Message ID | 20240711083009.5580-3-mariusz.tkaczyk@linux.intel.com |
---|---|
State | New |
Headers | show |
Series | PCIe Enclosure LED Management | expand |
On Thu, 11 Jul 2024, Mariusz Tkaczyk wrote: > Native PCIe Enclosure Management (NPEM, PCIe r6.1 sec 6.28) allows > managing LED in storage enclosures. NPEM is indication oriented > and it does not give direct access to LED. Although each of > the indications *could* represent an individual LED, multiple > indications could also be represented as a single, > multi-color LED or a single LED blinking in a specific interval. > The specification leaves that open. > > Each enabled indication (capability register bit on) is represented as a > ledclass_dev which can be controlled through sysfs. For every ledclass > device only 2 brightness states are allowed: LED_ON (1) or LED_OFF (0). > It is corresponding to NPEM control register (Indication bit on/off). > > Ledclass devices appear in sysfs as child devices (subdirectory) of PCI > device which has an NPEM Extended Capability and indication is enabled > in NPEM capability register. For example, these are leds created for > pcieport "10000:02:05.0" on my setup: > > leds/ > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:locate > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:ok > └── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:rebuild > > They can be also found in "/sys/class/leds" directory. Parent PCIe device > bdf is used to guarantee uniqueness across leds subsystem. > > To enable/disable fail indication "brightness" file can be edited: > echo 1 > ./leds/10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail/brightness > echo 0 > ./leds/10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail/brightness > > PCIe r6.1, sec 7.9.19.2 defines the possible indications. > > Multiple indications for same parent PCIe device can conflict and > hardware may update them when processing new request. To avoid issues, > driver refresh all indications by reading back control register. > > Driver is projected to be exclusive NPEM extended capability manager. > It waits up to 1 second after imposing new request, it doesn't verify if > controller is busy before write, assuming that mutex lock gives protection > from concurrent updates. Driver is not registered if _DSM LED management > is available. > > NPEM is a PCIe extended capability so it should be registered in > pcie_init_capabilities() but it is not possible due to LED dependency. > Parent pci_device must be added earlier for led_classdev_register() > to be successful. NPEM does not require configuration on kernel side, it > is safe to register LED devices later. > > Link: https://members.pcisig.com/wg/PCI-SIG/document/19849 [1] > Suggested-by: Lukas Wunner <lukas@wunner.de> > Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> > Signed-off-by: Mariusz Tkaczyk <mariusz.tkaczyk@linux.intel.com> Thanks for the update, Reviewed-by: Ilpo Järvinen <ilpo.jarvinen@linux.intel.com>
On Thu, Jul 11, 2024 at 10:30:08AM +0200, Mariusz Tkaczyk wrote: > Native PCIe Enclosure Management (NPEM, PCIe r6.1 sec 6.28) allows > managing LED in storage enclosures. NPEM is indication oriented > and it does not give direct access to LED. Although each of > the indications *could* represent an individual LED, multiple > indications could also be represented as a single, > multi-color LED or a single LED blinking in a specific interval. > The specification leaves that open. The specification leaves it open, but isn't there a way to determine how it is implemented? In ACPI, maybe? > Each enabled indication (capability register bit on) is represented as a > ledclass_dev which can be controlled through sysfs. For every ledclass > device only 2 brightness states are allowed: LED_ON (1) or LED_OFF (0). > It is corresponding to NPEM control register (Indication bit on/off). > > Ledclass devices appear in sysfs as child devices (subdirectory) of PCI > device which has an NPEM Extended Capability and indication is enabled > in NPEM capability register. For example, these are leds created for > pcieport "10000:02:05.0" on my setup: > > leds/ > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:locate > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:ok > └── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:rebuild > > They can be also found in "/sys/class/leds" directory. Parent PCIe device > bdf is used to guarantee uniqueness across leds subsystem. > > To enable/disable fail indication "brightness" file can be edited: > echo 1 > ./leds/10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail/brightness > echo 0 > ./leds/10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail/brightness Have you considered implemtening this via a led trigger? Something like: echo pcie-enclosure > /sys/class/leds/<LED>/trigger echo 1 >/sys/class/leds/<LED>/fail but properly thought up. Marek
On Fri, 26 Jul 2024 09:29:36 +0200 Marek Behún <kabel@kernel.org> wrote: > On Thu, Jul 11, 2024 at 10:30:08AM +0200, Mariusz Tkaczyk wrote: > > Native PCIe Enclosure Management (NPEM, PCIe r6.1 sec 6.28) allows > > managing LED in storage enclosures. NPEM is indication oriented > > and it does not give direct access to LED. Although each of > > the indications *could* represent an individual LED, multiple > > indications could also be represented as a single, > > multi-color LED or a single LED blinking in a specific interval. > > The specification leaves that open. > > The specification leaves it open, but isn't there a way to determine > how it is implemented? In ACPI, maybe? What would be a point of that? There are blinking patterns standards for 2-LED systems and 3-LED systems but NPEM is projected to not be limited to the led system you have. I mean that we shouldn't try to determine what hardware does - it belongs to hardware. Kernel task is just to read what NPEM registers are presenting and trust it. I can realize NPEM with separate LED for each indication. Who knows, maybe in the future it would become real. > > > Each enabled indication (capability register bit on) is represented as a > > ledclass_dev which can be controlled through sysfs. For every ledclass > > device only 2 brightness states are allowed: LED_ON (1) or LED_OFF (0). > > It is corresponding to NPEM control register (Indication bit on/off). > > > > Ledclass devices appear in sysfs as child devices (subdirectory) of PCI > > device which has an NPEM Extended Capability and indication is enabled > > in NPEM capability register. For example, these are leds created for > > pcieport "10000:02:05.0" on my setup: > > > > leds/ > > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail > > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:locate > > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:ok > > └── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:rebuild > > > > They can be also found in "/sys/class/leds" directory. Parent PCIe device > > bdf is used to guarantee uniqueness across leds subsystem. > > > > To enable/disable fail indication "brightness" file can be edited: > > echo 1 > ./leds/10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail/brightness > > echo 0 > ./leds/10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail/brightness > > Have you considered implemtening this via a led trigger? > > Something like: > echo pcie-enclosure > /sys/class/leds/<LED>/trigger > echo 1 >/sys/class/leds/<LED>/fail > but properly thought up. > No I didn't. I understand the triggers as an actions that may involve led change we can configure. I thought, it should be cross driver reference (for example, change LED if keyboard capslock is pressed) and triggers are optional. For that reasons I did not consider it. Please explain this concept in details. I think that forcing one and only trigger you can use may we even worse because it seems to be definitely design incompatible (triggers are optional) but I'm not an expert. Thanks, Mariusz
On Wed, Jul 31, 2024 at 01:51:17PM +0200, Mariusz Tkaczyk wrote: > On Fri, 26 Jul 2024 09:29:36 +0200 > Marek Behún <kabel@kernel.org> wrote: > > > On Thu, Jul 11, 2024 at 10:30:08AM +0200, Mariusz Tkaczyk wrote: > > > Native PCIe Enclosure Management (NPEM, PCIe r6.1 sec 6.28) allows > > > managing LED in storage enclosures. NPEM is indication oriented > > > and it does not give direct access to LED. Although each of > > > the indications *could* represent an individual LED, multiple > > > indications could also be represented as a single, > > > multi-color LED or a single LED blinking in a specific interval. > > > The specification leaves that open. > > > > The specification leaves it open, but isn't there a way to determine > > how it is implemented? In ACPI, maybe? > > > What would be a point of that? There are blinking patterns standards for 2-LED > systems and 3-LED systems but NPEM is projected to not be limited to > the led system you have. I mean that we shouldn't try to determine what hardware > does - it belongs to hardware. Kernel task is just to read what NPEM registers > are presenting and trust it. Hi. My point is about what a LED class device in kernel means, and what the brightness attribute means (in terms of intended behavior). One LED class device should represent one hardware LED (possibly multicolor), and nothing else. Setting the brightness attribute to the value of max_brightness should light the LED on, and setting it to 0 should light it off. So if on some device doing echo 1 >brightness makes the LED for example blink, it is wrong. That's why I am asking whether it is possible to determine what the hardware is doing from some description, like ACPI or device-tree. If setting brightness to 1 makes some LED blink (without a LED trigger), than the device does not behave according to the LED class expectations. > I can realize NPEM with separate LED for each indication. Who knows, maybe in > the future it would become real. > > > > > > Each enabled indication (capability register bit on) is represented as a > > > ledclass_dev which can be controlled through sysfs. For every ledclass > > > device only 2 brightness states are allowed: LED_ON (1) or LED_OFF (0). > > > It is corresponding to NPEM control register (Indication bit on/off). > > > > > > Ledclass devices appear in sysfs as child devices (subdirectory) of PCI > > > device which has an NPEM Extended Capability and indication is enabled > > > in NPEM capability register. For example, these are leds created for > > > pcieport "10000:02:05.0" on my setup: > > > > > > leds/ > > > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail > > > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:locate > > > ├── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:ok > > > └── 10000:02:05.0:enclosure:rebuild > > > > > > They can be also found in "/sys/class/leds" directory. Parent PCIe device > > > bdf is used to guarantee uniqueness across leds subsystem. > > > > > > To enable/disable fail indication "brightness" file can be edited: > > > echo 1 > ./leds/10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail/brightness > > > echo 0 > ./leds/10000:02:05.0:enclosure:fail/brightness > > > > Have you considered implemtening this via a led trigger? > > > > Something like: > > echo pcie-enclosure > /sys/class/leds/<LED>/trigger > > echo 1 >/sys/class/leds/<LED>/fail > > but properly thought up. > > > > No I didn't. I understand the triggers as an actions that may involve led > change we can configure. I thought, it should be cross driver reference (for > example, change LED if keyboard capslock is pressed) and triggers are optional. > > For that reasons I did not consider it. Please explain this concept in details. > > I think that forcing one and only trigger you can use may we even worse because > it seems to be definitely design incompatible (triggers are optional) but I'm > not an expert. Look for example at the netdev trigger. Originally it was software only, and you could set it up so that it would for example blink on rx/tx activity of a network interface. But recently it gained support to offload this blinking to hardware: some LEDs are wired from ethenret PHYs, and on those PHYs you can set it in hardware that the LED will blink on rx/tx activity (or something else). So now if the netdev trigger determines that the LED is connected to the PHY of a network interface, and that network interface is set to be triggering the LED, it will offload the blinking to hardware. Marek
On Wed, Jul 31, 2024 at 05:17:01PM +0200, Marek Behún wrote: > On Wed, Jul 31, 2024 at 01:51:17PM +0200, Mariusz Tkaczyk wrote: > > On Fri, 26 Jul 2024 09:29:36 +0200 > > Marek Behún <kabel@kernel.org> wrote: > > > > > On Thu, Jul 11, 2024 at 10:30:08AM +0200, Mariusz Tkaczyk wrote: > > > > Native PCIe Enclosure Management (NPEM, PCIe r6.1 sec 6.28) allows > > > > managing LED in storage enclosures. NPEM is indication oriented > > > > and it does not give direct access to LED. Although each of > > > > the indications *could* represent an individual LED, multiple > > > > indications could also be represented as a single, > > > > multi-color LED or a single LED blinking in a specific interval. > > > > The specification leaves that open. > > > > > > The specification leaves it open, but isn't there a way to determine > > > how it is implemented? In ACPI, maybe? > > > > What would be a point of that? There are blinking patterns standards for 2-LED > > systems and 3-LED systems but NPEM is projected to not be limited to > > the led system you have. I mean that we shouldn't try to determine what hardware > > does - it belongs to hardware. Kernel task is just to read what NPEM registers > > are presenting and trust it. > > My point is about what a LED class device in kernel means, and what the brightness > attribute means (in terms of intended behavior). > One LED class device should represent one hardware LED (possibly multicolor), and > nothing else. > Setting the brightness attribute to the value of max_brightness should light the LED > on, and setting it to 0 should light it off. > So if on some device doing > echo 1 >brightness > makes the LED for example blink, it is wrong. > > That's why I am asking whether it is possible to determine what the hardware is > doing from some description, like ACPI or device-tree. The PCIe Base Specification and the PCI Firmware Specification do not provide a way to query what the effect of a set bit will be. We've had lengthy mailing list discussions how to represent NPEM bits in the kernel. Representing each bit as a distinct led_classdev seemed like the most reasonable way and I thought we had reached consensus on that. Objecting against the chosen representation at this point, not to mention without suggesting a better alternative, is unreasonable from my point of view. I think it is reasonable to assume that usually each bit is a distinct LED. The spec doesn't rule out other form factors, such as multiple bits being represented by distinct colors of a multi-color LED. However I think such form factors will remain esoteric and theoretical for the most part. We need to be pragmatic here. > If setting brightness to 1 makes some LED blink (without a LED trigger), than > the device does not behave according to the LED class expectations. [...] > Look for example at the netdev trigger. Originally it was software only, and you > could set it up so that it would for example blink on rx/tx activity of a network > interface. I think you're confusing two different things: "Blinking" in the rx/tx activity context means that the LED is turned on when traffic is flowing and off when it is not flowing. Because traffic is usually not flowing constantly, the LED is "blinking". In the NPEM context, my understanding is "blinking" means the LED turns on or off *in a regular interval* to indicate that the corresponding NPEM bit has been set. Thanks, Lukas
On Wed, Jul 31, 2024 at 05:52:49PM +0200, Lukas Wunner wrote: > On Wed, Jul 31, 2024 at 05:17:01PM +0200, Marek Behún wrote: > > On Wed, Jul 31, 2024 at 01:51:17PM +0200, Mariusz Tkaczyk wrote: > > > On Fri, 26 Jul 2024 09:29:36 +0200 > > > Marek Behún <kabel@kernel.org> wrote: > > > > > > > On Thu, Jul 11, 2024 at 10:30:08AM +0200, Mariusz Tkaczyk wrote: > > > > > Native PCIe Enclosure Management (NPEM, PCIe r6.1 sec 6.28) allows > > > > > managing LED in storage enclosures. NPEM is indication oriented > > > > > and it does not give direct access to LED. Although each of > > > > > the indications *could* represent an individual LED, multiple > > > > > indications could also be represented as a single, > > > > > multi-color LED or a single LED blinking in a specific interval. > > > > > The specification leaves that open. > > > > > > > > The specification leaves it open, but isn't there a way to determine > > > > how it is implemented? In ACPI, maybe? > > > > > > What would be a point of that? There are blinking patterns standards for 2-LED > > > systems and 3-LED systems but NPEM is projected to not be limited to > > > the led system you have. I mean that we shouldn't try to determine what hardware > > > does - it belongs to hardware. Kernel task is just to read what NPEM registers > > > are presenting and trust it. > > > > My point is about what a LED class device in kernel means, and what the brightness > > attribute means (in terms of intended behavior). > > One LED class device should represent one hardware LED (possibly multicolor), and > > nothing else. > > Setting the brightness attribute to the value of max_brightness should light the LED > > on, and setting it to 0 should light it off. > > So if on some device doing > > echo 1 >brightness > > makes the LED for example blink, it is wrong. > > > > That's why I am asking whether it is possible to determine what the hardware is > > doing from some description, like ACPI or device-tree. > > The PCIe Base Specification and the PCI Firmware Specification do not > provide a way to query what the effect of a set bit will be. > > We've had lengthy mailing list discussions how to represent NPEM bits > in the kernel. Representing each bit as a distinct led_classdev seemed > like the most reasonable way and I thought we had reached consensus > on that. Objecting against the chosen representation at this point, > not to mention without suggesting a better alternative, is unreasonable > from my point of view. There are lenghty mailing list discussions all the time, e.g. the multi-color LED framework took several years to work out. But yes, it was a pain... It is not my intention to be unreasonable, I am just asking questions. I am sorry for getting into this discussion this late. > I think it is reasonable to assume that usually each bit is a distinct > LED. The spec doesn't rule out other form factors, such as multiple > bits being represented by distinct colors of a multi-color LED. > However I think such form factors will remain esoteric and theoretical > for the most part. We need to be pragmatic here. > > > > If setting brightness to 1 makes some LED blink (without a LED trigger), than > > the device does not behave according to the LED class expectations. > [...] > > Look for example at the netdev trigger. Originally it was software only, and you > > could set it up so that it would for example blink on rx/tx activity of a network > > interface. > > I think you're confusing two different things: > > "Blinking" in the rx/tx activity context means that the LED is turned on > when traffic is flowing and off when it is not flowing. Because traffic > is usually not flowing constantly, the LED is "blinking". > > In the NPEM context, my understanding is "blinking" means the LED turns > on or off *in a regular interval* to indicate that the corresponding > NPEM bit has been set. Ah! So the LEDs states is not supposed to be managed by hardware, but by software? From the userspace? Marek
> +static enum led_brightness brightness_get(struct led_classdev *led) > +{ > + struct npem_led *nled = container_of(led, struct npem_led, led); > + struct npem *npem = nled->npem; > + int ret, val = LED_OFF; Don't use LED_OFF and LED_ON. Instead use 0 and 1. Set max_brightness to 1. Enum led_brightness is obsolete: /* This is obsolete/useless. We now support variable maximum brightness. */ Marek
On Thu, Aug 01, 2024 at 11:06:26AM +0200, Marek Behún wrote: > It is not my intention to be unreasonable, I am just asking questions. > I am sorry for getting into this discussion this late. Thanks for your understanding! > On Wed, Jul 31, 2024 at 05:52:49PM +0200, Lukas Wunner wrote: > > "Blinking" in the rx/tx activity context means that the LED is turned on > > when traffic is flowing and off when it is not flowing. Because traffic > > is usually not flowing constantly, the LED is "blinking". > > > > In the NPEM context, my understanding is "blinking" means the LED turns > > on or off *in a regular interval* to indicate that the corresponding > > NPEM bit has been set. > > Ah! So the LEDs states is not supposed to be managed by hardware, > but by software? From the userspace? Yes the LEDs will be controlled through ledmon(8), which is maintained by Mariusz. Though conceivably any other piece of software will do as well. Basically the PCIe Base Spec defines registers to set/get LED states (NPEM). And the PCI Firmware Spec defines an alternative ACPI _DSM interface to control the same LEDs. The spec says ACPI _DSM shall be preferred over direct register access (NPEM) whenever _DSM is available. The idea apparently being that a portion of the LEDs is under control of platform firmware and the remaining LEDs are under OS control. And by using the _DSM interface, there are no conflicting register accesses by firmware and OS. The enclosure vendor is free to use e.g. LEDs which are on continuously, or they may choose to let certain LEDs blink in a regular interval. E.g. the enclosure vendor may decide that the "failure" LED is red and blinks in a regular interval when its corresponding register bit is set so that it's easier for an administrator to identify the faulty drive in a rack full of other drives with tons of LEDs. Conceivably we could one day add a led_trigger for some or all of these LEDs. Question is whether it makes sense. Maybe if the nvme driver can detect a faulty drive it could trigger that the failure LED is lit up. The design to use one led_classdev per register bit was chosen precisely to allow for such future extensions. Thanks, Lukas
diff --git a/drivers/pci/Kconfig b/drivers/pci/Kconfig index d35001589d88..e696e69ad516 100644 --- a/drivers/pci/Kconfig +++ b/drivers/pci/Kconfig @@ -143,6 +143,15 @@ config PCI_IOV If unsure, say N. +config PCI_NPEM + bool "Native PCIe Enclosure Management" + depends on LEDS_CLASS=y + help + Support for Native PCIe Enclosure Management. It allows managing LED + indications in storage enclosures. Enclosure must support following + indications: OK, Locate, Fail, Rebuild, other indications are + optional. + config PCI_PRI bool "PCI PRI support" select PCI_ATS diff --git a/drivers/pci/Makefile b/drivers/pci/Makefile index 175302036890..cd5f655d4be9 100644 --- a/drivers/pci/Makefile +++ b/drivers/pci/Makefile @@ -34,6 +34,7 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_XEN_PCIDEV_FRONTEND) += xen-pcifront.o obj-$(CONFIG_VGA_ARB) += vgaarb.o obj-$(CONFIG_PCI_DOE) += doe.o obj-$(CONFIG_PCI_DYNAMIC_OF_NODES) += of_property.o +obj-$(CONFIG_PCI_NPEM) += npem.o # Endpoint library must be initialized before its users obj-$(CONFIG_PCI_ENDPOINT) += endpoint/ diff --git a/drivers/pci/npem.c b/drivers/pci/npem.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..3aa0b6e94cbd --- /dev/null +++ b/drivers/pci/npem.c @@ -0,0 +1,449 @@ +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 +/* + * PCIe Enclosure management driver created for LED interfaces based on + * indications. It says *what indications* blink but does not specify *how* + * they blink - it is hardware defined. + * + * The driver name refers to Native PCIe Enclosure Management. It is + * first indication oriented standard with specification. + * + * Native PCIe Enclosure Management (NPEM) + * PCIe Base Specification r6.1 sec 6.28 + * PCIe Base Specification r6.1 sec 7.9.19 + * + * Copyright (c) 2023-2024 Intel Corporation + * Mariusz Tkaczyk <mariusz.tkaczyk@linux.intel.com> + */ + +#include <linux/acpi.h> +#include <linux/bitops.h> +#include <linux/errno.h> +#include <linux/iopoll.h> +#include <linux/leds.h> +#include <linux/mutex.h> +#include <linux/pci.h> +#include <linux/pci_regs.h> +#include <linux/types.h> +#include <linux/uleds.h> + +#include "pci.h" + +struct indication { + u32 bit; + const char *name; +}; + +static const struct indication npem_indications[] = { + {PCI_NPEM_IND_OK, "enclosure:ok"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_LOCATE, "enclosure:locate"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_FAIL, "enclosure:fail"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_REBUILD, "enclosure:rebuild"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_PFA, "enclosure:pfa"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_HOTSPARE, "enclosure:hotspare"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_ICA, "enclosure:ica"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_IFA, "enclosure:ifa"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_IDT, "enclosure:idt"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_DISABLED, "enclosure:disabled"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_0, "enclosure:specific_0"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_1, "enclosure:specific_1"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_2, "enclosure:specific_2"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_3, "enclosure:specific_3"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_4, "enclosure:specific_4"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_5, "enclosure:specific_5"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_6, "enclosure:specific_6"}, + {PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_7, "enclosure:specific_7"}, + {0, NULL} +}; + +#define for_each_indication(ind, inds) \ + for (ind = inds; ind->bit; ind++) + +/* + * The driver has internal list of supported indications. Ideally, the driver + * should not touch bits that are not defined and for which LED devices are + * not exposed but in reality, it needs to turn them off. + * + * Otherwise, there will be no possibility to turn off indications turned on by + * other utilities or turned on by default and it leads to bad user experience. + * + * Additionally, it excludes NPEM commands like RESET or ENABLE. + */ +static u32 reg_to_indications(u32 caps, const struct indication *inds) +{ + const struct indication *ind; + u32 supported_indications = 0; + + for_each_indication(ind, inds) + supported_indications |= ind->bit; + + return caps & supported_indications; +} + +/** + * struct npem_led - LED details + * @indication: indication details + * @npem: npem device + * @name: LED name + * @led: LED device + */ +struct npem_led { + const struct indication *indication; + struct npem *npem; + char name[LED_MAX_NAME_SIZE]; + struct led_classdev led; +}; + +/** + * struct npem_ops - backend specific callbacks + * @inds: supported indications array, set of indications is backend specific + * @get_active_indications: get active indications + * npem: npem device + * inds: response buffer + * @set_active_indications: set new indications + * npem: npem device + * inds: bit mask to set + */ +struct npem_ops { + const struct indication *inds; + int (*get_active_indications)(struct npem *npem, u32 *inds); + int (*set_active_indications)(struct npem *npem, u32 inds); +}; + +/** + * struct npem - NPEM device properties + * @dev: PCIe device this driver is attached to + * @ops: Backend specific callbacks + * @lock: serialized accessing npem device from multiple LED devices + * @pos: NPEM backed only, NPEM capability offset + * @supported_indications: bit mask of supported indications + * non-indication and reserved bits are cleared + * @active_indications: bit mask of active indications + * non-indication and reserved bits are cleared + * @active_inds_initialized: if set then active_indications are initialized + * @led_cnt: Supported LEDs count + * @leds: supported LEDs + */ +struct npem { + struct pci_dev *dev; + const struct npem_ops *ops; + struct mutex lock; + u16 pos; + u32 supported_indications; + u32 active_indications; + + /* + * Use lazy loading for active_indications to not play with initcalls. + * It is needed to allow _DSM initialization on DELL platforms, where + * ACPI_IPMI must be loaded first. + */ + unsigned int active_inds_initialized:1; + + int led_cnt; + struct npem_led leds[]; +}; + +static int npem_read_reg(struct npem *npem, u16 reg, u32 *val) +{ + int ret = pci_read_config_dword(npem->dev, npem->pos + reg, val); + + return pcibios_err_to_errno(ret); +} + +static int npem_write_ctrl(struct npem *npem, u32 reg) +{ + int pos = npem->pos + PCI_NPEM_CTRL; + int ret = pci_write_config_dword(npem->dev, pos, reg); + + return pcibios_err_to_errno(ret); +} + +static int npem_get_active_indications(struct npem *npem, u32 *inds) +{ + u32 ctrl; + int ret; + + lockdep_assert_held(&npem->lock); + + ret = npem_read_reg(npem, PCI_NPEM_CTRL, &ctrl); + if (ret) + return ret; + + /* If PCI_NPEM_CTRL_ENABLE is not set then no indication should blink */ + if (!(ctrl & PCI_NPEM_CTRL_ENABLE)) { + *inds = 0; + return 0; + } + + *inds = ctrl & npem->supported_indications; + + return 0; +} + +static int npem_set_active_indications(struct npem *npem, u32 inds) +{ + int ctrl, ret, ret_val; + u32 cc_status; + + lockdep_assert_held(&npem->lock); + + /* This bit is always required */ + ctrl = inds | PCI_NPEM_CTRL_ENABLE; + + ret = npem_write_ctrl(npem, ctrl); + if (ret) + return ret; + + /* + * For the case where a NPEM command has not completed immediately, + * it is recommended that software not continuously “spin” on polling + * the status register, but rather poll under interrupt at a reduced + * rate; for example at 10 ms intervals. + * + * PCIe r6.1 sec 6.28 "Implementation Note: Software Polling of NPEM + * Command Completed" + */ + ret = read_poll_timeout(npem_read_reg, ret_val, + ret_val || (cc_status & PCI_NPEM_STATUS_CC), + 10 * USEC_PER_MSEC, USEC_PER_SEC, false, npem, + PCI_NPEM_STATUS, &cc_status); + if (ret) + return ret; + if (ret_val) + return ret_val; + + /* + * All writes to control register, including writes that do not change + * the register value, are NPEM commands and should eventually result + * in a command completion indication in the NPEM Status Register. + * + * PCIe Base Specification r6.1 sec 7.9.19.3 + * + * Register may not be updated, or other conflicting bits may be + * cleared. Spec is not strict here. Read NPEM Control register after + * write to keep cache in-sync. + */ + return npem_get_active_indications(npem, &npem->active_indications); +} + +static const struct npem_ops npem_ops = { + .inds = npem_indications, + .get_active_indications = npem_get_active_indications, + .set_active_indications = npem_set_active_indications, +}; + +#define DSM_GUID GUID_INIT(0x5d524d9d, 0xfff9, 0x4d4b, 0x8c, 0xb7, 0x74, 0x7e,\ + 0xd5, 0x1e, 0x19, 0x4d) +#define GET_SUPPORTED_STATES_DSM 1 +#define GET_STATE_DSM 2 +#define SET_STATE_DSM 3 + +static const guid_t dsm_guid = DSM_GUID; + +static bool npem_has_dsm(struct pci_dev *pdev) +{ + acpi_handle handle; + + handle = ACPI_HANDLE(&pdev->dev); + if (!handle) + return false; + + return acpi_check_dsm(handle, &dsm_guid, 0x1, + BIT(GET_SUPPORTED_STATES_DSM) | + BIT(GET_STATE_DSM) | BIT(SET_STATE_DSM)); +} + +static int npem_initialize_active_indications(struct npem *npem) +{ + int ret; + + lockdep_assert_held(&npem->lock); + + if (npem->active_inds_initialized) + return 0; + + ret = npem->ops->get_active_indications(npem, + &npem->active_indications); + if (ret) + return ret; + + npem->active_inds_initialized = true; + return 0; +} + +/* + * The status of each indicator is cached on first brightness_ get/set time and + * updated at write time. + * brightness_get() is only responsible for reflecting the last written/cached + * value. + */ +static enum led_brightness brightness_get(struct led_classdev *led) +{ + struct npem_led *nled = container_of(led, struct npem_led, led); + struct npem *npem = nled->npem; + int ret, val = LED_OFF; + + ret = mutex_lock_interruptible(&npem->lock); + if (ret) + return ret; + + ret = npem_initialize_active_indications(npem); + if (ret) + goto out; + + if (npem->active_indications & nled->indication->bit) + val = LED_ON; + +out: + mutex_unlock(&npem->lock); + return val; +} + +static int brightness_set(struct led_classdev *led, + enum led_brightness brightness) +{ + struct npem_led *nled = container_of(led, struct npem_led, led); + struct npem *npem = nled->npem; + u32 indications; + int ret; + + ret = mutex_lock_interruptible(&npem->lock); + if (ret) + return ret; + + ret = npem_initialize_active_indications(npem); + if (ret) + goto out; + + if (brightness == LED_OFF) + indications = npem->active_indications & ~(nled->indication->bit); + else + indications = npem->active_indications | nled->indication->bit; + + ret = npem->ops->set_active_indications(npem, indications); + +out: + mutex_unlock(&npem->lock); + return ret; +} + +static void npem_free(struct npem *npem) +{ + struct npem_led *nled; + int cnt; + + if (!npem) + return; + + for (cnt = 0; cnt < npem->led_cnt; cnt++) { + nled = &npem->leds[cnt]; + + if (nled->name[0]) + led_classdev_unregister(&nled->led); + } + + mutex_destroy(&npem->lock); + kfree(npem); +} + +static int pci_npem_set_led_classdev(struct npem *npem, struct npem_led *nled) +{ + struct led_classdev *led = &nled->led; + struct led_init_data init_data = {}; + char *name = nled->name; + int ret; + + init_data.devicename = pci_name(npem->dev); + init_data.default_label = nled->indication->name; + + ret = led_compose_name(&npem->dev->dev, &init_data, name); + if (ret) + return ret; + + led->name = name; + led->brightness_set_blocking = brightness_set; + led->brightness_get = brightness_get; + led->max_brightness = LED_ON; + led->default_trigger = "none"; + led->flags = 0; + + ret = led_classdev_register(&npem->dev->dev, led); + if (ret) + /* Clear the name to indicate that it is not registered. */ + name[0] = 0; + return ret; +} + +static int pci_npem_init(struct pci_dev *dev, const struct npem_ops *ops, + int pos, u32 caps) +{ + u32 supported = reg_to_indications(caps, ops->inds); + int supported_cnt = hweight32(supported); + const struct indication *indication; + struct npem_led *nled; + struct npem *npem; + int led_idx = 0; + int ret; + + npem = kzalloc(struct_size(npem, leds, supported_cnt), GFP_KERNEL); + if (!npem) + return -ENOMEM; + + npem->supported_indications = supported; + npem->led_cnt = supported_cnt; + npem->pos = pos; + npem->dev = dev; + npem->ops = ops; + + mutex_init(&npem->lock); + + for_each_indication(indication, npem_indications) { + if (!(npem->supported_indications & indication->bit)) + continue; + + nled = &npem->leds[led_idx++]; + nled->indication = indication; + nled->npem = npem; + + ret = pci_npem_set_led_classdev(npem, nled); + if (ret) { + npem_free(npem); + return ret; + } + } + + dev->npem = npem; + return 0; +} + +void pci_npem_remove(struct pci_dev *dev) +{ + npem_free(dev->npem); +} + +void pci_npem_create(struct pci_dev *dev) +{ + const struct npem_ops *ops = &npem_ops; + int pos = 0, ret; + u32 cap; + + if (!npem_has_dsm(dev)) { + pos = pci_find_ext_capability(dev, PCI_EXT_CAP_ID_NPEM); + if (pos == 0) + return; + + if (pci_read_config_dword(dev, pos + PCI_NPEM_CAP, &cap) != 0 || + (cap & PCI_NPEM_CAP_CAPABLE) == 0) + return; + } else { + /* + * OS should use the DSM for LED control if it is available + * PCI Firmware Spec r3.3 sec 4.7. + */ + return; + } + + ret = pci_npem_init(dev, ops, pos, cap); + if (ret) + pci_err(dev, "Failed to register PCIe Enclosure Management driver, err: %d\n", + ret); +} diff --git a/drivers/pci/pci.h b/drivers/pci/pci.h index fd44565c4756..9dea8c7353ab 100644 --- a/drivers/pci/pci.h +++ b/drivers/pci/pci.h @@ -333,6 +333,14 @@ static inline void pci_doe_destroy(struct pci_dev *pdev) { } static inline void pci_doe_disconnected(struct pci_dev *pdev) { } #endif +#ifdef CONFIG_PCI_NPEM +void pci_npem_create(struct pci_dev *dev); +void pci_npem_remove(struct pci_dev *dev); +#else +static inline void pci_npem_create(struct pci_dev *dev) { } +static inline void pci_npem_remove(struct pci_dev *dev) { } +#endif + /** * pci_dev_set_io_state - Set the new error state if possible. * diff --git a/drivers/pci/probe.c b/drivers/pci/probe.c index 8e696e547565..b8ea6353e27a 100644 --- a/drivers/pci/probe.c +++ b/drivers/pci/probe.c @@ -2582,6 +2582,8 @@ void pci_device_add(struct pci_dev *dev, struct pci_bus *bus) dev->match_driver = false; ret = device_add(&dev->dev); WARN_ON(ret < 0); + + pci_npem_create(dev); } struct pci_dev *pci_scan_single_device(struct pci_bus *bus, int devfn) diff --git a/drivers/pci/remove.c b/drivers/pci/remove.c index d749ea8250d6..1436f9cf1fea 100644 --- a/drivers/pci/remove.c +++ b/drivers/pci/remove.c @@ -33,6 +33,8 @@ static void pci_destroy_dev(struct pci_dev *dev) if (!dev->dev.kobj.parent) return; + pci_npem_remove(dev); + device_del(&dev->dev); down_write(&pci_bus_sem); diff --git a/include/linux/pci.h b/include/linux/pci.h index fb004fd4e889..c327c2dd4527 100644 --- a/include/linux/pci.h +++ b/include/linux/pci.h @@ -517,6 +517,9 @@ struct pci_dev { #endif #ifdef CONFIG_PCI_DOE struct xarray doe_mbs; /* Data Object Exchange mailboxes */ +#endif +#ifdef CONFIG_PCI_NPEM + struct npem *npem; /* Native PCIe Enclosure Management */ #endif u16 acs_cap; /* ACS Capability offset */ phys_addr_t rom; /* Physical address if not from BAR */ diff --git a/include/uapi/linux/pci_regs.h b/include/uapi/linux/pci_regs.h index 94c00996e633..c5e1b0573ff8 100644 --- a/include/uapi/linux/pci_regs.h +++ b/include/uapi/linux/pci_regs.h @@ -740,6 +740,7 @@ #define PCI_EXT_CAP_ID_DVSEC 0x23 /* Designated Vendor-Specific */ #define PCI_EXT_CAP_ID_DLF 0x25 /* Data Link Feature */ #define PCI_EXT_CAP_ID_PL_16GT 0x26 /* Physical Layer 16.0 GT/s */ +#define PCI_EXT_CAP_ID_NPEM 0x29 /* Native PCIe Enclosure Management */ #define PCI_EXT_CAP_ID_PL_32GT 0x2A /* Physical Layer 32.0 GT/s */ #define PCI_EXT_CAP_ID_DOE 0x2E /* Data Object Exchange */ #define PCI_EXT_CAP_ID_MAX PCI_EXT_CAP_ID_DOE @@ -1121,6 +1122,40 @@ #define PCI_PL_16GT_LE_CTRL_USP_TX_PRESET_MASK 0x000000F0 #define PCI_PL_16GT_LE_CTRL_USP_TX_PRESET_SHIFT 4 +/* Native PCIe Enclosure Management */ +#define PCI_NPEM_CAP 0x04 /* NPEM capability register */ +#define PCI_NPEM_CAP_CAPABLE 0x00000001 /* NPEM Capable */ + +#define PCI_NPEM_CTRL 0x08 /* NPEM control register */ +#define PCI_NPEM_CTRL_ENABLE 0x00000001 /* NPEM Enable */ + +/* + * Native PCIe Enclosure Management indication bits and Reset command bit + * are corresponding for capability and control registers. + */ +#define PCI_NPEM_CMD_RESET 0x00000002 /* NPEM Reset Command */ +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_OK 0x00000004 /* NPEM indication OK */ +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_LOCATE 0x00000008 /* NPEM indication Locate */ +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_FAIL 0x00000010 /* NPEM indication Fail */ +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_REBUILD 0x00000020 /* NPEM indication Rebuild */ +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_PFA 0x00000040 /* NPEM indication Predicted Failure Analysis */ +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_HOTSPARE 0x00000080 /* NPEM indication Hot Spare */ +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_ICA 0x00000100 /* NPEM indication In Critical Array */ +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_IFA 0x00000200 /* NPEM indication In Failed Array */ +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_IDT 0x00000400 /* NPEM indication Invalid Device Type */ +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_DISABLED 0x00000800 /* NPEM indication Disabled */ +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_0 0x01000000 +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_1 0x02000000 +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_2 0x04000000 +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_3 0x08000000 +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_4 0x10000000 +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_5 0x20000000 +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_6 0x40000000 +#define PCI_NPEM_IND_SPEC_7 0x80000000 + +#define PCI_NPEM_STATUS 0x0c /* NPEM status register */ +#define PCI_NPEM_STATUS_CC 0x00000001 /* NPEM Command completed */ + /* Data Object Exchange */ #define PCI_DOE_CAP 0x04 /* DOE Capabilities Register */ #define PCI_DOE_CAP_INT_SUP 0x00000001 /* Interrupt Support */