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authorRandy Dunlap <randy.dunlap@oracle.com>2009-02-22 15:15:45 -0500
committerLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>2009-02-22 15:21:46 -0500
commitf7f84f38cd916552c175f1f3d09cb6e85c1b29fc (patch)
treedb7eaeba063dd29cc4310da1bd0714f9ee463d94 /Documentation
parent770824bdc421ff58a64db608294323571c949f4c (diff)
docbook: split kernel-api for device-drivers
The kernel-api docbook was much larger than any of the others, so processing it took longer and needed some docbook extras in some cases, so split it into kernel-api (infrastructure etc.) and device drivers/device subsystems. This allows these docbooks to be generated in parallel. (This reduced the docbook processing time on my 4-proc system with make -j4 from about 5min:16sec to about 2min:01sec.) The chapters that were moved from kernel-api to device-drivers are: Driver Basics Device drivers infrastructure Parallel Port Devices Message-based devices Sound Devices 16x50 UART Driver Frame Buffer Library Input Subsystem Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) I2C and SMBus Subsystem Signed-off-by: Randy Dunlap <randy.dunlap@oracle.com> Acked-by: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/DocBook/Makefile2
-rw-r--r--Documentation/DocBook/device-drivers.tmpl418
-rw-r--r--Documentation/DocBook/kernel-api.tmpl377
3 files changed, 419 insertions, 378 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/DocBook/Makefile b/Documentation/DocBook/Makefile
index dc3154e49279..1462ed86d40a 100644
--- a/Documentation/DocBook/Makefile
+++ b/Documentation/DocBook/Makefile
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
6# To add a new book the only step required is to add the book to the 6# To add a new book the only step required is to add the book to the
7# list of DOCBOOKS. 7# list of DOCBOOKS.
8 8
9DOCBOOKS := z8530book.xml mcabook.xml \ 9DOCBOOKS := z8530book.xml mcabook.xml device-drivers.xml \
10 kernel-hacking.xml kernel-locking.xml deviceiobook.xml \ 10 kernel-hacking.xml kernel-locking.xml deviceiobook.xml \
11 procfs-guide.xml writing_usb_driver.xml networking.xml \ 11 procfs-guide.xml writing_usb_driver.xml networking.xml \
12 kernel-api.xml filesystems.xml lsm.xml usb.xml kgdb.xml \ 12 kernel-api.xml filesystems.xml lsm.xml usb.xml kgdb.xml \
diff --git a/Documentation/DocBook/device-drivers.tmpl b/Documentation/DocBook/device-drivers.tmpl
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..94a20fe8fedf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/DocBook/device-drivers.tmpl
@@ -0,0 +1,418 @@
1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd" []>
4
5<book id="LinuxDriversAPI">
6 <bookinfo>
7 <title>Linux Device Drivers</title>
8
9 <legalnotice>
10 <para>
11 This documentation is free software; you can redistribute
12 it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public
13 License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
14 version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later
15 version.
16 </para>
17
18 <para>
19 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be
20 useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied
21 warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
22 See the GNU General Public License for more details.
23 </para>
24
25 <para>
26 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
27 License along with this program; if not, write to the Free
28 Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston,
29 MA 02111-1307 USA
30 </para>
31
32 <para>
33 For more details see the file COPYING in the source
34 distribution of Linux.
35 </para>
36 </legalnotice>
37 </bookinfo>
38
39<toc></toc>
40
41 <chapter id="Basics">
42 <title>Driver Basics</title>
43 <sect1><title>Driver Entry and Exit points</title>
44!Iinclude/linux/init.h
45 </sect1>
46
47 <sect1><title>Atomic and pointer manipulation</title>
48!Iarch/x86/include/asm/atomic_32.h
49!Iarch/x86/include/asm/unaligned.h
50 </sect1>
51
52 <sect1><title>Delaying, scheduling, and timer routines</title>
53!Iinclude/linux/sched.h
54!Ekernel/sched.c
55!Ekernel/timer.c
56 </sect1>
57 <sect1><title>High-resolution timers</title>
58!Iinclude/linux/ktime.h
59!Iinclude/linux/hrtimer.h
60!Ekernel/hrtimer.c
61 </sect1>
62 <sect1><title>Workqueues and Kevents</title>
63!Ekernel/workqueue.c
64 </sect1>
65 <sect1><title>Internal Functions</title>
66!Ikernel/exit.c
67!Ikernel/signal.c
68!Iinclude/linux/kthread.h
69!Ekernel/kthread.c
70 </sect1>
71
72 <sect1><title>Kernel objects manipulation</title>
73<!--
74X!Iinclude/linux/kobject.h
75-->
76!Elib/kobject.c
77 </sect1>
78
79 <sect1><title>Kernel utility functions</title>
80!Iinclude/linux/kernel.h
81!Ekernel/printk.c
82!Ekernel/panic.c
83!Ekernel/sys.c
84!Ekernel/rcupdate.c
85 </sect1>
86
87 <sect1><title>Device Resource Management</title>
88!Edrivers/base/devres.c
89 </sect1>
90
91 </chapter>
92
93 <chapter id="devdrivers">
94 <title>Device drivers infrastructure</title>
95 <sect1><title>Device Drivers Base</title>
96<!--
97X!Iinclude/linux/device.h
98-->
99!Edrivers/base/driver.c
100!Edrivers/base/core.c
101!Edrivers/base/class.c
102!Edrivers/base/firmware_class.c
103!Edrivers/base/transport_class.c
104<!-- Cannot be included, because
105 attribute_container_add_class_device_adapter
106 and attribute_container_classdev_to_container
107 exceed allowed 44 characters maximum
108X!Edrivers/base/attribute_container.c
109-->
110!Edrivers/base/sys.c
111<!--
112X!Edrivers/base/interface.c
113-->
114!Edrivers/base/platform.c
115!Edrivers/base/bus.c
116 </sect1>
117 <sect1><title>Device Drivers Power Management</title>
118!Edrivers/base/power/main.c
119 </sect1>
120 <sect1><title>Device Drivers ACPI Support</title>
121<!-- Internal functions only
122X!Edrivers/acpi/sleep/main.c
123X!Edrivers/acpi/sleep/wakeup.c
124X!Edrivers/acpi/motherboard.c
125X!Edrivers/acpi/bus.c
126-->
127!Edrivers/acpi/scan.c
128!Idrivers/acpi/scan.c
129<!-- No correct structured comments
130X!Edrivers/acpi/pci_bind.c
131-->
132 </sect1>
133 <sect1><title>Device drivers PnP support</title>
134!Idrivers/pnp/core.c
135<!-- No correct structured comments
136X!Edrivers/pnp/system.c
137 -->
138!Edrivers/pnp/card.c
139!Idrivers/pnp/driver.c
140!Edrivers/pnp/manager.c
141!Edrivers/pnp/support.c
142 </sect1>
143 <sect1><title>Userspace IO devices</title>
144!Edrivers/uio/uio.c
145!Iinclude/linux/uio_driver.h
146 </sect1>
147 </chapter>
148
149 <chapter id="parportdev">
150 <title>Parallel Port Devices</title>
151!Iinclude/linux/parport.h
152!Edrivers/parport/ieee1284.c
153!Edrivers/parport/share.c
154!Idrivers/parport/daisy.c
155 </chapter>
156
157 <chapter id="message_devices">
158 <title>Message-based devices</title>
159 <sect1><title>Fusion message devices</title>
160!Edrivers/message/fusion/mptbase.c
161!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptbase.c
162!Edrivers/message/fusion/mptscsih.c
163!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptscsih.c
164!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptctl.c
165!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptspi.c
166!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptfc.c
167!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptlan.c
168 </sect1>
169 <sect1><title>I2O message devices</title>
170!Iinclude/linux/i2o.h
171!Idrivers/message/i2o/core.h
172!Edrivers/message/i2o/iop.c
173!Idrivers/message/i2o/iop.c
174!Idrivers/message/i2o/config-osm.c
175!Edrivers/message/i2o/exec-osm.c
176!Idrivers/message/i2o/exec-osm.c
177!Idrivers/message/i2o/bus-osm.c
178!Edrivers/message/i2o/device.c
179!Idrivers/message/i2o/device.c
180!Idrivers/message/i2o/driver.c
181!Idrivers/message/i2o/pci.c
182!Idrivers/message/i2o/i2o_block.c
183!Idrivers/message/i2o/i2o_scsi.c
184!Idrivers/message/i2o/i2o_proc.c
185 </sect1>
186 </chapter>
187
188 <chapter id="snddev">
189 <title>Sound Devices</title>
190!Iinclude/sound/core.h
191!Esound/sound_core.c
192!Iinclude/sound/pcm.h
193!Esound/core/pcm.c
194!Esound/core/device.c
195!Esound/core/info.c
196!Esound/core/rawmidi.c
197!Esound/core/sound.c
198!Esound/core/memory.c
199!Esound/core/pcm_memory.c
200!Esound/core/init.c
201!Esound/core/isadma.c
202!Esound/core/control.c
203!Esound/core/pcm_lib.c
204!Esound/core/hwdep.c
205!Esound/core/pcm_native.c
206!Esound/core/memalloc.c
207<!-- FIXME: Removed for now since no structured comments in source
208X!Isound/sound_firmware.c
209-->
210 </chapter>
211
212 <chapter id="uart16x50">
213 <title>16x50 UART Driver</title>
214!Iinclude/linux/serial_core.h
215!Edrivers/serial/serial_core.c
216!Edrivers/serial/8250.c
217 </chapter>
218
219 <chapter id="fbdev">
220 <title>Frame Buffer Library</title>
221
222 <para>
223 The frame buffer drivers depend heavily on four data structures.
224 These structures are declared in include/linux/fb.h. They are
225 fb_info, fb_var_screeninfo, fb_fix_screeninfo and fb_monospecs.
226 The last three can be made available to and from userland.
227 </para>
228
229 <para>
230 fb_info defines the current state of a particular video card.
231 Inside fb_info, there exists a fb_ops structure which is a
232 collection of needed functions to make fbdev and fbcon work.
233 fb_info is only visible to the kernel.
234 </para>
235
236 <para>
237 fb_var_screeninfo is used to describe the features of a video card
238 that are user defined. With fb_var_screeninfo, things such as
239 depth and the resolution may be defined.
240 </para>
241
242 <para>
243 The next structure is fb_fix_screeninfo. This defines the
244 properties of a card that are created when a mode is set and can't
245 be changed otherwise. A good example of this is the start of the
246 frame buffer memory. This "locks" the address of the frame buffer
247 memory, so that it cannot be changed or moved.
248 </para>
249
250 <para>
251 The last structure is fb_monospecs. In the old API, there was
252 little importance for fb_monospecs. This allowed for forbidden things
253 such as setting a mode of 800x600 on a fix frequency monitor. With
254 the new API, fb_monospecs prevents such things, and if used
255 correctly, can prevent a monitor from being cooked. fb_monospecs
256 will not be useful until kernels 2.5.x.
257 </para>
258
259 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Memory</title>
260!Edrivers/video/fbmem.c
261 </sect1>
262<!--
263 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Console</title>
264X!Edrivers/video/console/fbcon.c
265 </sect1>
266-->
267 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Colormap</title>
268!Edrivers/video/fbcmap.c
269 </sect1>
270<!-- FIXME:
271 drivers/video/fbgen.c has no docs, which stuffs up the sgml. Comment
272 out until somebody adds docs. KAO
273 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Generic Functions</title>
274X!Idrivers/video/fbgen.c
275 </sect1>
276KAO -->
277 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Video Mode Database</title>
278!Idrivers/video/modedb.c
279!Edrivers/video/modedb.c
280 </sect1>
281 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Macintosh Video Mode Database</title>
282!Edrivers/video/macmodes.c
283 </sect1>
284 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Fonts</title>
285 <para>
286 Refer to the file drivers/video/console/fonts.c for more information.
287 </para>
288<!-- FIXME: Removed for now since no structured comments in source
289X!Idrivers/video/console/fonts.c
290-->
291 </sect1>
292 </chapter>
293
294 <chapter id="input_subsystem">
295 <title>Input Subsystem</title>
296!Iinclude/linux/input.h
297!Edrivers/input/input.c
298!Edrivers/input/ff-core.c
299!Edrivers/input/ff-memless.c
300 </chapter>
301
302 <chapter id="spi">
303 <title>Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI)</title>
304 <para>
305 SPI is the "Serial Peripheral Interface", widely used with
306 embedded systems because it is a simple and efficient
307 interface: basically a multiplexed shift register.
308 Its three signal wires hold a clock (SCK, often in the range
309 of 1-20 MHz), a "Master Out, Slave In" (MOSI) data line, and
310 a "Master In, Slave Out" (MISO) data line.
311 SPI is a full duplex protocol; for each bit shifted out the
312 MOSI line (one per clock) another is shifted in on the MISO line.
313 Those bits are assembled into words of various sizes on the
314 way to and from system memory.
315 An additional chipselect line is usually active-low (nCS);
316 four signals are normally used for each peripheral, plus
317 sometimes an interrupt.
318 </para>
319 <para>
320 The SPI bus facilities listed here provide a generalized
321 interface to declare SPI busses and devices, manage them
322 according to the standard Linux driver model, and perform
323 input/output operations.
324 At this time, only "master" side interfaces are supported,
325 where Linux talks to SPI peripherals and does not implement
326 such a peripheral itself.
327 (Interfaces to support implementing SPI slaves would
328 necessarily look different.)
329 </para>
330 <para>
331 The programming interface is structured around two kinds of driver,
332 and two kinds of device.
333 A "Controller Driver" abstracts the controller hardware, which may
334 be as simple as a set of GPIO pins or as complex as a pair of FIFOs
335 connected to dual DMA engines on the other side of the SPI shift
336 register (maximizing throughput). Such drivers bridge between
337 whatever bus they sit on (often the platform bus) and SPI, and
338 expose the SPI side of their device as a
339 <structname>struct spi_master</structname>.
340 SPI devices are children of that master, represented as a
341 <structname>struct spi_device</structname> and manufactured from
342 <structname>struct spi_board_info</structname> descriptors which
343 are usually provided by board-specific initialization code.
344 A <structname>struct spi_driver</structname> is called a
345 "Protocol Driver", and is bound to a spi_device using normal
346 driver model calls.
347 </para>
348 <para>
349 The I/O model is a set of queued messages. Protocol drivers
350 submit one or more <structname>struct spi_message</structname>
351 objects, which are processed and completed asynchronously.
352 (There are synchronous wrappers, however.) Messages are
353 built from one or more <structname>struct spi_transfer</structname>
354 objects, each of which wraps a full duplex SPI transfer.
355 A variety of protocol tweaking options are needed, because
356 different chips adopt very different policies for how they
357 use the bits transferred with SPI.
358 </para>
359!Iinclude/linux/spi/spi.h
360!Fdrivers/spi/spi.c spi_register_board_info
361!Edrivers/spi/spi.c
362 </chapter>
363
364 <chapter id="i2c">
365 <title>I<superscript>2</superscript>C and SMBus Subsystem</title>
366
367 <para>
368 I<superscript>2</superscript>C (or without fancy typography, "I2C")
369 is an acronym for the "Inter-IC" bus, a simple bus protocol which is
370 widely used where low data rate communications suffice.
371 Since it's also a licensed trademark, some vendors use another
372 name (such as "Two-Wire Interface", TWI) for the same bus.
373 I2C only needs two signals (SCL for clock, SDA for data), conserving
374 board real estate and minimizing signal quality issues.
375 Most I2C devices use seven bit addresses, and bus speeds of up
376 to 400 kHz; there's a high speed extension (3.4 MHz) that's not yet
377 found wide use.
378 I2C is a multi-master bus; open drain signaling is used to
379 arbitrate between masters, as well as to handshake and to
380 synchronize clocks from slower clients.
381 </para>
382
383 <para>
384 The Linux I2C programming interfaces support only the master
385 side of bus interactions, not the slave side.
386 The programming interface is structured around two kinds of driver,
387 and two kinds of device.
388 An I2C "Adapter Driver" abstracts the controller hardware; it binds
389 to a physical device (perhaps a PCI device or platform_device) and
390 exposes a <structname>struct i2c_adapter</structname> representing
391 each I2C bus segment it manages.
392 On each I2C bus segment will be I2C devices represented by a
393 <structname>struct i2c_client</structname>. Those devices will
394 be bound to a <structname>struct i2c_driver</structname>,
395 which should follow the standard Linux driver model.
396 (At this writing, a legacy model is more widely used.)
397 There are functions to perform various I2C protocol operations; at
398 this writing all such functions are usable only from task context.
399 </para>
400
401 <para>
402 The System Management Bus (SMBus) is a sibling protocol. Most SMBus
403 systems are also I2C conformant. The electrical constraints are
404 tighter for SMBus, and it standardizes particular protocol messages
405 and idioms. Controllers that support I2C can also support most
406 SMBus operations, but SMBus controllers don't support all the protocol
407 options that an I2C controller will.
408 There are functions to perform various SMBus protocol operations,
409 either using I2C primitives or by issuing SMBus commands to
410 i2c_adapter devices which don't support those I2C operations.
411 </para>
412
413!Iinclude/linux/i2c.h
414!Fdrivers/i2c/i2c-boardinfo.c i2c_register_board_info
415!Edrivers/i2c/i2c-core.c
416 </chapter>
417
418</book>
diff --git a/Documentation/DocBook/kernel-api.tmpl b/Documentation/DocBook/kernel-api.tmpl
index 5818ff75786a..bc962cda6504 100644
--- a/Documentation/DocBook/kernel-api.tmpl
+++ b/Documentation/DocBook/kernel-api.tmpl
@@ -38,58 +38,6 @@
38 38
39<toc></toc> 39<toc></toc>
40 40
41 <chapter id="Basics">
42 <title>Driver Basics</title>
43 <sect1><title>Driver Entry and Exit points</title>
44!Iinclude/linux/init.h
45 </sect1>
46
47 <sect1><title>Atomic and pointer manipulation</title>
48!Iarch/x86/include/asm/atomic_32.h
49!Iarch/x86/include/asm/unaligned.h
50 </sect1>
51
52 <sect1><title>Delaying, scheduling, and timer routines</title>
53!Iinclude/linux/sched.h
54!Ekernel/sched.c
55!Ekernel/timer.c
56 </sect1>
57 <sect1><title>High-resolution timers</title>
58!Iinclude/linux/ktime.h
59!Iinclude/linux/hrtimer.h
60!Ekernel/hrtimer.c
61 </sect1>
62 <sect1><title>Workqueues and Kevents</title>
63!Ekernel/workqueue.c
64 </sect1>
65 <sect1><title>Internal Functions</title>
66!Ikernel/exit.c
67!Ikernel/signal.c
68!Iinclude/linux/kthread.h
69!Ekernel/kthread.c
70 </sect1>
71
72 <sect1><title>Kernel objects manipulation</title>
73<!--
74X!Iinclude/linux/kobject.h
75-->
76!Elib/kobject.c
77 </sect1>
78
79 <sect1><title>Kernel utility functions</title>
80!Iinclude/linux/kernel.h
81!Ekernel/printk.c
82!Ekernel/panic.c
83!Ekernel/sys.c
84!Ekernel/rcupdate.c
85 </sect1>
86
87 <sect1><title>Device Resource Management</title>
88!Edrivers/base/devres.c
89 </sect1>
90
91 </chapter>
92
93 <chapter id="adt"> 41 <chapter id="adt">
94 <title>Data Types</title> 42 <title>Data Types</title>
95 <sect1><title>Doubly Linked Lists</title> 43 <sect1><title>Doubly Linked Lists</title>
@@ -298,62 +246,6 @@ X!Earch/x86/kernel/mca_32.c
298!Ikernel/acct.c 246!Ikernel/acct.c
299 </chapter> 247 </chapter>
300 248
301 <chapter id="devdrivers">
302 <title>Device drivers infrastructure</title>
303 <sect1><title>Device Drivers Base</title>
304<!--
305X!Iinclude/linux/device.h
306-->
307!Edrivers/base/driver.c
308!Edrivers/base/core.c
309!Edrivers/base/class.c
310!Edrivers/base/firmware_class.c
311!Edrivers/base/transport_class.c
312<!-- Cannot be included, because
313 attribute_container_add_class_device_adapter
314 and attribute_container_classdev_to_container
315 exceed allowed 44 characters maximum
316X!Edrivers/base/attribute_container.c
317-->
318!Edrivers/base/sys.c
319<!--
320X!Edrivers/base/interface.c
321-->
322!Edrivers/base/platform.c
323!Edrivers/base/bus.c
324 </sect1>
325 <sect1><title>Device Drivers Power Management</title>
326!Edrivers/base/power/main.c
327 </sect1>
328 <sect1><title>Device Drivers ACPI Support</title>
329<!-- Internal functions only
330X!Edrivers/acpi/sleep/main.c
331X!Edrivers/acpi/sleep/wakeup.c
332X!Edrivers/acpi/motherboard.c
333X!Edrivers/acpi/bus.c
334-->
335!Edrivers/acpi/scan.c
336!Idrivers/acpi/scan.c
337<!-- No correct structured comments
338X!Edrivers/acpi/pci_bind.c
339-->
340 </sect1>
341 <sect1><title>Device drivers PnP support</title>
342!Idrivers/pnp/core.c
343<!-- No correct structured comments
344X!Edrivers/pnp/system.c
345 -->
346!Edrivers/pnp/card.c
347!Idrivers/pnp/driver.c
348!Edrivers/pnp/manager.c
349!Edrivers/pnp/support.c
350 </sect1>
351 <sect1><title>Userspace IO devices</title>
352!Edrivers/uio/uio.c
353!Iinclude/linux/uio_driver.h
354 </sect1>
355 </chapter>
356
357 <chapter id="blkdev"> 249 <chapter id="blkdev">
358 <title>Block Devices</title> 250 <title>Block Devices</title>
359!Eblock/blk-core.c 251!Eblock/blk-core.c
@@ -381,275 +273,6 @@ X!Edrivers/pnp/system.c
381!Edrivers/char/misc.c 273!Edrivers/char/misc.c
382 </chapter> 274 </chapter>
383 275
384 <chapter id="parportdev">
385 <title>Parallel Port Devices</title>
386!Iinclude/linux/parport.h
387!Edrivers/parport/ieee1284.c
388!Edrivers/parport/share.c
389!Idrivers/parport/daisy.c
390 </chapter>
391
392 <chapter id="message_devices">
393 <title>Message-based devices</title>
394 <sect1><title>Fusion message devices</title>
395!Edrivers/message/fusion/mptbase.c
396!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptbase.c
397!Edrivers/message/fusion/mptscsih.c
398!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptscsih.c
399!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptctl.c
400!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptspi.c
401!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptfc.c
402!Idrivers/message/fusion/mptlan.c
403 </sect1>
404 <sect1><title>I2O message devices</title>
405!Iinclude/linux/i2o.h
406!Idrivers/message/i2o/core.h
407!Edrivers/message/i2o/iop.c
408!Idrivers/message/i2o/iop.c
409!Idrivers/message/i2o/config-osm.c
410!Edrivers/message/i2o/exec-osm.c
411!Idrivers/message/i2o/exec-osm.c
412!Idrivers/message/i2o/bus-osm.c
413!Edrivers/message/i2o/device.c
414!Idrivers/message/i2o/device.c
415!Idrivers/message/i2o/driver.c
416!Idrivers/message/i2o/pci.c
417!Idrivers/message/i2o/i2o_block.c
418!Idrivers/message/i2o/i2o_scsi.c
419!Idrivers/message/i2o/i2o_proc.c
420 </sect1>
421 </chapter>
422
423 <chapter id="snddev">
424 <title>Sound Devices</title>
425!Iinclude/sound/core.h
426!Esound/sound_core.c
427!Iinclude/sound/pcm.h
428!Esound/core/pcm.c
429!Esound/core/device.c
430!Esound/core/info.c
431!Esound/core/rawmidi.c
432!Esound/core/sound.c
433!Esound/core/memory.c
434!Esound/core/pcm_memory.c
435!Esound/core/init.c
436!Esound/core/isadma.c
437!Esound/core/control.c
438!Esound/core/pcm_lib.c
439!Esound/core/hwdep.c
440!Esound/core/pcm_native.c
441!Esound/core/memalloc.c
442<!-- FIXME: Removed for now since no structured comments in source
443X!Isound/sound_firmware.c
444-->
445 </chapter>
446
447 <chapter id="uart16x50">
448 <title>16x50 UART Driver</title>
449!Iinclude/linux/serial_core.h
450!Edrivers/serial/serial_core.c
451!Edrivers/serial/8250.c
452 </chapter>
453
454 <chapter id="fbdev">
455 <title>Frame Buffer Library</title>
456
457 <para>
458 The frame buffer drivers depend heavily on four data structures.
459 These structures are declared in include/linux/fb.h. They are
460 fb_info, fb_var_screeninfo, fb_fix_screeninfo and fb_monospecs.
461 The last three can be made available to and from userland.
462 </para>
463
464 <para>
465 fb_info defines the current state of a particular video card.
466 Inside fb_info, there exists a fb_ops structure which is a
467 collection of needed functions to make fbdev and fbcon work.
468 fb_info is only visible to the kernel.
469 </para>
470
471 <para>
472 fb_var_screeninfo is used to describe the features of a video card
473 that are user defined. With fb_var_screeninfo, things such as
474 depth and the resolution may be defined.
475 </para>
476
477 <para>
478 The next structure is fb_fix_screeninfo. This defines the
479 properties of a card that are created when a mode is set and can't
480 be changed otherwise. A good example of this is the start of the
481 frame buffer memory. This "locks" the address of the frame buffer
482 memory, so that it cannot be changed or moved.
483 </para>
484
485 <para>
486 The last structure is fb_monospecs. In the old API, there was
487 little importance for fb_monospecs. This allowed for forbidden things
488 such as setting a mode of 800x600 on a fix frequency monitor. With
489 the new API, fb_monospecs prevents such things, and if used
490 correctly, can prevent a monitor from being cooked. fb_monospecs
491 will not be useful until kernels 2.5.x.
492 </para>
493
494 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Memory</title>
495!Edrivers/video/fbmem.c
496 </sect1>
497<!--
498 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Console</title>
499X!Edrivers/video/console/fbcon.c
500 </sect1>
501-->
502 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Colormap</title>
503!Edrivers/video/fbcmap.c
504 </sect1>
505<!-- FIXME:
506 drivers/video/fbgen.c has no docs, which stuffs up the sgml. Comment
507 out until somebody adds docs. KAO
508 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Generic Functions</title>
509X!Idrivers/video/fbgen.c
510 </sect1>
511KAO -->
512 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Video Mode Database</title>
513!Idrivers/video/modedb.c
514!Edrivers/video/modedb.c
515 </sect1>
516 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Macintosh Video Mode Database</title>
517!Edrivers/video/macmodes.c
518 </sect1>
519 <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Fonts</title>
520 <para>
521 Refer to the file drivers/video/console/fonts.c for more information.
522 </para>
523<!-- FIXME: Removed for now since no structured comments in source
524X!Idrivers/video/console/fonts.c
525-->
526 </sect1>
527 </chapter>
528
529 <chapter id="input_subsystem">
530 <title>Input Subsystem</title>
531!Iinclude/linux/input.h
532!Edrivers/input/input.c
533!Edrivers/input/ff-core.c
534!Edrivers/input/ff-memless.c
535 </chapter>
536
537 <chapter id="spi">
538 <title>Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI)</title>
539 <para>
540 SPI is the "Serial Peripheral Interface", widely used with
541 embedded systems because it is a simple and efficient
542 interface: basically a multiplexed shift register.
543 Its three signal wires hold a clock (SCK, often in the range
544 of 1-20 MHz), a "Master Out, Slave In" (MOSI) data line, and
545 a "Master In, Slave Out" (MISO) data line.
546 SPI is a full duplex protocol; for each bit shifted out the
547 MOSI line (one per clock) another is shifted in on the MISO line.
548 Those bits are assembled into words of various sizes on the
549 way to and from system memory.
550 An additional chipselect line is usually active-low (nCS);
551 four signals are normally used for each peripheral, plus
552 sometimes an interrupt.
553 </para>
554 <para>
555 The SPI bus facilities listed here provide a generalized
556 interface to declare SPI busses and devices, manage them
557 according to the standard Linux driver model, and perform
558 input/output operations.
559 At this time, only "master" side interfaces are supported,
560 where Linux talks to SPI peripherals and does not implement
561 such a peripheral itself.
562 (Interfaces to support implementing SPI slaves would
563 necessarily look different.)
564 </para>
565 <para>
566 The programming interface is structured around two kinds of driver,
567 and two kinds of device.
568 A "Controller Driver" abstracts the controller hardware, which may
569 be as simple as a set of GPIO pins or as complex as a pair of FIFOs
570 connected to dual DMA engines on the other side of the SPI shift
571 register (maximizing throughput). Such drivers bridge between
572 whatever bus they sit on (often the platform bus) and SPI, and
573 expose the SPI side of their device as a
574 <structname>struct spi_master</structname>.
575 SPI devices are children of that master, represented as a
576 <structname>struct spi_device</structname> and manufactured from
577 <structname>struct spi_board_info</structname> descriptors which
578 are usually provided by board-specific initialization code.
579 A <structname>struct spi_driver</structname> is called a
580 "Protocol Driver", and is bound to a spi_device using normal
581 driver model calls.
582 </para>
583 <para>
584 The I/O model is a set of queued messages. Protocol drivers
585 submit one or more <structname>struct spi_message</structname>
586 objects, which are processed and completed asynchronously.
587 (There are synchronous wrappers, however.) Messages are
588 built from one or more <structname>struct spi_transfer</structname>
589 objects, each of which wraps a full duplex SPI transfer.
590 A variety of protocol tweaking options are needed, because
591 different chips adopt very different policies for how they
592 use the bits transferred with SPI.
593 </para>
594!Iinclude/linux/spi/spi.h
595!Fdrivers/spi/spi.c spi_register_board_info
596!Edrivers/spi/spi.c
597 </chapter>
598
599 <chapter id="i2c">
600 <title>I<superscript>2</superscript>C and SMBus Subsystem</title>
601
602 <para>
603 I<superscript>2</superscript>C (or without fancy typography, "I2C")
604 is an acronym for the "Inter-IC" bus, a simple bus protocol which is
605 widely used where low data rate communications suffice.
606 Since it's also a licensed trademark, some vendors use another
607 name (such as "Two-Wire Interface", TWI) for the same bus.
608 I2C only needs two signals (SCL for clock, SDA for data), conserving
609 board real estate and minimizing signal quality issues.
610 Most I2C devices use seven bit addresses, and bus speeds of up
611 to 400 kHz; there's a high speed extension (3.4 MHz) that's not yet
612 found wide use.
613 I2C is a multi-master bus; open drain signaling is used to
614 arbitrate between masters, as well as to handshake and to
615 synchronize clocks from slower clients.
616 </para>
617
618 <para>
619 The Linux I2C programming interfaces support only the master
620 side of bus interactions, not the slave side.
621 The programming interface is structured around two kinds of driver,
622 and two kinds of device.
623 An I2C "Adapter Driver" abstracts the controller hardware; it binds
624 to a physical device (perhaps a PCI device or platform_device) and
625 exposes a <structname>struct i2c_adapter</structname> representing
626 each I2C bus segment it manages.
627 On each I2C bus segment will be I2C devices represented by a
628 <structname>struct i2c_client</structname>. Those devices will
629 be bound to a <structname>struct i2c_driver</structname>,
630 which should follow the standard Linux driver model.
631 (At this writing, a legacy model is more widely used.)
632 There are functions to perform various I2C protocol operations; at
633 this writing all such functions are usable only from task context.
634 </para>
635
636 <para>
637 The System Management Bus (SMBus) is a sibling protocol. Most SMBus
638 systems are also I2C conformant. The electrical constraints are
639 tighter for SMBus, and it standardizes particular protocol messages
640 and idioms. Controllers that support I2C can also support most
641 SMBus operations, but SMBus controllers don't support all the protocol
642 options that an I2C controller will.
643 There are functions to perform various SMBus protocol operations,
644 either using I2C primitives or by issuing SMBus commands to
645 i2c_adapter devices which don't support those I2C operations.
646 </para>
647
648!Iinclude/linux/i2c.h
649!Fdrivers/i2c/i2c-boardinfo.c i2c_register_board_info
650!Edrivers/i2c/i2c-core.c
651 </chapter>
652
653 <chapter id="clk"> 276 <chapter id="clk">
654 <title>Clock Framework</title> 277 <title>Clock Framework</title>
655 278