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authorStefan Reinauer <stefan.reinauer@coreboot.org>2015-05-05 13:10:04 -0700
committerStefan Reinauer <stefan.reinauer@coreboot.org>2015-05-06 19:09:47 +0200
commit4d8b843d3740cc90c98f181d49f0d4a67cb0a1b7 (patch)
tree19306425b170975b5317a63a84b0e6f4b94b5f40 /Documentation/RFC/chip.tex
parent29ed46caccd5cea8401c5d133895fa3a9d6f5030 (diff)
downloadcoreboot-4d8b843d3740cc90c98f181d49f0d4a67cb0a1b7.tar.xz
Rename documentation -> Documentation
In order to be closer to the Linux kernel source tree structure, rename documentation to Documentation. Change-Id: I8690f666638ef352d201bd3c3dc1923b0d24cb12 Signed-off-by: Stefan Reinauer <stefan.reinauer@coreboot.org> Reviewed-on: http://review.coreboot.org/10110 Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins) Reviewed-by: Patrick Georgi <pgeorgi@google.com>
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+ RFC for the chip specification architecture
+
+\begin{abstract}
+At the end of this document is the original message that motivated the
+change.
+\end{abstract}
+
+\section{Scope}
+This document defines how LinuxBIOS programmers can specify chips that
+are used, specified, and initalized. The current scope is for superio
+chips, but the architecture should allow for specification of other chips such
+as southbridges. Multiple chips of same or different type are supported.
+
+\section{Goals}
+The goals of the new chip architecture are these:
+\begin{itemize}
+\item seperate implementation details from specification in the Config file
+(translation: no more C code in Config files)
+\item make the specification easier for people to use and understand
+\item remove private details of a given chip to the chip file as much
+as possible
+\item allow unique register-set-specifiers for each chip
+\end{itemize}
+
+\section{Specification in the Config file}
+The specification looks like this:
+\begin{verbatim}
+chip <name> [path=<path>] ["<configuration>"]
+\end{verbatim}
+The name is in the standard LinuxBIOS form of type/vendor/name, e.g.
+"southbridge/intel/piix4e" or "superio/ite/it8671f". The class of the
+chip is derived from the first pathname component of the name, and the chip
+configuration is derived from the following components.
+
+The path defines the access mechanism to the chip.
+It is optional. If present, it overrides the default path to the chip.
+
+The configuration defines chip-specific configuration details, and is also
+optional. Note that an empty configuration will leave the chip with
+no enabled resources. This may be desirable in some cases.
+
+\section{Results of specifying a chip}
+
+When one or more chips are specified, the data about the chips
+is saved until the entire file is parsed. At this point, the config tool
+creates a file in the build directory called chip.c This file contains
+a common struct containing information about
+each individual chip and an array of pointers to these structures.
+
+For each chip, there are two structures. The structures contain control
+information for the chip, and register initialization information. The
+names of the structures are derived by ``flattening'' the chip name,
+as in the current linuxbios. For example, superio/ite/xyz uses
+two structs, one called superio_ite_xyz_control and one called
+superio_ite_xyz_init. The control struct is initialized from the
+chip name and path information, and has a pointer to the
+config struct. The config struct is initialized from the quote string
+
+\begin{verbatim}
+From rminnich@lanl.gov Fri May 16 10:34:13 2003
+Date: Tue, 13 May 2003 08:11:46 -0600 (MDT)
+From: ron minnich <rminnich@lanl.gov>
+To: linuxbios@clustermatic.org
+Subject: RFC:new superio proposal
+
+Abstract:
+ The superio architecture for linuxbios has worked for the last 2
+years but is being stretched to the limit by the changes in superio chips.
+The architecture depended on superio resources being relatively constant
+between chips, but this assumption no longer holds. In this document we
+propose several alternatives and solicit comments.
+
+Overview:
+The superio architecture in linuxbios was developed over time, and
+modified as circumstances required. In the beginning it was relatively
+simple and assumed only one superio per mainboard. The latest version
+allows an arbitrary number of superios per mainboard, and allows complete
+specification of the superio base I/O address along with the specification
+of reasonable default valures for both the base I/O address and the
+superio parameters such as serial enable, baud rate, and so on.
+
+Specification of superio control parameters is done by a configuration
+line such as:
+
+nsuperio sis/950 com1={1} floppy=1 lpt=1
+
+This fragment sets the superio type to sis/950; sets com1, floppy, and lpt
+to enabled; and leaves the defaults to com1 (baud rate, etc.) to the
+default values.
+
+While it is not obvious, these configuration parameters are fragments of a
+C initializer. The initializers are used to build a statically initialized
+structure of this type:
+
+struct superio {
+ struct superio_control *super; // the ops for the device.
+ unsigned int port; // if non-zero, overrides the default port
+ // com ports. This is not done as an array (yet).
+ // We think it's easier to set up from python if it is not an
+ // array.
+ struct com_ports com1, com2, com3, com4;
+ // DMA, if it exists.
+ struct lpt_ports lpt1, lpt2;
+ /* flags for each device type. Unsigned int. */
+ // low order bit ALWAYS means enable. Next bit means to enable
+ // LPT is in transition, so we leave this here for the moment.
+ // The winbond chips really stretched the way this works.
+ // so many functions!
+ unsigned int ide, floppy, lpt;
+ unsigned int keyboard, cir, game;
+ unsigned int gpio1, gpio2, gpio3;
+ unsigned int acpi,hwmonitor;
+};
+
+These structures are, in turn, created and statically initialized by a
+config-tool-generated structure that defines all the superios. This file
+is called nsuperio.c, is created for each mainboard you build, only
+appears in the build directory, and looks like this:
+
+===
+extern struct superio_control superio_winbond_w83627hf_control;
+
+struct superio superio_winbond_w83627hf= {
+ &superio_winbond_w83627hf_control,
+ .com1={1}, .com2={1}, .floppy=1, .lpt=1, .keyboard=1, .hwmonitor=1};
+
+struct superio *all_superio[] = {&superio_winbond_w83627hf,
+};
+
+unsigned long nsuperio = 1;
+===
+
+This example shows a board with one superio (nsuperio). The superio
+consists of a winbond w83627hf, with com1, com2, floppy, lpt, keyboard,
+and hwmonitor enabled. Note that this structure also allows for
+over-riding the default superio base, although that capability is rarely
+used.
+
+The control structure is used to define how to access the superio for
+purposes of control. It looks like this:
+===
+struct superio_control {
+ void (*pre_pci_init)(struct superio *s);
+ void (*init)(struct superio *s);
+ void (*finishup)(struct superio *s);
+ unsigned int defaultport; /* the defaultport. Can be overridden
+ * by commands in config
+ */
+ // This is the print name for debugging
+ char *name;
+};
+===
+
+There are three methods for stages of hardwaremain. First is pre_pci_init
+(for chips like the acer southbridge that require you to enable some
+resources BEFORE pci scan); init, called during the 'middle' phase of
+hardwaremain; and finishup, called before the payload is loaded.
+
+This approach was inspired by and borrows heavily on the Plan 9 kernel
+configuration tools.
+
+The problem:
+
+When the first version of the superio structure came out it was much
+smaller. It has grown and in the limit this structure is the union of all
+possibly superio chips. Obviously, in the long term, this is not
+practical: we can not anticipate all possible superio chips for all time.
+
+The common PC BIOS solution to this type of problem is to continue with
+binary structures but add version numbers to them, so that all code that
+uses a given structure has to check the version number. Personally, I find
+this grotesque and would rather not work this way.
+
+Using textual strings for configuration is something I find far more
+attractive. Plan 9 has shown that this approach has no real limits and
+suffices for configuration tasks. The Linux kernel does more limited use
+of strings for configuration, but still depends on them. Strings are
+easier to read and work with than binary structures, and more important, a
+lot easier to deal with when things start going wrong.
+
+The proposed solution:
+
+What follows are three possible ideas for specifying superio resources and
+their settings.
+
+A common part of the new idea is to eliminate the common superio
+structure, due to the many variations in chips, and make it invisible
+outside a given superio source file -- the superio structure is now
+private to a given superio. Thus, sis/950/superio.c would contain its own
+superio structure definitions, and also might contain more than once
+instance of these structures (consider a board with 2 sis 950 chips).
+
+The control structure would change as follows:
+struct superio_control {
+ int (*create)(struct superio *s);
+ void (*pre_pci_init)(struct superio *s);
+ void (*init)(struct superio *s);
+ void (*finishup)(struct superio *s);
+ unsigned int defaultport; /* the defaultport. Can be overridden
+ * by commands in config
+ */
+ // This is the print name for debugging
+ char *name;
+};
+
+I.e. we add a new function for creating the superio.
+
+Communication of superio settings from linuxbios to the superio would be
+via textual strings. The superio structure becomes this:
+
+struct superio {
+ struct superio_control *super; // the ops for the device.
+ unsigned int port; // if non-zero, overrides the default port
+ struct configuration *config;
+};
+
+
+So now the question becomes, what is the configuration structure?
+There are several choices. The simplest, from my point of view, are
+keyword-value pairs:
+struct configuration {
+ const char *keyword;
+ const char *value;
+};
+
+These get filled in by the config tool as before. The linuxbios libary can
+then provide a generic parsing function for the superios to use.
+
+The remaining question is how should the superio command look in
+freebios2?
+
+superio sis/950 "com1=115200,8n1 lpt=1 com2=9600"
+
+or
+
+superio sis/950 "com1baud=115200 lpt=1 com1chars=8n1"
+
+or
+
+superio sis/950 ((com1 115200 8n1) (lpt 1))
+
+So, my questions:
+
+1. Does this new scheme look workable. If not, what needs to change?
+2. What should the 'struct configuration' be? does keyword/value work?
+3. what should the superio command look like?
+
+Comments welcome.
+
+I'd like to adopt this "RFC" approach for freebios2 as much as we can.
+There was a lot of give-and-take in the early days of linuxbios about
+structure and it proved useful. There's a lot that will start happening in
+freebios2 now, and we need to try to make sure it will work for everyone.
+
+Those of you who are doing mainboards, please look at freebios2 and see
+how it looks for you. There's a lot of good work that has been done (not
+by me so far, thanks Eric and Stefan), and more that needs to be done.
+Consider trying out romcc as an "assembly code killer". See how it fits
+together and if you can work with it or need changes. Bring comments back
+to this list.
+
+thanks
+
+ron
+
+\end{verbatim}