linux/Documentation/xillybus.txt
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   1==========================================
   2Xillybus driver for generic FPGA interface
   3==========================================
   4
   5:Author: Eli Billauer, Xillybus Ltd. (http://xillybus.com)
   6:Email:  eli.billauer@gmail.com or as advertised on Xillybus' site.
   7
   8.. Contents:
   9
  10 - Introduction
  11  -- Background
  12  -- Xillybus Overview
  13
  14 - Usage
  15  -- User interface
  16  -- Synchronization
  17  -- Seekable pipes
  18
  19 - Internals
  20  -- Source code organization
  21  -- Pipe attributes
  22  -- Host never reads from the FPGA
  23  -- Channels, pipes, and the message channel
  24  -- Data streaming
  25  -- Data granularity
  26  -- Probing
  27  -- Buffer allocation
  28  -- The "nonempty" message (supporting poll)
  29
  30
  31Introduction
  32============
  33
  34Background
  35----------
  36
  37An FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array) is a piece of logic hardware, which
  38can be programmed to become virtually anything that is usually found as a
  39dedicated chipset: For instance, a display adapter, network interface card,
  40or even a processor with its peripherals. FPGAs are the LEGO of hardware:
  41Based upon certain building blocks, you make your own toys the way you like
  42them. It's usually pointless to reimplement something that is already
  43available on the market as a chipset, so FPGAs are mostly used when some
  44special functionality is needed, and the production volume is relatively low
  45(hence not justifying the development of an ASIC).
  46
  47The challenge with FPGAs is that everything is implemented at a very low
  48level, even lower than assembly language. In order to allow FPGA designers to
  49focus on their specific project, and not reinvent the wheel over and over
  50again, pre-designed building blocks, IP cores, are often used. These are the
  51FPGA parallels of library functions. IP cores may implement certain
  52mathematical functions, a functional unit (e.g. a USB interface), an entire
  53processor (e.g. ARM) or anything that might come handy. Think of them as a
  54building block, with electrical wires dangling on the sides for connection to
  55other blocks.
  56
  57One of the daunting tasks in FPGA design is communicating with a fullblown
  58operating system (actually, with the processor running it): Implementing the
  59low-level bus protocol and the somewhat higher-level interface with the host
  60(registers, interrupts, DMA etc.) is a project in itself. When the FPGA's
  61function is a well-known one (e.g. a video adapter card, or a NIC), it can
  62make sense to design the FPGA's interface logic specifically for the project.
  63A special driver is then written to present the FPGA as a well-known interface
  64to the kernel and/or user space. In that case, there is no reason to treat the
  65FPGA differently than any device on the bus.
  66
  67It's however common that the desired data communication doesn't fit any well-
  68known peripheral function. Also, the effort of designing an elegant
  69abstraction for the data exchange is often considered too big. In those cases,
  70a quicker and possibly less elegant solution is sought: The driver is
  71effectively written as a user space program, leaving the kernel space part
  72with just elementary data transport. This still requires designing some
  73interface logic for the FPGA, and write a simple ad-hoc driver for the kernel.
  74
  75Xillybus Overview
  76-----------------
  77
  78Xillybus is an IP core and a Linux driver. Together, they form a kit for
  79elementary data transport between an FPGA and the host, providing pipe-like
  80data streams with a straightforward user interface. It's intended as a low-
  81effort solution for mixed FPGA-host projects, for which it makes sense to
  82have the project-specific part of the driver running in a user-space program.
  83
  84Since the communication requirements may vary significantly from one FPGA
  85project to another (the number of data pipes needed in each direction and
  86their attributes), there isn't one specific chunk of logic being the Xillybus
  87IP core. Rather, the IP core is configured and built based upon a
  88specification given by its end user.
  89
  90Xillybus presents independent data streams, which resemble pipes or TCP/IP
  91communication to the user. At the host side, a character device file is used
  92just like any pipe file. On the FPGA side, hardware FIFOs are used to stream
  93the data. This is contrary to a common method of communicating through fixed-
  94sized buffers (even though such buffers are used by Xillybus under the hood).
  95There may be more than a hundred of these streams on a single IP core, but
  96also no more than one, depending on the configuration.
  97
  98In order to ease the deployment of the Xillybus IP core, it contains a simple
  99data structure which completely defines the core's configuration. The Linux
 100driver fetches this data structure during its initialization process, and sets
 101up the DMA buffers and character devices accordingly. As a result, a single
 102driver is used to work out of the box with any Xillybus IP core.
 103
 104The data structure just mentioned should not be confused with PCI's
 105configuration space or the Flattened Device Tree.
 106
 107Usage
 108=====
 109
 110User interface
 111--------------
 112
 113On the host, all interface with Xillybus is done through /dev/xillybus_*
 114device files, which are generated automatically as the drivers loads. The
 115names of these files depend on the IP core that is loaded in the FPGA (see
 116Probing below). To communicate with the FPGA, open the device file that
 117corresponds to the hardware FIFO you want to send data or receive data from,
 118and use plain write() or read() calls, just like with a regular pipe. In
 119particular, it makes perfect sense to go::
 120
 121        $ cat mydata > /dev/xillybus_thisfifo
 122
 123        $ cat /dev/xillybus_thatfifo > hisdata
 124
 125possibly pressing CTRL-C as some stage, even though the xillybus_* pipes have
 126the capability to send an EOF (but may not use it).
 127
 128The driver and hardware are designed to behave sensibly as pipes, including:
 129
 130* Supporting non-blocking I/O (by setting O_NONBLOCK on open() ).
 131
 132* Supporting poll() and select().
 133
 134* Being bandwidth efficient under load (using DMA) but also handle small
 135  pieces of data sent across (like TCP/IP) by autoflushing.
 136
 137A device file can be read only, write only or bidirectional. Bidirectional
 138device files are treated like two independent pipes (except for sharing a
 139"channel" structure in the implementation code).
 140
 141Synchronization
 142---------------
 143
 144Xillybus pipes are configured (on the IP core) to be either synchronous or
 145asynchronous. For a synchronous pipe, write() returns successfully only after
 146some data has been submitted and acknowledged by the FPGA. This slows down
 147bulk data transfers, and is nearly impossible for use with streams that
 148require data at a constant rate: There is no data transmitted to the FPGA
 149between write() calls, in particular when the process loses the CPU.
 150
 151When a pipe is configured asynchronous, write() returns if there was enough
 152room in the buffers to store any of the data in the buffers.
 153
 154For FPGA to host pipes, asynchronous pipes allow data transfer from the FPGA
 155as soon as the respective device file is opened, regardless of if the data
 156has been requested by a read() call. On synchronous pipes, only the amount
 157of data requested by a read() call is transmitted.
 158
 159In summary, for synchronous pipes, data between the host and FPGA is
 160transmitted only to satisfy the read() or write() call currently handled
 161by the driver, and those calls wait for the transmission to complete before
 162returning.
 163
 164Note that the synchronization attribute has nothing to do with the possibility
 165that read() or write() completes less bytes than requested. There is a
 166separate configuration flag ("allowpartial") that determines whether such a
 167partial completion is allowed.
 168
 169Seekable pipes
 170--------------
 171
 172A synchronous pipe can be configured to have the stream's position exposed
 173to the user logic at the FPGA. Such a pipe is also seekable on the host API.
 174With this feature, a memory or register interface can be attached on the
 175FPGA side to the seekable stream. Reading or writing to a certain address in
 176the attached memory is done by seeking to the desired address, and calling
 177read() or write() as required.
 178
 179
 180Internals
 181=========
 182
 183Source code organization
 184------------------------
 185
 186The Xillybus driver consists of a core module, xillybus_core.c, and modules
 187that depend on the specific bus interface (xillybus_of.c and xillybus_pcie.c).
 188
 189The bus specific modules are those probed when a suitable device is found by
 190the kernel. Since the DMA mapping and synchronization functions, which are bus
 191dependent by their nature, are used by the core module, a
 192xilly_endpoint_hardware structure is passed to the core module on
 193initialization. This structure is populated with pointers to wrapper functions
 194which execute the DMA-related operations on the bus.
 195
 196Pipe attributes
 197---------------
 198
 199Each pipe has a number of attributes which are set when the FPGA component
 200(IP core) is built. They are fetched from the IDT (the data structure which
 201defines the core's configuration, see Probing below) by xilly_setupchannels()
 202in xillybus_core.c as follows:
 203
 204* is_writebuf: The pipe's direction. A non-zero value means it's an FPGA to
 205  host pipe (the FPGA "writes").
 206
 207* channelnum: The pipe's identification number in communication between the
 208  host and FPGA.
 209
 210* format: The underlying data width. See Data Granularity below.
 211
 212* allowpartial: A non-zero value means that a read() or write() (whichever
 213  applies) may return with less than the requested number of bytes. The common
 214  choice is a non-zero value, to match standard UNIX behavior.
 215
 216* synchronous: A non-zero value means that the pipe is synchronous. See
 217  Synchronization above.
 218
 219* bufsize: Each DMA buffer's size. Always a power of two.
 220
 221* bufnum: The number of buffers allocated for this pipe. Always a power of two.
 222
 223* exclusive_open: A non-zero value forces exclusive opening of the associated
 224  device file. If the device file is bidirectional, and already opened only in
 225  one direction, the opposite direction may be opened once.
 226
 227* seekable: A non-zero value indicates that the pipe is seekable. See
 228  Seekable pipes above.
 229
 230* supports_nonempty: A non-zero value (which is typical) indicates that the
 231  hardware will send the messages that are necessary to support select() and
 232  poll() for this pipe.
 233
 234Host never reads from the FPGA
 235------------------------------
 236
 237Even though PCI Express is hotpluggable in general, a typical motherboard
 238doesn't expect a card to go away all of the sudden. But since the PCIe card
 239is based upon reprogrammable logic, a sudden disappearance from the bus is
 240quite likely as a result of an accidental reprogramming of the FPGA while the
 241host is up. In practice, nothing happens immediately in such a situation. But
 242if the host attempts to read from an address that is mapped to the PCI Express
 243device, that leads to an immediate freeze of the system on some motherboards,
 244even though the PCIe standard requires a graceful recovery.
 245
 246In order to avoid these freezes, the Xillybus driver refrains completely from
 247reading from the device's register space. All communication from the FPGA to
 248the host is done through DMA. In particular, the Interrupt Service Routine
 249doesn't follow the common practice of checking a status register when it's
 250invoked. Rather, the FPGA prepares a small buffer which contains short
 251messages, which inform the host what the interrupt was about.
 252
 253This mechanism is used on non-PCIe buses as well for the sake of uniformity.
 254
 255
 256Channels, pipes, and the message channel
 257----------------------------------------
 258
 259Each of the (possibly bidirectional) pipes presented to the user is allocated
 260a data channel between the FPGA and the host. The distinction between channels
 261and pipes is necessary only because of channel 0, which is used for interrupt-
 262related messages from the FPGA, and has no pipe attached to it.
 263
 264Data streaming
 265--------------
 266
 267Even though a non-segmented data stream is presented to the user at both
 268sides, the implementation relies on a set of DMA buffers which is allocated
 269for each channel. For the sake of illustration, let's take the FPGA to host
 270direction: As data streams into the respective channel's interface in the
 271FPGA, the Xillybus IP core writes it to one of the DMA buffers. When the
 272buffer is full, the FPGA informs the host about that (appending a
 273XILLYMSG_OPCODE_RELEASEBUF message channel 0 and sending an interrupt if
 274necessary). The host responds by making the data available for reading through
 275the character device. When all data has been read, the host writes on the
 276the FPGA's buffer control register, allowing the buffer's overwriting. Flow
 277control mechanisms exist on both sides to prevent underflows and overflows.
 278
 279This is not good enough for creating a TCP/IP-like stream: If the data flow
 280stops momentarily before a DMA buffer is filled, the intuitive expectation is
 281that the partial data in buffer will arrive anyhow, despite the buffer not
 282being completed. This is implemented by adding a field in the
 283XILLYMSG_OPCODE_RELEASEBUF message, through which the FPGA informs not just
 284which buffer is submitted, but how much data it contains.
 285
 286But the FPGA will submit a partially filled buffer only if directed to do so
 287by the host. This situation occurs when the read() method has been blocking
 288for XILLY_RX_TIMEOUT jiffies (currently 10 ms), after which the host commands
 289the FPGA to submit a DMA buffer as soon as it can. This timeout mechanism
 290balances between bus bandwidth efficiency (preventing a lot of partially
 291filled buffers being sent) and a latency held fairly low for tails of data.
 292
 293A similar setting is used in the host to FPGA direction. The handling of
 294partial DMA buffers is somewhat different, though. The user can tell the
 295driver to submit all data it has in the buffers to the FPGA, by issuing a
 296write() with the byte count set to zero. This is similar to a flush request,
 297but it doesn't block. There is also an autoflushing mechanism, which triggers
 298an equivalent flush roughly XILLY_RX_TIMEOUT jiffies after the last write().
 299This allows the user to be oblivious about the underlying buffering mechanism
 300and yet enjoy a stream-like interface.
 301
 302Note that the issue of partial buffer flushing is irrelevant for pipes having
 303the "synchronous" attribute nonzero, since synchronous pipes don't allow data
 304to lay around in the DMA buffers between read() and write() anyhow.
 305
 306Data granularity
 307----------------
 308
 309The data arrives or is sent at the FPGA as 8, 16 or 32 bit wide words, as
 310configured by the "format" attribute. Whenever possible, the driver attempts
 311to hide this when the pipe is accessed differently from its natural alignment.
 312For example, reading single bytes from a pipe with 32 bit granularity works
 313with no issues. Writing single bytes to pipes with 16 or 32 bit granularity
 314will also work, but the driver can't send partially completed words to the
 315FPGA, so the transmission of up to one word may be held until it's fully
 316occupied with user data.
 317
 318This somewhat complicates the handling of host to FPGA streams, because
 319when a buffer is flushed, it may contain up to 3 bytes don't form a word in
 320the FPGA, and hence can't be sent. To prevent loss of data, these leftover
 321bytes need to be moved to the next buffer. The parts in xillybus_core.c
 322that mention "leftovers" in some way are related to this complication.
 323
 324Probing
 325-------
 326
 327As mentioned earlier, the number of pipes that are created when the driver
 328loads and their attributes depend on the Xillybus IP core in the FPGA. During
 329the driver's initialization, a blob containing configuration info, the
 330Interface Description Table (IDT), is sent from the FPGA to the host. The
 331bootstrap process is done in three phases:
 332
 3331. Acquire the length of the IDT, so a buffer can be allocated for it. This
 334   is done by sending a quiesce command to the device, since the acknowledge
 335   for this command contains the IDT's buffer length.
 336
 3372. Acquire the IDT itself.
 338
 3393. Create the interfaces according to the IDT.
 340
 341Buffer allocation
 342-----------------
 343
 344In order to simplify the logic that prevents illegal boundary crossings of
 345PCIe packets, the following rule applies: If a buffer is smaller than 4kB,
 346it must not cross a 4kB boundary. Otherwise, it must be 4kB aligned. The
 347xilly_setupchannels() functions allocates these buffers by requesting whole
 348pages from the kernel, and diving them into DMA buffers as necessary. Since
 349all buffers' sizes are powers of two, it's possible to pack any set of such
 350buffers, with a maximal waste of one page of memory.
 351
 352All buffers are allocated when the driver is loaded. This is necessary,
 353since large continuous physical memory segments are sometimes requested,
 354which are more likely to be available when the system is freshly booted.
 355
 356The allocation of buffer memory takes place in the same order they appear in
 357the IDT. The driver relies on a rule that the pipes are sorted with decreasing
 358buffer size in the IDT. If a requested buffer is larger or equal to a page,
 359the necessary number of pages is requested from the kernel, and these are
 360used for this buffer. If the requested buffer is smaller than a page, one
 361single page is requested from the kernel, and that page is partially used.
 362Or, if there already is a partially used page at hand, the buffer is packed
 363into that page. It can be shown that all pages requested from the kernel
 364(except possibly for the last) are 100% utilized this way.
 365
 366The "nonempty" message (supporting poll)
 367----------------------------------------
 368
 369In order to support the "poll" method (and hence select() ), there is a small
 370catch regarding the FPGA to host direction: The FPGA may have filled a DMA
 371buffer with some data, but not submitted that buffer. If the host waited for
 372the buffer's submission by the FPGA, there would be a possibility that the
 373FPGA side has sent data, but a select() call would still block, because the
 374host has not received any notification about this. This is solved with
 375XILLYMSG_OPCODE_NONEMPTY messages sent by the FPGA when a channel goes from
 376completely empty to containing some data.
 377
 378These messages are used only to support poll() and select(). The IP core can
 379be configured not to send them for a slight reduction of bandwidth.
 380