Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
Merge pull request #101 from arturum1/master
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
Improve the device driver tutorial
  • Loading branch information
jjts authored Jul 14, 2024
2 parents 0f45e12 + ec41ce7 commit 8d612b4
Show file tree
Hide file tree
Showing 3 changed files with 122 additions and 25 deletions.
4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions README.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ hopefully, each variable is explained by a comment.
## Set environment variables for local or remote building and running

The various simulators, FPGA compilers, and FPGA boards may run locally or
remotely. For running a tool remotely, you need to set two environmental
remotely. For running a tool remotely, you need to set two environment
variables: the server logical name and the server user name. Consider placing
these settings in your `.bashrc` file so that they apply to every session.

Expand All @@ -176,7 +176,7 @@ Using the open-source simulator Icarus Verilog (`iverilog`) as an example, note
`SIM_SERVER,` is set to `IVSIM_SERVER,` and the variable for the user name,
`SIM_USER` is set to `IVSIM_USER`.

To run the simulator on the server *mysimserver.myorg.com* as user *ivsimuser*, set the following environmental
To run the simulator on the server *mysimserver.myorg.com* as user *ivsimuser*, set the following environment
variables beforehand, or place them in your `.bashrc` file:

```Bash
Expand Down
141 changes: 119 additions & 22 deletions document/device_driver_tutorial.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -1,9 +1,17 @@
# Tutorial: Add New Device Driver

This tutorial presents the steps required to create simple linux character device drivers for a device and use them in OpenCryptoLinux.

The [IOb-SPI](https://github.com/IObundle/iob-spi) device is used as an example.

See [this commit](https://github.com/IObundle/iob-spi/commit/dce9c93f1202da96d3570f88e31b9409afb43419) for the full SPI linux driver implementation.

To follow this tutorial, clone the [iob-linux](https://github.com/IObundle/iob-linux) repository.

1. Create device drivers: on the device repository create a `software/linux` directory with the following files:
## 1. Create device drivers

On the device repository create a `software/linux` directory with the following files:

```bash
software/
├── linux
Expand All @@ -14,14 +22,44 @@ software/
│   └── Readme.md
```

1.1. `software/linux/drivers/driver.mk`: compilation makefile segment
1.1. Create compilation makefile segment

`software/linux/drivers/driver.mk`

```make
iob_spi_master-objs := iob_spi_main.o iob_class/iob_class_utils.o
```

1.2. `software/linux/drivers/iob_spi_main.c`: main driver file, see [this commit](https://github.com/IObundle/iob-spi/commit/dce9c93f1202da96d3570f88e31b9409afb43419) for full code snippet.
1.2. Create main driver file

`software/linux/drivers/iob_spi_main.c`

Copy the [SPI driver source](https://github.com/IObundle/iob-spi/blob/main/software/linux/drivers/iob_spi_main.c) to use it as a template for the new driver.

```bash
cp iob-spi/software/linux/drivers/iob_spi_main.c <new_core_name>/software/linux/drivers/<new_core_name>_main.c
```

Replace `<new_core_name>` with the new device name.

1.2.1. Rename the functions to the particular device
1.2.2. Update the `iob_spi_read()` function implementation according with the read registers of the device. SPI has the `FL_READY`, `FL_DATAOUT` and `VERSION` (implicit) read registers:

Use the following commands to rename the functions from the template:

```bash
NEW_CORE_NAME=<new_core_name>
sed -i "s/IOB_SPI_MASTER/${NEW_CORE_NAME}/g" ${NEW_CORE_NAME}/software/linux/drivers/${NEW_CORE_NAME}_main.c
sed -i "s/iob_spi_master/${NEW_CORE_NAME}/g" ${NEW_CORE_NAME}/software/linux/drivers/${NEW_CORE_NAME}_main.c
sed -i "s/iob_spi/${NEW_CORE_NAME}/g" ${NEW_CORE_NAME}/software/linux/drivers/${NEW_CORE_NAME}_main.c
sed -i "s/spi/${NEW_CORE_NAME}/g" ${NEW_CORE_NAME}/software/linux/drivers/${NEW_CORE_NAME}_main.c
```

Replace `<new_core_name>` with the new device name.

1.2.2. Update read function

Update the `iob_spi_read()` function implementation according with the read registers of the device. SPI has the `FL_READY`, `FL_DATAOUT` and `VERSION` (implicit) read registers:

```C
static ssize_t iob_spi_read(struct file *file, char __user *buf, size_t count,
loff_t *ppos) {
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -61,13 +99,18 @@ static ssize_t iob_spi_read(struct file *file, char __user *buf, size_t count,
// (...)
}
```
1.2.3. Update the `iob_spi_write()` function implementation according with the write registers of the device. SPI had the `FL_RESET`, `FL_DATAIN`, `FL_ADDRESS`, `FL_COMMAND`, `FL_COMMANDTP` and `FL_VALIDFLG`write registers:
1.2.3. Update write function
Update the `iob_spi_write()` function implementation according with the write registers of the device. SPI had the `FL_RESET`, `FL_DATAIN`, `FL_ADDRESS`, `FL_COMMAND`, `FL_COMMANDTP` and `FL_VALIDFLG` write registers:
```C
static ssize_t iob_spi_write(struct file *file, const char __user *buf,
size_t count, loff_t *ppos) {
// (...)
switch (*ppos) {
// Add one case for each Write software register
case IOB_SPI_MASTER_FL_RESET_ADDR:
size = (IOB_SPI_MASTER_FL_RESET_W >> 3); // bit to bytes
if (read_user_data(buf, size, &value))
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -103,20 +146,42 @@ static ssize_t iob_spi_write(struct file *file, const char __user *buf,
return count;
}
```
1.2.4. Notice the string used in the `struct of_device_id`. This string must match the `compatible` field in the device tree to associate the hardware device with the correct driver.

1.2.4. Verify device `compatible` field

Notice the string used in the `struct of_device_id`. This string must match the `compatible` field in the device tree to associate the hardware device with the correct driver.

```C
static const struct of_device_id of_iob_spi_match[] = {
{.compatible = "iobundle,spi0"},
{},
};
```

1.3. Generate `iob_spi_master.h` and `iob_spi_master_sysfs_multi.h` header files with the [`drivers.py`](https://github.com/IObundle/iob-linux/blob/main/scripts/drivers.py) script:
1.3. Generate driver header files

Generate `iob_spi_master.h` and `iob_spi_master_sysfs_multi.h` header files with the [`drivers.py`](https://github.com/IObundle/iob-linux/blob/main/scripts/drivers.py) script:

```bash
python3 .path/to/iob-linux/scripts/drivers.py iob_spi_master -o [output_dir]
python3 ./path/to/iob-linux/scripts/drivers.py iob_spi_master -o [output_dir]
```

2. Update device tree with device node. The `compatible` string must match with the `compatible` field in the driver source:
The `output_dir` should be a directory that is included by the linux user space software.

These headers are commonly placed in the Linux root filesystem along with the user space software that uses them.

For example, for the `dma_demo` program, the sources are placed in the following location:

`software/buildroot/board/IObundle/iob-soc/rootfs-overlay/root/dma_demo/`

## 2. Update the Linux Device Tree

Include the device node in the Linux Device Tree.

`software/linux/iob_spi.dts`

The `compatible` string must match with the `compatible` field in the driver source.

```
// SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0 OR MIT)
/* Copyright (c) 2024 IObundle */
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -149,30 +214,62 @@ python3 .path/to/iob-linux/scripts/drivers.py iob_spi_master -o [output_dir]
};
```

3. Compile driver module and add to rootfs.
The `size-cells` field (`0x100`) of the following device tree line must updated to match the size of the device register address space.

3.1. Copy device driver files to [`iob-linux/software/drivers`](https://github.com/IObundle/iob-linux/tree/main/software/drivers)
```
reg = <0x/*SPI0_ADDR_MACRO*/ 0x100>;
```

## 3. Compile kernel, driver module, and add to rootfs

3.1. Compile Linux kernel

A compiled kernel is required to be able to later build the driver module.

3.2. Run `make all` target. Note that linux driver module compilation requires an already built linux kernel:
```bash
cd ./path/to/iob-linux/software/drivers
cd /path/to/iob-linux
make build-linux-kernel
```

3.2. Compile driver module

Copy device driver files to the [`iob-linux/software/drivers`](https://github.com/IObundle/iob-linux/tree/main/software/drivers) folder.

```bash
cp /path/to/device/repo/software/linux/drivers/* /path/to/iob-linux/software/drivers/
```

Run the `make all` target.

```bash
cd /path/to/iob-linux/software/drivers
make all
```

3.3. Add module files to buildroot:
3.3. Add module files to buildroot (optional)

To add the built driver modules to the Linux root filesystem, move the modules to a folder inside the buildroot filesystem.
For the SPI driver example, the module is placed in the `drivers` folder of the rootfs.

```bash
# copy module files to directory used to build rootfs
cp ./path/to/iob-linux/software/drivers $OS_SOFTWARE_DIR
# change directory to iob-linux
cd ./path/to/iob-linux
# re-build buildroot
make build-buildroot OS_SOFTWARE_DIR=$OS_SOFTWARE_DIR
cd /path/to/iob-linux
mkdir software/buildroot/board/IObundle/iob-soc/rootfs-overlay/drivers
cp software/drivers/* software/buildroot/board/IObundle/iob-soc/rootfs-overlay/drivers/
```

4. Load module in linux. After booting into linux, use the `insmod` command to load the new driver modules:
Re-build buildroot:

```bash
make build-buildroot
```

## 4. Load module in linux

After booting into linux, use the `insmod` command to load the new driver modules:

```bash
# inside linux console
insmod ./path/to/driver.ko
insmod /path/to/driver.ko
# iob-spi example:
insmod /drivers/iob_spi_master.ko
```
2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion submodules/OS
Submodule OS updated 1 files
+1 −1 .github/workflows/ci.yml

0 comments on commit 8d612b4

Please sign in to comment.