xref: /linux/Documentation/power/charger-manager.rst (revision 8e07e0e3964ca4e23ce7b68e2096fe660a888942)
1===============
2Charger Manager
3===============
4
5	(C) 2011 MyungJoo Ham <myungjoo.ham@samsung.com>, GPL
6
7Charger Manager provides in-kernel battery charger management that
8requires temperature monitoring during suspend-to-RAM state
9and where each battery may have multiple chargers attached and the userland
10wants to look at the aggregated information of the multiple chargers.
11
12Charger Manager is a platform_driver with power-supply-class entries.
13An instance of Charger Manager (a platform-device created with Charger-Manager)
14represents an independent battery with chargers. If there are multiple
15batteries with their own chargers acting independently in a system,
16the system may need multiple instances of Charger Manager.
17
181. Introduction
19===============
20
21Charger Manager supports the following:
22
23* Support for multiple chargers (e.g., a device with USB, AC, and solar panels)
24	A system may have multiple chargers (or power sources) and some of
25	they may be activated at the same time. Each charger may have its
26	own power-supply-class and each power-supply-class can provide
27	different information about the battery status. This framework
28	aggregates charger-related information from multiple sources and
29	shows combined information as a single power-supply-class.
30
31* Support for in suspend-to-RAM polling (with suspend_again callback)
32	While the battery is being charged and the system is in suspend-to-RAM,
33	we may need to monitor the battery health by looking at the ambient or
34	battery temperature. We can accomplish this by waking up the system
35	periodically. However, such a method wakes up devices unnecessarily for
36	monitoring the battery health and tasks, and user processes that are
37	supposed to be kept suspended. That, in turn, incurs unnecessary power
38	consumption and slow down charging process. Or even, such peak power
39	consumption can stop chargers in the middle of charging
40	(external power input < device power consumption), which not
41	only affects the charging time, but the lifespan of the battery.
42
43	Charger Manager provides a function "cm_suspend_again" that can be
44	used as suspend_again callback of platform_suspend_ops. If the platform
45	requires tasks other than cm_suspend_again, it may implement its own
46	suspend_again callback that calls cm_suspend_again in the middle.
47	Normally, the platform will need to resume and suspend some devices
48	that are used by Charger Manager.
49
50* Support for premature full-battery event handling
51	If the battery voltage drops by "fullbatt_vchkdrop_uV" after
52	"fullbatt_vchkdrop_ms" from the full-battery event, the framework
53	restarts charging. This check is also performed while suspended by
54	setting wakeup time accordingly and using suspend_again.
55
56* Support for uevent-notify
57	With the charger-related events, the device sends
58	notification to users with UEVENT.
59
602. Global Charger-Manager Data related with suspend_again
61=========================================================
62In order to setup Charger Manager with suspend-again feature
63(in-suspend monitoring), the user should provide charger_global_desc
64with setup_charger_manager(`struct charger_global_desc *`).
65This charger_global_desc data for in-suspend monitoring is global
66as the name suggests. Thus, the user needs to provide only once even
67if there are multiple batteries. If there are multiple batteries, the
68multiple instances of Charger Manager share the same charger_global_desc
69and it will manage in-suspend monitoring for all instances of Charger Manager.
70
71The user needs to provide all the three entries to `struct charger_global_desc`
72properly in order to activate in-suspend monitoring:
73
74`char *rtc_name;`
75	The name of rtc (e.g., "rtc0") used to wakeup the system from
76	suspend for Charger Manager. The alarm interrupt (AIE) of the rtc
77	should be able to wake up the system from suspend. Charger Manager
78	saves and restores the alarm value and use the previously-defined
79	alarm if it is going to go off earlier than Charger Manager so that
80	Charger Manager does not interfere with previously-defined alarms.
81
82`bool (*rtc_only_wakeup)(void);`
83	This callback should let CM know whether
84	the wakeup-from-suspend is caused only by the alarm of "rtc" in the
85	same struct. If there is any other wakeup source triggered the
86	wakeup, it should return false. If the "rtc" is the only wakeup
87	reason, it should return true.
88
89`bool assume_timer_stops_in_suspend;`
90	if true, Charger Manager assumes that
91	the timer (CM uses jiffies as timer) stops during suspend. Then, CM
92	assumes that the suspend-duration is same as the alarm length.
93
94
953. How to setup suspend_again
96=============================
97Charger Manager provides a function "extern bool cm_suspend_again(void)".
98When cm_suspend_again is called, it monitors every battery. The suspend_ops
99callback of the system's platform_suspend_ops can call cm_suspend_again
100function to know whether Charger Manager wants to suspend again or not.
101If there are no other devices or tasks that want to use suspend_again
102feature, the platform_suspend_ops may directly refer to cm_suspend_again
103for its suspend_again callback.
104
105The cm_suspend_again() returns true (meaning "I want to suspend again")
106if the system was woken up by Charger Manager and the polling
107(in-suspend monitoring) results in "normal".
108
1094. Charger-Manager Data (struct charger_desc)
110=============================================
111For each battery charged independently from other batteries (if a series of
112batteries are charged by a single charger, they are counted as one independent
113battery), an instance of Charger Manager is attached to it. The following
114
115struct charger_desc elements:
116
117`char *psy_name;`
118	The power-supply-class name of the battery. Default is
119	"battery" if psy_name is NULL. Users can access the psy entries
120	at "/sys/class/power_supply/[psy_name]/".
121
122`enum polling_modes polling_mode;`
123	  CM_POLL_DISABLE:
124		do not poll this battery.
125	  CM_POLL_ALWAYS:
126		always poll this battery.
127	  CM_POLL_EXTERNAL_POWER_ONLY:
128		poll this battery if and only if an external power
129		source is attached.
130	  CM_POLL_CHARGING_ONLY:
131		poll this battery if and only if the battery is being charged.
132
133`unsigned int fullbatt_vchkdrop_ms; / unsigned int fullbatt_vchkdrop_uV;`
134	If both have non-zero values, Charger Manager will check the
135	battery voltage drop fullbatt_vchkdrop_ms after the battery is fully
136	charged. If the voltage drop is over fullbatt_vchkdrop_uV, Charger
137	Manager will try to recharge the battery by disabling and enabling
138	chargers. Recharge with voltage drop condition only (without delay
139	condition) is needed to be implemented with hardware interrupts from
140	fuel gauges or charger devices/chips.
141
142`unsigned int fullbatt_uV;`
143	If specified with a non-zero value, Charger Manager assumes
144	that the battery is full (capacity = 100) if the battery is not being
145	charged and the battery voltage is equal to or greater than
146	fullbatt_uV.
147
148`unsigned int polling_interval_ms;`
149	Required polling interval in ms. Charger Manager will poll
150	this battery every polling_interval_ms or more frequently.
151
152`enum data_source battery_present;`
153	CM_BATTERY_PRESENT:
154		assume that the battery exists.
155	CM_NO_BATTERY:
156		assume that the battery does not exists.
157	CM_FUEL_GAUGE:
158		get battery presence information from fuel gauge.
159	CM_CHARGER_STAT:
160		get battery presence from chargers.
161
162`char **psy_charger_stat;`
163	An array ending with NULL that has power-supply-class names of
164	chargers. Each power-supply-class should provide "PRESENT" (if
165	battery_present is "CM_CHARGER_STAT"), "ONLINE" (shows whether an
166	external power source is attached or not), and "STATUS" (shows whether
167	the battery is {"FULL" or not FULL} or {"FULL", "Charging",
168	"Discharging", "NotCharging"}).
169
170`int num_charger_regulators; / struct regulator_bulk_data *charger_regulators;`
171	Regulators representing the chargers in the form for
172	regulator framework's bulk functions.
173
174`char *psy_fuel_gauge;`
175	Power-supply-class name of the fuel gauge.
176
177`int (*temperature_out_of_range)(int *mC); / bool measure_battery_temp;`
178	This callback returns 0 if the temperature is safe for charging,
179	a positive number if it is too hot to charge, and a negative number
180	if it is too cold to charge. With the variable mC, the callback returns
181	the temperature in 1/1000 of centigrade.
182	The source of temperature can be battery or ambient one according to
183	the value of measure_battery_temp.
184
185
1865. Notify Charger-Manager of charger events: cm_notify_event()
187==============================================================
188If there is an charger event is required to notify
189Charger Manager, a charger device driver that triggers the event can call
190cm_notify_event(psy, type, msg) to notify the corresponding Charger Manager.
191In the function, psy is the charger driver's power_supply pointer, which is
192associated with Charger-Manager. The parameter "type"
193is the same as irq's type (enum cm_event_types). The event message "msg" is
194optional and is effective only if the event type is "UNDESCRIBED" or "OTHERS".
195
1966. Other Considerations
197=======================
198
199At the charger/battery-related events such as battery-pulled-out,
200charger-pulled-out, charger-inserted, DCIN-over/under-voltage, charger-stopped,
201and others critical to chargers, the system should be configured to wake up.
202At least the following should wake up the system from a suspend:
203a) charger-on/off b) external-power-in/out c) battery-in/out (while charging)
204
205It is usually accomplished by configuring the PMIC as a wakeup source.
206