rockbox/firmware/export/i2c-async.h

303 lines
12 KiB
C

/***************************************************************************
* __________ __ ___.
* Open \______ \ ____ ____ | | _\_ |__ _______ ___
* Source | _// _ \_/ ___\| |/ /| __ \ / _ \ \/ /
* Jukebox | | ( <_> ) \___| < | \_\ ( <_> > < <
* Firmware |____|_ /\____/ \___ >__|_ \|___ /\____/__/\_ \
* \/ \/ \/ \/ \/
* $Id$
*
* Copyright (C) 2021 Aidan MacDonald
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
* of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This software is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
* KIND, either express or implied.
*
****************************************************************************/
#ifndef __I2C_ASYNC_H__
#define __I2C_ASYNC_H__
#include "config.h"
/* i2c-async provides an API for asynchronous communication over an I2C bus.
* It's not linked to a specific target, so device drivers using this API can
* be shared more easily among multiple targets.
*
* Transactions are built using descriptors, and callbacks can be used to
* perform work directly from interrupt context. Callbacks can even change
* the descriptor chain on the fly, so the transaction can be altered based
* on data recieved over the I2C bus.
*
* There's an API for synchronous operations on devices using 8-bit register
* addresses. This API demonstrates how you can build more specialized routines
* on top of the asynchronous API, and is useful in its own right for dealing
* with simple devices.
*/
#ifdef HAVE_I2C_ASYNC
#include "i2c-target.h"
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stddef.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
/* Queueing codes */
#define I2C_RC_OK 0
#define I2C_RC_BUSY 1
#define I2C_RC_NOTADDED 2
#define I2C_RC_NOTFOUND 3
/* Descriptor status codes */
#define I2C_STATUS_OK 0
#define I2C_STATUS_ERROR 1
#define I2C_STATUS_TIMEOUT 2
#define I2C_STATUS_SKIPPED 3
/* I2C bus end conditions */
#define I2C_START (1 << 0)
#define I2C_RESTART (1 << 1)
#define I2C_CONTINUE (1 << 2)
#define I2C_STOP (1 << 3)
#define I2C_HOLD (1 << 4)
/* Transfer modes */
#define I2C_READ 0
#define I2C_WRITE 1
/* Queue modes */
#define I2C_Q_ADD 0
#define I2C_Q_ONCE 1
#define I2C_Q_REPLACE 2
/* Flag for using 10-bit addresses */
#define I2C_10BIT_ADDR 0x8000
/* Descriptors are used to set up an I2C transfer. The transfer mode is
* specified by 'tran_mode', and is normally a READ or WRITE operation.
* The transfer mode dictates how the buffer/count fields are interpreted.
*
* - I2C_WRITE
* buffer[0] must be non-NULL and count[0] must be at least 1.
* The transfer sends count[0] bytes from buffer[0] on the bus.
*
* buffer[1] and count[1] can be used to specify a second buffer
* whose contents are written after the buffer[0]'s last byte.
* No start/stop conditions are issued between the buffers; it is
* as if you had appended the contents of buffer[1] to buffer[0].
*
* If not used, buffer[1] must be NULL and count[1] must be 0.
* If used, buffer[1] must be non-NULL and count[1] must be >= 1.
*
* - I2C_READ
* buffer[1] must be non-NULL and count[1] must be at least 1.
* The transfer will request count[1] bytes and writes the data
* into buffer[1].
*
* This type of transfer can send some data bytes before the
* read operation, eg. to send a register address for the read.
* If this feature is not used, set buffer[0] to NULL and set
* count[0] to zero.
*
* If used, buffer[0] must be non-NULL and count[0] must be >= 1.
* Between the last byte written and the first byte read, the bus
* will automatically issue a RESTART condition.
*
* Bus conditions are divided into two classes: start and end conditions.
* You MUST supply both a start and end condition in the 'bus_cond' field,
* by OR'ing together one start condition and one end condition:
*
* - I2C_START
* Issue a START condition before the first data byte. This must be
* specified on the first descriptor of a transaction.
*
* - I2C_RESTART
* Issue a RESTART condition before the first data byte. On the bus this
* is physically identical to a START condition, but drivers might need
* this to distinguish between these two cases.
*
* - I2C_CONTINUE
* Do not issue any condition before the first data byte. This is only
* valid if the descriptor continues a previous descriptor which ended
* with the HOLD condition; otherwise the results are undefined.
*
* - I2C_STOP
* Issue a STOP condition after the last data byte. This must be set on
* the final descriptor in a transaction, so the bus is left in a usable
* state when the descriptor finishes.
*
* - I2C_HOLD
* Do not issue any condition after the last data byte. This is only
* valid if the next descriptor starts with an I2C_CONTINUE condition.
*/
typedef struct i2c_descriptor {
/* Address of the target device. To use 10-bit addresses, simply
* OR the address with the I2C_10BIT_ADDR. */
uint16_t slave_addr;
/* What to do at the ends of the data transfer */
uint8_t bus_cond;
/* Transfer mode */
uint8_t tran_mode;
/* Buffer/length fields. Their use depends on the transfer mode. */
void* buffer[2];
int count[2];
/* Callback which is invoked when the descriptor completes.
*
* The first argument is a status code and the second argument is a
* pointer to the completed descriptor. The status code is the only
* way of checking whether the descriptor completed successfully,
* and it is NOT saved, so ensure you save it yourself if needed.
*/
void(*callback)(int, struct i2c_descriptor*);
/* Argument field reserved for the user; not touched by the driver. */
intptr_t arg;
/* Pointer to the next descriptor. */
struct i2c_descriptor* next;
} i2c_descriptor;
/* Public API */
/* Aysnchronously enqueue a descriptor, optionally waiting on a timeout
* if the queue is full. The exact behavior depends on 'q_mode':
*
* - I2C_Q_ADD
* Always try to enqueue the descriptor.
*
* - I2C_Q_ONCE
* Only attempt to enqueue the descriptor if no descriptor with the same
* cookie is already running or queued. If this is not the case, then
* returns I2C_RC_NOTADDED.
*
* - I2C_Q_REPLACE
* If a descriptor with the same cookie is queued, replace it with this
* descriptor and do not run the old descriptor's callbacks. If the
* matching descriptor is running, returns I2C_RC_NOTADDED and does not
* queue the new descriptor. If no match was found, then simply add the
* new descriptor to the queue.
*
* The 'cookie' is only useful if you want to use the ONCE or REPLACE queue
* modes, or if you want to use i2c_async_cancel(). Cookies used for queue
* management must be reserved with i2c_async_reserve_cookies(), to prevent
* different drivers from stepping on each other's toes.
*
* When you do not need queue management, you can use a 'cookie' of 0, which
* is reserved for unmanaged transactions. Only use I2C_Q_ADD if you do this.
*
* Queuing is only successful if I2C_RC_OK is returned. All other codes
* indicate that the descriptor was not queued, and therefore will not be
* executed.
*
* Be careful about how/when you modify and queue descriptors. It's unsafe to
* modify a queued descriptor: it could start running at any time, and the bus
* might see a half-rewritten version of the descriptor. You _can_ queue the
* same descriptor twice, since the i2c-async driver is not allowed to modify
* any fields, but your callbacks need to be written with this case in mind.
*
* You can use queue management to help efficiently re-use descriptors.
* Typically you can alternate between multiple descriptors, always keeping one
* free to modify, and using your completion callbacks to cycle the free slot.
* You can also probe with i2c_async_cancel() to ensure a specific descriptor
* is not running before modifying it.
*/
extern int i2c_async_queue(int bus, int timeout, int q_mode,
int cookie, i2c_descriptor* desc);
/* Cancel a queued descriptor. Searches the queue, starting with the running
* descriptor, for a descriptor with a matching cookie, and attempts to remove
* it from the queue.
*
* - Returns I2C_RC_NOTFOUND if no match was found.
* - Returns I2C_RC_BUSY if the match is the currently running transaction.
* - Returns I2C_RC_OK if the match was found in the pending queue and was
* successfully removed from the queue.
*/
extern int i2c_async_cancel(int bus, int cookie);
/* Reserve a range of cookie values for use by a driver. This should only be
* done once at startup. The driver doesn't care what cookies are used, so you
* can manage them any way you like.
*
* A range [r, r+count) will be allocated, disjoint from all other allocated
* ranges and with r >= 1. Returns 'r'.
*/
extern int i2c_async_reserve_cookies(int bus, int count);
/* Synchronous API to read, write, and modify registers. The register address
* width is limited to 8 bits, although you can read and write multiple bytes.
*
* The modify operation can do a clear-and-set on a register with 8-bit values.
* It also returns the original value of the register before modification, if
* val != NULL.
*/
extern int i2c_reg_write(int bus, uint8_t addr, uint8_t reg,
int count, const uint8_t* buf);
extern int i2c_reg_read(int bus, uint8_t addr, uint8_t reg,
int count, uint8_t* buf);
extern int i2c_reg_modify1(int bus, uint8_t addr, uint8_t reg,
uint8_t clr, uint8_t set, uint8_t* val);
/* Variant to write a single 8-bit value to a register */
inline int i2c_reg_write1(int bus, uint8_t addr, uint8_t reg, uint8_t val)
{
return i2c_reg_write(bus, addr, reg, 1, &val);
}
/* Variant to read an 8-bit value from a register; returns the value
* directly, or returns -1 on any error. */
inline int i2c_reg_read1(int bus, uint8_t addr, uint8_t reg)
{
uint8_t v;
int i = i2c_reg_read(bus, addr, reg, 1, &v);
if(i == I2C_STATUS_OK)
return v;
else
return -1;
}
/* Variant to set or clear one bit in an 8-bit register */
inline int i2c_reg_setbit1(int bus, uint8_t addr, uint8_t reg,
int bit, int value, uint8_t* val)
{
uint8_t clr = 0, set = 0;
if(value)
set = 1 << bit;
else
clr = 1 << bit;
return i2c_reg_modify1(bus, addr, reg, clr, set, val);
}
/* Internal API */
/* Must be called by the target's i2c_init() before anyone uses I2C. */
extern void __i2c_async_init(void);
/* Called by the target's interrupt handlers to signal completion of the
* currently running descriptor. You must ensure IRQs are disabled before
* calling this function.
*
* If another descriptor is queued for submission, either as part of the
* same transaction or another one, then this may call __i2c_async_submit()
* to start the next descriptor.
*/
extern void __i2c_async_complete_callback(int bus, int status);
/* Called by the i2c-async core to submit a descriptor to the hardware bus.
* This function is implemented by the target. Just start the transfer and
* unmask needed interrupts here, and try to return as quickly as possible.
*/
extern void __i2c_async_submit(int bus, i2c_descriptor* desc);
#endif /* HAVE_I2C_ASYNC */
#endif /* __I2C_ASYNC_H__ */