linux/drivers/char/nwbutton.c
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   1// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
   2/*
   3 *      NetWinder Button Driver-
   4 *      Copyright (C) Alex Holden <alex@linuxhacker.org> 1998, 1999.
   5 *
   6 */
   7
   8#include <linux/module.h>
   9#include <linux/kernel.h>
  10#include <linux/sched/signal.h>
  11#include <linux/interrupt.h>
  12#include <linux/time.h>
  13#include <linux/timer.h>
  14#include <linux/fs.h>
  15#include <linux/miscdevice.h>
  16#include <linux/string.h>
  17#include <linux/errno.h>
  18#include <linux/init.h>
  19
  20#include <linux/uaccess.h>
  21#include <asm/irq.h>
  22#include <asm/mach-types.h>
  23
  24#define __NWBUTTON_C            /* Tell the header file who we are */
  25#include "nwbutton.h"
  26
  27static void button_sequence_finished(struct timer_list *unused);
  28
  29static int button_press_count;          /* The count of button presses */
  30/* Times for the end of a sequence */
  31static DEFINE_TIMER(button_timer, button_sequence_finished);
  32static DECLARE_WAIT_QUEUE_HEAD(button_wait_queue); /* Used for blocking read */
  33static char button_output_buffer[32];   /* Stores data to write out of device */
  34static int bcount;                      /* The number of bytes in the buffer */
  35static int bdelay = BUTTON_DELAY;       /* The delay, in jiffies */
  36static struct button_callback button_callback_list[32]; /* The callback list */
  37static int callback_count;              /* The number of callbacks registered */
  38static int reboot_count = NUM_PRESSES_REBOOT; /* Number of presses to reboot */
  39
  40/*
  41 * This function is called by other drivers to register a callback function
  42 * to be called when a particular number of button presses occurs.
  43 * The callback list is a static array of 32 entries (I somehow doubt many
  44 * people are ever going to want to register more than 32 different actions
  45 * to be performed by the kernel on different numbers of button presses ;).
  46 * However, if an attempt to register a 33rd entry (perhaps a stuck loop
  47 * somewhere registering the same entry over and over?) it will fail to
  48 * do so and return -ENOMEM. If an attempt is made to register a null pointer,
  49 * it will fail to do so and return -EINVAL.
  50 * Because callbacks can be unregistered at random the list can become
  51 * fragmented, so we need to search through the list until we find the first
  52 * free entry.
  53 *
  54 * FIXME: Has anyone spotted any locking functions int his code recently ??
  55 */
  56
  57int button_add_callback (void (*callback) (void), int count)
  58{
  59        int lp = 0;
  60        if (callback_count == 32) {
  61                return -ENOMEM;
  62        }
  63        if (!callback) {
  64                return -EINVAL;
  65        }
  66        callback_count++;
  67        for (; (button_callback_list [lp].callback); lp++);
  68        button_callback_list [lp].callback = callback;
  69        button_callback_list [lp].count = count;
  70        return 0;
  71}
  72
  73/*
  74 * This function is called by other drivers to deregister a callback function.
  75 * If you attempt to unregister a callback which does not exist, it will fail
  76 * with -EINVAL. If there is more than one entry with the same address,
  77 * because it searches the list from end to beginning, it will unregister the
  78 * last one to be registered first (FILO- First In Last Out).
  79 * Note that this is not necessarily true if the entries are not submitted
  80 * at the same time, because another driver could have unregistered a callback
  81 * between the submissions creating a gap earlier in the list, which would
  82 * be filled first at submission time.
  83 */
  84
  85int button_del_callback (void (*callback) (void))
  86{
  87        int lp = 31;
  88        if (!callback) {
  89                return -EINVAL;
  90        }
  91        while (lp >= 0) {
  92                if ((button_callback_list [lp].callback) == callback) {
  93                        button_callback_list [lp].callback = NULL;
  94                        button_callback_list [lp].count = 0;
  95                        callback_count--;
  96                        return 0;
  97                }
  98                lp--;
  99        }
 100        return -EINVAL;
 101}
 102
 103/*
 104 * This function is called by button_sequence_finished to search through the
 105 * list of callback functions, and call any of them whose count argument
 106 * matches the current count of button presses. It starts at the beginning
 107 * of the list and works up to the end. It will refuse to follow a null
 108 * pointer (which should never happen anyway).
 109 */
 110
 111static void button_consume_callbacks (int bpcount)
 112{
 113        int lp = 0;
 114        for (; lp <= 31; lp++) {
 115                if ((button_callback_list [lp].count) == bpcount) {
 116                        if (button_callback_list [lp].callback) {
 117                                button_callback_list[lp].callback();
 118                        }
 119                }
 120        }
 121}
 122
 123/* 
 124 * This function is called when the button_timer times out.
 125 * ie. When you don't press the button for bdelay jiffies, this is taken to
 126 * mean you have ended the sequence of key presses, and this function is
 127 * called to wind things up (write the press_count out to /dev/button, call
 128 * any matching registered function callbacks, initiate reboot, etc.).
 129 */
 130
 131static void button_sequence_finished(struct timer_list *unused)
 132{
 133        if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_NWBUTTON_REBOOT) &&
 134            button_press_count == reboot_count)
 135                kill_cad_pid(SIGINT, 1);        /* Ask init to reboot us */
 136        button_consume_callbacks (button_press_count);
 137        bcount = sprintf (button_output_buffer, "%d\n", button_press_count);
 138        button_press_count = 0;         /* Reset the button press counter */
 139        wake_up_interruptible (&button_wait_queue);
 140}
 141
 142/* 
 143 *  This handler is called when the orange button is pressed (GPIO 10 of the
 144 *  SuperIO chip, which maps to logical IRQ 26). If the press_count is 0,
 145 *  this is the first press, so it starts a timer and increments the counter.
 146 *  If it is higher than 0, it deletes the old timer, starts a new one, and
 147 *  increments the counter.
 148 */ 
 149
 150static irqreturn_t button_handler (int irq, void *dev_id)
 151{
 152        button_press_count++;
 153        mod_timer(&button_timer, jiffies + bdelay);
 154
 155        return IRQ_HANDLED;
 156}
 157
 158/*
 159 * This function is called when a user space program attempts to read
 160 * /dev/nwbutton. It puts the device to sleep on the wait queue until
 161 * button_sequence_finished writes some data to the buffer and flushes
 162 * the queue, at which point it writes the data out to the device and
 163 * returns the number of characters it has written. This function is
 164 * reentrant, so that many processes can be attempting to read from the
 165 * device at any one time.
 166 */
 167
 168static int button_read (struct file *filp, char __user *buffer,
 169                        size_t count, loff_t *ppos)
 170{
 171        DEFINE_WAIT(wait);
 172        prepare_to_wait(&button_wait_queue, &wait, TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE);
 173        schedule();
 174        finish_wait(&button_wait_queue, &wait);
 175        return (copy_to_user (buffer, &button_output_buffer, bcount))
 176                 ? -EFAULT : bcount;
 177}
 178
 179/* 
 180 * This structure is the file operations structure, which specifies what
 181 * callbacks functions the kernel should call when a user mode process
 182 * attempts to perform these operations on the device.
 183 */
 184
 185static const struct file_operations button_fops = {
 186        .owner          = THIS_MODULE,
 187        .read           = button_read,
 188        .llseek         = noop_llseek,
 189};
 190
 191/* 
 192 * This structure is the misc device structure, which specifies the minor
 193 * device number (158 in this case), the name of the device (for /proc/misc),
 194 * and the address of the above file operations structure.
 195 */
 196
 197static struct miscdevice button_misc_device = {
 198        BUTTON_MINOR,
 199        "nwbutton",
 200        &button_fops,
 201};
 202
 203/*
 204 * This function is called to initialise the driver, either from misc.c at
 205 * bootup if the driver is compiled into the kernel, or from init_module
 206 * below at module insert time. It attempts to register the device node
 207 * and the IRQ and fails with a warning message if either fails, though
 208 * neither ever should because the device number and IRQ are unique to
 209 * this driver.
 210 */
 211
 212static int __init nwbutton_init(void)
 213{
 214        if (!machine_is_netwinder())
 215                return -ENODEV;
 216
 217        printk (KERN_INFO "NetWinder Button Driver Version %s (C) Alex Holden "
 218                        "<alex@linuxhacker.org> 1998.\n", VERSION);
 219
 220        if (misc_register (&button_misc_device)) {
 221                printk (KERN_WARNING "nwbutton: Couldn't register device 10, "
 222                                "%d.\n", BUTTON_MINOR);
 223                return -EBUSY;
 224        }
 225
 226        if (request_irq (IRQ_NETWINDER_BUTTON, button_handler, 0,
 227                        "nwbutton", NULL)) {
 228                printk (KERN_WARNING "nwbutton: IRQ %d is not free.\n",
 229                                IRQ_NETWINDER_BUTTON);
 230                misc_deregister (&button_misc_device);
 231                return -EIO;
 232        }
 233        return 0;
 234}
 235
 236static void __exit nwbutton_exit (void) 
 237{
 238        free_irq (IRQ_NETWINDER_BUTTON, NULL);
 239        misc_deregister (&button_misc_device);
 240}
 241
 242
 243MODULE_AUTHOR("Alex Holden");
 244MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
 245
 246module_init(nwbutton_init);
 247module_exit(nwbutton_exit);
 248