1 #ifndef LINUX_MMC_IOCTL_H 2 #define LINUX_MMC_IOCTL_H 3 4 #include <linux/types.h> 5 6 struct mmc_ioc_cmd { 7 /* Implies direction of data. true = write, false = read */ 8 int write_flag; 9 10 /* Application-specific command. true = precede with CMD55 */ 11 int is_acmd; 12 13 __u32 opcode; 14 __u32 arg; 15 __u32 response[4]; /* CMD response */ 16 unsigned int flags; 17 unsigned int blksz; 18 unsigned int blocks; 19 20 /* 21 * Sleep at least postsleep_min_us useconds, and at most 22 * postsleep_max_us useconds *after* issuing command. Needed for 23 * some read commands for which cards have no other way of indicating 24 * they're ready for the next command (i.e. there is no equivalent of 25 * a "busy" indicator for read operations). 26 */ 27 unsigned int postsleep_min_us; 28 unsigned int postsleep_max_us; 29 30 /* 31 * Override driver-computed timeouts. Note the difference in units! 32 */ 33 unsigned int data_timeout_ns; 34 unsigned int cmd_timeout_ms; 35 36 /* 37 * For 64-bit machines, the next member, ``__u64 data_ptr``, wants to 38 * be 8-byte aligned. Make sure this struct is the same size when 39 * built for 32-bit. 40 */ 41 __u32 __pad; 42 43 /* DAT buffer */ 44 __u64 data_ptr; 45 }; 46 #define mmc_ioc_cmd_set_data(ic, ptr) ic.data_ptr = (__u64)(unsigned long) ptr 47 48 #define MMC_IOC_CMD _IOWR(MMC_BLOCK_MAJOR, 0, struct mmc_ioc_cmd) 49 50 /** 51 * There are four request types that are applicable for rpmb accesses- two 52 * under read category and two under write. They are 53 * 54 * Reads 55 * ------- 56 * 1. Read Write Counter 57 * 2. Authenticated data read 58 * 59 * 60 * Writes 61 * ------- 62 * 1. Provision RPMB key (though it might be done in a secure environment) 63 * 2. Authenticated data write 64 * 65 * While its given that the rpmb data frames are going to have that 66 * information encoded in it and the frames should be generated by a secure 67 * piece of code, the request types can be classified as above. 68 * 69 * So here are the set of commands that should be executed atomically in the 70 * ioctl for rpmb read operation 71 * 1. Switch partition 72 * 2. Set block count 73 * 3. Write data frame - CMD25 to write the rpmb data frame 74 * 4. Set block count 75 * 5. Read the data - CMD18 to do the actual read 76 * 77 * Similarly for rpmb write operation, these are the commands that should be 78 * executed atomically in the ioctl for rpmb write operation 79 * 1. Switch partition 80 * 2. Set block count 81 * 3. Write data frame - CMD25 to write the rpmb data frame with data 82 * 4. Set block count 83 * 5. Read the data - CMD25 to write rpmb data frame indicating that rpmb 84 * result register is about to be read 85 * 6. Set block count 86 * 7. Read rpmb result - CMD18 to read the rpmb result register 87 * 88 * Each of the above commands should be sent individually via struct mmc_ioc_cmd 89 * and fields like is_acmd that are not needed for rpmb operations will be 90 * ignored. 91 */ 92 #define MMC_IOC_MAX_RPMB_CMD 3 93 struct mmc_ioc_rpmb { 94 struct mmc_ioc_cmd cmds[MMC_IOC_MAX_RPMB_CMD]; 95 }; 96 97 /* 98 * This ioctl is meant for use with rpmb partitions. This is needed since the 99 * access procedure for this particular partition is different from regular 100 * or normal partitions. 101 */ 102 #define MMC_IOC_RPMB_CMD _IOWR(MMC_BLOCK_MAJOR, 0, struct mmc_ioc_rpmb) 103 104 /* 105 * Since this ioctl is only meant to enhance (and not replace) normal access 106 * to the mmc bus device, an upper data transfer limit of MMC_IOC_MAX_BYTES 107 * is enforced per ioctl call. For larger data transfers, use the normal 108 * block device operations. 109 */ 110 #define MMC_IOC_MAX_BYTES (512L * 256) 111 #endif /* LINUX_MMC_IOCTL_H */ 112