Specification and Internals for the New UHCI Driver (Whitepaper...) brought to you by Georg Acher, acher@in.tum.de (executive slave) (base guitar) Deti Fliegl, deti@fliegl.de (executive slave) (lead voice) Thomas Sailer, sailer@ife.ee.ethz.ch (chief consultant) (cheer leader) $Id: README.uhci,v 1.1 1999/12/14 14:03:02 fliegl Exp $ This document and the new uhci sources can be found on http://hotswap.in.tum.de/usb 1. General issues 1.1 Why a new UHCI driver, we already have one?!? Correct, but its internal structure got more and more mixed up by the (still ongoing) efforts to get isochronous transfers (ISO) to work. Since there is an increasing need for reliable ISO-transfers (especially for USB-audio needed by TS and for a DAB-USB-Receiver build by GA and DF), this state was a bit unsatisfying in our opinion, so we've decided (based on knowledge and experiences with the old UHCI driver) to start from scratch with a new approach, much simpler but at the same time more powerful. It is inspired by the way Win98/Win2000 handles USB requests via URBs, but it's definitely 100% free of MS-code and doesn't crash while unplugging an used ISO-device like Win98 ;-) Some code for HW setup and root hub management was taken from the original UHCI driver, but heavily modified to fit into the new code. The invention of the basic concept, and major coding were completed in two days (and nights) on the 16th and 17th of October 1999, now known as the great USB-October-Revolution started by GA, DF, and TS ;-) Since the concept is in no way UHCI dependent, we hope that it will also be transferred to the OHCI-driver, so both drivers share a common API. 1.2. Advantages and disadvantages + All USB transfer types work now! + Asynchronous operation + Simple, but powerful interface (only two calls for start and cancel) + Easy migration to the new API, simplified by a compatibility API + Simple usage of ISO transfers + Automatic linking of requests + ISO transfers allow variable length for each frame and striping + No CPU dependent and non-portable atomic memory access, no asm()-inlines + Tested on x86 and Alpha - Rewriting for ISO transfers needed 1.3. Is there some compatibility to the old API? Yes, but only for control, bulk and interrupt transfers. We've implemented some wrapper calls for these transfer types. The usbcore works fine with these wrappers. For ISO there's no compatibility, because the old ISO-API and its semantics were unnecessary complicated in our opinion. 1.4. What's really working? As said above, CTRL and BULK already work fine even with the wrappers, so legacy code wouldn't notice the change. Regarding to Thomas, ISO transfers now run stable with USB audio. INT transfers (e.g. mouse driver) work fine, too. 1.5. Are there any bugs? No ;-) Hm... Well, of course this implementation needs extensive testing on all available hardware, but we believe that any fixes shouldn't harm the overall concept. 1.6. What should be done next? A large part of the request handling seems to be identical for UHCI and OHCI, so it would be a good idea to extract the common parts and have only the HW specific stuff in uhci.c. Furthermore, all other USB device drivers should need URBification, if they use isochronous or interrupt transfers. One thing missing in the current implementation (and the old UHCI driver) is fair queueing for BULK transfers. Since this would need (in principle) the alteration of already constructed TD chains (to switch from depth to breadth execution), another way has to be found. Maybe some simple heuristics work with the same effect. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2. Internal structure and mechanisms To get quickly familiar with the internal structures, here's a short description how the new UHCI driver works. However, the ultimate source of truth is only uhci.c! 2.1. Descriptor structure (QHs and TDs) During initialization, the following skeleton is allocated in init_skel: framespecific | common chain framelist[] [ 0 ]-----> TD --> TD -------\ [ 1 ]-----> TD --> TD --------> TD ----> QH -------> QH -------> QH ---> NULL ... TD --> TD -------/ [1023]-----> TD --> TD ------/ ^^ ^^ ^^ ^^ ^^ ^^ 1024 TDs for 7 TDs for 1 TD for Start of Start of End Chain ISO INT (2-128ms) 1ms-INT CTRL Chain BULK Chain For each CTRL or BULK transfer a new QH is allocated and the containing data transfers are appended as (vertical) TDs. After building the whole QH with its dangling TDs, the QH is inserted before the BULK Chain QH (for CTRL) or before the End Chain QH (for BULK). Since only the QH->next pointers are affected, no atomic memory operation is required. The three QHs in the common chain are never equipped with TDs! For ISO or INT, the TD for each frame is simply inserted into the appropriate ISO/INT-TD-chain for the desired frame. The 7 skeleton INT-TDs are scattered among the 1024 frames similar to the old UHCI driver. For CTRL/BULK/ISO, the last TD in the transfer has the IOC-bit set. For INT, every TD (there is only one...) has the IOC-bit set. Besides the data for the UHCI controller (2 or 4 32bit words), the descriptors are double-linked through the .vertical and .horizontal elements in the SW data of the descriptor (using the double-linked list structures and operations), but SW-linking occurs only in closed domains, i.e. for each of the 1024 ISO-chains and the 8 INT-chains there is a closed cycle. This simplifies all insertions and unlinking operations and avoids costly bus_to_virt()-calls. 2.2. URB structure and linking to QH/TDs During assembly of the QH and TDs of the requested action, these descriptors are stored in urb->urb_list, so the allocated QH/TD descriptors are bound to this URB. If the assembly was successful and the descriptors were added to the HW chain, the corresponding URB is inserted into a global URB list for this controller. This list stores all pending URBs. 2.3. Interrupt processing Since UHCI provides no means to directly detect completed transactions, the following is done in each UHCI interrupt (uhci_interrupt()): For each URB in the pending queue (process_urb()), the ACTIVE-flag of the associated TDs are processed (depending on the transfer type process_{transfer|interrupt|iso}()). If the TDs are not active anymore, they indicate the completion of the transaction and the status is calculated. Inactive QH/TDs are removed from the HW chain (since the host controller already removed the TDs from the QH, no atomic access is needed) and eventually the URB is marked as completed (OK or errors) and removed from the pending queue. Then the next linked URB is submitted. After (or immediately before) that, the completion handler is called. 2.4. Unlinking URBs First, all QH/TDs stored in the URB are unlinked from the HW chain. To ensure that the host controller really left a vertical TD chain, we wait for one frame. After that, the TDs are physically destroyed. 2.5. URB linking and the consequences Since URBs can be linked and the corresponding submit_urb is called in the UHCI-interrupt, all work associated with URB/QH/TD assembly has to be interrupt save. This forces kmalloc to use GFP_ATOMIC in the interrupt.