1.. |struct dev_pm_domain| replace:: :c:type:`struct dev_pm_domain <dev_pm_domain>` 2.. |struct generic_pm_domain| replace:: :c:type:`struct generic_pm_domain <generic_pm_domain>` 3 4============ 5Device links 6============ 7 8By default, the driver core only enforces dependencies between devices 9that are borne out of a parent/child relationship within the device 10hierarchy: When suspending, resuming or shutting down the system, devices 11are ordered based on this relationship, i.e. children are always suspended 12before their parent, and the parent is always resumed before its children. 13 14Sometimes there is a need to represent device dependencies beyond the 15mere parent/child relationship, e.g. between siblings, and have the 16driver core automatically take care of them. 17 18Secondly, the driver core by default does not enforce any driver presence 19dependencies, i.e. that one device must be bound to a driver before 20another one can probe or function correctly. 21 22Often these two dependency types come together, so a device depends on 23another one both with regards to driver presence *and* with regards to 24suspend/resume and shutdown ordering. 25 26Device links allow representation of such dependencies in the driver core. 27 28In its standard form, a device link combines *both* dependency types: 29It guarantees correct suspend/resume and shutdown ordering between a 30"supplier" device and its "consumer" devices, and it guarantees driver 31presence on the supplier. The consumer devices are not probed before the 32supplier is bound to a driver, and they're unbound before the supplier 33is unbound. 34 35When driver presence on the supplier is irrelevant and only correct 36suspend/resume and shutdown ordering is needed, the device link may 37simply be set up with the ``DL_FLAG_STATELESS`` flag. In other words, 38enforcing driver presence on the supplier is optional. 39 40Another optional feature is runtime PM integration: By setting the 41``DL_FLAG_PM_RUNTIME`` flag on addition of the device link, the PM core 42is instructed to runtime resume the supplier and keep it active 43whenever and for as long as the consumer is runtime resumed. 44 45Usage 46===== 47 48The earliest point in time when device links can be added is after 49:c:func:`device_add()` has been called for the supplier and 50:c:func:`device_initialize()` has been called for the consumer. 51 52It is legal to add them later, but care must be taken that the system 53remains in a consistent state: E.g. a device link cannot be added in 54the midst of a suspend/resume transition, so either commencement of 55such a transition needs to be prevented with :c:func:`lock_system_sleep()`, 56or the device link needs to be added from a function which is guaranteed 57not to run in parallel to a suspend/resume transition, such as from a 58device ``->probe`` callback or a boot-time PCI quirk. 59 60Another example for an inconsistent state would be a device link that 61represents a driver presence dependency, yet is added from the consumer's 62``->probe`` callback while the supplier hasn't probed yet: Had the driver 63core known about the device link earlier, it wouldn't have probed the 64consumer in the first place. The onus is thus on the consumer to check 65presence of the supplier after adding the link, and defer probing on 66non-presence. 67 68If a device link is added in the ``->probe`` callback of the supplier or 69consumer driver, it is typically deleted in its ``->remove`` callback for 70symmetry. That way, if the driver is compiled as a module, the device 71link is added on module load and orderly deleted on unload. The same 72restrictions that apply to device link addition (e.g. exclusion of a 73parallel suspend/resume transition) apply equally to deletion. 74 75Several flags may be specified on device link addition, two of which 76have already been mentioned above: ``DL_FLAG_STATELESS`` to express that no 77driver presence dependency is needed (but only correct suspend/resume and 78shutdown ordering) and ``DL_FLAG_PM_RUNTIME`` to express that runtime PM 79integration is desired. 80 81Two other flags are specifically targeted at use cases where the device 82link is added from the consumer's ``->probe`` callback: ``DL_FLAG_RPM_ACTIVE`` 83can be specified to runtime resume the supplier upon addition of the 84device link. ``DL_FLAG_AUTOREMOVE`` causes the device link to be automatically 85purged when the consumer fails to probe or later unbinds. This obviates 86the need to explicitly delete the link in the ``->remove`` callback or in 87the error path of the ``->probe`` callback. 88 89Limitations 90=========== 91 92Driver authors should be aware that a driver presence dependency (i.e. when 93``DL_FLAG_STATELESS`` is not specified on link addition) may cause probing of 94the consumer to be deferred indefinitely. This can become a problem if the 95consumer is required to probe before a certain initcall level is reached. 96Worse, if the supplier driver is blacklisted or missing, the consumer will 97never be probed. 98 99Sometimes drivers depend on optional resources. They are able to operate 100in a degraded mode (reduced feature set or performance) when those resources 101are not present. An example is an SPI controller that can use a DMA engine 102or work in PIO mode. The controller can determine presence of the optional 103resources at probe time but on non-presence there is no way to know whether 104they will become available in the near future (due to a supplier driver 105probing) or never. Consequently it cannot be determined whether to defer 106probing or not. It would be possible to notify drivers when optional 107resources become available after probing, but it would come at a high cost 108for drivers as switching between modes of operation at runtime based on the 109availability of such resources would be much more complex than a mechanism 110based on probe deferral. In any case optional resources are beyond the 111scope of device links. 112 113Examples 114======== 115 116* An MMU device exists alongside a busmaster device, both are in the same 117 power domain. The MMU implements DMA address translation for the busmaster 118 device and shall be runtime resumed and kept active whenever and as long 119 as the busmaster device is active. The busmaster device's driver shall 120 not bind before the MMU is bound. To achieve this, a device link with 121 runtime PM integration is added from the busmaster device (consumer) 122 to the MMU device (supplier). The effect with regards to runtime PM 123 is the same as if the MMU was the parent of the master device. 124 125 The fact that both devices share the same power domain would normally 126 suggest usage of a |struct dev_pm_domain| or |struct generic_pm_domain|, 127 however these are not independent devices that happen to share a power 128 switch, but rather the MMU device serves the busmaster device and is 129 useless without it. A device link creates a synthetic hierarchical 130 relationship between the devices and is thus more apt. 131 132* A Thunderbolt host controller comprises a number of PCIe hotplug ports 133 and an NHI device to manage the PCIe switch. On resume from system sleep, 134 the NHI device needs to re-establish PCI tunnels to attached devices 135 before the hotplug ports can resume. If the hotplug ports were children 136 of the NHI, this resume order would automatically be enforced by the 137 PM core, but unfortunately they're aunts. The solution is to add 138 device links from the hotplug ports (consumers) to the NHI device 139 (supplier). A driver presence dependency is not necessary for this 140 use case. 141 142* Discrete GPUs in hybrid graphics laptops often feature an HDA controller 143 for HDMI/DP audio. In the device hierarchy the HDA controller is a sibling 144 of the VGA device, yet both share the same power domain and the HDA 145 controller is only ever needed when an HDMI/DP display is attached to the 146 VGA device. A device link from the HDA controller (consumer) to the 147 VGA device (supplier) aptly represents this relationship. 148 149* ACPI allows definition of a device start order by way of _DEP objects. 150 A classical example is when ACPI power management methods on one device 151 are implemented in terms of I\ :sup:`2`\ C accesses and require a specific 152 I\ :sup:`2`\ C controller to be present and functional for the power 153 management of the device in question to work. 154 155* In some SoCs a functional dependency exists from display, video codec and 156 video processing IP cores on transparent memory access IP cores that handle 157 burst access and compression/decompression. 158 159Alternatives 160============ 161 162* A |struct dev_pm_domain| can be used to override the bus, 163 class or device type callbacks. It is intended for devices sharing 164 a single on/off switch, however it does not guarantee a specific 165 suspend/resume ordering, this needs to be implemented separately. 166 It also does not by itself track the runtime PM status of the involved 167 devices and turn off the power switch only when all of them are runtime 168 suspended. Furthermore it cannot be used to enforce a specific shutdown 169 ordering or a driver presence dependency. 170 171* A |struct generic_pm_domain| is a lot more heavyweight than a 172 device link and does not allow for shutdown ordering or driver presence 173 dependencies. It also cannot be used on ACPI systems. 174 175Implementation 176============== 177 178The device hierarchy, which -- as the name implies -- is a tree, 179becomes a directed acyclic graph once device links are added. 180 181Ordering of these devices during suspend/resume is determined by the 182dpm_list. During shutdown it is determined by the devices_kset. With 183no device links present, the two lists are a flattened, one-dimensional 184representations of the device tree such that a device is placed behind 185all its ancestors. That is achieved by traversing the ACPI namespace 186or OpenFirmware device tree top-down and appending devices to the lists 187as they are discovered. 188 189Once device links are added, the lists need to satisfy the additional 190constraint that a device is placed behind all its suppliers, recursively. 191To ensure this, upon addition of the device link the consumer and the 192entire sub-graph below it (all children and consumers of the consumer) 193are moved to the end of the list. (Call to :c:func:`device_reorder_to_tail()` 194from :c:func:`device_link_add()`.) 195 196To prevent introduction of dependency loops into the graph, it is 197verified upon device link addition that the supplier is not dependent 198on the consumer or any children or consumers of the consumer. 199(Call to :c:func:`device_is_dependent()` from :c:func:`device_link_add()`.) 200If that constraint is violated, :c:func:`device_link_add()` will return 201``NULL`` and a ``WARNING`` will be logged. 202 203Notably this also prevents the addition of a device link from a parent 204device to a child. However the converse is allowed, i.e. a device link 205from a child to a parent. Since the driver core already guarantees 206correct suspend/resume and shutdown ordering between parent and child, 207such a device link only makes sense if a driver presence dependency is 208needed on top of that. In this case driver authors should weigh 209carefully if a device link is at all the right tool for the purpose. 210A more suitable approach might be to simply use deferred probing or 211add a device flag causing the parent driver to be probed before the 212child one. 213 214State machine 215============= 216 217.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/device.h 218 :functions: device_link_state 219 220:: 221 222 .=============================. 223 | | 224 v | 225 DORMANT <=> AVAILABLE <=> CONSUMER_PROBE => ACTIVE 226 ^ | 227 | | 228 '============ SUPPLIER_UNBIND <============' 229 230* The initial state of a device link is automatically determined by 231 :c:func:`device_link_add()` based on the driver presence on the supplier 232 and consumer. If the link is created before any devices are probed, it 233 is set to ``DL_STATE_DORMANT``. 234 235* When a supplier device is bound to a driver, links to its consumers 236 progress to ``DL_STATE_AVAILABLE``. 237 (Call to :c:func:`device_links_driver_bound()` from 238 :c:func:`driver_bound()`.) 239 240* Before a consumer device is probed, presence of supplier drivers is 241 verified by checking that links to suppliers are in ``DL_STATE_AVAILABLE`` 242 state. The state of the links is updated to ``DL_STATE_CONSUMER_PROBE``. 243 (Call to :c:func:`device_links_check_suppliers()` from 244 :c:func:`really_probe()`.) 245 This prevents the supplier from unbinding. 246 (Call to :c:func:`wait_for_device_probe()` from 247 :c:func:`device_links_unbind_consumers()`.) 248 249* If the probe fails, links to suppliers revert back to ``DL_STATE_AVAILABLE``. 250 (Call to :c:func:`device_links_no_driver()` from :c:func:`really_probe()`.) 251 252* If the probe succeeds, links to suppliers progress to ``DL_STATE_ACTIVE``. 253 (Call to :c:func:`device_links_driver_bound()` from :c:func:`driver_bound()`.) 254 255* When the consumer's driver is later on removed, links to suppliers revert 256 back to ``DL_STATE_AVAILABLE``. 257 (Call to :c:func:`__device_links_no_driver()` from 258 :c:func:`device_links_driver_cleanup()`, which in turn is called from 259 :c:func:`__device_release_driver()`.) 260 261* Before a supplier's driver is removed, links to consumers that are not 262 bound to a driver are updated to ``DL_STATE_SUPPLIER_UNBIND``. 263 (Call to :c:func:`device_links_busy()` from 264 :c:func:`__device_release_driver()`.) 265 This prevents the consumers from binding. 266 (Call to :c:func:`device_links_check_suppliers()` from 267 :c:func:`really_probe()`.) 268 Consumers that are bound are freed from their driver; consumers that are 269 probing are waited for until they are done. 270 (Call to :c:func:`device_links_unbind_consumers()` from 271 :c:func:`__device_release_driver()`.) 272 Once all links to consumers are in ``DL_STATE_SUPPLIER_UNBIND`` state, 273 the supplier driver is released and the links revert to ``DL_STATE_DORMANT``. 274 (Call to :c:func:`device_links_driver_cleanup()` from 275 :c:func:`__device_release_driver()`.) 276 277API 278=== 279 280.. kernel-doc:: drivers/base/core.c 281 :functions: device_link_add device_link_del 282