linux/drivers/fsi/Kconfig

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# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
#
# FSI subsystem
#
menuconfig FSI
tristate "FSI support"
depends on OF
select CRC4
---help---
FSI - the FRU Support Interface - is a simple bus for low-level
access to POWER-based hardware.
if FSI
config FSI_NEW_DEV_NODE
bool "Create '/dev/fsi' directory for char devices"
default n
---help---
This option causes char devices created for FSI devices to be
located under a common /dev/fsi/ directory. Set to N unless your
userspace has been updated to handle the new location.
Additionally, it also causes the char device names to be offset
by one so that chip 0 will have /dev/scom1 and chip1 /dev/scom2
to match old userspace expectations.
New userspace will use udev rules to generate predictable access
symlinks in /dev/fsi/by-path when this option is enabled.
config FSI_MASTER_GPIO
tristate "GPIO-based FSI master"
depends on GPIOLIB
select CRC4
---help---
This option enables a FSI master driver using GPIO lines.
config FSI_MASTER_HUB
tristate "FSI hub master"
---help---
This option enables a FSI hub master driver. Hub is a type of FSI
master that is connected to the upstream master via a slave. Hubs
allow chaining of FSI links to an arbitrary depth. This allows for
a high target device fanout.
config FSI_MASTER_AST_CF
tristate "FSI master based on Aspeed ColdFire coprocessor"
depends on GPIOLIB
depends on GPIO_ASPEED
select GENERIC_ALLOCATOR
---help---
This option enables a FSI master using the AST2400 and AST2500 GPIO
lines driven by the internal ColdFire coprocessor. This requires
the corresponding machine specific ColdFire firmware to be available.
config FSI_MASTER_ASPEED
tristate "FSI ASPEED master"
help
This option enables a FSI master that is present behind an OPB bridge
in the AST2600.
Enable it for your BMC kernel in an OpenPower or IBM Power system.
config FSI_SCOM
tristate "SCOM FSI client device driver"
---help---
This option enables an FSI based SCOM device driver.
fsi/sbefifo: Add driver for the SBE FIFO This driver provides an in-kernel and a user API for accessing the command FIFO of the SBE (Self Boot Engine) of the POWER9 processor, via the FSI bus. It provides an in-kernel interface to submit command and receive responses, along with a helper to locate and analyse the response status block. It's a simple synchronous submit() type API. The user interface uses the write/read interface that an earlier version of this driver already provided, however it has some specific limitations in order to keep the driver simple and avoid using up a lot of kernel memory: - The user should perform a single write() with the command and a single read() to get the response (with a buffer big enough to hold the entire response). - On a write() the command is simply "stored" into a kernel buffer, it is submitted as one operation on the subsequent read(). This allows to have the code write directly from the FIFO into the user buffer and avoid hogging the SBE between the write() and read() syscall as it's critical that the SBE be freed asap to respond to the host. An extra write() will simply replace the previously written command. - A write of a single 4 bytes containing the value 0x52534554 in big endian will trigger a reset request. No read is necessary, the write() call will return when the reset has been acknowledged or times out. - The command is limited to 4K bytes. Signed-off-by: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org> Tested-by: Joel Stanley <joel@jms.id.au> ---
2018-05-17 05:58:00 +00:00
config FSI_SBEFIFO
tristate "SBEFIFO FSI client device driver"
depends on OF_ADDRESS
fsi/sbefifo: Add driver for the SBE FIFO This driver provides an in-kernel and a user API for accessing the command FIFO of the SBE (Self Boot Engine) of the POWER9 processor, via the FSI bus. It provides an in-kernel interface to submit command and receive responses, along with a helper to locate and analyse the response status block. It's a simple synchronous submit() type API. The user interface uses the write/read interface that an earlier version of this driver already provided, however it has some specific limitations in order to keep the driver simple and avoid using up a lot of kernel memory: - The user should perform a single write() with the command and a single read() to get the response (with a buffer big enough to hold the entire response). - On a write() the command is simply "stored" into a kernel buffer, it is submitted as one operation on the subsequent read(). This allows to have the code write directly from the FIFO into the user buffer and avoid hogging the SBE between the write() and read() syscall as it's critical that the SBE be freed asap to respond to the host. An extra write() will simply replace the previously written command. - A write of a single 4 bytes containing the value 0x52534554 in big endian will trigger a reset request. No read is necessary, the write() call will return when the reset has been acknowledged or times out. - The command is limited to 4K bytes. Signed-off-by: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org> Tested-by: Joel Stanley <joel@jms.id.au> ---
2018-05-17 05:58:00 +00:00
---help---
This option enables an FSI based SBEFIFO device driver. The SBEFIFO is
a pipe-like FSI device for communicating with the self boot engine
(SBE) on POWER processors.
config FSI_OCC
tristate "OCC SBEFIFO client device driver"
depends on FSI_SBEFIFO
---help---
This option enables an SBEFIFO based On-Chip Controller (OCC) device
driver. The OCC is a device embedded on a POWER processor that collects
and aggregates sensor data from the processor and system. The OCC can
provide the raw sensor data as well as perform thermal and power
management on the system.
endif