1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3 ================================ 4 Linux I2C slave testunit backend 5 ================================ 6 7 by Wolfram Sang <wsa@sang-engineering.com> in 2 8 9 This backend can be used to trigger test cases 10 require a remote device with certain capabilit 11 easy to obtain). Examples include multi-master 12 testing. For some tests, the I2C slave control 13 between master and slave mode because it needs 14 15 Note that this is a device for testing and deb 16 in a production build. And while there is some 17 keep backward compatibility, there is no stabl 18 19 Instantiating the device is regular. Example f 20 21 # echo "slave-testunit 0x1030" > /sys/bus/i2 22 23 Or using firmware nodes. Here is a devicetree 24 debug device, so there are no official DT bind 25 26 &i2c0 { 27 ... 28 29 testunit@30 { 30 compatible = "slave-testunit"; 31 reg = <(0x30 | I2C_OWN_SLAVE_A 32 }; 33 }; 34 35 After that, you will have the device listening 36 byte. Its value is 0 if the testunit is idle, 37 the currently running command. 38 39 When writing, the device consists of 4 8-bit r 40 "partial" commands, all registers must be writ 41 usually write 4 bytes to the device. The regis 42 43 .. csv-table:: 44 :header: "Offset", "Name", "Description" 45 46 0x00, CMD, which test to trigger 47 0x01, DATAL, configuration byte 1 for the te 48 0x02, DATAH, configuration byte 2 for the te 49 0x03, DELAY, delay in n * 10ms until test is 50 51 Using 'i2cset' from the i2c-tools package, the 52 53 # i2cset -y <bus_num> <testunit_address> <CM 54 55 DELAY is a generic parameter which will delay 56 While a command is running (including the dela 57 acknowledged. You need to wait until the old o 58 59 The commands are described in the following se 60 result in the transfer not being acknowledged. 61 62 Commands 63 -------- 64 65 0x00 NOOP 66 ~~~~~~~~~ 67 68 Reserved for future use. 69 70 0x01 READ_BYTES 71 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 72 73 .. list-table:: 74 :header-rows: 1 75 76 * - CMD 77 - DATAL 78 - DATAH 79 - DELAY 80 81 * - 0x01 82 - address to read data from (lower 7 bits, 83 - number of bytes to read 84 - n * 10ms 85 86 Also needs master mode. This is useful to test 87 handling multi-master correctly. You can trigg 88 from another device on the bus. If the bus mas 89 access the bus at the same time, the bus will 90 bytes from device 0x50 after 50ms of delay:: 91 92 # i2cset -y 0 0x30 1 0x50 0x80 5 i 93 94 0x02 SMBUS_HOST_NOTIFY 95 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 96 97 .. list-table:: 98 :header-rows: 1 99 100 * - CMD 101 - DATAL 102 - DATAH 103 - DELAY 104 105 * - 0x02 106 - low byte of the status word to send 107 - high byte of the status word to send 108 - n * 10ms 109 110 Also needs master mode. This test will send an 111 host. Note that the status word is currently i 112 Example to send a notification with status wor 113 114 # i2cset -y 0 0x30 2 0x42 0x64 1 i 115 116 If the host controller supports HostNotify, th 117 should appear (Linux 6.11 and later):: 118 119 Detected HostNotify from address 0x30 120 121 0x03 SMBUS_BLOCK_PROC_CALL 122 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 123 124 .. list-table:: 125 :header-rows: 1 126 127 * - CMD 128 - DATAL 129 - DATAH 130 - DELAY 131 132 * - 0x03 133 - 0x01 (i.e. one further byte will be writ 134 - number of bytes to be sent back 135 - leave out, partial command! 136 137 Partial command. This test will respond to a b 138 the SMBus specification. The one data byte wri 139 will be sent back in the following read transf 140 transfer, the testunit will prefix the length 141 your host bus driver emulates SMBus calls like 142 support the I2C_M_RECV_LEN flag of an i2c_msg. 143 The returned data consists of the length first 144 from length-1 to 0. Here is an example which e 145 i2c_smbus_block_process_call() using i2ctransf 146 later):: 147 148 # i2ctransfer -y 0 w3@0x30 3 1 0x10 r? 149 0x10 0x0f 0x0e 0x0d 0x0c 0x0b 0x0a 0x09 0x08 150 151 0x04 GET_VERSION_WITH_REP_START 152 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 153 154 .. list-table:: 155 :header-rows: 1 156 157 * - CMD 158 - DATAL 159 - DATAH 160 - DELAY 161 162 * - 0x04 163 - currently unused 164 - currently unused 165 - leave out, partial command! 166 167 Partial command. After sending this command, t 168 message with a NUL terminated version string b 169 character is always a 'v' and the length of th 170 128 bytes. However, it will only respond if th 171 the write message via repeated start. If your 172 repeated start correctly, this will work:: 173 174 # i2ctransfer -y 0 w3@0x30 4 0 0 r128 175 0x76 0x36 0x2e 0x31 0x31 0x2e 0x30 0x2d 0x72 176 177 If you have i2c-tools 4.4 or later, you can pr 178 179 # i2ctransfer -y -b 0 w3@0x30 4 0 0 r128 180 v6.11.0-rc1-00009-gd37a1b4d3fd0 181 182 STOP/START combinations between the two messag 183 are not equivalent to a REPEATED START. As an 184 default response:: 185 186 # i2cset -y 0 0x30 4 0 0 i; i2cget -y 0 0x30 187 0x00 188 189 0x05 SMBUS_ALERT_REQUEST 190 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 191 192 .. list-table:: 193 :header-rows: 1 194 195 * - CMD 196 - DATAL 197 - DATAH 198 - DELAY 199 200 * - 0x05 201 - response value (7 MSBs interpreted as I2 202 - currently unused 203 - n * 10ms 204 205 This test raises an interrupt via the SMBAlert 206 must handle. The pin must be connected to the 207 is not allowed to sleep. Currently, this can o 208 nodes. So, for devicetree, you would add somet 209 node:: 210 211 gpios = <&gpio1 24 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; 212 213 The following command will trigger the alert w 214 second of delay:: 215 216 # i2cset -y 0 0x30 5 0xc9 0x00 100 i 217 218 If the host controller supports SMBusAlert, th 219 should appear:: 220 221 smbus_alert 0-000c: SMBALERT# from dev 0x64, 222 223 This message may appear more than once because 224 hardware and, thus, may not be able to react t 225 enough. The interrupt count should increase on 226 227 # cat /proc/interrupts | grep smbus_alert 228 93: 1 gpio-rcar 26 Edge smb 229 230 If the host does not respond to the alert with 231 aborted and the testunit will report an error. 232 233 For this test, the testunit will shortly drop 234 on the SMBus Alert Response Address (0x0c). It 235 address afterwards.
Linux® is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States and other countries.
TOMOYO® is a registered trademark of NTT DATA CORPORATION.