaining to complete the command, or the
* specified expected number of samples (@nsamples), whichever is fewer.
*/
unsigned int comedi_nsamples_left(struct comedi_subdevice *s,
unsigned int nsamples)
{
struct comedi_async *async = s->async;
struct comedi_cmd *cmd = &async->cmd;
unsigned long long scans_left;
unsigned long long samples_left;
if (cmd->stop_src != TRIG_COUNT)
return nsamples;
scans_left = __comedi_nscans_left(s, cmd->stop_arg);
if (!scans_left)
return 0;
samples_left = scans_left * cmd->scan_end_arg -
comedi_bytes_to_samples(s, async->scan_progress);
if (samples_left < nsamples)
return samples_left;
return nsamples;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_nsamples_left);
/**
* comedi_inc_scan_progress() - Update scan progress in asynchronous command
* @s: COMEDI subdevice.
* @num_bytes: Amount of data in bytes to increment scan progress.
*
* Increments the scan progress by the number of bytes specified by @num_bytes.
* If the scan progress reaches or exceeds the scan length in bytes, reduce
* it modulo the scan length in bytes and set the "end of scan" asynchronous
* event flag (%COMEDI_CB_EOS) to be processed later.
*/
void comedi_inc_scan_progress(struct comedi_subdevice *s,
unsigned int num_bytes)
{
struct comedi_async *async = s->async;
struct comedi_cmd *cmd = &async->cmd;
unsigned int scan_length = comedi_bytes_per_scan(s);
/* track the 'cur_chan' for non-SDF_PACKED subdevices */
if (!(s->subdev_flags & SDF_PACKED)) {
async->cur_chan += comedi_bytes_to_samples(s, num_bytes);
async->cur_chan %= cmd->chanlist_len;
}
async->scan_progress += num_bytes;
if (async->scan_progress >= scan_length) {
unsigned int nscans = async->scan_progress / scan_length;
if (async->scans_done < (UINT_MAX - nscans))
async->scans_done += nscans;
else
async->scans_done = UINT_MAX;
async->scan_progress %= scan_length;
async->events |= COMEDI_CB_EOS;
}
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_inc_scan_progress);
/**
* comedi_handle_events() - Handle events and possibly stop acquisition
* @dev: COMEDI device.
* @s: COMEDI subdevice.
*
* Handles outstanding asynchronous acquisition event flags associated
* with the subdevice. Call the subdevice's @s->cancel() handler if the
* "end of acquisition", "error" or "overflow" event flags are set in order
* to stop the acquisition at the driver level.
*
* Calls comedi_event() to further process the event flags, which may mark
* the asynchronous command as no longer running, possibly terminated with
* an error, and may wake up tasks.
*
* Return a bit-mask of the handled events.
*/
unsigned int comedi_handle_events(struct comedi_device *dev,
struct comedi_subdevice *s)
{
unsigned int events = s->async->events;
if (events == 0)
return events;
if ((events & COMEDI_CB_CANCEL_MASK) && s->cancel)
s->cancel(dev, s);
comedi_event(dev, s);
return events;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_handle_events);
static int insn_rw_emulate_bits(struct comedi_device *dev,
struct comedi_subdevice *s,
struct comedi_insn *insn,
unsigned int *data)
{
struct comedi_insn _insn;
unsigned int chan = CR_CHAN(insn->chanspec);
unsigned int base_chan = (chan < 32) ? 0 : chan;
unsigned int _data[2];
int ret;
memset(_data, 0, sizeof(_data));
memset(&_insn, 0, sizeof(_insn));
_insn.insn = INSN_BITS;
_insn.chanspec = base_chan;
_insn.n = 2;
_insn.subdev = insn->subdev;
if (insn->insn == INSN_WRITE) {
if (!(s->subdev_flags & SDF_WRITABLE))
return -EINVAL;
_data[0] = 1 << (chan - base_chan); /* mask */
_data[1] = data[0] ? (1 << (chan - base_chan)) : 0; /* bits */
}
ret = s->insn_bits(dev, s, &_insn, _data);
if (ret < 0)
return ret;
if (insn->insn == INSN_READ)
data[0] = (_data[1] >> (chan - base_chan)) & 1;
return 1;
}
static int __comedi_device_postconfig_async(struct comedi_device *dev,
struct comedi_subdevice *s)
{
struct comedi_async *async;
unsigned int buf_size;
int ret;
lockdep_assert_held(&dev->mutex);
if ((s->subdev_flags & (SDF_CMD_READ | SDF_CMD_WRITE)) == 0) {
dev_warn(dev->class_dev,
"async subdevices must support SDF_CMD_READ or SDF_CMD_WRITE\n");
return -EINVAL;
}
if (!s->do_cmdtest) {
dev_warn(dev->class_dev,
"async subdevices must have a do_cmdtest() function\n");
return -EINVAL;
}
if (!s->cancel)
dev_warn(dev->class_dev,
"async subdevices should have a cancel() function\n");
async = kzalloc(sizeof(*async), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!async)
return -ENOMEM;
init_waitqueue_head(&async->wait_head);
s->async = async;
async->max_bufsize = comedi_default_buf_maxsize_kb * 1024;
buf_size = comedi_default_buf_size_kb * 1024;
if (buf_size > async->max_bufsize)
buf_size = async->max_bufsize;
if (comedi_buf_alloc(dev, s, buf_size) < 0) {
dev_warn(dev->class_dev, "Buffer allocation failed\n");
return -ENOMEM;
}
if (s->buf_change) {
ret = s->buf_change(dev, s);
if (ret < 0)
return ret;
}
comedi_alloc_subdevice_minor(s);
return 0;
}
static int __comedi_device_postconfig(struct comedi_device *dev)
{
struct comedi_subdevice *s;
int ret;
int i;
lockdep_assert_held(&dev->mutex);
if (!dev->insn_device_config)
dev->insn_device_config = insn_device_inval;
if (!dev->get_valid_routes)
dev->get_valid_routes = get_zero_valid_routes;
for (i = 0; i < dev->n_subdevices; i++) {
s = &dev->subdevices[i];
if (s->type == COMEDI_SUBD_UNUSED)
continue;
if (s->type == COMEDI_SUBD_DO) {
if (s->n_chan < 32)
s->io_bits = (1 << s->n_chan) - 1;
else
s->io_bits = 0xffffffff;
}
if (s->len_chanlist == 0)
s->len_chanlist = 1;
if (s->do_cmd) {
ret = __comedi_device_postconfig_async(dev, s);
if (ret)
return ret;
}
if (!s->range_table && !s->range_table_list)
s->range_table = &range_unknown;
if (!s->insn_read && s->insn_bits)
s->insn_read = insn_rw_emulate_bits;
if (!s->insn_write && s->insn_bits)
s->insn_write = insn_rw_emulate_bits;
if (!s->insn_read)
s->insn_read = insn_inval;
if (!s->insn_write)
s->insn_write = insn_inval;
if (!s->insn_bits)
s->insn_bits = insn_inval;
if (!s->insn_config)
s->insn_config = insn_inval;
if (!s->poll)
s->poll = poll_invalid;
}
return 0;
}
/* do a little post-config cleanup */
static int comedi_device_postconfig(struct comedi_device *dev)
{
staging: comedi: simplify driver module counting For a legacy device attachment with the `COMEDI_DEVCONFIG` ioctl, `do_devconfig_ioctl()` calls `comedi_device_attach()` to find a matching device driver and attach the device. It then tries to increment the device driver's module count and if that fails it detaches the device. So on successful attachment of a device by the `COMEDI_DEVCONFIG` ioctl, the device driver's module count will have been incremented. `comedi_device_attach()` is called from nowhere else. It already increments the device driver's module count temporarily and decrements it again; if it gets as far as calling `comedi_device_postconfig()` the module count is decremented within that function. Simplify the above by removing the decrement of the device driver module count from `comedi_device_postconfig()`. If the call to `comedi_device_postconfig()` succeeds, `comedi_device_attach()` will return with the module count still incremented, otherwise decrement the module count before returning the error. Don't try and increment the module count in `do_devconfig_ioctl()` after a successful return from `comedi_device_attach()` as the module count has now already been incremented. `comedi_device_postconfig()` is also called by `comedi_auto_config()` which currently has to increment the device driver's module count temporarily so that `comedi_device_postconfig()` can decrement it, but always returns with no overall change to the module count. Remove all the module count manipulations from `comedi_device_postconfig()`. There is no other reason for `comedi_auto_config()` to increment the device driver's module count temporarily, since it is only called (indirectly) from the device driver itself (usually via one of the wrappers `comedi_pci_auto_config()` or `comedi_usb_auto_config()`). Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Reviewed-by: H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-04-04 17:58:56 +04:00
int ret;
lockdep_assert_held(&dev->mutex);
staging: comedi: simplify driver module counting For a legacy device attachment with the `COMEDI_DEVCONFIG` ioctl, `do_devconfig_ioctl()` calls `comedi_device_attach()` to find a matching device driver and attach the device. It then tries to increment the device driver's module count and if that fails it detaches the device. So on successful attachment of a device by the `COMEDI_DEVCONFIG` ioctl, the device driver's module count will have been incremented. `comedi_device_attach()` is called from nowhere else. It already increments the device driver's module count temporarily and decrements it again; if it gets as far as calling `comedi_device_postconfig()` the module count is decremented within that function. Simplify the above by removing the decrement of the device driver module count from `comedi_device_postconfig()`. If the call to `comedi_device_postconfig()` succeeds, `comedi_device_attach()` will return with the module count still incremented, otherwise decrement the module count before returning the error. Don't try and increment the module count in `do_devconfig_ioctl()` after a successful return from `comedi_device_attach()` as the module count has now already been incremented. `comedi_device_postconfig()` is also called by `comedi_auto_config()` which currently has to increment the device driver's module count temporarily so that `comedi_device_postconfig()` can decrement it, but always returns with no overall change to the module count. Remove all the module count manipulations from `comedi_device_postconfig()`. There is no other reason for `comedi_auto_config()` to increment the device driver's module count temporarily, since it is only called (indirectly) from the device driver itself (usually via one of the wrappers `comedi_pci_auto_config()` or `comedi_usb_auto_config()`). Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Reviewed-by: H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-04-04 17:58:56 +04:00
ret = __comedi_device_postconfig(dev);
if (ret < 0)
return ret;
down_write(&dev->attach_lock);
dev->attached = true;
up_write(&dev->attach_lock);
return 0;
}
/*
* Generic recognize function for drivers that register their supported
* board names.
*
* 'driv->board_name' points to a 'const char *' member within the
* zeroth element of an array of some private board information
* structure, say 'struct foo_board' containing a member 'const char
* *board_name' that is initialized to point to a board name string that
* is one of the candidates matched against this function's 'name'
* parameter.
*
* 'driv->offset' is the size of the private board information
* structure, say 'sizeof(struct foo_board)', and 'driv->num_names' is
* the length of the array of private board information structures.
*
* If one of the board names in the array of private board information
* structures matches the name supplied to this function, the function
* returns a pointer to the pointer to the board name, otherwise it
* returns NULL. The return value ends up in the 'board_ptr' member of
* a 'struct comedi_device' that the low-level comedi driver's
* 'attach()' hook can convert to a point to a particular element of its
* array of private board information structures by subtracting the
* offset of the member that points to the board name. (No subtraction
* is required if the board name pointer is the first member of the
* private board information structure, which is generally the case.)
*/
static void *comedi_recognize(struct comedi_driver *driv, const char *name)
{
char **name_ptr = (char **)driv->board_name;
int i;
for (i = 0; i < driv->num_names; i++) {
if (strcmp(*name_ptr, name) == 0)
return name_ptr;
name_ptr = (void *)name_ptr + driv->offset;
}
return NULL;
}
static void comedi_report_boards(struct comedi_driver *driv)
{
unsigned int i;
const char *const *name_ptr;
pr_info("comedi: valid board names for %s driver are:\n",
driv->driver_name);
name_ptr = driv->board_name;
for (i = 0; i < driv->num_names; i++) {
pr_info(" %s\n", *name_ptr);
name_ptr = (const char **)((char *)name_ptr + driv->offset);
}
if (driv->num_names == 0)
pr_info(" %s\n", driv->driver_name);
}
/**
* comedi_load_firmware() - Request and load firmware for a device
* @dev: COMEDI device.
* @device: Hardware device.
* @name: The name of the firmware image.
* @cb: Callback to the upload the firmware image.
* @context: Private context from the driver.
*
* Sends a firmware request for the hardware device and waits for it. Calls
* the callback function to upload the firmware to the device, them releases
* the firmware.
*
* Returns 0 on success, -EINVAL if @cb is NULL, or a negative error number
* from the firmware request or the callback function.
*/
int comedi_load_firmware(struct comedi_device *dev,
struct device *device,
const char *name,
int (*cb)(struct comedi_device *dev,
const u8 *data, size_t size,
unsigned long context),
unsigned long context)
{
const struct firmware *fw;
int ret;
if (!cb)
return -EINVAL;
ret = request_firmware(&fw, name, device);
if (ret == 0) {
ret = cb(dev, fw->data, fw->size, context);
release_firmware(fw);
}
return ret < 0 ? ret : 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_load_firmware);
/**
* __comedi_request_region() - Request an I/O region for a legacy driver
* @dev: COMEDI device.
* @start: Base address of the I/O region.
* @len: Length of the I/O region.
*
* Requests the specified I/O port region which must start at a non-zero
* address.
*
* Returns 0 on success, -EINVAL if @start is 0, or -EIO if the request
* fails.
*/
int __comedi_request_region(struct comedi_device *dev,
unsigned long start, unsigned long len)
{
if (!start) {
dev_warn(dev->class_dev,
"%s: a I/O base address must be specified\n",
dev->board_name);
return -EINVAL;
}
if (!request_region(start, len, dev->board_name)) {
dev_warn(dev->class_dev, "%s: I/O port conflict (%#lx,%lu)\n",
dev->board_name, start, len);
return -EIO;
}
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(__comedi_request_region);
/**
* comedi_request_region() - Request an I/O region for a legacy driver
* @dev: COMEDI device.
* @start: Base address of the I/O region.
* @len: Length of the I/O region.
*
* Requests the specified I/O port region which must start at a non-zero
* address.
*
* On success, @dev->iobase is set to the base address of the region and
* @dev->iolen is set to its length.
*
* Returns 0 on success, -EINVAL if @start is 0, or -EIO if the request
* fails.
*/
int comedi_request_region(struct comedi_device *dev,
unsigned long start, unsigned long len)
{
int ret;
ret = __comedi_request_region(dev, start, len);
if (ret == 0) {
dev->iobase = start;
dev->iolen = len;
}
return ret;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_request_region);
/**
* comedi_legacy_detach() - A generic (*detach) function for legacy drivers
* @dev: COMEDI device.
*
* This is a simple, generic 'detach' handler for legacy COMEDI devices that
* just use a single I/O port region and possibly an IRQ and that don't need
* any special clean-up for their private device or subdevice storage. It
* can also be called by a driver-specific 'detach' handler.
*
* If @dev->irq is non-zero, the IRQ will be freed. If @dev->iobase and
* @dev->iolen are both non-zero, the I/O port region will be released.
*/
void comedi_legacy_detach(struct comedi_device *dev)
{
if (dev->irq) {
free_irq(dev->irq, dev);
dev->irq = 0;
}
if (dev->iobase && dev->iolen) {
release_region(dev->iobase, dev->iolen);
dev->iobase = 0;
dev->iolen = 0;
}
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_legacy_detach);
int comedi_device_attach(struct comedi_device *dev, struct comedi_devconfig *it)
{
struct comedi_driver *driv;
int ret;
lockdep_assert_held(&dev->mutex);
if (dev->attached)
return -EBUSY;
mutex_lock(&comedi_drivers_list_lock);
for (driv = comedi_drivers; driv; driv = driv->next) {
if (!try_module_get(driv->module))
continue;
if (driv->num_names) {
dev->board_ptr = comedi_recognize(driv, it->board_name);
if (dev->board_ptr)
break;
} else if (strcmp(driv->driver_name, it->board_name) == 0) {
break;
}
module_put(driv->module);
}
if (!driv) {
/* recognize has failed if we get here */
/* report valid board names before returning error */
for (driv = comedi_drivers; driv; driv = driv->next) {
if (!try_module_get(driv->module))
continue;
comedi_report_boards(driv);
module_put(driv->module);
}
ret = -EIO;
goto out;
}
if (!driv->attach) {
/* driver does not support manual configuration */
dev_warn(dev->class_dev,
"driver '%s' does not support attach using comedi_config\n",
driv->driver_name);
module_put(driv->module);
ret = -EIO;
goto out;
}
dev->driver = driv;
dev->board_name = dev->board_ptr ? *(const char **)dev->board_ptr
: dev->driver->driver_name;
ret = driv->attach(dev, it);
if (ret >= 0)
ret = comedi_device_postconfig(dev);
if (ret < 0) {
staging: comedi: replace __comedi_device_detach() `comedi_device_detach()` does nothing if the `struct comedi_device`'s `attached` member is false, otherwise it calls `__comedi_device_detach()` to do the real work. `__comedi_device_detach()` is called from various other functions in "drivers.c" (`comedi_device_postconfig()`, `comedi_device_attach()`, and `comedi_auto_config()`) to bypass the check for the `attached` member being false. If we make `__comedi_device_detach()` safe to call when the `attached` member is already false, we can remove the check in `comedi_device_detach()`, subsume `__comedi_device_detach()` within `comedi_device_detach()`, and replace all the calls to `__comedi_device_detach()` with calls to `comedi_device_detach()`. In fact, it is already safe to call `__comedi_device_detach()` when the `attached` member is false. We just need to remove the warning message it outputs when the `driver` member is NULL. Then the function becomes idempotent without outputting spurious warnings. (It is idempotent because `dev->driver->detach()` will only be called once at most and the call to `cleanup_device()` is idempotent itself.) Combine `comedi_device_detach()` with `__comedi_device_detach()`, removing the check for the `attached` member being false and removing the warning about the `driver` member being NULL, and replace all calls to `__comedi_device_detach()` with calls to the combined `comedi_device_detach()`. A beneficial side-effect of the above change is that a call to `comedi_device_detach()` will always result in a call to `cleanup_device()` and so always result in a call to `comedi_clear_hw_dev()`. We will make use of this beneficial side-effect in a later patch. Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Reviewed-by: H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-04-04 17:58:58 +04:00
comedi_device_detach(dev);
module_put(driv->module);
}
staging: comedi: simplify driver module counting For a legacy device attachment with the `COMEDI_DEVCONFIG` ioctl, `do_devconfig_ioctl()` calls `comedi_device_attach()` to find a matching device driver and attach the device. It then tries to increment the device driver's module count and if that fails it detaches the device. So on successful attachment of a device by the `COMEDI_DEVCONFIG` ioctl, the device driver's module count will have been incremented. `comedi_device_attach()` is called from nowhere else. It already increments the device driver's module count temporarily and decrements it again; if it gets as far as calling `comedi_device_postconfig()` the module count is decremented within that function. Simplify the above by removing the decrement of the device driver module count from `comedi_device_postconfig()`. If the call to `comedi_device_postconfig()` succeeds, `comedi_device_attach()` will return with the module count still incremented, otherwise decrement the module count before returning the error. Don't try and increment the module count in `do_devconfig_ioctl()` after a successful return from `comedi_device_attach()` as the module count has now already been incremented. `comedi_device_postconfig()` is also called by `comedi_auto_config()` which currently has to increment the device driver's module count temporarily so that `comedi_device_postconfig()` can decrement it, but always returns with no overall change to the module count. Remove all the module count manipulations from `comedi_device_postconfig()`. There is no other reason for `comedi_auto_config()` to increment the device driver's module count temporarily, since it is only called (indirectly) from the device driver itself (usually via one of the wrappers `comedi_pci_auto_config()` or `comedi_usb_auto_config()`). Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Reviewed-by: H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-04-04 17:58:56 +04:00
/* On success, the driver module count has been incremented. */
out:
mutex_unlock(&comedi_drivers_list_lock);
staging: comedi: simplify driver module counting For a legacy device attachment with the `COMEDI_DEVCONFIG` ioctl, `do_devconfig_ioctl()` calls `comedi_device_attach()` to find a matching device driver and attach the device. It then tries to increment the device driver's module count and if that fails it detaches the device. So on successful attachment of a device by the `COMEDI_DEVCONFIG` ioctl, the device driver's module count will have been incremented. `comedi_device_attach()` is called from nowhere else. It already increments the device driver's module count temporarily and decrements it again; if it gets as far as calling `comedi_device_postconfig()` the module count is decremented within that function. Simplify the above by removing the decrement of the device driver module count from `comedi_device_postconfig()`. If the call to `comedi_device_postconfig()` succeeds, `comedi_device_attach()` will return with the module count still incremented, otherwise decrement the module count before returning the error. Don't try and increment the module count in `do_devconfig_ioctl()` after a successful return from `comedi_device_attach()` as the module count has now already been incremented. `comedi_device_postconfig()` is also called by `comedi_auto_config()` which currently has to increment the device driver's module count temporarily so that `comedi_device_postconfig()` can decrement it, but always returns with no overall change to the module count. Remove all the module count manipulations from `comedi_device_postconfig()`. There is no other reason for `comedi_auto_config()` to increment the device driver's module count temporarily, since it is only called (indirectly) from the device driver itself (usually via one of the wrappers `comedi_pci_auto_config()` or `comedi_usb_auto_config()`). Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Reviewed-by: H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-04-04 17:58:56 +04:00
return ret;
}
/**
* comedi_auto_config() - Create a COMEDI device for a hardware device
* @hardware_device: Hardware device.
* @driver: COMEDI low-level driver for the hardware device.
* @context: Driver context for the auto_attach handler.
*
* Allocates a new COMEDI device for the hardware device and calls the
* low-level driver's 'auto_attach' handler to set-up the hardware and
* allocate the COMEDI subdevices. Additional "post-configuration" setting
* up is performed on successful return from the 'auto_attach' handler.
* If the 'auto_attach' handler fails, the low-level driver's 'detach'
* handler will be called as part of the clean-up.
*
* This is usually called from a wrapper function in a bus-specific COMEDI
* module, which in turn is usually called from a bus device 'probe'
* function in the low-level driver.
*
* Returns 0 on success, -EINVAL if the parameters are invalid or the
* post-configuration determines the driver has set the COMEDI device up
* incorrectly, -ENOMEM if failed to allocate memory, -EBUSY if run out of
* COMEDI minor device numbers, or some negative error number returned by
* the driver's 'auto_attach' handler.
*/
int comedi_auto_config(struct device *hardware_device,
struct comedi_driver *driver, unsigned long context)
staging: comedi: add bus-type-specific attach hooks for PCI and USB The Comedi auto-configuration mechanism used to bind hardware devices to comedi devices automatically is pretty kludgy. It fakes a "manual" configuration of the comedi device as though the COMEDI_DEVCONFIG ioctl (or the 'comedi_config' utility) were used. In particular, the low-level comedi driver's '->attach()' routine is called with a pointer to the struct comedi_device being attached and a pointer to a 'struct devconfig' containing a device name string and a few integer options to help the attach routine locate the device being attached. In the case of PCI devices, these integer options are the PCI bus and slot numbers. In the case of USB devices, there are no integer options and it relies more on pot luck to attach the correct device. This patch adds a couple of bus-type-specific attach routine hooks to the struct comedi_driver, which a low-level driver can optionally fill in if it supports auto-configuration. A low-level driver that supports auto-configuration of {PCI,USB} devices calls the existing comedi_{pci,usb}_auto_config() when it wishes to auto-configure a freshly probed device (maybe after loading firmware). This will call the new '->attach_{pci,usb}()' hook if the driver has defined it, otherwise it will fall back to calling the '->attach()' hook as before. The '->attach_{pci,usb}()' hook gets a pointer to the struct comedi_device and a pointer to the struct {pci_dev,usb_interface} and can figure out the {PCI,USB} device details for itself. Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2012-03-30 20:15:01 +04:00
{
struct comedi_device *dev;
staging: comedi: add bus-type-specific attach hooks for PCI and USB The Comedi auto-configuration mechanism used to bind hardware devices to comedi devices automatically is pretty kludgy. It fakes a "manual" configuration of the comedi device as though the COMEDI_DEVCONFIG ioctl (or the 'comedi_config' utility) were used. In particular, the low-level comedi driver's '->attach()' routine is called with a pointer to the struct comedi_device being attached and a pointer to a 'struct devconfig' containing a device name string and a few integer options to help the attach routine locate the device being attached. In the case of PCI devices, these integer options are the PCI bus and slot numbers. In the case of USB devices, there are no integer options and it relies more on pot luck to attach the correct device. This patch adds a couple of bus-type-specific attach routine hooks to the struct comedi_driver, which a low-level driver can optionally fill in if it supports auto-configuration. A low-level driver that supports auto-configuration of {PCI,USB} devices calls the existing comedi_{pci,usb}_auto_config() when it wishes to auto-configure a freshly probed device (maybe after loading firmware). This will call the new '->attach_{pci,usb}()' hook if the driver has defined it, otherwise it will fall back to calling the '->attach()' hook as before. The '->attach_{pci,usb}()' hook gets a pointer to the struct comedi_device and a pointer to the struct {pci_dev,usb_interface} and can figure out the {PCI,USB} device details for itself. Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2012-03-30 20:15:01 +04:00
int ret;
if (!hardware_device) {
pr_warn("BUG! %s called with NULL hardware_device\n", __func__);
return -EINVAL;
}
if (!driver) {
dev_warn(hardware_device,
"BUG! %s called with NULL comedi driver\n", __func__);
return -EINVAL;
}
if (!driver->auto_attach) {
dev_warn(hardware_device,
"BUG! comedi driver '%s' has no auto_attach handler\n",
driver->driver_name);
return -EINVAL;
}
dev = comedi_alloc_board_minor(hardware_device);
if (IS_ERR(dev)) {
dev_warn(hardware_device,
"driver '%s' could not create device.\n",
driver->driver_name);
return PTR_ERR(dev);
}
/* Note: comedi_alloc_board_minor() locked dev->mutex. */
lockdep_assert_held(&dev->mutex);
staging: comedi: add bus-type-specific attach hooks for PCI and USB The Comedi auto-configuration mechanism used to bind hardware devices to comedi devices automatically is pretty kludgy. It fakes a "manual" configuration of the comedi device as though the COMEDI_DEVCONFIG ioctl (or the 'comedi_config' utility) were used. In particular, the low-level comedi driver's '->attach()' routine is called with a pointer to the struct comedi_device being attached and a pointer to a 'struct devconfig' containing a device name string and a few integer options to help the attach routine locate the device being attached. In the case of PCI devices, these integer options are the PCI bus and slot numbers. In the case of USB devices, there are no integer options and it relies more on pot luck to attach the correct device. This patch adds a couple of bus-type-specific attach routine hooks to the struct comedi_driver, which a low-level driver can optionally fill in if it supports auto-configuration. A low-level driver that supports auto-configuration of {PCI,USB} devices calls the existing comedi_{pci,usb}_auto_config() when it wishes to auto-configure a freshly probed device (maybe after loading firmware). This will call the new '->attach_{pci,usb}()' hook if the driver has defined it, otherwise it will fall back to calling the '->attach()' hook as before. The '->attach_{pci,usb}()' hook gets a pointer to the struct comedi_device and a pointer to the struct {pci_dev,usb_interface} and can figure out the {PCI,USB} device details for itself. Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2012-03-30 20:15:01 +04:00
dev->driver = driver;
dev->board_name = dev->driver->driver_name;
ret = driver->auto_attach(dev, context);
if (ret >= 0)
ret = comedi_device_postconfig(dev);
staging: comedi: add bus-type-specific attach hooks for PCI and USB The Comedi auto-configuration mechanism used to bind hardware devices to comedi devices automatically is pretty kludgy. It fakes a "manual" configuration of the comedi device as though the COMEDI_DEVCONFIG ioctl (or the 'comedi_config' utility) were used. In particular, the low-level comedi driver's '->attach()' routine is called with a pointer to the struct comedi_device being attached and a pointer to a 'struct devconfig' containing a device name string and a few integer options to help the attach routine locate the device being attached. In the case of PCI devices, these integer options are the PCI bus and slot numbers. In the case of USB devices, there are no integer options and it relies more on pot luck to attach the correct device. This patch adds a couple of bus-type-specific attach routine hooks to the struct comedi_driver, which a low-level driver can optionally fill in if it supports auto-configuration. A low-level driver that supports auto-configuration of {PCI,USB} devices calls the existing comedi_{pci,usb}_auto_config() when it wishes to auto-configure a freshly probed device (maybe after loading firmware). This will call the new '->attach_{pci,usb}()' hook if the driver has defined it, otherwise it will fall back to calling the '->attach()' hook as before. The '->attach_{pci,usb}()' hook gets a pointer to the struct comedi_device and a pointer to the struct {pci_dev,usb_interface} and can figure out the {PCI,USB} device details for itself. Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2012-03-30 20:15:01 +04:00
if (ret < 0) {
dev_warn(hardware_device,
"driver '%s' failed to auto-configure device.\n",
driver->driver_name);
mutex_unlock(&dev->mutex);
comedi_release_hardware_device(hardware_device);
} else {
/*
* class_dev should be set properly here
* after a successful auto config
*/
dev_info(dev->class_dev,
"driver '%s' has successfully auto-configured '%s'.\n",
driver->driver_name, dev->board_name);
mutex_unlock(&dev->mutex);
}
staging: comedi: add bus-type-specific attach hooks for PCI and USB The Comedi auto-configuration mechanism used to bind hardware devices to comedi devices automatically is pretty kludgy. It fakes a "manual" configuration of the comedi device as though the COMEDI_DEVCONFIG ioctl (or the 'comedi_config' utility) were used. In particular, the low-level comedi driver's '->attach()' routine is called with a pointer to the struct comedi_device being attached and a pointer to a 'struct devconfig' containing a device name string and a few integer options to help the attach routine locate the device being attached. In the case of PCI devices, these integer options are the PCI bus and slot numbers. In the case of USB devices, there are no integer options and it relies more on pot luck to attach the correct device. This patch adds a couple of bus-type-specific attach routine hooks to the struct comedi_driver, which a low-level driver can optionally fill in if it supports auto-configuration. A low-level driver that supports auto-configuration of {PCI,USB} devices calls the existing comedi_{pci,usb}_auto_config() when it wishes to auto-configure a freshly probed device (maybe after loading firmware). This will call the new '->attach_{pci,usb}()' hook if the driver has defined it, otherwise it will fall back to calling the '->attach()' hook as before. The '->attach_{pci,usb}()' hook gets a pointer to the struct comedi_device and a pointer to the struct {pci_dev,usb_interface} and can figure out the {PCI,USB} device details for itself. Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2012-03-30 20:15:01 +04:00
return ret;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_auto_config);
/**
* comedi_auto_unconfig() - Unconfigure auto-allocated COMEDI device
* @hardware_device: Hardware device previously passed to
* comedi_auto_config().
*
* Cleans up and eventually destroys the COMEDI device allocated by
* comedi_auto_config() for the same hardware device. As part of this
* clean-up, the low-level COMEDI driver's 'detach' handler will be called.
* (The COMEDI device itself will persist in an unattached state if it is
* still open, until it is released, and any mmapped buffers will persist
* until they are munmapped.)
*
* This is usually called from a wrapper module in a bus-specific COMEDI
* module, which in turn is usually set as the bus device 'remove' function
* in the low-level COMEDI driver.
*/
void comedi_auto_unconfig(struct device *hardware_device)
{
if (!hardware_device)
return;
comedi_release_hardware_device(hardware_device);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_auto_unconfig);
/**
* comedi_driver_register() - Register a low-level COMEDI driver
* @driver: Low-level COMEDI driver.
*
* The low-level COMEDI driver is added to the list of registered COMEDI
* drivers. This is used by the handler for the "/proc/comedi" file and is
* also used by the handler for the %COMEDI_DEVCONFIG ioctl to configure
* "legacy" COMEDI devices (for those low-level drivers that support it).
*
* Returns 0.
*/
int comedi_driver_register(struct comedi_driver *driver)
{
mutex_lock(&comedi_drivers_list_lock);
driver->next = comedi_drivers;
comedi_drivers = driver;
mutex_unlock(&comedi_drivers_list_lock);
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_driver_register);
/**
* comedi_driver_unregister() - Unregister a low-level COMEDI driver
* @driver: Low-level COMEDI driver.
*
* The low-level COMEDI driver is removed from the list of registered COMEDI
* drivers. Detaches any COMEDI devices attached to the driver, which will
* result in the low-level driver's 'detach' handler being called for those
* devices before this function returns.
*/
void comedi_driver_unregister(struct comedi_driver *driver)
{
struct comedi_driver *prev;
int i;
/* unlink the driver */
mutex_lock(&comedi_drivers_list_lock);
if (comedi_drivers == driver) {
comedi_drivers = driver->next;
} else {
for (prev = comedi_drivers; prev->next; prev = prev->next) {
if (prev->next == driver) {
prev->next = driver->next;
break;
}
}
}
mutex_unlock(&comedi_drivers_list_lock);
/* check for devices using this driver */
for (i = 0; i < COMEDI_NUM_BOARD_MINORS; i++) {
struct comedi_device *dev = comedi_dev_get_from_minor(i);
if (!dev)
continue;
mutex_lock(&dev->mutex);
if (dev->attached && dev->driver == driver) {
if (dev->use_count)
dev_warn(dev->class_dev,
"BUG! detaching device with use_count=%d\n",
dev->use_count);
comedi_device_detach(dev);
}
mutex_unlock(&dev->mutex);
comedi_dev_put(dev);
}
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(comedi_driver_unregister);