diff mbox series

Documentation: i2c: testunit: use proper reST

Message ID 20240611095108.10639-2-wsa+renesas@sang-engineering.com
State New
Headers show
Series Documentation: i2c: testunit: use proper reST | expand

Commit Message

Wolfram Sang June 11, 2024, 9:50 a.m. UTC
This document is hardly readable when converted to HTML. Mark code
sections as such and use tables to improve readability a lot. Some
content has slightly been moved around, but no significant changes were
made.

Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa+renesas@sang-engineering.com>
---

This is a preparational patch before adding more features to the
testunit.

 Documentation/i2c/slave-testunit-backend.rst | 122 +++++++++++++------
 1 file changed, 82 insertions(+), 40 deletions(-)

Comments

Wolfram Sang June 26, 2024, 10:27 a.m. UTC | #1
On Tue, Jun 11, 2024 at 11:50:31AM GMT, Wolfram Sang wrote:
> This document is hardly readable when converted to HTML. Mark code
> sections as such and use tables to improve readability a lot. Some
> content has slightly been moved around, but no significant changes were
> made.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa+renesas@sang-engineering.com>

Applied to for-next, thanks!
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/Documentation/i2c/slave-testunit-backend.rst b/Documentation/i2c/slave-testunit-backend.rst
index ecfc2abec32d..0df60c7c0be4 100644
--- a/Documentation/i2c/slave-testunit-backend.rst
+++ b/Documentation/i2c/slave-testunit-backend.rst
@@ -16,9 +16,9 @@  Note that this is a device for testing and debugging. It should not be enabled
 in a production build. And while there is some versioning and we try hard to
 keep backward compatibility, there is no stable ABI guaranteed!
 
-Instantiating the device is regular. Example for bus 0, address 0x30:
+Instantiating the device is regular. Example for bus 0, address 0x30::
 
-# echo "slave-testunit 0x1030" > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/i2c-0/new_device
+  # echo "slave-testunit 0x1030" > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/i2c-0/new_device
 
 After that, you will have a write-only device listening. Reads will just return
 an 8-bit version number of the testunit. When writing, the device consists of 4
@@ -26,14 +26,17 @@  an 8-bit version number of the testunit. When writing, the device consists of 4
 written to start a testcase, i.e. you usually write 4 bytes to the device. The
 registers are:
 
-0x00 CMD   - which test to trigger
-0x01 DATAL - configuration byte 1 for the test
-0x02 DATAH - configuration byte 2 for the test
-0x03 DELAY - delay in n * 10ms until test is started
+.. csv-table::
+  :header: "Offset", "Name", "Description"
 
-Using 'i2cset' from the i2c-tools package, the generic command looks like:
+  0x00, CMD, which test to trigger
+  0x01, DATAL, configuration byte 1 for the test
+  0x02, DATAH, configuration byte 2 for the test
+  0x03, DELAY, delay in n * 10ms until test is started
 
-# i2cset -y <bus_num> <testunit_address> <CMD> <DATAL> <DATAH> <DELAY> i
+Using 'i2cset' from the i2c-tools package, the generic command looks like::
+
+  # i2cset -y <bus_num> <testunit_address> <CMD> <DATAL> <DATAH> <DELAY> i
 
 DELAY is a generic parameter which will delay the execution of the test in CMD.
 While a command is running (including the delay), new commands will not be
@@ -45,44 +48,83 @@  result in the transfer not being acknowledged.
 Commands
 --------
 
-0x00 NOOP (reserved for future use)
+0x00 NOOP
+~~~~~~~~~
+
+Reserved for future use.
+
+0x01 READ_BYTES
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+.. list-table::
+  :header-rows: 1
+
+  * - CMD
+    - DATAL
+    - DATAH
+    - DELAY
+
+  * - 0x01
+    - address to read data from (lower 7 bits, highest bit currently unused)
+    - number of bytes to read
+    - n * 10ms
+
+Also needs master mode. This is useful to test if your bus master driver is
+handling multi-master correctly. You can trigger the testunit to read bytes
+from another device on the bus. If the bus master under test also wants to
+access the bus at the same time, the bus will be busy. Example to read 128
+bytes from device 0x50 after 50ms of delay::
+
+  # i2cset -y 0 0x30 0x01 0x50 0x80 0x05 i
+
+0x02 SMBUS_HOST_NOTIFY
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+.. list-table::
+  :header-rows: 1
+
+  * - CMD
+    - DATAL
+    - DATAH
+    - DELAY
 
-0x01 READ_BYTES (also needs master mode)
-   DATAL - address to read data from (lower 7 bits, highest bit currently unused)
-   DATAH - number of bytes to read
+  * - 0x02
+    - low byte of the status word to send
+    - high byte of the status word to send
+    - n * 10ms
 
-This is useful to test if your bus master driver is handling multi-master
-correctly. You can trigger the testunit to read bytes from another device on
-the bus. If the bus master under test also wants to access the bus at the same
-time, the bus will be busy. Example to read 128 bytes from device 0x50 after
-50ms of delay:
+Also needs master mode. This test will send an SMBUS_HOST_NOTIFY message to the
+host. Note that the status word is currently ignored in the Linux Kernel.
+Example to send a notification after 10ms::
 
-# i2cset -y 0 0x30 0x01 0x50 0x80 0x05 i
+  # i2cset -y 0 0x30 0x02 0x42 0x64 0x01 i
 
-0x02 SMBUS_HOST_NOTIFY (also needs master mode)
-   DATAL - low byte of the status word to send
-   DATAH - high byte of the status word to send
+0x03 SMBUS_BLOCK_PROC_CALL
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
-This test will send an SMBUS_HOST_NOTIFY message to the host. Note that the
-status word is currently ignored in the Linux Kernel. Example to send a
-notification after 10ms:
+.. list-table::
+  :header-rows: 1
 
-# i2cset -y 0 0x30 0x02 0x42 0x64 0x01 i
+  * - CMD
+    - DATAL
+    - DATAH
+    - DELAY
 
-0x03 SMBUS_BLOCK_PROC_CALL (partial command)
-   DATAL - must be '1', i.e. one further byte will be written
-   DATAH - number of bytes to be sent back
-   DELAY - not applicable, partial command!
+  * - 0x03
+    - must be '1', i.e. one further byte will be written
+    - number of bytes to be sent back
+    - leave out, partial command!
 
-This test will respond to a block process call as defined by the SMBus
-specification. The one data byte written specifies how many bytes will be sent
-back in the following read transfer. Note that in this read transfer, the
-testunit will prefix the length of the bytes to follow. So, if your host bus
-driver emulates SMBus calls like the majority does, it needs to support the
-I2C_M_RECV_LEN flag of an i2c_msg. This is a good testcase for it. The returned
-data consists of the length first, and then of an array of bytes from length-1
-to 0. Here is an example which emulates i2c_smbus_block_process_call() using
-i2ctransfer (you need i2c-tools v4.2 or later):
+Partial command. This test will respond to a block process call as defined by
+the SMBus specification. The one data byte written specifies how many bytes
+will be sent back in the following read transfer. Note that in this read
+transfer, the testunit will prefix the length of the bytes to follow. So, if
+your host bus driver emulates SMBus calls like the majority does, it needs to
+support the I2C_M_RECV_LEN flag of an i2c_msg. This is a good testcase for it.
+The returned data consists of the length first, and then of an array of bytes
+from length-1 to 0. Here is an example which emulates
+i2c_smbus_block_process_call() using i2ctransfer (you need i2c-tools v4.2 or
+later)::
 
-# i2ctransfer -y 0 w3@0x30 0x03 0x01 0x10 r?
-0x10 0x0f 0x0e 0x0d 0x0c 0x0b 0x0a 0x09 0x08 0x07 0x06 0x05 0x04 0x03 0x02 0x01 0x00
+  # i2ctransfer -y 0 w3@0x30 0x03 0x01 0x10 r?
+  0x10 0x0f 0x0e 0x0d 0x0c 0x0b 0x0a 0x09 0x08 0x07 0x06 0x05 0x04 0x03 0x02 0x01 0x00