aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/Documentation/phy.txt
blob: ebff6ee52441edbca95a0ebc8b20cd49ac218d3d (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
			    PHY SUBSYSTEM
		  Kishon Vijay Abraham I <kishon@ti.com>

This document explains the Generic PHY Framework along with the APIs provided,
and how-to-use.

1. Introduction

*PHY* is the abbreviation for physical layer. It is used to connect a device
to the physical medium e.g., the USB controller has a PHY to provide functions
such as serialization, de-serialization, encoding, decoding and is responsible
for obtaining the required data transmission rate. Note that some USB
controllers have PHY functionality embedded into it and others use an external
PHY. Other peripherals that use PHY include Wireless LAN, Ethernet,
SATA etc.

The intention of creating this framework is to bring the PHY drivers spread
all over the Linux kernel to drivers/phy to increase code re-use and for
better code maintainability.

This framework will be of use only to devices that use external PHY (PHY
functionality is not embedded within the controller).

2. Registering/Unregistering the PHY provider

PHY provider refers to an entity that implements one or more PHY instances.
For the simple case where the PHY provider implements only a single instance of
the PHY, the framework provides its own implementation of of_xlate in
of_phy_simple_xlate. If the PHY provider implements multiple instances, it
should provide its own implementation of of_xlate. of_xlate is used only for
dt boot case.

#define of_phy_provider_register(dev, xlate)    \
        __of_phy_provider_register((dev), THIS_MODULE, (xlate))

#define devm_of_phy_provider_register(dev, xlate)       \
        __devm_of_phy_provider_register((dev), THIS_MODULE, (xlate))

of_phy_provider_register and devm_of_phy_provider_register macros can be used to
register the phy_provider and it takes device and of_xlate as
arguments. For the dt boot case, all PHY providers should use one of the above
2 macros to register the PHY provider.

void devm_of_phy_provider_unregister(struct device *dev,
	struct phy_provider *phy_provider);
void of_phy_provider_unregister(struct phy_provider *phy_provider);

devm_of_phy_provider_unregister and of_phy_provider_unregister can be used to
unregister the PHY.

3. Creating the PHY

The PHY driver should create the PHY in order for other peripheral controllers
to make use of it. The PHY framework provides 2 APIs to create the PHY.

struct phy *phy_create(struct device *dev, const struct phy_ops *ops,
        struct phy_init_data *init_data);
struct phy *devm_phy_create(struct device *dev, const struct phy_ops *ops,
	struct phy_init_data *init_data);

The PHY drivers can use one of the above 2 APIs to create the PHY by passing
the device pointer, phy ops and init_data.
phy_ops is a set of function pointers for performing PHY operations such as
init, exit, power_on and power_off. *init_data* is mandatory to get a reference
to the PHY in the case of non-dt boot. See section *Board File Initialization*
on how init_data should be used.

Inorder to dereference the private data (in phy_ops), the phy provider driver
can use phy_set_drvdata() after creating the PHY and use phy_get_drvdata() in
phy_ops to get back the private data.

4. Getting a reference to the PHY

Before the controller can make use of the PHY, it has to get a reference to
it. This framework provides the following APIs to get a reference to the PHY.

struct phy *phy_get(struct device *dev, const char *string);
struct phy *phy_optional_get(struct device *dev, const char *string);
struct phy *devm_phy_get(struct device *dev, const char *string);
struct phy *devm_phy_optional_get(struct device *dev, const char *string);

phy_get, phy_optional_get, devm_phy_get and devm_phy_optional_get can
be used to get the PHY. In the case of dt boot, the string arguments
should contain the phy name as given in the dt data and in the case of
non-dt boot, it should contain the label of the PHY.  The two
devm_phy_get associates the device with the PHY using devres on
successful PHY get. On driver detach, release function is invoked on
the the devres data and devres data is freed. phy_optional_get and
devm_phy_optional_get should be used when the phy is optional. These
two functions will never return -ENODEV, but instead returns NULL when
the phy cannot be found.

It should be noted that NULL is a valid phy reference. All phy
consumer calls on the NULL phy become NOPs. That is the release calls,
the phy_init() and phy_exit() calls, and phy_power_on() and
phy_power_off() calls are all NOP when applied to a NULL phy. The NULL
phy is useful in devices for handling optional phy devices.

5. Releasing a reference to the PHY

When the controller no longer needs the PHY, it has to release the reference
to the PHY it has obtained using the APIs mentioned in the above section. The
PHY framework provides 2 APIs to release a reference to the PHY.

void phy_put(struct phy *phy);
void devm_phy_put(struct device *dev, struct phy *phy);

Both these APIs are used to release a reference to the PHY and devm_phy_put
destroys the devres associated with this PHY.

6. Destroying the PHY

When the driver that created the PHY is unloaded, it should destroy the PHY it
created using one of the following 2 APIs.

void phy_destroy(struct phy *phy);
void devm_phy_destroy(struct device *dev, struct phy *phy);

Both these APIs destroy the PHY and devm_phy_destroy destroys the devres
associated with this PHY.

7. PM Runtime

This subsystem is pm runtime enabled. So while creating the PHY,
pm_runtime_enable of the phy device created by this subsystem is called and
while destroying the PHY, pm_runtime_disable is called. Note that the phy
device created by this subsystem will be a child of the device that calls
phy_create (PHY provider device).

So pm_runtime_get_sync of the phy_device created by this subsystem will invoke
pm_runtime_get_sync of PHY provider device because of parent-child relationship.
It should also be noted that phy_power_on and phy_power_off performs
phy_pm_runtime_get_sync and phy_pm_runtime_put respectively.
There are exported APIs like phy_pm_runtime_get, phy_pm_runtime_get_sync,
phy_pm_runtime_put, phy_pm_runtime_put_sync, phy_pm_runtime_allow and
phy_pm_runtime_forbid for performing PM operations.

8. Board File Initialization

Certain board file initialization is necessary in order to get a reference
to the PHY in the case of non-dt boot.
Say we have a single device that implements 3 PHYs that of USB, SATA and PCIe,
then in the board file the following initialization should be done.

struct phy_consumer consumers[] = {
	PHY_CONSUMER("dwc3.0", "usb"),
	PHY_CONSUMER("pcie.0", "pcie"),
	PHY_CONSUMER("sata.0", "sata"),
};
PHY_CONSUMER takes 2 parameters, first is the device name of the controller
(PHY consumer) and second is the port name.

struct phy_init_data init_data = {
	.consumers = consumers,
	.num_consumers = ARRAY_SIZE(consumers),
};

static const struct platform_device pipe3_phy_dev = {
	.name = "pipe3-phy",
	.id = -1,
	.dev = {
		.platform_data = {
			.init_data = &init_data,
		},
	},
};

then, while doing phy_create, the PHY driver should pass this init_data
	phy_create(dev, ops, pdata->init_data);

and the controller driver (phy consumer) should pass the port name along with
the device to get a reference to the PHY
	phy_get(dev, "pcie");

9. DeviceTree Binding

The documentation for PHY dt binding can be found @
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/phy/phy-bindings.txt