1 2 Real Time Clock (RTC) Drivers for Linux 3 ======================================= 4 5When Linux developers talk about a "Real Time Clock", they usually mean 6something that tracks wall clock time and is battery backed so that it 7works even with system power off. Such clocks will normally not track 8the local time zone or daylight savings time -- unless they dual boot 9with MS-Windows -- but will instead be set to Coordinated Universal Time 10(UTC, formerly "Greenwich Mean Time"). 11 12The newest non-PC hardware tends to just count seconds, like the time(2) 13system call reports, but RTCs also very commonly represent time using 14the Gregorian calendar and 24 hour time, as reported by gmtime(3). 15 16Linux has two largely-compatible userspace RTC API families you may 17need to know about: 18 19 * /dev/rtc ... is the RTC provided by PC compatible systems, 20 so it's not very portable to non-x86 systems. 21 22 * /dev/rtc0, /dev/rtc1 ... are part of a framework that's 23 supported by a wide variety of RTC chips on all systems. 24 25Programmers need to understand that the PC/AT functionality is not 26always available, and some systems can do much more. That is, the 27RTCs use the same API to make requests in both RTC frameworks (using 28different filenames of course), but the hardware may not offer the 29same functionality. For example, not every RTC is hooked up to an 30IRQ, so they can't all issue alarms; and where standard PC RTCs can 31only issue an alarm up to 24 hours in the future, other hardware may 32be able to schedule one any time in the upcoming century. 33 34 35 Old PC/AT-Compatible driver: /dev/rtc 36 -------------------------------------- 37 38All PCs (even Alpha machines) have a Real Time Clock built into them. 39Usually they are built into the chipset of the computer, but some may 40actually have a Motorola MC146818 (or clone) on the board. This is the 41clock that keeps the date and time while your computer is turned off. 42 43ACPI has standardized that MC146818 functionality, and extended it in 44a few ways (enabling longer alarm periods, and wake-from-hibernate). 45That functionality is NOT exposed in the old driver. 46 47However it can also be used to generate signals from a slow 2Hz to a 48relatively fast 8192Hz, in increments of powers of two. These signals 49are reported by interrupt number 8. (Oh! So *that* is what IRQ 8 is 50for...) It can also function as a 24hr alarm, raising IRQ 8 when the 51alarm goes off. The alarm can also be programmed to only check any 52subset of the three programmable values, meaning that it could be set to 53ring on the 30th second of the 30th minute of every hour, for example. 54The clock can also be set to generate an interrupt upon every clock 55update, thus generating a 1Hz signal. 56 57The interrupts are reported via /dev/rtc (major 10, minor 135, read only 58character device) in the form of an unsigned long. The low byte contains 59the type of interrupt (update-done, alarm-rang, or periodic) that was 60raised, and the remaining bytes contain the number of interrupts since 61the last read. Status information is reported through the pseudo-file 62/proc/driver/rtc if the /proc filesystem was enabled. The driver has 63built in locking so that only one process is allowed to have the /dev/rtc 64interface open at a time. 65 66A user process can monitor these interrupts by doing a read(2) or a 67select(2) on /dev/rtc -- either will block/stop the user process until 68the next interrupt is received. This is useful for things like 69reasonably high frequency data acquisition where one doesn't want to 70burn up 100% CPU by polling gettimeofday etc. etc. 71 72At high frequencies, or under high loads, the user process should check 73the number of interrupts received since the last read to determine if 74there has been any interrupt "pileup" so to speak. Just for reference, a 75typical 486-33 running a tight read loop on /dev/rtc will start to suffer 76occasional interrupt pileup (i.e. > 1 IRQ event since last read) for 77frequencies above 1024Hz. So you really should check the high bytes 78of the value you read, especially at frequencies above that of the 79normal timer interrupt, which is 100Hz. 80 81Programming and/or enabling interrupt frequencies greater than 64Hz is 82only allowed by root. This is perhaps a bit conservative, but we don't want 83an evil user generating lots of IRQs on a slow 386sx-16, where it might have 84a negative impact on performance. This 64Hz limit can be changed by writing 85a different value to /proc/sys/dev/rtc/max-user-freq. Note that the 86interrupt handler is only a few lines of code to minimize any possibility 87of this effect. 88 89Also, if the kernel time is synchronized with an external source, the 90kernel will write the time back to the CMOS clock every 11 minutes. In 91the process of doing this, the kernel briefly turns off RTC periodic 92interrupts, so be aware of this if you are doing serious work. If you 93don't synchronize the kernel time with an external source (via ntp or 94whatever) then the kernel will keep its hands off the RTC, allowing you 95exclusive access to the device for your applications. 96 97The alarm and/or interrupt frequency are programmed into the RTC via 98various ioctl(2) calls as listed in ./include/linux/rtc.h 99Rather than write 50 pages describing the ioctl() and so on, it is 100perhaps more useful to include a small test program that demonstrates 101how to use them, and demonstrates the features of the driver. This is 102probably a lot more useful to people interested in writing applications 103that will be using this driver. See the code at the end of this document. 104 105(The original /dev/rtc driver was written by Paul Gortmaker.) 106 107 108 New portable "RTC Class" drivers: /dev/rtcN 109 -------------------------------------------- 110 111Because Linux supports many non-ACPI and non-PC platforms, some of which 112have more than one RTC style clock, it needed a more portable solution 113than expecting a single battery-backed MC146818 clone on every system. 114Accordingly, a new "RTC Class" framework has been defined. It offers 115three different userspace interfaces: 116 117 * /dev/rtcN ... much the same as the older /dev/rtc interface 118 119 * /sys/class/rtc/rtcN ... sysfs attributes support readonly 120 access to some RTC attributes. 121 122 * /proc/driver/rtc ... the first RTC (rtc0) may expose itself 123 using a procfs interface. More information is (currently) shown 124 here than through sysfs. 125 126The RTC Class framework supports a wide variety of RTCs, ranging from those 127integrated into embeddable system-on-chip (SOC) processors to discrete chips 128using I2C, SPI, or some other bus to communicate with the host CPU. There's 129even support for PC-style RTCs ... including the features exposed on newer PCs 130through ACPI. 131 132The new framework also removes the "one RTC per system" restriction. For 133example, maybe the low-power battery-backed RTC is a discrete I2C chip, but 134a high functionality RTC is integrated into the SOC. That system might read 135the system clock from the discrete RTC, but use the integrated one for all 136other tasks, because of its greater functionality. 137 138The ioctl() calls supported by /dev/rtc are also supported by the RTC class 139framework. However, because the chips and systems are not standardized, 140some PC/AT functionality might not be provided. And in the same way, some 141newer features -- including those enabled by ACPI -- are exposed by the 142RTC class framework, but can't be supported by the older driver. 143 144 * RTC_RD_TIME, RTC_SET_TIME ... every RTC supports at least reading 145 time, returning the result as a Gregorian calendar date and 24 hour 146 wall clock time. To be most useful, this time may also be updated. 147 148 * RTC_AIE_ON, RTC_AIE_OFF, RTC_ALM_SET, RTC_ALM_READ ... when the RTC 149 is connected to an IRQ line, it can often issue an alarm IRQ up to 150 24 hours in the future. (Use RTC_WKALM_* by preference.) 151 152 * RTC_WKALM_SET, RTC_WKALM_RD ... RTCs that can issue alarms beyond 153 the next 24 hours use a slightly more powerful API, which supports 154 setting the longer alarm time and enabling its IRQ using a single 155 request (using the same model as EFI firmware). 156 157 * RTC_UIE_ON, RTC_UIE_OFF ... if the RTC offers IRQs, it probably 158 also offers update IRQs whenever the "seconds" counter changes. 159 If needed, the RTC framework can emulate this mechanism. 160 161 * RTC_PIE_ON, RTC_PIE_OFF, RTC_IRQP_SET, RTC_IRQP_READ ... another 162 feature often accessible with an IRQ line is a periodic IRQ, issued 163 at settable frequencies (usually 2^N Hz). 164 165In many cases, the RTC alarm can be a system wake event, used to force 166Linux out of a low power sleep state (or hibernation) back to a fully 167operational state. For example, a system could enter a deep power saving 168state until it's time to execute some scheduled tasks. 169 170Note that many of these ioctls need not actually be implemented by your 171driver. The common rtc-dev interface handles many of these nicely if your 172driver returns ENOIOCTLCMD. Some common examples: 173 174 * RTC_RD_TIME, RTC_SET_TIME: the read_time/set_time functions will be 175 called with appropriate values. 176 177 * RTC_ALM_SET, RTC_ALM_READ, RTC_WKALM_SET, RTC_WKALM_RD: the 178 set_alarm/read_alarm functions will be called. 179 180 * RTC_IRQP_SET, RTC_IRQP_READ: the irq_set_freq function will be called 181 to set the frequency while the framework will handle the read for you 182 since the frequency is stored in the irq_freq member of the rtc_device 183 structure. Your driver needs to initialize the irq_freq member during 184 init. Make sure you check the requested frequency is in range of your 185 hardware in the irq_set_freq function. If it isn't, return -EINVAL. If 186 you cannot actually change the frequency, do not define irq_set_freq. 187 188If all else fails, check out the rtc-test.c driver! 189 190 191-------------------- 8< ---------------- 8< ----------------------------- 192 193/* 194 * Real Time Clock Driver Test/Example Program 195 * 196 * Compile with: 197 * gcc -s -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes rtctest.c -o rtctest 198 * 199 * Copyright (C) 1996, Paul Gortmaker. 200 * 201 * Released under the GNU General Public License, version 2, 202 * included herein by reference. 203 * 204 */ 205 206#include <stdio.h> 207#include <linux/rtc.h> 208#include <sys/ioctl.h> 209#include <sys/time.h> 210#include <sys/types.h> 211#include <fcntl.h> 212#include <unistd.h> 213#include <stdlib.h> 214#include <errno.h> 215 216 217/* 218 * This expects the new RTC class driver framework, working with 219 * clocks that will often not be clones of what the PC-AT had. 220 * Use the command line to specify another RTC if you need one. 221 */ 222static const char default_rtc[] = "/dev/rtc0"; 223 224 225int main(int argc, char **argv) 226{ 227 int i, fd, retval, irqcount = 0; 228 unsigned long tmp, data; 229 struct rtc_time rtc_tm; 230 const char *rtc = default_rtc; 231 232 switch (argc) { 233 case 2: 234 rtc = argv[1]; 235 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 236 case 1: 237 break; 238 default: 239 fprintf(stderr, "usage: rtctest [rtcdev]\n"); 240 return 1; 241 } 242 243 fd = open(rtc, O_RDONLY); 244 245 if (fd == -1) { 246 perror(rtc); 247 exit(errno); 248 } 249 250 fprintf(stderr, "\n\t\t\tRTC Driver Test Example.\n\n"); 251 252 /* Turn on update interrupts (one per second) */ 253 retval = ioctl(fd, RTC_UIE_ON, 0); 254 if (retval == -1) { 255 if (errno == ENOTTY) { 256 fprintf(stderr, 257 "\n...Update IRQs not supported.\n"); 258 goto test_READ; 259 } 260 perror("RTC_UIE_ON ioctl"); 261 exit(errno); 262 } 263 264 fprintf(stderr, "Counting 5 update (1/sec) interrupts from reading %s:", 265 rtc); 266 fflush(stderr); 267 for (i=1; i<6; i++) { 268 /* This read will block */ 269 retval = read(fd, &data, sizeof(unsigned long)); 270 if (retval == -1) { 271 perror("read"); 272 exit(errno); 273 } 274 fprintf(stderr, " %d",i); 275 fflush(stderr); 276 irqcount++; 277 } 278 279 fprintf(stderr, "\nAgain, from using select(2) on /dev/rtc:"); 280 fflush(stderr); 281 for (i=1; i<6; i++) { 282 struct timeval tv = {5, 0}; /* 5 second timeout on select */ 283 fd_set readfds; 284 285 FD_ZERO(&readfds); 286 FD_SET(fd, &readfds); 287 /* The select will wait until an RTC interrupt happens. */ 288 retval = select(fd+1, &readfds, NULL, NULL, &tv); 289 if (retval == -1) { 290 perror("select"); 291 exit(errno); 292 } 293 /* This read won't block unlike the select-less case above. */ 294 retval = read(fd, &data, sizeof(unsigned long)); 295 if (retval == -1) { 296 perror("read"); 297 exit(errno); 298 } 299 fprintf(stderr, " %d",i); 300 fflush(stderr); 301 irqcount++; 302 } 303 304 /* Turn off update interrupts */ 305 retval = ioctl(fd, RTC_UIE_OFF, 0); 306 if (retval == -1) { 307 perror("RTC_UIE_OFF ioctl"); 308 exit(errno); 309 } 310 311test_READ: 312 /* Read the RTC time/date */ 313 retval = ioctl(fd, RTC_RD_TIME, &rtc_tm); 314 if (retval == -1) { 315 perror("RTC_RD_TIME ioctl"); 316 exit(errno); 317 } 318 319 fprintf(stderr, "\n\nCurrent RTC date/time is %d-%d-%d, %02d:%02d:%02d.\n", 320 rtc_tm.tm_mday, rtc_tm.tm_mon + 1, rtc_tm.tm_year + 1900, 321 rtc_tm.tm_hour, rtc_tm.tm_min, rtc_tm.tm_sec); 322 323 /* Set the alarm to 5 sec in the future, and check for rollover */ 324 rtc_tm.tm_sec += 5; 325 if (rtc_tm.tm_sec >= 60) { 326 rtc_tm.tm_sec %= 60; 327 rtc_tm.tm_min++; 328 } 329 if (rtc_tm.tm_min == 60) { 330 rtc_tm.tm_min = 0; 331 rtc_tm.tm_hour++; 332 } 333 if (rtc_tm.tm_hour == 24) 334 rtc_tm.tm_hour = 0; 335 336 retval = ioctl(fd, RTC_ALM_SET, &rtc_tm); 337 if (retval == -1) { 338 if (errno == ENOTTY) { 339 fprintf(stderr, 340 "\n...Alarm IRQs not supported.\n"); 341 goto test_PIE; 342 } 343 perror("RTC_ALM_SET ioctl"); 344 exit(errno); 345 } 346 347 /* Read the current alarm settings */ 348 retval = ioctl(fd, RTC_ALM_READ, &rtc_tm); 349 if (retval == -1) { 350 perror("RTC_ALM_READ ioctl"); 351 exit(errno); 352 } 353 354 fprintf(stderr, "Alarm time now set to %02d:%02d:%02d.\n", 355 rtc_tm.tm_hour, rtc_tm.tm_min, rtc_tm.tm_sec); 356 357 /* Enable alarm interrupts */ 358 retval = ioctl(fd, RTC_AIE_ON, 0); 359 if (retval == -1) { 360 perror("RTC_AIE_ON ioctl"); 361 exit(errno); 362 } 363 364 fprintf(stderr, "Waiting 5 seconds for alarm..."); 365 fflush(stderr); 366 /* This blocks until the alarm ring causes an interrupt */ 367 retval = read(fd, &data, sizeof(unsigned long)); 368 if (retval == -1) { 369 perror("read"); 370 exit(errno); 371 } 372 irqcount++; 373 fprintf(stderr, " okay. Alarm rang.\n"); 374 375 /* Disable alarm interrupts */ 376 retval = ioctl(fd, RTC_AIE_OFF, 0); 377 if (retval == -1) { 378 perror("RTC_AIE_OFF ioctl"); 379 exit(errno); 380 } 381 382test_PIE: 383 /* Read periodic IRQ rate */ 384 retval = ioctl(fd, RTC_IRQP_READ, &tmp); 385 if (retval == -1) { 386 /* not all RTCs support periodic IRQs */ 387 if (errno == ENOTTY) { 388 fprintf(stderr, "\nNo periodic IRQ support\n"); 389 goto done; 390 } 391 perror("RTC_IRQP_READ ioctl"); 392 exit(errno); 393 } 394 fprintf(stderr, "\nPeriodic IRQ rate is %ldHz.\n", tmp); 395 396 fprintf(stderr, "Counting 20 interrupts at:"); 397 fflush(stderr); 398 399 /* The frequencies 128Hz, 256Hz, ... 8192Hz are only allowed for root. */ 400 for (tmp=2; tmp<=64; tmp*=2) { 401 402 retval = ioctl(fd, RTC_IRQP_SET, tmp); 403 if (retval == -1) { 404 /* not all RTCs can change their periodic IRQ rate */ 405 if (errno == ENOTTY) { 406 fprintf(stderr, 407 "\n...Periodic IRQ rate is fixed\n"); 408 goto done; 409 } 410 perror("RTC_IRQP_SET ioctl"); 411 exit(errno); 412 } 413 414 fprintf(stderr, "\n%ldHz:\t", tmp); 415 fflush(stderr); 416 417 /* Enable periodic interrupts */ 418 retval = ioctl(fd, RTC_PIE_ON, 0); 419 if (retval == -1) { 420 perror("RTC_PIE_ON ioctl"); 421 exit(errno); 422 } 423 424 for (i=1; i<21; i++) { 425 /* This blocks */ 426 retval = read(fd, &data, sizeof(unsigned long)); 427 if (retval == -1) { 428 perror("read"); 429 exit(errno); 430 } 431 fprintf(stderr, " %d",i); 432 fflush(stderr); 433 irqcount++; 434 } 435 436 /* Disable periodic interrupts */ 437 retval = ioctl(fd, RTC_PIE_OFF, 0); 438 if (retval == -1) { 439 perror("RTC_PIE_OFF ioctl"); 440 exit(errno); 441 } 442 } 443 444done: 445 fprintf(stderr, "\n\n\t\t\t *** Test complete ***\n"); 446 447 close(fd); 448 449 return 0; 450} 451