| HCI backend for NFC Core | 
 |  | 
 | Author: Eric Lapuyade, Samuel Ortiz | 
 | Contact: eric.lapuyade@intel.com, samuel.ortiz@intel.com | 
 |  | 
 | General | 
 | ------- | 
 |  | 
 | The HCI layer implements much of the ETSI TS 102 622 V10.2.0 specification. It | 
 | enables easy writing of HCI-based NFC drivers. The HCI layer runs as an NFC Core | 
 | backend, implementing an abstract nfc device and translating NFC Core API | 
 | to HCI commands and events. | 
 |  | 
 | HCI | 
 | --- | 
 |  | 
 | HCI registers as an nfc device with NFC Core. Requests coming from userspace are | 
 | routed through netlink sockets to NFC Core and then to HCI. From this point, | 
 | they are translated in a sequence of HCI commands sent to the HCI layer in the | 
 | host controller (the chip). Commands can be executed synchronously (the sending | 
 | context blocks waiting for response) or asynchronously (the response is returned | 
 | from HCI Rx context). | 
 | HCI events can also be received from the host controller. They will be handled | 
 | and a translation will be forwarded to NFC Core as needed. There are hooks to | 
 | let the HCI driver handle proprietary events or override standard behavior. | 
 | HCI uses 2 execution contexts: | 
 | - one for executing commands : nfc_hci_msg_tx_work(). Only one command | 
 | can be executing at any given moment. | 
 | - one for dispatching received events and commands : nfc_hci_msg_rx_work(). | 
 |  | 
 | HCI Session initialization: | 
 | --------------------------- | 
 |  | 
 | The Session initialization is an HCI standard which must unfortunately | 
 | support proprietary gates. This is the reason why the driver will pass a list | 
 | of proprietary gates that must be part of the session. HCI will ensure all | 
 | those gates have pipes connected when the hci device is set up. | 
 | In case the chip supports pre-opened gates and pseudo-static pipes, the driver | 
 | can pass that information to HCI core. | 
 |  | 
 | HCI Gates and Pipes | 
 | ------------------- | 
 |  | 
 | A gate defines the 'port' where some service can be found. In order to access | 
 | a service, one must create a pipe to that gate and open it. In this | 
 | implementation, pipes are totally hidden. The public API only knows gates. | 
 | This is consistent with the driver need to send commands to proprietary gates | 
 | without knowing the pipe connected to it. | 
 |  | 
 | Driver interface | 
 | ---------------- | 
 |  | 
 | A driver is generally written in two parts : the physical link management and | 
 | the HCI management. This makes it easier to maintain a driver for a chip that | 
 | can be connected using various phy (i2c, spi, ...) | 
 |  | 
 | HCI Management | 
 | -------------- | 
 |  | 
 | A driver would normally register itself with HCI and provide the following | 
 | entry points: | 
 |  | 
 | struct nfc_hci_ops { | 
 | 	int (*open)(struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev); | 
 | 	void (*close)(struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev); | 
 | 	int (*hci_ready) (struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev); | 
 | 	int (*xmit) (struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, struct sk_buff *skb); | 
 | 	int (*start_poll) (struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, | 
 | 			   u32 im_protocols, u32 tm_protocols); | 
 | 	int (*dep_link_up)(struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, struct nfc_target *target, | 
 | 			   u8 comm_mode, u8 *gb, size_t gb_len); | 
 | 	int (*dep_link_down)(struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev); | 
 | 	int (*target_from_gate) (struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, u8 gate, | 
 | 				 struct nfc_target *target); | 
 | 	int (*complete_target_discovered) (struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, u8 gate, | 
 | 					   struct nfc_target *target); | 
 | 	int (*im_transceive) (struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, | 
 | 			      struct nfc_target *target, struct sk_buff *skb, | 
 | 			      data_exchange_cb_t cb, void *cb_context); | 
 | 	int (*tm_send)(struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, struct sk_buff *skb); | 
 | 	int (*check_presence)(struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, | 
 | 			      struct nfc_target *target); | 
 | 	int (*event_received)(struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, u8 gate, u8 event, | 
 | 			      struct sk_buff *skb); | 
 | }; | 
 |  | 
 | - open() and close() shall turn the hardware on and off. | 
 | - hci_ready() is an optional entry point that is called right after the hci | 
 | session has been set up. The driver can use it to do additional initialization | 
 | that must be performed using HCI commands. | 
 | - xmit() shall simply write a frame to the physical link. | 
 | - start_poll() is an optional entrypoint that shall set the hardware in polling | 
 | mode. This must be implemented only if the hardware uses proprietary gates or a | 
 | mechanism slightly different from the HCI standard. | 
 | - dep_link_up() is called after a p2p target has been detected, to finish | 
 | the p2p connection setup with hardware parameters that need to be passed back | 
 | to nfc core. | 
 | - dep_link_down() is called to bring the p2p link down. | 
 | - target_from_gate() is an optional entrypoint to return the nfc protocols | 
 | corresponding to a proprietary gate. | 
 | - complete_target_discovered() is an optional entry point to let the driver | 
 | perform additional proprietary processing necessary to auto activate the | 
 | discovered target. | 
 | - im_transceive() must be implemented by the driver if proprietary HCI commands | 
 | are required to send data to the tag. Some tag types will require custom | 
 | commands, others can be written to using the standard HCI commands. The driver | 
 | can check the tag type and either do proprietary processing, or return 1 to ask | 
 | for standard processing. The data exchange command itself must be sent | 
 | asynchronously. | 
 | - tm_send() is called to send data in the case of a p2p connection | 
 | - check_presence() is an optional entry point that will be called regularly | 
 | by the core to check that an activated tag is still in the field. If this is | 
 | not implemented, the core will not be able to push tag_lost events to the user | 
 | space | 
 | - event_received() is called to handle an event coming from the chip. Driver | 
 | can handle the event or return 1 to let HCI attempt standard processing. | 
 |  | 
 | On the rx path, the driver is responsible to push incoming HCP frames to HCI | 
 | using nfc_hci_recv_frame(). HCI will take care of re-aggregation and handling | 
 | This must be done from a context that can sleep. | 
 |  | 
 | PHY Management | 
 | -------------- | 
 |  | 
 | The physical link (i2c, ...) management is defined by the following structure: | 
 |  | 
 | struct nfc_phy_ops { | 
 | 	int (*write)(void *dev_id, struct sk_buff *skb); | 
 | 	int (*enable)(void *dev_id); | 
 | 	void (*disable)(void *dev_id); | 
 | }; | 
 |  | 
 | enable(): turn the phy on (power on), make it ready to transfer data | 
 | disable(): turn the phy off | 
 | write(): Send a data frame to the chip. Note that to enable higher | 
 | layers such as an llc to store the frame for re-emission, this function must | 
 | not alter the skb. It must also not return a positive result (return 0 for | 
 | success, negative for failure). | 
 |  | 
 | Data coming from the chip shall be sent directly to nfc_hci_recv_frame(). | 
 |  | 
 | LLC | 
 | --- | 
 |  | 
 | Communication between the CPU and the chip often requires some link layer | 
 | protocol. Those are isolated as modules managed by the HCI layer. There are | 
 | currently two modules : nop (raw transfert) and shdlc. | 
 | A new llc must implement the following functions: | 
 |  | 
 | struct nfc_llc_ops { | 
 | 	void *(*init) (struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, xmit_to_drv_t xmit_to_drv, | 
 | 		       rcv_to_hci_t rcv_to_hci, int tx_headroom, | 
 | 		       int tx_tailroom, int *rx_headroom, int *rx_tailroom, | 
 | 		       llc_failure_t llc_failure); | 
 | 	void (*deinit) (struct nfc_llc *llc); | 
 | 	int (*start) (struct nfc_llc *llc); | 
 | 	int (*stop) (struct nfc_llc *llc); | 
 | 	void (*rcv_from_drv) (struct nfc_llc *llc, struct sk_buff *skb); | 
 | 	int (*xmit_from_hci) (struct nfc_llc *llc, struct sk_buff *skb); | 
 | }; | 
 |  | 
 | - init() : allocate and init your private storage | 
 | - deinit() : cleanup | 
 | - start() : establish the logical connection | 
 | - stop () : terminate the logical connection | 
 | - rcv_from_drv() : handle data coming from the chip, going to HCI | 
 | - xmit_from_hci() : handle data sent by HCI, going to the chip | 
 |  | 
 | The llc must be registered with nfc before it can be used. Do that by | 
 | calling nfc_llc_register(const char *name, struct nfc_llc_ops *ops); | 
 |  | 
 | Again, note that the llc does not handle the physical link. It is thus very | 
 | easy to mix any physical link with any llc for a given chip driver. | 
 |  | 
 | Included Drivers | 
 | ---------------- | 
 |  | 
 | An HCI based driver for an NXP PN544, connected through I2C bus, and using | 
 | shdlc is included. | 
 |  | 
 | Execution Contexts | 
 | ------------------ | 
 |  | 
 | The execution contexts are the following: | 
 | - IRQ handler (IRQH): | 
 | fast, cannot sleep. sends incoming frames to HCI where they are passed to | 
 | the current llc. In case of shdlc, the frame is queued in shdlc rx queue. | 
 |  | 
 | - SHDLC State Machine worker (SMW) | 
 | Only when llc_shdlc is used: handles shdlc rx & tx queues. | 
 | Dispatches HCI cmd responses. | 
 |  | 
 | - HCI Tx Cmd worker (MSGTXWQ) | 
 | Serializes execution of HCI commands. Completes execution in case of response | 
 | timeout. | 
 |  | 
 | - HCI Rx worker (MSGRXWQ) | 
 | Dispatches incoming HCI commands or events. | 
 |  | 
 | - Syscall context from a userspace call (SYSCALL) | 
 | Any entrypoint in HCI called from NFC Core | 
 |  | 
 | Workflow executing an HCI command (using shdlc) | 
 | ----------------------------------------------- | 
 |  | 
 | Executing an HCI command can easily be performed synchronously using the | 
 | following API: | 
 |  | 
 | int nfc_hci_send_cmd (struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, u8 gate, u8 cmd, | 
 | 			const u8 *param, size_t param_len, struct sk_buff **skb) | 
 |  | 
 | The API must be invoked from a context that can sleep. Most of the time, this | 
 | will be the syscall context. skb will return the result that was received in | 
 | the response. | 
 |  | 
 | Internally, execution is asynchronous. So all this API does is to enqueue the | 
 | HCI command, setup a local wait queue on stack, and wait_event() for completion. | 
 | The wait is not interruptible because it is guaranteed that the command will | 
 | complete after some short timeout anyway. | 
 |  | 
 | MSGTXWQ context will then be scheduled and invoke nfc_hci_msg_tx_work(). | 
 | This function will dequeue the next pending command and send its HCP fragments | 
 | to the lower layer which happens to be shdlc. It will then start a timer to be | 
 | able to complete the command with a timeout error if no response arrive. | 
 |  | 
 | SMW context gets scheduled and invokes nfc_shdlc_sm_work(). This function | 
 | handles shdlc framing in and out. It uses the driver xmit to send frames and | 
 | receives incoming frames in an skb queue filled from the driver IRQ handler. | 
 | SHDLC I(nformation) frames payload are HCP fragments. They are aggregated to | 
 | form complete HCI frames, which can be a response, command, or event. | 
 |  | 
 | HCI Responses are dispatched immediately from this context to unblock | 
 | waiting command execution. Response processing involves invoking the completion | 
 | callback that was provided by nfc_hci_msg_tx_work() when it sent the command. | 
 | The completion callback will then wake the syscall context. | 
 |  | 
 | It is also possible to execute the command asynchronously using this API: | 
 |  | 
 | static int nfc_hci_execute_cmd_async(struct nfc_hci_dev *hdev, u8 pipe, u8 cmd, | 
 | 			       const u8 *param, size_t param_len, | 
 | 			       data_exchange_cb_t cb, void *cb_context) | 
 |  | 
 | The workflow is the same, except that the API call returns immediately, and | 
 | the callback will be called with the result from the SMW context. | 
 |  | 
 | Workflow receiving an HCI event or command | 
 | ------------------------------------------ | 
 |  | 
 | HCI commands or events are not dispatched from SMW context. Instead, they are | 
 | queued to HCI rx_queue and will be dispatched from HCI rx worker | 
 | context (MSGRXWQ). This is done this way to allow a cmd or event handler | 
 | to also execute other commands (for example, handling the | 
 | NFC_HCI_EVT_TARGET_DISCOVERED event from PN544 requires to issue an | 
 | ANY_GET_PARAMETER to the reader A gate to get information on the target | 
 | that was discovered). | 
 |  | 
 | Typically, such an event will be propagated to NFC Core from MSGRXWQ context. | 
 |  | 
 | Error management | 
 | ---------------- | 
 |  | 
 | Errors that occur synchronously with the execution of an NFC Core request are | 
 | simply returned as the execution result of the request. These are easy. | 
 |  | 
 | Errors that occur asynchronously (e.g. in a background protocol handling thread) | 
 | must be reported such that upper layers don't stay ignorant that something | 
 | went wrong below and know that expected events will probably never happen. | 
 | Handling of these errors is done as follows: | 
 |  | 
 | - driver (pn544) fails to deliver an incoming frame: it stores the error such | 
 | that any subsequent call to the driver will result in this error. Then it calls | 
 | the standard nfc_shdlc_recv_frame() with a NULL argument to report the problem | 
 | above. shdlc stores a EREMOTEIO sticky status, which will trigger SMW to | 
 | report above in turn. | 
 |  | 
 | - SMW is basically a background thread to handle incoming and outgoing shdlc | 
 | frames. This thread will also check the shdlc sticky status and report to HCI | 
 | when it discovers it is not able to run anymore because of an unrecoverable | 
 | error that happened within shdlc or below. If the problem occurs during shdlc | 
 | connection, the error is reported through the connect completion. | 
 |  | 
 | - HCI: if an internal HCI error happens (frame is lost), or HCI is reported an | 
 | error from a lower layer, HCI will either complete the currently executing | 
 | command with that error, or notify NFC Core directly if no command is executing. | 
 |  | 
 | - NFC Core: when NFC Core is notified of an error from below and polling is | 
 | active, it will send a tag discovered event with an empty tag list to the user | 
 | space to let it know that the poll operation will never be able to detect a tag. | 
 | If polling is not active and the error was sticky, lower levels will return it | 
 | at next invocation. |