1 #include <linux/module.h> 2 #include <linux/string.h> 3 #include <linux/bitops.h> 4 #include <linux/slab.h> 5 #include <linux/init.h> 6 #include <linux/usb.h> 7 #include <linux/wait.h> 8 #include "hcd.h" 9 10 #define to_urb(d) container_of(d, struct urb, kref) 11 12 static void urb_destroy(struct kref *kref) 13 { 14 struct urb *urb = to_urb(kref); 15 16 if (urb->transfer_flags & URB_FREE_BUFFER) 17 kfree(urb->transfer_buffer); 18 19 kfree(urb); 20 } 21 22 /** 23 * usb_init_urb - initializes a urb so that it can be used by a USB driver 24 * @urb: pointer to the urb to initialize 25 * 26 * Initializes a urb so that the USB subsystem can use it properly. 27 * 28 * If a urb is created with a call to usb_alloc_urb() it is not 29 * necessary to call this function. Only use this if you allocate the 30 * space for a struct urb on your own. If you call this function, be 31 * careful when freeing the memory for your urb that it is no longer in 32 * use by the USB core. 33 * 34 * Only use this function if you _really_ understand what you are doing. 35 */ 36 void usb_init_urb(struct urb *urb) 37 { 38 if (urb) { 39 memset(urb, 0, sizeof(*urb)); 40 kref_init(&urb->kref); 41 spin_lock_init(&urb->lock); 42 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&urb->anchor_list); 43 } 44 } 45 46 /** 47 * usb_alloc_urb - creates a new urb for a USB driver to use 48 * @iso_packets: number of iso packets for this urb 49 * @mem_flags: the type of memory to allocate, see kmalloc() for a list of 50 * valid options for this. 51 * 52 * Creates an urb for the USB driver to use, initializes a few internal 53 * structures, incrementes the usage counter, and returns a pointer to it. 54 * 55 * If no memory is available, NULL is returned. 56 * 57 * If the driver want to use this urb for interrupt, control, or bulk 58 * endpoints, pass '0' as the number of iso packets. 59 * 60 * The driver must call usb_free_urb() when it is finished with the urb. 61 */ 62 struct urb *usb_alloc_urb(int iso_packets, gfp_t mem_flags) 63 { 64 struct urb *urb; 65 66 urb = kmalloc(sizeof(struct urb) + 67 iso_packets * sizeof(struct usb_iso_packet_descriptor), 68 mem_flags); 69 if (!urb) { 70 err("alloc_urb: kmalloc failed"); 71 return NULL; 72 } 73 usb_init_urb(urb); 74 return urb; 75 } 76 77 /** 78 * usb_free_urb - frees the memory used by a urb when all users of it are finished 79 * @urb: pointer to the urb to free, may be NULL 80 * 81 * Must be called when a user of a urb is finished with it. When the last user 82 * of the urb calls this function, the memory of the urb is freed. 83 * 84 * Note: The transfer buffer associated with the urb is not freed, that must be 85 * done elsewhere. 86 */ 87 void usb_free_urb(struct urb *urb) 88 { 89 if (urb) 90 kref_put(&urb->kref, urb_destroy); 91 } 92 93 /** 94 * usb_get_urb - increments the reference count of the urb 95 * @urb: pointer to the urb to modify, may be NULL 96 * 97 * This must be called whenever a urb is transferred from a device driver to a 98 * host controller driver. This allows proper reference counting to happen 99 * for urbs. 100 * 101 * A pointer to the urb with the incremented reference counter is returned. 102 */ 103 struct urb * usb_get_urb(struct urb *urb) 104 { 105 if (urb) 106 kref_get(&urb->kref); 107 return urb; 108 } 109 110 /** 111 * usb_anchor_urb - anchors an URB while it is processed 112 * @urb: pointer to the urb to anchor 113 * @anchor: pointer to the anchor 114 * 115 * This can be called to have access to URBs which are to be executed 116 * without bothering to track them 117 */ 118 void usb_anchor_urb(struct urb *urb, struct usb_anchor *anchor) 119 { 120 unsigned long flags; 121 122 spin_lock_irqsave(&anchor->lock, flags); 123 usb_get_urb(urb); 124 list_add_tail(&urb->anchor_list, &anchor->urb_list); 125 urb->anchor = anchor; 126 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&anchor->lock, flags); 127 } 128 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(usb_anchor_urb); 129 130 /** 131 * usb_unanchor_urb - unanchors an URB 132 * @urb: pointer to the urb to anchor 133 * 134 * Call this to stop the system keeping track of this URB 135 */ 136 void usb_unanchor_urb(struct urb *urb) 137 { 138 unsigned long flags; 139 struct usb_anchor *anchor; 140 141 if (!urb) 142 return; 143 144 anchor = urb->anchor; 145 if (!anchor) 146 return; 147 148 spin_lock_irqsave(&anchor->lock, flags); 149 if (unlikely(anchor != urb->anchor)) { 150 /* we've lost the race to another thread */ 151 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&anchor->lock, flags); 152 return; 153 } 154 urb->anchor = NULL; 155 list_del(&urb->anchor_list); 156 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&anchor->lock, flags); 157 usb_put_urb(urb); 158 if (list_empty(&anchor->urb_list)) 159 wake_up(&anchor->wait); 160 } 161 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(usb_unanchor_urb); 162 163 /*-------------------------------------------------------------------*/ 164 165 /** 166 * usb_submit_urb - issue an asynchronous transfer request for an endpoint 167 * @urb: pointer to the urb describing the request 168 * @mem_flags: the type of memory to allocate, see kmalloc() for a list 169 * of valid options for this. 170 * 171 * This submits a transfer request, and transfers control of the URB 172 * describing that request to the USB subsystem. Request completion will 173 * be indicated later, asynchronously, by calling the completion handler. 174 * The three types of completion are success, error, and unlink 175 * (a software-induced fault, also called "request cancellation"). 176 * 177 * URBs may be submitted in interrupt context. 178 * 179 * The caller must have correctly initialized the URB before submitting 180 * it. Functions such as usb_fill_bulk_urb() and usb_fill_control_urb() are 181 * available to ensure that most fields are correctly initialized, for 182 * the particular kind of transfer, although they will not initialize 183 * any transfer flags. 184 * 185 * Successful submissions return 0; otherwise this routine returns a 186 * negative error number. If the submission is successful, the complete() 187 * callback from the URB will be called exactly once, when the USB core and 188 * Host Controller Driver (HCD) are finished with the URB. When the completion 189 * function is called, control of the URB is returned to the device 190 * driver which issued the request. The completion handler may then 191 * immediately free or reuse that URB. 192 * 193 * With few exceptions, USB device drivers should never access URB fields 194 * provided by usbcore or the HCD until its complete() is called. 195 * The exceptions relate to periodic transfer scheduling. For both 196 * interrupt and isochronous urbs, as part of successful URB submission 197 * urb->interval is modified to reflect the actual transfer period used 198 * (normally some power of two units). And for isochronous urbs, 199 * urb->start_frame is modified to reflect when the URB's transfers were 200 * scheduled to start. Not all isochronous transfer scheduling policies 201 * will work, but most host controller drivers should easily handle ISO 202 * queues going from now until 10-200 msec into the future. 203 * 204 * For control endpoints, the synchronous usb_control_msg() call is 205 * often used (in non-interrupt context) instead of this call. 206 * That is often used through convenience wrappers, for the requests 207 * that are standardized in the USB 2.0 specification. For bulk 208 * endpoints, a synchronous usb_bulk_msg() call is available. 209 * 210 * Request Queuing: 211 * 212 * URBs may be submitted to endpoints before previous ones complete, to 213 * minimize the impact of interrupt latencies and system overhead on data 214 * throughput. With that queuing policy, an endpoint's queue would never 215 * be empty. This is required for continuous isochronous data streams, 216 * and may also be required for some kinds of interrupt transfers. Such 217 * queuing also maximizes bandwidth utilization by letting USB controllers 218 * start work on later requests before driver software has finished the 219 * completion processing for earlier (successful) requests. 220 * 221 * As of Linux 2.6, all USB endpoint transfer queues support depths greater 222 * than one. This was previously a HCD-specific behavior, except for ISO 223 * transfers. Non-isochronous endpoint queues are inactive during cleanup 224 * after faults (transfer errors or cancellation). 225 * 226 * Reserved Bandwidth Transfers: 227 * 228 * Periodic transfers (interrupt or isochronous) are performed repeatedly, 229 * using the interval specified in the urb. Submitting the first urb to 230 * the endpoint reserves the bandwidth necessary to make those transfers. 231 * If the USB subsystem can't allocate sufficient bandwidth to perform 232 * the periodic request, submitting such a periodic request should fail. 233 * 234 * Device drivers must explicitly request that repetition, by ensuring that 235 * some URB is always on the endpoint's queue (except possibly for short 236 * periods during completion callacks). When there is no longer an urb 237 * queued, the endpoint's bandwidth reservation is canceled. This means 238 * drivers can use their completion handlers to ensure they keep bandwidth 239 * they need, by reinitializing and resubmitting the just-completed urb 240 * until the driver longer needs that periodic bandwidth. 241 * 242 * Memory Flags: 243 * 244 * The general rules for how to decide which mem_flags to use 245 * are the same as for kmalloc. There are four 246 * different possible values; GFP_KERNEL, GFP_NOFS, GFP_NOIO and 247 * GFP_ATOMIC. 248 * 249 * GFP_NOFS is not ever used, as it has not been implemented yet. 250 * 251 * GFP_ATOMIC is used when 252 * (a) you are inside a completion handler, an interrupt, bottom half, 253 * tasklet or timer, or 254 * (b) you are holding a spinlock or rwlock (does not apply to 255 * semaphores), or 256 * (c) current->state != TASK_RUNNING, this is the case only after 257 * you've changed it. 258 * 259 * GFP_NOIO is used in the block io path and error handling of storage 260 * devices. 261 * 262 * All other situations use GFP_KERNEL. 263 * 264 * Some more specific rules for mem_flags can be inferred, such as 265 * (1) start_xmit, timeout, and receive methods of network drivers must 266 * use GFP_ATOMIC (they are called with a spinlock held); 267 * (2) queuecommand methods of scsi drivers must use GFP_ATOMIC (also 268 * called with a spinlock held); 269 * (3) If you use a kernel thread with a network driver you must use 270 * GFP_NOIO, unless (b) or (c) apply; 271 * (4) after you have done a down() you can use GFP_KERNEL, unless (b) or (c) 272 * apply or your are in a storage driver's block io path; 273 * (5) USB probe and disconnect can use GFP_KERNEL unless (b) or (c) apply; and 274 * (6) changing firmware on a running storage or net device uses 275 * GFP_NOIO, unless b) or c) apply 276 * 277 */ 278 int usb_submit_urb(struct urb *urb, gfp_t mem_flags) 279 { 280 int pipe, temp, max; 281 struct usb_device *dev; 282 int is_out; 283 284 if (!urb || urb->hcpriv || !urb->complete) 285 return -EINVAL; 286 if (!(dev = urb->dev) || 287 (dev->state < USB_STATE_DEFAULT) || 288 (!dev->bus) || (dev->devnum <= 0)) 289 return -ENODEV; 290 if (dev->bus->controller->power.power_state.event != PM_EVENT_ON 291 || dev->state == USB_STATE_SUSPENDED) 292 return -EHOSTUNREACH; 293 294 urb->status = -EINPROGRESS; 295 urb->actual_length = 0; 296 297 /* Lots of sanity checks, so HCDs can rely on clean data 298 * and don't need to duplicate tests 299 */ 300 pipe = urb->pipe; 301 temp = usb_pipetype(pipe); 302 is_out = usb_pipeout(pipe); 303 304 if (!usb_pipecontrol(pipe) && dev->state < USB_STATE_CONFIGURED) 305 return -ENODEV; 306 307 /* FIXME there should be a sharable lock protecting us against 308 * config/altsetting changes and disconnects, kicking in here. 309 * (here == before maxpacket, and eventually endpoint type, 310 * checks get made.) 311 */ 312 313 max = usb_maxpacket(dev, pipe, is_out); 314 if (max <= 0) { 315 dev_dbg(&dev->dev, 316 "bogus endpoint ep%d%s in %s (bad maxpacket %d)\n", 317 usb_pipeendpoint(pipe), is_out ? "out" : "in", 318 __FUNCTION__, max); 319 return -EMSGSIZE; 320 } 321 322 /* periodic transfers limit size per frame/uframe, 323 * but drivers only control those sizes for ISO. 324 * while we're checking, initialize return status. 325 */ 326 if (temp == PIPE_ISOCHRONOUS) { 327 int n, len; 328 329 /* "high bandwidth" mode, 1-3 packets/uframe? */ 330 if (dev->speed == USB_SPEED_HIGH) { 331 int mult = 1 + ((max >> 11) & 0x03); 332 max &= 0x07ff; 333 max *= mult; 334 } 335 336 if (urb->number_of_packets <= 0) 337 return -EINVAL; 338 for (n = 0; n < urb->number_of_packets; n++) { 339 len = urb->iso_frame_desc[n].length; 340 if (len < 0 || len > max) 341 return -EMSGSIZE; 342 urb->iso_frame_desc[n].status = -EXDEV; 343 urb->iso_frame_desc[n].actual_length = 0; 344 } 345 } 346 347 /* the I/O buffer must be mapped/unmapped, except when length=0 */ 348 if (urb->transfer_buffer_length < 0) 349 return -EMSGSIZE; 350 351 #ifdef DEBUG 352 /* stuff that drivers shouldn't do, but which shouldn't 353 * cause problems in HCDs if they get it wrong. 354 */ 355 { 356 unsigned int orig_flags = urb->transfer_flags; 357 unsigned int allowed; 358 359 /* enforce simple/standard policy */ 360 allowed = (URB_NO_TRANSFER_DMA_MAP | URB_NO_SETUP_DMA_MAP | 361 URB_NO_INTERRUPT); 362 switch (temp) { 363 case PIPE_BULK: 364 if (is_out) 365 allowed |= URB_ZERO_PACKET; 366 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 367 case PIPE_CONTROL: 368 allowed |= URB_NO_FSBR; /* only affects UHCI */ 369 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 370 default: /* all non-iso endpoints */ 371 if (!is_out) 372 allowed |= URB_SHORT_NOT_OK; 373 break; 374 case PIPE_ISOCHRONOUS: 375 allowed |= URB_ISO_ASAP; 376 break; 377 } 378 urb->transfer_flags &= allowed; 379 380 /* fail if submitter gave bogus flags */ 381 if (urb->transfer_flags != orig_flags) { 382 err("BOGUS urb flags, %x --> %x", 383 orig_flags, urb->transfer_flags); 384 return -EINVAL; 385 } 386 } 387 #endif 388 /* 389 * Force periodic transfer intervals to be legal values that are 390 * a power of two (so HCDs don't need to). 391 * 392 * FIXME want bus->{intr,iso}_sched_horizon values here. Each HC 393 * supports different values... this uses EHCI/UHCI defaults (and 394 * EHCI can use smaller non-default values). 395 */ 396 switch (temp) { 397 case PIPE_ISOCHRONOUS: 398 case PIPE_INTERRUPT: 399 /* too small? */ 400 if (urb->interval <= 0) 401 return -EINVAL; 402 /* too big? */ 403 switch (dev->speed) { 404 case USB_SPEED_HIGH: /* units are microframes */ 405 // NOTE usb handles 2^15 406 if (urb->interval > (1024 * 8)) 407 urb->interval = 1024 * 8; 408 temp = 1024 * 8; 409 break; 410 case USB_SPEED_FULL: /* units are frames/msec */ 411 case USB_SPEED_LOW: 412 if (temp == PIPE_INTERRUPT) { 413 if (urb->interval > 255) 414 return -EINVAL; 415 // NOTE ohci only handles up to 32 416 temp = 128; 417 } else { 418 if (urb->interval > 1024) 419 urb->interval = 1024; 420 // NOTE usb and ohci handle up to 2^15 421 temp = 1024; 422 } 423 break; 424 default: 425 return -EINVAL; 426 } 427 /* power of two? */ 428 while (temp > urb->interval) 429 temp >>= 1; 430 urb->interval = temp; 431 } 432 433 return usb_hcd_submit_urb(urb, mem_flags); 434 } 435 436 /*-------------------------------------------------------------------*/ 437 438 /** 439 * usb_unlink_urb - abort/cancel a transfer request for an endpoint 440 * @urb: pointer to urb describing a previously submitted request, 441 * may be NULL 442 * 443 * This routine cancels an in-progress request. URBs complete only 444 * once per submission, and may be canceled only once per submission. 445 * Successful cancellation means the requests's completion handler will 446 * be called with a status code indicating that the request has been 447 * canceled (rather than any other code) and will quickly be removed 448 * from host controller data structures. 449 * 450 * This request is always asynchronous. 451 * Success is indicated by returning -EINPROGRESS, 452 * at which time the URB will normally have been unlinked but not yet 453 * given back to the device driver. When it is called, the completion 454 * function will see urb->status == -ECONNRESET. Failure is indicated 455 * by any other return value. Unlinking will fail when the URB is not 456 * currently "linked" (i.e., it was never submitted, or it was unlinked 457 * before, or the hardware is already finished with it), even if the 458 * completion handler has not yet run. 459 * 460 * Unlinking and Endpoint Queues: 461 * 462 * Host Controller Drivers (HCDs) place all the URBs for a particular 463 * endpoint in a queue. Normally the queue advances as the controller 464 * hardware processes each request. But when an URB terminates with an 465 * error its queue stops, at least until that URB's completion routine 466 * returns. It is guaranteed that the queue will not restart until all 467 * its unlinked URBs have been fully retired, with their completion 468 * routines run, even if that's not until some time after the original 469 * completion handler returns. Normally the same behavior and guarantees 470 * apply when an URB terminates because it was unlinked; however if an 471 * URB is unlinked before the hardware has started to execute it, then 472 * its queue is not guaranteed to stop until all the preceding URBs have 473 * completed. 474 * 475 * This means that USB device drivers can safely build deep queues for 476 * large or complex transfers, and clean them up reliably after any sort 477 * of aborted transfer by unlinking all pending URBs at the first fault. 478 * 479 * Note that an URB terminating early because a short packet was received 480 * will count as an error if and only if the URB_SHORT_NOT_OK flag is set. 481 * Also, that all unlinks performed in any URB completion handler must 482 * be asynchronous. 483 * 484 * Queues for isochronous endpoints are treated differently, because they 485 * advance at fixed rates. Such queues do not stop when an URB is unlinked. 486 * An unlinked URB may leave a gap in the stream of packets. It is undefined 487 * whether such gaps can be filled in. 488 * 489 * When a control URB terminates with an error, it is likely that the 490 * status stage of the transfer will not take place, even if it is merely 491 * a soft error resulting from a short-packet with URB_SHORT_NOT_OK set. 492 */ 493 int usb_unlink_urb(struct urb *urb) 494 { 495 if (!urb) 496 return -EINVAL; 497 if (!(urb->dev && urb->dev->bus)) 498 return -ENODEV; 499 return usb_hcd_unlink_urb(urb, -ECONNRESET); 500 } 501 502 /** 503 * usb_kill_urb - cancel a transfer request and wait for it to finish 504 * @urb: pointer to URB describing a previously submitted request, 505 * may be NULL 506 * 507 * This routine cancels an in-progress request. It is guaranteed that 508 * upon return all completion handlers will have finished and the URB 509 * will be totally idle and available for reuse. These features make 510 * this an ideal way to stop I/O in a disconnect() callback or close() 511 * function. If the request has not already finished or been unlinked 512 * the completion handler will see urb->status == -ENOENT. 513 * 514 * While the routine is running, attempts to resubmit the URB will fail 515 * with error -EPERM. Thus even if the URB's completion handler always 516 * tries to resubmit, it will not succeed and the URB will become idle. 517 * 518 * This routine may not be used in an interrupt context (such as a bottom 519 * half or a completion handler), or when holding a spinlock, or in other 520 * situations where the caller can't schedule(). 521 */ 522 void usb_kill_urb(struct urb *urb) 523 { 524 might_sleep(); 525 if (!(urb && urb->dev && urb->dev->bus)) 526 return; 527 spin_lock_irq(&urb->lock); 528 ++urb->reject; 529 spin_unlock_irq(&urb->lock); 530 531 usb_hcd_unlink_urb(urb, -ENOENT); 532 wait_event(usb_kill_urb_queue, atomic_read(&urb->use_count) == 0); 533 534 spin_lock_irq(&urb->lock); 535 --urb->reject; 536 spin_unlock_irq(&urb->lock); 537 } 538 539 /** 540 * usb_kill_anchored_urbs - cancel transfer requests en masse 541 * @anchor: anchor the requests are bound to 542 * 543 * this allows all outstanding URBs to be killed starting 544 * from the back of the queue 545 */ 546 void usb_kill_anchored_urbs(struct usb_anchor *anchor) 547 { 548 struct urb *victim; 549 550 spin_lock_irq(&anchor->lock); 551 while (!list_empty(&anchor->urb_list)) { 552 victim = list_entry(anchor->urb_list.prev, struct urb, anchor_list); 553 /* we must make sure the URB isn't freed before we kill it*/ 554 usb_get_urb(victim); 555 spin_unlock_irq(&anchor->lock); 556 /* this will unanchor the URB */ 557 usb_kill_urb(victim); 558 usb_put_urb(victim); 559 spin_lock_irq(&anchor->lock); 560 } 561 spin_unlock_irq(&anchor->lock); 562 } 563 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(usb_kill_anchored_urbs); 564 565 /** 566 * usb_wait_anchor_empty_timeout - wait for an anchor to be unused 567 * @anchor: the anchor you want to become unused 568 * @timeout: how long you are willing to wait in milliseconds 569 * 570 * Call this is you want to be sure all an anchor's 571 * URBs have finished 572 */ 573 int usb_wait_anchor_empty_timeout(struct usb_anchor *anchor, 574 unsigned int timeout) 575 { 576 return wait_event_timeout(anchor->wait, list_empty(&anchor->urb_list), 577 msecs_to_jiffies(timeout)); 578 } 579 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(usb_wait_anchor_empty_timeout); 580 581 EXPORT_SYMBOL(usb_init_urb); 582 EXPORT_SYMBOL(usb_alloc_urb); 583 EXPORT_SYMBOL(usb_free_urb); 584 EXPORT_SYMBOL(usb_get_urb); 585 EXPORT_SYMBOL(usb_submit_urb); 586 EXPORT_SYMBOL(usb_unlink_urb); 587 EXPORT_SYMBOL(usb_kill_urb); 588