Message ID | 20210420161310.16189-1-m.chetan.kumar@intel.com |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | net: iosm: PCIe Driver for Intel M.2 Modem | expand |
Hey, On Tue, Apr 20, 2021 at 6:14 PM M Chetan Kumar <m.chetan.kumar@intel.com> wrote: > > The IOSM (IPC over Shared Memory) driver is a PCIe host driver implemented > for linux or chrome platform for data exchange over PCIe interface between > Host platform & Intel M.2 Modem. The driver exposes interface conforming to > the MBIM protocol. Any front end application ( eg: Modem Manager) could > easily manage the MBIM interface to enable data communication towards WWAN. > > Intel M.2 modem uses 2 BAR regions. The first region is dedicated to Doorbell > register for IRQs and the second region is used as scratchpad area for book > keeping modem execution stage details along with host system shared memory > region context details. The upper edge of the driver exposes the control and > data channels for user space application interaction. At lower edge these data > and control channels are associated to pipes. The pipes are lowest level > interfaces used over PCIe as a logical channel for message exchange. A single > channel maps to UL and DL pipe and are initialized on device open. > > On UL path, driver copies application sent data to SKBs associate it with > transfer descriptor and puts it on to ring buffer for DMA transfer. Once > information has been updated in shared memory region, host gives a Doorbell > to modem to perform DMA and modem uses MSI to communicate back to host. > For receiving data in DL path, SKBs are pre-allocated during pipe open and > transfer descriptors are given to modem for DMA transfer. > > The driver exposes two types of ports, namely "wwanctrl", a char device node > which is used for MBIM control operation and "INMx",(x = 0,1,2..7) network > interfaces for IP data communication. Is there any plan to integrate this driver in the new "wwan" subsystem so that the character device for MBIM control is exposed in the same format (i.e. same name rules and such) as with the MHI driver?
Hi Aleksander, > > The IOSM (IPC over Shared Memory) driver is a PCIe host driver > > implemented for linux or chrome platform for data exchange over PCIe > > interface between Host platform & Intel M.2 Modem. The driver exposes > > interface conforming to the MBIM protocol. Any front end application ( > > eg: Modem Manager) could easily manage the MBIM interface to enable > data communication towards WWAN. > > > > Intel M.2 modem uses 2 BAR regions. The first region is dedicated to > > Doorbell register for IRQs and the second region is used as scratchpad > > area for book keeping modem execution stage details along with host > > system shared memory region context details. The upper edge of the > > driver exposes the control and data channels for user space > > application interaction. At lower edge these data and control channels > > are associated to pipes. The pipes are lowest level interfaces used > > over PCIe as a logical channel for message exchange. A single channel maps > to UL and DL pipe and are initialized on device open. > > > > On UL path, driver copies application sent data to SKBs associate it > > with transfer descriptor and puts it on to ring buffer for DMA > > transfer. Once information has been updated in shared memory region, > > host gives a Doorbell to modem to perform DMA and modem uses MSI to > communicate back to host. > > For receiving data in DL path, SKBs are pre-allocated during pipe open > > and transfer descriptors are given to modem for DMA transfer. > > > > The driver exposes two types of ports, namely "wwanctrl", a char > > device node which is used for MBIM control operation and "INMx",(x = > > 0,1,2..7) network interfaces for IP data communication. > > Is there any plan to integrate this driver in the new "wwan" subsystem so > that the character device for MBIM control is exposed in the same format > (i.e. same name rules and such) as with the MHI driver? > Yes, we are working on it. The next version of driver would have these adaptation to expose MBIM "WWAN Port". Regards, Chetan