</abstract>
<revhistory>
+ <revision>
+ <revnumber>0.5</revnumber>
+ <date>2008-05-22</date>
+ <authorinitials>hjk</authorinitials>
+ <revremark>Added description of write() function.</revremark>
+ </revision>
<revision>
<revnumber>0.4</revnumber>
<date>2007-11-26</date>
<?dbhtml filename="copyright.html"?>
<title>Copyright and License</title>
<para>
- Copyright (c) 2006 by Hans-Jürgen Koch.</para>
+ Copyright (c) 2006-2008 by Hans-Jürgen Koch.</para>
<para>
This documentation is Free Software licensed under the terms of the
GPL version 2.
represents the total interrupt count. You can use this number
to figure out if you missed some interrupts.
</para>
+ <para>
+ For some hardware that has more than one interrupt source internally,
+ but not separate IRQ mask and status registers, there might be
+ situations where userspace cannot determine what the interrupt source
+ was if the kernel handler disables them by writing to the chip's IRQ
+ register. In such a case, the kernel has to disable the IRQ completely
+ to leave the chip's register untouched. Now the userspace part can
+ determine the cause of the interrupt, but it cannot re-enable
+ interrupts. Another cornercase is chips where re-enabling interrupts
+ is a read-modify-write operation to a combined IRQ status/acknowledge
+ register. This would be racy if a new interrupt occurred
+ simultaneously.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ To address these problems, UIO also implements a write() function. It
+ is normally not used and can be ignored for hardware that has only a
+ single interrupt source or has separate IRQ mask and status registers.
+ If you need it, however, a write to <filename>/dev/uioX</filename>
+ will call the <function>irqcontrol()</function> function implemented
+ by the driver. You have to write a 32-bit value that is usually either
+ 0 or 1 to disable or enable interrupts. If a driver does not implement
+ <function>irqcontrol()</function>, <function>write()</function> will
+ return with <varname>-ENOSYS</varname>.
+ </para>
<para>
To handle interrupts properly, your custom kernel module can
<function>open()</function>, you will probably also want a custom
<function>release()</function> function.
</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>
+<varname>int (*irqcontrol)(struct uio_info *info, s32 irq_on)
+</varname>: Optional. If you need to be able to enable or disable
+interrupts from userspace by writing to <filename>/dev/uioX</filename>,
+you can implement this function. The parameter <varname>irq_on</varname>
+will be 0 to disable interrupts and 1 to enable them.
+</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>
return retval;
}
+static ssize_t uio_write(struct file *filep, const char __user *buf,
+ size_t count, loff_t *ppos)
+{
+ struct uio_listener *listener = filep->private_data;
+ struct uio_device *idev = listener->dev;
+ ssize_t retval;
+ s32 irq_on;
+
+ if (idev->info->irq == UIO_IRQ_NONE)
+ return -EIO;
+
+ if (count != sizeof(s32))
+ return -EINVAL;
+
+ if (!idev->info->irqcontrol)
+ return -ENOSYS;
+
+ if (copy_from_user(&irq_on, buf, count))
+ return -EFAULT;
+
+ retval = idev->info->irqcontrol(idev->info, irq_on);
+
+ return retval ? retval : sizeof(s32);
+}
+
static int uio_find_mem_index(struct vm_area_struct *vma)
{
int mi;
.open = uio_open,
.release = uio_release,
.read = uio_read,
+ .write = uio_write,
.mmap = uio_mmap,
.poll = uio_poll,
.fasync = uio_fasync,
* @mmap: mmap operation for this uio device
* @open: open operation for this uio device
* @release: release operation for this uio device
+ * @irqcontrol: disable/enable irqs when 0/1 is written to /dev/uioX
*/
struct uio_info {
struct uio_device *uio_dev;
int (*mmap)(struct uio_info *info, struct vm_area_struct *vma);
int (*open)(struct uio_info *info, struct inode *inode);
int (*release)(struct uio_info *info, struct inode *inode);
+ int (*irqcontrol)(struct uio_info *info, s32 irq_on);
};
extern int __must_check