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Message-ID: <20150810183054.GA18817@kroah.com>
Date: Mon, 10 Aug 2015 11:30:54 -0700
From: Greg KH <gregkh@...uxfoundation.org>
To: "Gabriel L. Somlo" <somlo@....edu>
Cc: ralf@...ux-mips.org, zajec5@...il.com, paul@...an.com,
galak@...eaurora.org, linux-api@...r.kernel.org,
linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org, matt.fleming@...el.com,
x86@...nel.org, linux-efi@...r.kernel.org, qemu-devel@...gnu.org,
lersek@...hat.com, jordan.l.justen@...el.com,
gleb@...udius-systems.com, pbonzini@...hat.com, kraxel@...hat.com,
eblake@...hat.com, rjones@...hat.com,
kernelnewbies@...nelnewbies.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/3] firmware: introduce sysfs driver for QEMU's fw_cfg
device
On Mon, Aug 10, 2015 at 12:31:18PM -0400, Gabriel L. Somlo wrote:
> From: "Gabriel Somlo" <somlo@....edu>
>
> Make fw_cfg entries of type "file" available via sysfs. Entries
> are listed under /sys/firmware/fw_cfg/by_select, in folders named
> after each entry's selector key. Filename, selector value, and
> size read-only attributes are included for each entry. Also, a
> "raw" attribute allows retrieval of the full binary content of
> each entry.
>
> This patch also provides a documentation file outlining the
> guest-side "hardware" interface exposed by the QEMU fw_cfg device.
>
> Signed-off-by: Gabriel Somlo <somlo@....edu>
> ---
> Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-firmware-fw_cfg | 169 +++++++++
> drivers/firmware/Kconfig | 10 +
> drivers/firmware/Makefile | 1 +
> drivers/firmware/fw_cfg.c | 438 ++++++++++++++++++++++++
> 4 files changed, 618 insertions(+)
> create mode 100644 Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-firmware-fw_cfg
> create mode 100644 drivers/firmware/fw_cfg.c
>
> diff --git a/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-firmware-fw_cfg b/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-firmware-fw_cfg
> new file mode 100644
> index 0000000..3a7e7f2
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-firmware-fw_cfg
> @@ -0,0 +1,169 @@
> +What: /sys/firmware/fw_cfg/
/sys/firmware/qemu_fw/ ?
"fw_cfg" is very vague and not descriptive at all.
> +Date: August 2015
> +Contact: Gabriel Somlo <somlo@....edu>
> +Description:
> + Several different architectures supported by QEMU (x86, arm,
> + sun4*, ppc/mac) are provisioned with a firmware configuration
> + (fw_cfg) device, used by the host to provide configuration data
> + to the starting guest. While most of this data is meant for use
> + by the guest BIOS, starting with QEMU v2.4, guest VMs may be
> + started with arbitrary fw_cfg entries supplied directly on the
> + command line, which therefore may be of interest to userspace.
> +
> + === Guest-side Hardware Interface ===
> +
> + The fw_cfg device is available to guest VMs as a pair (control
> + and data) of registers, accessible as either a IO ports or as
> + MMIO addresses, depending on the architecture.
> +
> + --- Control Register ---
> +
> + Width: 16-bit
> + Access: Write-Only
> + Endianness: LE (if IOport) or BE (if MMIO)
> +
> + A write to the control register selects the index for one of
> + the firmware configuration items (or "blobs") available on the
> + fw_cfg device, which can subsequently be read from the data
> + register.
> +
> + Each time the control register is written, an data offset
> + internal to the fw_cfg device will be set to zero. This data
> + offset impacts which portion of the selected fw_cfg blob is
> + accessed by reading the data register, as explained below.
> +
> + --- Data Register ---
> +
> + Width: 8-bit (if IOport), or 8/16/32/64-bit (if MMIO)
> + Access: Read-Only
> + Endianness: string preserving
> +
> + The data register allows access to an array of bytes which
> + represent the fw_cfg blob last selected by a write to the
> + control register.
> +
> + Immediately following a write to the control register, the data
> + offset will be set to zero. Each successful read access to the
> + data register will increment the data offset by the appropriate
> + access width.
> +
> + Each fw_cfg blob has a maximum associated data length. Once the
> + data offset exceeds this maximum length, any subsequent reads
> + via the data register will return 0x00.
> +
> + An N-byte wide read of the data register will return the next
> + available N bytes of the selected fw_cfg blob, as a substring,
> + in increasing address order, similar to memcpy(), zero-padded
> + if necessary should the maximum data length of the selected
> + item be reached, as described above.
> +
> + --- Per-arch Register Details ---
> +
> + -------------------------------------------------------------
> + arch access base ctrl ctrl data data
> + mode address offset endian offset width
> + max.
> + -------------------------------------------------------------
> + x86 IOport 0x510 0 LE 1 8
> + x86_64 IOport 0x510 0 LE 1 8
> + arm MMIO 0x9020000 8 BE 0 64
> + sun4u IOport 0x510 0 LE 1 8
> + sun4m MMIO 0xd00000510 0 BE 2 8
> + ppc/mac MMIO 0xf0000510 0 BE 2 8
> + -------------------------------------------------------------
> +
> + NOTE: On platforms where the fw_cfg registers are exposed as
> + IO ports, the data port number will always be one greater than
> + the port number of the control register. I.e., the two ports
> + are overlapping, and can not be mapped separately.
> +
> + === Firmware Configuration Items of Interest ===
> +
> + Originally, the index key, size, and formatting of blobs in
> + fw_cfg was hard coded by mutual agreement between QEMU on the
> + host side, and the BIOS running on the guest. Later on, a file
> + transfer interface was added: by reading a special blob, the
> + fw_cfg consumer can retrieve a list of records containing the
> + name, selector key, and size of further fw_cfg blobs made
> + available by the host. Below we describe three fw_cfg blobs
> + of interest to the sysfs driver.
> +
> + --- Signature (Key 0x0000, FW_CFG_SIGNATURE) ---
> +
> + The presence of the fw_cfg device can be verified by selecting
> + the signature blob by writing 0x0000 to the control register,
> + and reading four bytes from the data register. If the fw_cfg
> + device is present, the four bytes read will match the ASCII
> + characters "QEMU".
Why is this a binary sysfs file? It really sounds like you want a char
device, so you can do ioctl commands on it, right?
> +
> + --- Revision (Key 0x0001, FW_CFG_ID) ---
> +
> + A 32-bit little-endian unsigned integer, this item is used as
> + an interface revision number.
> +
> + --- File Directory (Key 0x0019, FW_CFG_FILE_DIR) ---
> +
> + Any fw_cfg blobs stored at key 0x0020 FW_CFG_FILE_FIRST() or
> + higher will have an associated entry in this "directory" blob,
> + which facilitates the discovery of available items by software
> + (e.g. BIOS) running on the guest. The format of the directory
> + blob is shown below.
> +
> + NOTE: All integers are stored in big-endian format!
> +
> + /* the entire file directory "blob" */
> + struct FWCfgFiles {
> + uint32_t count; /* total number of entries */
> + struct FWCfgFile f[]; /* entry array, see below */
> + };
> +
> + /* an individual directory entry, 64 bytes total */
> + struct FWCfgFile {
> + uint32_t size; /* size of referenced blob */
> + uint16_t select; /* blob selector key */
> + uint16_t reserved;
> + char name[56]; /* blob name, nul-term. ascii */
> + };
> +
> + === SysFS fw_cfg Interface ===
> +
> + The fw_cfg sysfs interface described in this document is only
> + intended to display discoverable blobs (i.e., those registered
> + with the file directory), as there is no way to determine the
> + presence or size of "legacy" blobs (with selector keys between
> + 0x0002 and 0x0018) programmatically.
> +
> + All fw_cfg information is shown under:
> +
> + /sys/firmware/fw_cfg/
> +
> + The only legacy blob displayed is the fw_cfg device revision:
> +
> + /sys/firmware/fw_cfg/rev
> +
> + --- Discoverable fw_cfg blobs by selector key ---
> +
> + All discoverable blobs listed in the fw_cfg file directory are
> + displayed as entries named after their unique selector key
> + value, e.g.:
> +
> + /sys/firmware/fw_cfg/by_select/32
> + /sys/firmware/fw_cfg/by_select/33
> + /sys/firmware/fw_cfg/by_select/34
> + ...
> +
> + Each such fw_cfg sysfs entry has the following values exported
> + as attributes:
> +
> + name : The 56-byte nul-terminated ASCII string used as the
> + blob's 'file name' in the fw_cfg directory.
> + size : The length of the blob, as given in the fw_cfg
> + directory.
> + select : The value of the blob's selector key as given in the
> + fw_cfg directory. This value is the same as used in
> + the parent directory name.
> + how the rest of the entry should be interpreted.
> + raw : The raw bytes of the blob, obtained by selecting the
> + entry via the control register, and reading a number
> + of bytes equal to the blob size from the data
> + register.
> diff --git a/drivers/firmware/Kconfig b/drivers/firmware/Kconfig
> index 99c69a3..f5cbe81 100644
> --- a/drivers/firmware/Kconfig
> +++ b/drivers/firmware/Kconfig
> @@ -136,6 +136,16 @@ config QCOM_SCM
> bool
> depends on ARM || ARM64
>
> +config FW_CFG_SYSFS
> + tristate "QEMU fw_cfg device support in sysfs"
> + depends on SYSFS
> + default n
> + help
> + Say Y or M here to enable the exporting of the QEMU firmware
> + configuration (fw_cfg) file entries via sysfs. Entries are
> + found under /sys/firmware/fw_cfg when this option is enabled
> + and loaded.
> +
> source "drivers/firmware/broadcom/Kconfig"
> source "drivers/firmware/google/Kconfig"
> source "drivers/firmware/efi/Kconfig"
> diff --git a/drivers/firmware/Makefile b/drivers/firmware/Makefile
> index 4a4b897..b81b46e 100644
> --- a/drivers/firmware/Makefile
> +++ b/drivers/firmware/Makefile
> @@ -13,6 +13,7 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_ISCSI_IBFT) += iscsi_ibft.o
> obj-$(CONFIG_FIRMWARE_MEMMAP) += memmap.o
> obj-$(CONFIG_QCOM_SCM) += qcom_scm.o
> obj-$(CONFIG_QCOM_SCM) += qcom_scm-32.o
> +obj-$(CONFIG_FW_CFG_SYSFS) += fw_cfg.o
> CFLAGS_qcom_scm-32.o :=$(call as-instr,.arch_extension sec,-DREQUIRES_SEC=1)
>
> obj-y += broadcom/
> diff --git a/drivers/firmware/fw_cfg.c b/drivers/firmware/fw_cfg.c
> new file mode 100644
> index 0000000..be17411
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/drivers/firmware/fw_cfg.c
> @@ -0,0 +1,438 @@
> +/*
> + * drivers/firmware/fw_cfg.c
> + *
> + * Expose entries from QEMU's firmware configuration (fw_cfg) device in
> + * sysfs (read-only, under "/sys/firmware/fw_cfg/...").
> + *
> + * Copyright 2015 Carnegie Mellon University
> + */
> +
> +#include <linux/module.h>
> +#include <linux/capability.h>
> +#include <linux/slab.h>
> +#include <linux/io.h>
> +#include <linux/ioport.h>
> +#include <linux/ctype.h>
> +
> +/* selector values for "well-known" fw_cfg entries */
> +#define FW_CFG_SIGNATURE 0x00
> +#define FW_CFG_ID 0x01
> +#define FW_CFG_FILE_DIR 0x19
> +
> +/* size in bytes of fw_cfg signature */
> +#define FW_CFG_SIG_SIZE 4
> +
> +/* fw_cfg "file name" is up to 56 characters (including terminating nul) */
> +#define FW_CFG_MAX_FILE_PATH 56
> +
> +/* fw_cfg file directory entry type */
> +struct fw_cfg_file {
> + uint32_t size;
> + uint16_t select;
> + uint16_t reserved;
Those aren't valid kernel types, use u32, and u16 please.
> + char name[FW_CFG_MAX_FILE_PATH];
> +};
> +
> +/* fw_cfg device i/o access options type */
> +struct fw_cfg_access {
> + phys_addr_t start;
> + uint8_t size;
> + uint8_t ctrl_offset;
> + uint8_t data_offset;
u8.
> + bool is_mmio;
> + const char *name;
> +};
> +
> +/* fw_cfg device i/o access available options for known architectures */
> +static struct fw_cfg_access fw_cfg_modes[] = {
> + { 0x510, 2, 0, 1, false, "fw_cfg on i386, sun4u" },
> + { 0x9020000, 10, 8, 0, true, "fw_cfg on arm" },
> + { 0xd00000510, 3, 0, 2, true, "fw_cfg on sun4m" },
> + { 0xf0000510, 3, 0, 2, true, "fw_cfg on ppc/mac" },
named identifiers please.
> + { }
> +};
> +
> +/* fw_cfg device i/o currently selected option set */
> +static struct fw_cfg_access *fw_cfg_mode;
> +
> +/* fw_cfg device i/o register addresses */
> +static void __iomem *fw_cfg_dev_base;
> +static void __iomem *fw_cfg_dev_ctrl;
> +static void __iomem *fw_cfg_dev_data;
> +
> +/* atomic access to fw_cfg device (potentially slow i/o, so using mutex) */
> +static DEFINE_MUTEX(fw_cfg_dev_lock);
> +
> +/* pick apropriate endianness for selector key */
> +static inline uint16_t fw_cfg_sel_endianness(uint16_t select)
> +{
> + return fw_cfg_mode->is_mmio ? cpu_to_be16(select) : cpu_to_le16(select);
> +}
> +
> +/* type for fw_cfg "directory scan" visitor/callback function */
> +typedef int (*fw_cfg_file_callback)(const struct fw_cfg_file *f);
> +
> +/* run a given callback on each fw_cfg directory entry */
> +static int fw_cfg_scan_dir(fw_cfg_file_callback callback)
> +{
> + int ret = 0;
> + uint32_t count, i;
u32. Please remove all the *_t variable types. and i should be an int
here, right?
> + struct fw_cfg_file f;
> +
> + mutex_lock(&fw_cfg_dev_lock);
> + iowrite16(fw_cfg_sel_endianness(FW_CFG_FILE_DIR), fw_cfg_dev_ctrl);
> + ioread8_rep(fw_cfg_dev_data, &count, sizeof(count));
> + for (i = 0; i < be32_to_cpu(count); i++) {
> + ioread8_rep(fw_cfg_dev_data, &f, sizeof(f));
> + ret = callback(&f);
> + if (ret)
> + break;
> + }
> + mutex_unlock(&fw_cfg_dev_lock);
> + return ret;
> +}
> +
> +/* read chunk of given fw_cfg blob (caller responsible for sanity-check) */
> +static inline void fw_cfg_read_blob(uint16_t select,
> + void *buf, loff_t pos, size_t count)
> +{
> + mutex_lock(&fw_cfg_dev_lock);
> + iowrite16(fw_cfg_sel_endianness(select), fw_cfg_dev_ctrl);
> + while (pos-- > 0)
> + ioread8(fw_cfg_dev_data);
> + ioread8_rep(fw_cfg_dev_data, buf, count);
> + mutex_unlock(&fw_cfg_dev_lock);
> +}
> +
> +/* clean up fw_cfg device i/o setup */
> +static void fw_cfg_io_cleanup(void)
> +{
> + if (fw_cfg_mode->is_mmio) {
> + iounmap(fw_cfg_dev_base);
> + release_mem_region(fw_cfg_mode->start, fw_cfg_mode->size);
> + } else {
> + ioport_unmap(fw_cfg_dev_base);
> + release_region(fw_cfg_mode->start, fw_cfg_mode->size);
> + }
> +}
> +
> +/* probe and map fw_cfg device */
> +static int __init fw_cfg_io_probe(void)
> +{
> + char sig[FW_CFG_SIG_SIZE];
> +
> + for (fw_cfg_mode = &fw_cfg_modes[0];
> + fw_cfg_mode->start; fw_cfg_mode++) {
> +
> + phys_addr_t start = fw_cfg_mode->start;
> + uint8_t size = fw_cfg_mode->size;
> +
> + /* reserve and map mmio or ioport region */
> + if (fw_cfg_mode->is_mmio) {
> + if (!request_mem_region(start, size, fw_cfg_mode->name))
> + continue;
> + fw_cfg_dev_base = ioremap(start, size);
> + if (!fw_cfg_dev_base) {
> + release_mem_region(start, size);
> + continue;
> + }
> + } else {
> + if (!request_region(start, size, fw_cfg_mode->name))
> + continue;
> + fw_cfg_dev_base = ioport_map(start, size);
> + if (!fw_cfg_dev_base) {
> + release_region(start, size);
> + continue;
> + }
> + }
> +
> + /* set control and data register addresses */
> + fw_cfg_dev_ctrl = fw_cfg_dev_base + fw_cfg_mode->ctrl_offset;
> + fw_cfg_dev_data = fw_cfg_dev_base + fw_cfg_mode->data_offset;
> +
> + /* verify fw_cfg device signature */
> + fw_cfg_read_blob(FW_CFG_SIGNATURE, sig, 0, FW_CFG_SIG_SIZE);
> + if (memcmp(sig, "QEMU", FW_CFG_SIG_SIZE) == 0)
> + /* success, we're done */
> + return 0;
> +
> + /* clean up before probing next access mode */
> + fw_cfg_io_cleanup();
> + }
> +
> + return -ENODEV;
> +}
> +
> +/* fw_cfg revision attribute, placed in top-level /sys/fw_cfg directory */
> +static uint32_t fw_cfg_rev;
> +
> +static ssize_t fw_cfg_showrev(struct kobject *k, struct attribute *a, char *buf)
> +{
> + return sprintf(buf, "%u\n", fw_cfg_rev);
> +}
> +
> +static const struct {
> + struct attribute attr;
> + ssize_t (*show)(struct kobject *k, struct attribute *a, char *buf);
> +} fw_cfg_rev_attr = {
> + .attr = { .name = "rev", .mode = S_IRUSR },
> + .show = fw_cfg_showrev,
> +};
> +
> +/* fw_cfg_sysfs_entry type */
> +struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry {
> + struct kobject kobj;
> + struct fw_cfg_file f;
> + struct list_head list;
> +};
> +
> +/* get fw_cfg_sysfs_entry from kobject member */
> +static inline struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *to_entry(struct kobject *kobj)
> +{
> + return container_of(kobj, struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry, kobj);
> +}
> +
> +/* fw_cfg_sysfs_attribute type */
> +struct fw_cfg_sysfs_attribute {
> + struct attribute attr;
> + ssize_t (*show)(struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *entry, char *buf);
> +};
> +
> +/* get fw_cfg_sysfs_attribute from attribute member */
> +static inline struct fw_cfg_sysfs_attribute *to_attr(struct attribute *attr)
> +{
> + return container_of(attr, struct fw_cfg_sysfs_attribute, attr);
> +}
> +
> +/* global cache of fw_cfg_sysfs_entry objects */
> +static LIST_HEAD(fw_cfg_entry_cache);
> +
> +/* kobjects removed lazily by kernel, mutual exclusion needed */
> +static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(fw_cfg_cache_lock);
> +
> +static inline void fw_cfg_sysfs_cache_enlist(struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *entry)
> +{
> + spin_lock(&fw_cfg_cache_lock);
> + list_add_tail(&entry->list, &fw_cfg_entry_cache);
> + spin_unlock(&fw_cfg_cache_lock);
> +}
> +
> +static inline void fw_cfg_sysfs_cache_delist(struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *entry)
> +{
> + spin_lock(&fw_cfg_cache_lock);
> + list_del(&entry->list);
> + spin_unlock(&fw_cfg_cache_lock);
> +}
> +
> +static void fw_cfg_sysfs_cache_cleanup(void)
> +{
> + struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *entry, *next;
> +
> + list_for_each_entry_safe(entry, next, &fw_cfg_entry_cache, list) {
> + /* will end up invoking fw_cfg_sysfs_cache_delist()
> + * via each object's release() method (i.e. destructor) */
> + kobject_put(&entry->kobj);
> + }
> +}
> +
> +/* default_attrs: per-entry attributes and show methods */
> +
> +#define FW_CFG_SYSFS_ATTR(_attr) \
> +struct fw_cfg_sysfs_attribute fw_cfg_sysfs_attr_##_attr = { \
> + .attr = { .name = __stringify(_attr), .mode = S_IRUSR }, \
> + .show = fw_cfg_sysfs_show_##_attr, \
> +}
> +
> +static ssize_t fw_cfg_sysfs_show_size(struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *e, char *buf)
> +{
> + return sprintf(buf, "%u\n", e->f.size);
> +}
> +
> +static ssize_t fw_cfg_sysfs_show_select(struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *e, char *buf)
> +{
> + return sprintf(buf, "%u\n", e->f.select);
> +}
> +
> +static ssize_t fw_cfg_sysfs_show_name(struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *e, char *buf)
> +{
> + return sprintf(buf, "%s\n", e->f.name);
> +}
> +
> +static FW_CFG_SYSFS_ATTR(size);
> +static FW_CFG_SYSFS_ATTR(select);
> +static FW_CFG_SYSFS_ATTR(name);
> +
> +static struct attribute *fw_cfg_sysfs_entry_attrs[] = {
> + &fw_cfg_sysfs_attr_size.attr,
> + &fw_cfg_sysfs_attr_select.attr,
> + &fw_cfg_sysfs_attr_name.attr,
> + NULL,
> +};
> +
> +/* sysfs_ops: find fw_cfg_[entry, attribute] and call appropriate show method */
> +static ssize_t fw_cfg_sysfs_attr_show(struct kobject *kobj, struct attribute *a,
> + char *buf)
> +{
> + struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *entry = to_entry(kobj);
> + struct fw_cfg_sysfs_attribute *attr = to_attr(a);
> +
> + if (!capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN))
> + return -EACCES;
Shouldn't the file permissions handle this properly for you?
> +
> + return attr->show(entry, buf);
> +}
> +
> +static const struct sysfs_ops fw_cfg_sysfs_attr_ops = {
> + .show = fw_cfg_sysfs_attr_show,
> +};
> +
> +/* release: destructor, to be called via kobject_put() */
> +static void fw_cfg_sysfs_release_entry(struct kobject *kobj)
> +{
> + struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *entry = to_entry(kobj);
> +
> + fw_cfg_sysfs_cache_delist(entry);
> + kfree(entry);
> +}
> +
> +/* kobj_type: ties together all properties required to register an entry */
> +static struct kobj_type fw_cfg_sysfs_entry_ktype = {
> + .default_attrs = fw_cfg_sysfs_entry_attrs,
> + .sysfs_ops = &fw_cfg_sysfs_attr_ops,
> + .release = fw_cfg_sysfs_release_entry,
> +};
> +
> +/* raw-read method and attribute */
> +static ssize_t fw_cfg_sysfs_read_raw(struct file *filp, struct kobject *kobj,
> + struct bin_attribute *bin_attr,
> + char *buf, loff_t pos, size_t count)
> +{
> + struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *entry = to_entry(kobj);
> +
> + if (!capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN))
> + return -EACCES;
Again, file permissions?
> +
> + if (pos > entry->f.size)
> + return -EINVAL;
> +
> + if (count > entry->f.size - pos)
> + count = entry->f.size - pos;
> +
> + fw_cfg_read_blob(entry->f.select, buf, pos, count);
> + return count;
> +}
> +
> +static struct bin_attribute fw_cfg_sysfs_attr_raw = {
> + .attr = { .name = "raw", .mode = 0400 },
> + .read = fw_cfg_sysfs_read_raw,
> +};
> +
> +/* kobjects & kset representing top-level, by_select, and by_name folders */
> +static struct kobject *fw_cfg_top_ko;
> +static struct kobject *fw_cfg_sel_ko;
> +
> +/* callback function to register an individual fw_cfg file */
> +static int __init fw_cfg_register_file(const struct fw_cfg_file *f)
> +{
> + int err;
> + struct fw_cfg_sysfs_entry *entry;
> +
> + /* allocate new entry */
> + entry = kzalloc(sizeof(*entry), GFP_KERNEL);
> + if (!entry)
> + return -ENOMEM;
> +
> + /* set file entry information */
> + entry->f.size = be32_to_cpu(f->size);
> + entry->f.select = be16_to_cpu(f->select);
> + strcpy(entry->f.name, f->name);
> +
> + /* register entry under "/sys/firmware/fw_cfg/by_select/" */
> + err = kobject_init_and_add(&entry->kobj, &fw_cfg_sysfs_entry_ktype,
> + fw_cfg_sel_ko, "%d", entry->f.select);
> + if (err)
> + goto err_register;
> +
> + /* add raw binary content access */
> + err = sysfs_create_bin_file(&entry->kobj, &fw_cfg_sysfs_attr_raw);
> + if (err)
> + goto err_add_raw;
> +
> + /* success, add entry to global cache */
> + fw_cfg_sysfs_cache_enlist(entry);
> + return 0;
> +
> +err_add_raw:
> + kobject_del(&entry->kobj);
> +err_register:
> + kfree(entry);
> + return err;
> +}
> +
> +/* unregister top-level or by_select folder */
> +static inline void fw_cfg_kobj_cleanup(struct kobject *kobj)
> +{
> + kobject_del(kobj);
> + kobject_put(kobj);
> +}
> +
> +static int __init fw_cfg_sysfs_init(void)
> +{
> + int err;
> +
> + /* probe for the fw_cfg "hardware" */
> + err = fw_cfg_io_probe();
> + if (err)
> + return err;
> +
> + /* create /sys/firmware/fwcfg/ and its subdirectories */
> + err = -ENOMEM;
> + fw_cfg_top_ko = kobject_create_and_add("fw_cfg", firmware_kobj);
> + if (!fw_cfg_top_ko)
> + goto err_top;
> + fw_cfg_sel_ko = kobject_create_and_add("by_select", fw_cfg_top_ko);
> + if (!fw_cfg_sel_ko)
> + goto err_sel;
> +
> + /* get revision number, add matching top-level attribute */
> + fw_cfg_read_blob(FW_CFG_ID, &fw_cfg_rev, 0, sizeof(fw_cfg_rev));
> + fw_cfg_rev = le32_to_cpu(fw_cfg_rev);
> + err = sysfs_create_file(fw_cfg_top_ko, &fw_cfg_rev_attr.attr);
> + if (err)
> + goto err_rev;
> +
> + /* process fw_cfg file directory entry, registering each file */
> + err = fw_cfg_scan_dir(fw_cfg_register_file);
Dealing with all of these "raw" kobjecs makes me nervous. Why can't you
use 'struct device' for this instead, on the system bus?
thanks,
greg k-h
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