2 request_firmware() hotplug interface:
3 ------------------------------------
4 Copyright (C) 2003 Manuel Estrada Sainz
9 Today, the most extended way to use firmware in the Linux kernel is linking
10 it statically in a header file. Which has political and technical issues:
12 1) Some firmware is not legal to redistribute.
13 2) The firmware occupies memory permanently, even though it often is just
15 3) Some people, like the Debian crowd, don't consider some firmware free
16 enough and remove entire drivers (e.g.: keyspan).
18 High level behavior (mixed):
19 ============================
21 kernel(driver): calls request_firmware(&fw_entry, $FIRMWARE, device)
24 - /sys/class/firmware/xxx/{loading,data} appear.
25 - hotplug gets called with a firmware identifier in $FIRMWARE
26 and the usual hotplug environment.
27 - hotplug: echo 1 > /sys/class/firmware/xxx/loading
29 kernel: Discard any previous partial load.
32 - hotplug: cat appropriate_firmware_image > \
33 /sys/class/firmware/xxx/data
35 kernel: grows a buffer in PAGE_SIZE increments to hold the image as it
39 - hotplug: echo 0 > /sys/class/firmware/xxx/loading
41 kernel: request_firmware() returns and the driver has the firmware
42 image in fw_entry->{data,size}. If something went wrong
43 request_firmware() returns non-zero and fw_entry is set to
46 kernel(driver): Driver code calls release_firmware(fw_entry) releasing
47 the firmware image and any related resource.
49 High level behavior (driver code):
50 ==================================
52 if(request_firmware(&fw_entry, $FIRMWARE, device) == 0)
53 copy_fw_to_device(fw_entry->data, fw_entry->size);
56 Sample/simple hotplug script:
57 ============================
59 # Both $DEVPATH and $FIRMWARE are already provided in the environment.
61 HOTPLUG_FW_DIR=/usr/lib/hotplug/firmware/
63 echo 1 > /sys/$DEVPATH/loading
64 cat $HOTPLUG_FW_DIR/$FIRMWARE > /sysfs/$DEVPATH/data
65 echo 0 > /sys/$DEVPATH/loading
70 - "echo -1 > /sys/class/firmware/xxx/loading" will cancel the load at
71 once and make request_firmware() return with error.
73 - firmware_data_read() and firmware_loading_show() are just provided
74 for testing and completeness, they are not called in normal use.
76 - There is also /sys/class/firmware/timeout which holds a timeout in
77 seconds for the whole load operation.
79 - request_firmware_nowait() is also provided for convenience in
80 user contexts to request firmware asynchronously, but can't be called
84 about in-kernel persistence:
85 ---------------------------
86 Under some circumstances, as explained below, it would be interesting to keep
87 firmware images in non-swappable kernel memory or even in the kernel image
88 (probably within initramfs).
90 Note that this functionality has not been implemented.
92 - Why OPTIONAL in-kernel persistence may be a good idea sometimes:
94 - If the device that needs the firmware is needed to access the
95 filesystem. When upon some error the device has to be reset and the
96 firmware reloaded, it won't be possible to get it from userspace.
98 - A diskless client with a network card that needs firmware.
99 - The filesystem is stored in a disk behind an scsi device
101 - Replacing buggy DSDT/SSDT ACPI tables on boot.
102 Note: this would require the persistent objects to be included
103 within the kernel image, probably within initramfs.
105 And the same device can be needed to access the filesystem or not depending
106 on the setup, so I think that the choice on what firmware to make
107 persistent should be left to userspace.