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authorDan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com>2020-07-20 15:08:18 -0700
committerVishal Verma <vishal.l.verma@intel.com>2020-07-28 19:28:32 -0600
commit48001ea50d17f3eb06a552e9ecf21f7fc01b25da (patch)
treed62ce17a32b2d86494615af61cdbe90a5df9812d /Documentation/driver-api/nvdimm
parent5cf81ce1893da01fede18c6749eafd4bc1c5ae9b (diff)
PM, libnvdimm: Add runtime firmware activation support
Abstract platform specific mechanics for nvdimm firmware activation behind a handful of generic ops. At the bus level ->activate_state() indicates the unified state (idle, busy, armed) of all DIMMs on the bus, and ->capability() indicates the system state expectations for activate. At the DIMM level ->activate_state() indicates the per-DIMM state, ->activate_result() indicates the outcome of the last activation attempt, and ->arm() attempts to transition the DIMM from 'idle' to 'armed'. A new hibernate_quiet_exec() facility is added to support firmware activation in an OS defined system quiesce state. It leverages the fact that the hibernate-freeze state wants to assert that a memory hibernation snapshot can be taken. This is in contrast to a platform firmware defined quiesce state that may forcefully quiet the memory controller independent of whether an individual device-driver properly supports hibernate-freeze. The libnvdimm sysfs interface is extended to support detection of a firmware activate capability. The mechanism supports enumeration and triggering of firmware activate, optionally in the hibernate_quiet_exec() context. [rafael: hibernate_quiet_exec() proposal] [vishal: fix up sparse warning, grammar in Documentation/] Cc: Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz> Cc: Ira Weiny <ira.weiny@intel.com> Cc: Len Brown <len.brown@intel.com> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Dave Jiang <dave.jiang@intel.com> Cc: Vishal Verma <vishal.l.verma@intel.com> Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com> Co-developed-by: "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> Signed-off-by: "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Vishal Verma <vishal.l.verma@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/driver-api/nvdimm')
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diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/nvdimm/firmware-activate.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/nvdimm/firmware-activate.rst
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+.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+
+==================================
+NVDIMM Runtime Firmware Activation
+==================================
+
+Some persistent memory devices run a firmware locally on the device /
+"DIMM" to perform tasks like media management, capacity provisioning,
+and health monitoring. The process of updating that firmware typically
+involves a reboot because it has implications for in-flight memory
+transactions. However, reboots are disruptive and at least the Intel
+persistent memory platform implementation, described by the Intel ACPI
+DSM specification [1], has added support for activating firmware at
+runtime.
+
+A native sysfs interface is implemented in libnvdimm to allow platform
+to advertise and control their local runtime firmware activation
+capability.
+
+The libnvdimm bus object, ndbusX, implements an ndbusX/firmware/activate
+attribute that shows the state of the firmware activation as one of 'idle',
+'armed', 'overflow', and 'busy'.
+
+- idle:
+ No devices are set / armed to activate firmware
+
+- armed:
+ At least one device is armed
+
+- busy:
+ In the busy state armed devices are in the process of transitioning
+ back to idle and completing an activation cycle.
+
+- overflow:
+ If the platform has a concept of incremental work needed to perform
+ the activation it could be the case that too many DIMMs are armed for
+ activation. In that scenario the potential for firmware activation to
+ timeout is indicated by the 'overflow' state.
+
+The 'ndbusX/firmware/activate' property can be written with a value of
+either 'live', or 'quiesce'. A value of 'quiesce' triggers the kernel to
+run firmware activation from within the equivalent of the hibernation
+'freeze' state where drivers and applications are notified to stop their
+modifications of system memory. A value of 'live' attempts
+firmware activation without this hibernation cycle. The
+'ndbusX/firmware/activate' property will be elided completely if no
+firmware activation capability is detected.
+
+Another property 'ndbusX/firmware/capability' indicates a value of
+'live' or 'quiesce', where 'live' indicates that the firmware
+does not require or inflict any quiesce period on the system to update
+firmware. A capability value of 'quiesce' indicates that firmware does
+expect and injects a quiet period for the memory controller, but 'live'
+may still be written to 'ndbusX/firmware/activate' as an override to
+assume the risk of racing firmware update with in-flight device and
+application activity. The 'ndbusX/firmware/capability' property will be
+elided completely if no firmware activation capability is detected.
+
+The libnvdimm memory-device / DIMM object, nmemX, implements
+'nmemX/firmware/activate' and 'nmemX/firmware/result' attributes to
+communicate the per-device firmware activation state. Similar to the
+'ndbusX/firmware/activate' attribute, the 'nmemX/firmware/activate'
+attribute indicates 'idle', 'armed', or 'busy'. The state transitions
+from 'armed' to 'idle' when the system is prepared to activate firmware,
+firmware staged + state set to armed, and 'ndbusX/firmware/activate' is
+triggered. After that activation event the nmemX/firmware/result
+attribute reflects the state of the last activation as one of:
+
+- none:
+ No runtime activation triggered since the last time the device was reset
+
+- success:
+ The last runtime activation completed successfully.
+
+- fail:
+ The last runtime activation failed for device-specific reasons.
+
+- not_staged:
+ The last runtime activation failed due to a sequencing error of the
+ firmware image not being staged.
+
+- need_reset:
+ Runtime firmware activation failed, but the firmware can still be
+ activated via the legacy method of power-cycling the system.
+
+[1]: https://docs.pmem.io/persistent-memory/