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1Overview of Linux kernel SPI support
2====================================
3
402-Feb-2012
5
6What is SPI?
7------------
8The "Serial Peripheral Interface" (SPI) is a synchronous four wire serial
9link used to connect microcontrollers to sensors, memory, and peripherals.
10It's a simple "de facto" standard, not complicated enough to acquire a
11standardization body.  SPI uses a master/slave configuration.
12
13The three signal wires hold a clock (SCK, often on the order of 10 MHz),
14and parallel data lines with "Master Out, Slave In" (MOSI) or "Master In,
15Slave Out" (MISO) signals.  (Other names are also used.)  There are four
16clocking modes through which data is exchanged; mode-0 and mode-3 are most
17commonly used.  Each clock cycle shifts data out and data in; the clock
18doesn't cycle except when there is a data bit to shift.  Not all data bits
19are used though; not every protocol uses those full duplex capabilities.
20
21SPI masters use a fourth "chip select" line to activate a given SPI slave
22device, so those three signal wires may be connected to several chips
23in parallel.  All SPI slaves support chipselects; they are usually active
24low signals, labeled nCSx for slave 'x' (e.g. nCS0).  Some devices have
25other signals, often including an interrupt to the master.
26
27Unlike serial busses like USB or SMBus, even low level protocols for
28SPI slave functions are usually not interoperable between vendors
29(except for commodities like SPI memory chips).
30
31  - SPI may be used for request/response style device protocols, as with
32    touchscreen sensors and memory chips.
33
34  - It may also be used to stream data in either direction (half duplex),
35    or both of them at the same time (full duplex).
36
37  - Some devices may use eight bit words.  Others may use different word
38    lengths, such as streams of 12-bit or 20-bit digital samples.
39
40  - Words are usually sent with their most significant bit (MSB) first,
41    but sometimes the least significant bit (LSB) goes first instead.
42
43  - Sometimes SPI is used to daisy-chain devices, like shift registers.
44
45In the same way, SPI slaves will only rarely support any kind of automatic
46discovery/enumeration protocol.  The tree of slave devices accessible from
47a given SPI master will normally be set up manually, with configuration
48tables.
49
50SPI is only one of the names used by such four-wire protocols, and
51most controllers have no problem handling "MicroWire" (think of it as
52half-duplex SPI, for request/response protocols), SSP ("Synchronous
53Serial Protocol"), PSP ("Programmable Serial Protocol"), and other
54related protocols.
55
56Some chips eliminate a signal line by combining MOSI and MISO, and
57limiting themselves to half-duplex at the hardware level.  In fact
58some SPI chips have this signal mode as a strapping option.  These
59can be accessed using the same programming interface as SPI, but of
60course they won't handle full duplex transfers.  You may find such
61chips described as using "three wire" signaling: SCK, data, nCSx.
62(That data line is sometimes called MOMI or SISO.)
63
64Microcontrollers often support both master and slave sides of the SPI
65protocol.  This document (and Linux) currently only supports the master
66side of SPI interactions.
67
68
69Who uses it?  On what kinds of systems?
70---------------------------------------
71Linux developers using SPI are probably writing device drivers for embedded
72systems boards.  SPI is used to control external chips, and it is also a
73protocol supported by every MMC or SD memory card.  (The older "DataFlash"
74cards, predating MMC cards but using the same connectors and card shape,
75support only SPI.)  Some PC hardware uses SPI flash for BIOS code.
76
77SPI slave chips range from digital/analog converters used for analog
78sensors and codecs, to memory, to peripherals like USB controllers
79or Ethernet adapters; and more.
80
81Most systems using SPI will integrate a few devices on a mainboard.
82Some provide SPI links on expansion connectors; in cases where no
83dedicated SPI controller exists, GPIO pins can be used to create a
84low speed "bitbanging" adapter.  Very few systems will "hotplug" an SPI
85controller; the reasons to use SPI focus on low cost and simple operation,
86and if dynamic reconfiguration is important, USB will often be a more
87appropriate low-pincount peripheral bus.
88
89Many microcontrollers that can run Linux integrate one or more I/O
90interfaces with SPI modes.  Given SPI support, they could use MMC or SD
91cards without needing a special purpose MMC/SD/SDIO controller.
92
93
94I'm confused.  What are these four SPI "clock modes"?
95-----------------------------------------------------
96It's easy to be confused here, and the vendor documentation you'll
97find isn't necessarily helpful.  The four modes combine two mode bits:
98
99 - CPOL indicates the initial clock polarity.  CPOL=0 means the
100   clock starts low, so the first (leading) edge is rising, and
101   the second (trailing) edge is falling.  CPOL=1 means the clock
102   starts high, so the first (leading) edge is falling.
103
104 - CPHA indicates the clock phase used to sample data; CPHA=0 says
105   sample on the leading edge, CPHA=1 means the trailing edge.
106
107   Since the signal needs to stablize before it's sampled, CPHA=0
108   implies that its data is written half a clock before the first
109   clock edge.  The chipselect may have made it become available.
110
111Chip specs won't always say "uses SPI mode X" in as many words,
112but their timing diagrams will make the CPOL and CPHA modes clear.
113
114In the SPI mode number, CPOL is the high order bit and CPHA is the
115low order bit.  So when a chip's timing diagram shows the clock
116starting low (CPOL=0) and data stabilized for sampling during the
117trailing clock edge (CPHA=1), that's SPI mode 1.
118
119Note that the clock mode is relevant as soon as the chipselect goes
120active.  So the master must set the clock to inactive before selecting
121a slave, and the slave can tell the chosen polarity by sampling the
122clock level when its select line goes active.  That's why many devices
123support for example both modes 0 and 3:  they don't care about polarity,
124and always clock data in/out on rising clock edges.
125
126
127How do these driver programming interfaces work?
128------------------------------------------------
129The <linux/spi/spi.h> header file includes kerneldoc, as does the
130main source code, and you should certainly read that chapter of the
131kernel API document.  This is just an overview, so you get the big
132picture before those details.
133
134SPI requests always go into I/O queues.  Requests for a given SPI device
135are always executed in FIFO order, and complete asynchronously through
136completion callbacks.  There are also some simple synchronous wrappers
137for those calls, including ones for common transaction types like writing
138a command and then reading its response.
139
140There are two types of SPI driver, here called:
141
142  Controller drivers ... controllers may be built into System-On-Chip
143	processors, and often support both Master and Slave roles.
144	These drivers touch hardware registers and may use DMA.
145	Or they can be PIO bitbangers, needing just GPIO pins.
146
147  Protocol drivers ... these pass messages through the controller
148	driver to communicate with a Slave or Master device on the
149	other side of an SPI link.
150
151So for example one protocol driver might talk to the MTD layer to export
152data to filesystems stored on SPI flash like DataFlash; and others might
153control audio interfaces, present touchscreen sensors as input interfaces,
154or monitor temperature and voltage levels during industrial processing.
155And those might all be sharing the same controller driver.
156
157A "struct spi_device" encapsulates the master-side interface between
158those two types of driver.  At this writing, Linux has no slave side
159programming interface.
160
161There is a minimal core of SPI programming interfaces, focussing on
162using the driver model to connect controller and protocol drivers using
163device tables provided by board specific initialization code.  SPI
164shows up in sysfs in several locations:
165
166   /sys/devices/.../CTLR ... physical node for a given SPI controller
167
168   /sys/devices/.../CTLR/spiB.C ... spi_device on bus "B",
169	chipselect C, accessed through CTLR.
170
171   /sys/bus/spi/devices/spiB.C ... symlink to that physical
172   	.../CTLR/spiB.C device
173
174   /sys/devices/.../CTLR/spiB.C/modalias ... identifies the driver
175	that should be used with this device (for hotplug/coldplug)
176
177   /sys/bus/spi/drivers/D ... driver for one or more spi*.* devices
178
179   /sys/class/spi_master/spiB ... symlink (or actual device node) to
180	a logical node which could hold class related state for the
181	controller managing bus "B".  All spiB.* devices share one
182	physical SPI bus segment, with SCLK, MOSI, and MISO.
183
184Note that the actual location of the controller's class state depends
185on whether you enabled CONFIG_SYSFS_DEPRECATED or not.  At this time,
186the only class-specific state is the bus number ("B" in "spiB"), so
187those /sys/class entries are only useful to quickly identify busses.
188
189
190How does board-specific init code declare SPI devices?
191------------------------------------------------------
192Linux needs several kinds of information to properly configure SPI devices.
193That information is normally provided by board-specific code, even for
194chips that do support some of automated discovery/enumeration.
195
196DECLARE CONTROLLERS
197
198The first kind of information is a list of what SPI controllers exist.
199For System-on-Chip (SOC) based boards, these will usually be platform
200devices, and the controller may need some platform_data in order to
201operate properly.  The "struct platform_device" will include resources
202like the physical address of the controller's first register and its IRQ.
203
204Platforms will often abstract the "register SPI controller" operation,
205maybe coupling it with code to initialize pin configurations, so that
206the arch/.../mach-*/board-*.c files for several boards can all share the
207same basic controller setup code.  This is because most SOCs have several
208SPI-capable controllers, and only the ones actually usable on a given
209board should normally be set up and registered.
210
211So for example arch/.../mach-*/board-*.c files might have code like:
212
213	#include <mach/spi.h>	/* for mysoc_spi_data */
214
215	/* if your mach-* infrastructure doesn't support kernels that can
216	 * run on multiple boards, pdata wouldn't benefit from "__init".
217	 */
218	static struct mysoc_spi_data pdata __initdata = { ... };
219
220	static __init board_init(void)
221	{
222		...
223		/* this board only uses SPI controller #2 */
224		mysoc_register_spi(2, &pdata);
225		...
226	}
227
228And SOC-specific utility code might look something like:
229
230	#include <mach/spi.h>
231
232	static struct platform_device spi2 = { ... };
233
234	void mysoc_register_spi(unsigned n, struct mysoc_spi_data *pdata)
235	{
236		struct mysoc_spi_data *pdata2;
237
238		pdata2 = kmalloc(sizeof *pdata2, GFP_KERNEL);
239		*pdata2 = pdata;
240		...
241		if (n == 2) {
242			spi2->dev.platform_data = pdata2;
243			register_platform_device(&spi2);
244
245			/* also: set up pin modes so the spi2 signals are
246			 * visible on the relevant pins ... bootloaders on
247			 * production boards may already have done this, but
248			 * developer boards will often need Linux to do it.
249			 */
250		}
251		...
252	}
253
254Notice how the platform_data for boards may be different, even if the
255same SOC controller is used.  For example, on one board SPI might use
256an external clock, where another derives the SPI clock from current
257settings of some master clock.
258
259
260DECLARE SLAVE DEVICES
261
262The second kind of information is a list of what SPI slave devices exist
263on the target board, often with some board-specific data needed for the
264driver to work correctly.
265
266Normally your arch/.../mach-*/board-*.c files would provide a small table
267listing the SPI devices on each board.  (This would typically be only a
268small handful.)  That might look like:
269
270	static struct ads7846_platform_data ads_info = {
271		.vref_delay_usecs	= 100,
272		.x_plate_ohms		= 580,
273		.y_plate_ohms		= 410,
274	};
275
276	static struct spi_board_info spi_board_info[] __initdata = {
277	{
278		.modalias	= "ads7846",
279		.platform_data	= &ads_info,
280		.mode		= SPI_MODE_0,
281		.irq		= GPIO_IRQ(31),
282		.max_speed_hz	= 120000 /* max sample rate at 3V */ * 16,
283		.bus_num	= 1,
284		.chip_select	= 0,
285	},
286	};
287
288Again, notice how board-specific information is provided; each chip may need
289several types.  This example shows generic constraints like the fastest SPI
290clock to allow (a function of board voltage in this case) or how an IRQ pin
291is wired, plus chip-specific constraints like an important delay that's
292changed by the capacitance at one pin.
293
294(There's also "controller_data", information that may be useful to the
295controller driver.  An example would be peripheral-specific DMA tuning
296data or chipselect callbacks.  This is stored in spi_device later.)
297
298The board_info should provide enough information to let the system work
299without the chip's driver being loaded.  The most troublesome aspect of
300that is likely the SPI_CS_HIGH bit in the spi_device.mode field, since
301sharing a bus with a device that interprets chipselect "backwards" is
302not possible until the infrastructure knows how to deselect it.
303
304Then your board initialization code would register that table with the SPI
305infrastructure, so that it's available later when the SPI master controller
306driver is registered:
307
308	spi_register_board_info(spi_board_info, ARRAY_SIZE(spi_board_info));
309
310Like with other static board-specific setup, you won't unregister those.
311
312The widely used "card" style computers bundle memory, cpu, and little else
313onto a card that's maybe just thirty square centimeters.  On such systems,
314your arch/.../mach-.../board-*.c file would primarily provide information
315about the devices on the mainboard into which such a card is plugged.  That
316certainly includes SPI devices hooked up through the card connectors!
317
318
319NON-STATIC CONFIGURATIONS
320
321Developer boards often play by different rules than product boards, and one
322example is the potential need to hotplug SPI devices and/or controllers.
323
324For those cases you might need to use spi_busnum_to_master() to look
325up the spi bus master, and will likely need spi_new_device() to provide the
326board info based on the board that was hotplugged.  Of course, you'd later
327call at least spi_unregister_device() when that board is removed.
328
329When Linux includes support for MMC/SD/SDIO/DataFlash cards through SPI, those
330configurations will also be dynamic.  Fortunately, such devices all support
331basic device identification probes, so they should hotplug normally.
332
333
334How do I write an "SPI Protocol Driver"?
335----------------------------------------
336Most SPI drivers are currently kernel drivers, but there's also support
337for userspace drivers.  Here we talk only about kernel drivers.
338
339SPI protocol drivers somewhat resemble platform device drivers:
340
341	static struct spi_driver CHIP_driver = {
342		.driver = {
343			.name		= "CHIP",
344			.owner		= THIS_MODULE,
345		},
346
347		.probe		= CHIP_probe,
348		.remove		= CHIP_remove,
349		.suspend	= CHIP_suspend,
350		.resume		= CHIP_resume,
351	};
352
353The driver core will automatically attempt to bind this driver to any SPI
354device whose board_info gave a modalias of "CHIP".  Your probe() code
355might look like this unless you're creating a device which is managing
356a bus (appearing under /sys/class/spi_master).
357
358	static int CHIP_probe(struct spi_device *spi)
359	{
360		struct CHIP			*chip;
361		struct CHIP_platform_data	*pdata;
362
363		/* assuming the driver requires board-specific data: */
364		pdata = &spi->dev.platform_data;
365		if (!pdata)
366			return -ENODEV;
367
368		/* get memory for driver's per-chip state */
369		chip = kzalloc(sizeof *chip, GFP_KERNEL);
370		if (!chip)
371			return -ENOMEM;
372		spi_set_drvdata(spi, chip);
373
374		... etc
375		return 0;
376	}
377
378As soon as it enters probe(), the driver may issue I/O requests to
379the SPI device using "struct spi_message".  When remove() returns,
380or after probe() fails, the driver guarantees that it won't submit
381any more such messages.
382
383  - An spi_message is a sequence of protocol operations, executed
384    as one atomic sequence.  SPI driver controls include:
385
386      + when bidirectional reads and writes start ... by how its
387        sequence of spi_transfer requests is arranged;
388
389      + which I/O buffers are used ... each spi_transfer wraps a
390        buffer for each transfer direction, supporting full duplex
391        (two pointers, maybe the same one in both cases) and half
392        duplex (one pointer is NULL) transfers;
393
394      + optionally defining short delays after transfers ... using
395        the spi_transfer.delay_usecs setting (this delay can be the
396        only protocol effect, if the buffer length is zero);
397
398      + whether the chipselect becomes inactive after a transfer and
399        any delay ... by using the spi_transfer.cs_change flag;
400
401      + hinting whether the next message is likely to go to this same
402        device ... using the spi_transfer.cs_change flag on the last
403	transfer in that atomic group, and potentially saving costs
404	for chip deselect and select operations.
405
406  - Follow standard kernel rules, and provide DMA-safe buffers in
407    your messages.  That way controller drivers using DMA aren't forced
408    to make extra copies unless the hardware requires it (e.g. working
409    around hardware errata that force the use of bounce buffering).
410
411    If standard dma_map_single() handling of these buffers is inappropriate,
412    you can use spi_message.is_dma_mapped to tell the controller driver
413    that you've already provided the relevant DMA addresses.
414
415  - The basic I/O primitive is spi_async().  Async requests may be
416    issued in any context (irq handler, task, etc) and completion
417    is reported using a callback provided with the message.
418    After any detected error, the chip is deselected and processing
419    of that spi_message is aborted.
420
421  - There are also synchronous wrappers like spi_sync(), and wrappers
422    like spi_read(), spi_write(), and spi_write_then_read().  These
423    may be issued only in contexts that may sleep, and they're all
424    clean (and small, and "optional") layers over spi_async().
425
426  - The spi_write_then_read() call, and convenience wrappers around
427    it, should only be used with small amounts of data where the
428    cost of an extra copy may be ignored.  It's designed to support
429    common RPC-style requests, such as writing an eight bit command
430    and reading a sixteen bit response -- spi_w8r16() being one its
431    wrappers, doing exactly that.
432
433Some drivers may need to modify spi_device characteristics like the
434transfer mode, wordsize, or clock rate.  This is done with spi_setup(),
435which would normally be called from probe() before the first I/O is
436done to the device.  However, that can also be called at any time
437that no message is pending for that device.
438
439While "spi_device" would be the bottom boundary of the driver, the
440upper boundaries might include sysfs (especially for sensor readings),
441the input layer, ALSA, networking, MTD, the character device framework,
442or other Linux subsystems.
443
444Note that there are two types of memory your driver must manage as part
445of interacting with SPI devices.
446
447  - I/O buffers use the usual Linux rules, and must be DMA-safe.
448    You'd normally allocate them from the heap or free page pool.
449    Don't use the stack, or anything that's declared "static".
450
451  - The spi_message and spi_transfer metadata used to glue those
452    I/O buffers into a group of protocol transactions.  These can
453    be allocated anywhere it's convenient, including as part of
454    other allocate-once driver data structures.  Zero-init these.
455
456If you like, spi_message_alloc() and spi_message_free() convenience
457routines are available to allocate and zero-initialize an spi_message
458with several transfers.
459
460
461How do I write an "SPI Master Controller Driver"?
462-------------------------------------------------
463An SPI controller will probably be registered on the platform_bus; write
464a driver to bind to the device, whichever bus is involved.
465
466The main task of this type of driver is to provide an "spi_master".
467Use spi_alloc_master() to allocate the master, and spi_master_get_devdata()
468to get the driver-private data allocated for that device.
469
470	struct spi_master	*master;
471	struct CONTROLLER	*c;
472
473	master = spi_alloc_master(dev, sizeof *c);
474	if (!master)
475		return -ENODEV;
476
477	c = spi_master_get_devdata(master);
478
479The driver will initialize the fields of that spi_master, including the
480bus number (maybe the same as the platform device ID) and three methods
481used to interact with the SPI core and SPI protocol drivers.  It will
482also initialize its own internal state.  (See below about bus numbering
483and those methods.)
484
485After you initialize the spi_master, then use spi_register_master() to
486publish it to the rest of the system. At that time, device nodes for the
487controller and any predeclared spi devices will be made available, and
488the driver model core will take care of binding them to drivers.
489
490If you need to remove your SPI controller driver, spi_unregister_master()
491will reverse the effect of spi_register_master().
492
493
494BUS NUMBERING
495
496Bus numbering is important, since that's how Linux identifies a given
497SPI bus (shared SCK, MOSI, MISO).  Valid bus numbers start at zero.  On
498SOC systems, the bus numbers should match the numbers defined by the chip
499manufacturer.  For example, hardware controller SPI2 would be bus number 2,
500and spi_board_info for devices connected to it would use that number.
501
502If you don't have such hardware-assigned bus number, and for some reason
503you can't just assign them, then provide a negative bus number.  That will
504then be replaced by a dynamically assigned number. You'd then need to treat
505this as a non-static configuration (see above).
506
507
508SPI MASTER METHODS
509
510    master->setup(struct spi_device *spi)
511	This sets up the device clock rate, SPI mode, and word sizes.
512	Drivers may change the defaults provided by board_info, and then
513	call spi_setup(spi) to invoke this routine.  It may sleep.
514
515	Unless each SPI slave has its own configuration registers, don't
516	change them right away ... otherwise drivers could corrupt I/O
517	that's in progress for other SPI devices.
518
519		** BUG ALERT:  for some reason the first version of
520		** many spi_master drivers seems to get this wrong.
521		** When you code setup(), ASSUME that the controller
522		** is actively processing transfers for another device.
523
524    master->cleanup(struct spi_device *spi)
525	Your controller driver may use spi_device.controller_state to hold
526	state it dynamically associates with that device.  If you do that,
527	be sure to provide the cleanup() method to free that state.
528
529    master->prepare_transfer_hardware(struct spi_master *master)
530	This will be called by the queue mechanism to signal to the driver
531	that a message is coming in soon, so the subsystem requests the
532	driver to prepare the transfer hardware by issuing this call.
533	This may sleep.
534
535    master->unprepare_transfer_hardware(struct spi_master *master)
536	This will be called by the queue mechanism to signal to the driver
537	that there are no more messages pending in the queue and it may
538	relax the hardware (e.g. by power management calls). This may sleep.
539
540    master->transfer_one_message(struct spi_master *master,
541				 struct spi_message *mesg)
542	The subsystem calls the driver to transfer a single message while
543	queuing transfers that arrive in the meantime. When the driver is
544	finished with this message, it must call
545	spi_finalize_current_message() so the subsystem can issue the next
546	message. This may sleep.
547
548    master->transfer_one(struct spi_master *master, struct spi_device *spi,
549			 struct spi_transfer *transfer)
550	The subsystem calls the driver to transfer a single transfer while
551	queuing transfers that arrive in the meantime. When the driver is
552	finished with this transfer, it must call
553	spi_finalize_current_transfer() so the subsystem can issue the next
554	transfer. This may sleep. Note: transfer_one and transfer_one_message
555	are mutually exclusive; when both are set, the generic subsystem does
556	not call your transfer_one callback.
557
558	Return values:
559	negative errno: error
560	0: transfer is finished
561	1: transfer is still in progress
562
563    DEPRECATED METHODS
564
565    master->transfer(struct spi_device *spi, struct spi_message *message)
566	This must not sleep. Its responsibility is to arrange that the
567	transfer happens and its complete() callback is issued. The two
568	will normally happen later, after other transfers complete, and
569	if the controller is idle it will need to be kickstarted. This
570	method is not used on queued controllers and must be NULL if
571	transfer_one_message() and (un)prepare_transfer_hardware() are
572	implemented.
573
574
575SPI MESSAGE QUEUE
576
577If you are happy with the standard queueing mechanism provided by the
578SPI subsystem, just implement the queued methods specified above. Using
579the message queue has the upside of centralizing a lot of code and
580providing pure process-context execution of methods. The message queue
581can also be elevated to realtime priority on high-priority SPI traffic.
582
583Unless the queueing mechanism in the SPI subsystem is selected, the bulk
584of the driver will be managing the I/O queue fed by the now deprecated
585function transfer().
586
587That queue could be purely conceptual.  For example, a driver used only
588for low-frequency sensor access might be fine using synchronous PIO.
589
590But the queue will probably be very real, using message->queue, PIO,
591often DMA (especially if the root filesystem is in SPI flash), and
592execution contexts like IRQ handlers, tasklets, or workqueues (such
593as keventd).  Your driver can be as fancy, or as simple, as you need.
594Such a transfer() method would normally just add the message to a
595queue, and then start some asynchronous transfer engine (unless it's
596already running).
597
598
599THANKS TO
600---------
601Contributors to Linux-SPI discussions include (in alphabetical order,
602by last name):
603
604Mark Brown
605David Brownell
606Russell King
607Grant Likely
608Dmitry Pervushin
609Stephen Street
610Mark Underwood
611Andrew Victor
612Linus Walleij
613Vitaly Wool
614