xref: /illumos-gate/usr/src/man/man9e/usba_hcdi_pipe_intr_xfer.9e (revision c193478586214940af708897e19c9a878b6a6223)
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12.\" Copyright 2016 Joyent, Inc.
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14.Dd Dec 22, 2016
15.Dt USBA_HCDI_PIPE_INTR_XFER 9E
16.Os
17.Sh NAME
18.Nm usba_hcdi_pipe_intr_xfer
19.Nd perform a USB interrupt transfer
20.Sh SYNOPSIS
21.In sys/usb/usba/hcdi.h
22.Ft int
23.Fo prefix_hcdi_pipe_intr_xfer
24.Fa "usba_pipe_handle_data_t *ph"
25.Fa "usb_intr_req_t *uirp"
26.Fa "usb_flags_t usb_flags"
27.Fc
28.Sh INTERFACE LEVEL
29.Sy Volatile -
30illumos USB HCD private function
31.Pp
32This is a private function that is not part of the stable DDI. It may be
33removed or changed at any time.
34.Sh PARAMETERS
35.Bl -tag -width Fa
36.It Fa ph
37A pointer to a USB pipe handle as defined in
38.Xr usba_pipe_handle_data 9S .
39.It Fa uirp
40A pointer to a USB interrupt transfer request. The structure's members
41are documented in
42.Xr usb_intr_req 9S .
43.It Fa usb_flags
44Flags which describe how allocations should be performed. Valid flags
45are:
46.Bl -tag -width Sy
47.It Sy USB_FLAGS_NOSLEEP
48Do not block waiting for memory. If memory is not available the allocation
49will fail.
50.It Sy USB_FLAGS_SLEEP
51Perform a blocking allocation. If memory is not available, the function
52will wait until memory is made available.
53.Pp
54Note, the request may still fail even if
55.Sy USB_FLAGS_SLEEP
56is specified.
57.El
58.El
59.Sh DESCRIPTION
60The
61.Fn usba_hcdi_pipe_intr_xfer
62entry point is used to initiate an
63.Em asynchronous
64USB interrupt transfer on the pipe
65.Fa ph .
66The specific USB interrupt transfer is provided in
67.Fa uirp .
68For more background on transfer types, see
69.Xr usba_hcdi 9E .
70.Pp
71The host controller driver should first check the USB address of the
72pipe handle. It may correspond to the root hub. If it does, rather than
73initiating an I/O transfer, the driver may need to emulate it.
74.Pp
75Unlike other transfers, interrupt transfers may be periodic. If the
76transfer is meant to be a one-shot, then the
77.Sy USB_ATTRS_ONE_XFER
78flag will be set in the
79.Sy intr_attributes
80member of the
81.Fa uirp
82structure. If the
83.Sy USB_ATTRS_ONE_XFER
84flag is not set, then the transfer begins a periodic transfer. Periodic
85transfers have different handling and behavior.
86.Pp
87Interrupt transfers may send data to the device or receive data from the
88device. A given interrupt endpoint is uni-directional. The direction can
89be determined from the endpoint address based on the
90.Sy p_ep
91member of
92.Fa ubrp .
93See
94.Xr usb_ep_descr 9S
95for more information on how to determine the direction of the endpoint.
96.Pp
97The device driver should allocate memory, whether memory suitable for a
98DMA transfer or otherwise, to perform the transfer. For all memory
99allocated, it should honor the values in
100.Fa usb_flags
101to determine whether or not it should block for allocations.
102.Pp
103The length of the interrupt transfer and its data can be found in the
104.Sy intr_len
105and
106.Sy intr_data
107members of
108.Fa uirp
109respectively.
110 The
111.Xr mblk 9S
112structure that should not be used directly and data should be copied to
113or from the data buffer that will go the controller.
114.Pp
115Unlike bulk and control transfers, the
116.Fa intr_data
117member may not be allocated for interrupt-IN transfers. In such cases,
118the device driver is required to allocate the message block through
119something like
120.Xr allocb 9F
121and assign it to the
122.Sy intr_data
123member.
124.Pp
125If the driver successfully schedules the I/O, then it should return
126.Sy USB_SUCCESS .
127When the I/O completes, it must call
128.Xr usba_hcdi_cb 9F
129with
130.Fa uirp .
131If the transfer fails, but the driver returned
132.Sy USB_SUCCESS ,
133it still must call
134.Xr usba_hcdi_cb 9F
135and should specify an error there.
136.Pp
137It is the driver's responsibility to time out one-shot interrupt transfer
138requests. If the timeout in the request as indicated in the
139.Sy intr_timeout
140member of
141.Fa uirp
142is set to zero, then the driver should use the USBA default timeout of
143.Sy HCDI_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT .
144All timeout values are in
145.Em seconds .
146.Ss Periodic Transfers
147When the
148.Sy USB_ATTRS_ONE_XFER
149flag is not present, it indicates that a periodic interrupt transfer is
150being initiated. Once a periodic interrupt transfer is initiated, every
151time data is received the driver should call
152.Xr usba_hcdi_cb 9F
153with the updated data.
154.Pp
155When a periodic transfer is initiated, many controller drivers will
156allocate multiple transfers up front and schedule them all. Many drivers
157do this to ensure that data isn't lost between servicing the first
158transfer and scheduling the next. The number of such transfers used
159depends on the polling frequency specified in the endpoint descriptor.
160.Pp
161Unless an error occurs, the driver must not use the original interrupt
162request,
163.Fa uirp .
164Instead, it should duplicate the request through the
165.Xr usba_hcdi_dup_intr_req 9F
166function before calling
167.Xr usba_hcdi_cb 9F .
168.Pp
169The driver should return the original transfer in one of the following
170conditions:
171.Bl -bullet
172.It
173A pipe reset request came in from the
174.Xr usba_hcdi_pipe_rest 9E
175entry point.
176.It
177A request to stop polling came in from the
178.Xr usba_hcdi_pipe_stop_intr_polling 9E
179entry point.
180.It
181A request to close the pipe came in from the
182.Xr usba_hcdi_pipe_close 9E
183entry point.
184.It
185An out of memory condition occurred. The caller should call
186.Xr usba_hcdi_cb 9F
187with the code
188.Sy USB_CR_NO_RESOURCES .
189.It
190Some other transfer error occurred.
191.El
192.Pp
193If the periodic interrupt transfer is for the root hub, the driver will
194need to emulate the behavior of a hub as specified in the USB
195specification. For more information, see the
196.Sx Root Hub Management
197section in
198.Xr usba_hcdi 9E .
199.Ss Callback Handling
200When the interrupt transfer completes, the driver should consider the
201following items to determine what actions it should take on the
202callback:
203.Sy USB_SUCCESS .
204Otherwise, it should return the appropriate USB error. If uncertain, use
205.Sy USB_FAILURE .
206.Bl -bullet
207.It
208If the transfer timed out, it should remove the transfer from the
209outstanding list, queue the next transfer, and return the transfer back
210to the OS with the error code
211.Sy USB_CR_TIMEOUT
212with
213.Xr usba_hcdi_cb 9F .
214.It
215If the transfer failed, it should find the appropriate error and call
216.Xr usba_hcdi_cb 9F
217with that error.
218.It
219If the transfer succeeded, but less data was transferred than expected,
220consult the
221.Sy intr_attributes
222member of the
223.Fa uirp .
224If the
225.Sy USB_ATTRS_SHORT_XFER_OK
226flag is not present, then the driver should call
227.Xr usba_hcdi_cb 9F
228with the error
229.Sy USB_CR_DATA_UNDERRUN .
230.It
231If the transfer was going to the host, then the driver should copy the
232data into the transfer's message block and update the
233.Sy b_wptr
234member of the
235.Xr mblk 9S .
236.It
237If everything was successful, call
238.Xr usba_hcdi_cb 9F
239with the code
240.Sy USB_CR_OK .
241.It
242If this was a periodic transfer, it should reschedule the transfer.
243.El
244.Sh RETURN VALUES
245Upon successful completion, the
246.Fn usba_hcdi_pipe_intr_xfer
247function should return
248function should return
249.Sy USB_SUCCESS .
250Otherwise, it should return the appropriate USB error. If uncertain, use
251.Sy USB_FAILURE .
252.Sh SEE ALSO
253.Xr usba_hcdi 9E ,
254.Xr usba_hcdi_pipe_close 9E ,
255.Xr usba_hcdi_pipe_rest 9E ,
256.Xr usba_hcdi_pipe_stop_intr_polling 9E ,
257.Xr allocb 9F ,
258.Xr usba_hcdi_cb 9F ,
259.Xr usba_hcdi_dup_intr_req 9F ,
260.Xr mblk 9S ,
261.Xr usb_ep_descr 9S ,
262.Xr usb_intr_req 9S ,
263.Xr usba_pipe_handle_data 9S
264