1 ====================== 2 Writing an ALSA Driver 3 ====================== 4 5 :Author: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de> 6 7 Preface 8 ======= 9 10 This document describes how to write an `ALSA (Advanced Linux Sound 11 Architecture) <http://www.alsa-project.org/>`__ driver. The document 12 focuses mainly on PCI soundcards. In the case of other device types, the 13 API might be different, too. However, at least the ALSA kernel API is 14 consistent, and therefore it would be still a bit help for writing them. 15 16 This document targets people who already have enough C language skills 17 and have basic linux kernel programming knowledge. This document doesn't 18 explain the general topic of linux kernel coding and doesn't cover 19 low-level driver implementation details. It only describes the standard 20 way to write a PCI sound driver on ALSA. 21 22 File Tree Structure 23 =================== 24 25 General 26 ------- 27 28 The file tree structure of ALSA driver is depicted below:: 29 30 sound 31 /core 32 /oss 33 /seq 34 /oss 35 /include 36 /drivers 37 /mpu401 38 /opl3 39 /i2c 40 /synth 41 /emux 42 /pci 43 /(cards) 44 /isa 45 /(cards) 46 /arm 47 /ppc 48 /sparc 49 /usb 50 /pcmcia /(cards) 51 /soc 52 /oss 53 54 55 core directory 56 -------------- 57 58 This directory contains the middle layer which is the heart of ALSA 59 drivers. In this directory, the native ALSA modules are stored. The 60 sub-directories contain different modules and are dependent upon the 61 kernel config. 62 63 core/oss 64 ~~~~~~~~ 65 66 The code for OSS PCM and mixer emulation modules is stored in this 67 directory. The OSS rawmidi emulation is included in the ALSA rawmidi 68 code since it's quite small. The sequencer code is stored in 69 ``core/seq/oss`` directory (see `below <core/seq/oss_>`__). 70 71 core/seq 72 ~~~~~~~~ 73 74 This directory and its sub-directories are for the ALSA sequencer. This 75 directory contains the sequencer core and primary sequencer modules such 76 as snd-seq-midi, snd-seq-virmidi, etc. They are compiled only when 77 ``CONFIG_SND_SEQUENCER`` is set in the kernel config. 78 79 core/seq/oss 80 ~~~~~~~~~~~~ 81 82 This contains the OSS sequencer emulation code. 83 84 include directory 85 ----------------- 86 87 This is the place for the public header files of ALSA drivers, which are 88 to be exported to user-space, or included by several files in different 89 directories. Basically, the private header files should not be placed in 90 this directory, but you may still find files there, due to historical 91 reasons :) 92 93 drivers directory 94 ----------------- 95 96 This directory contains code shared among different drivers on different 97 architectures. They are hence supposed not to be architecture-specific. 98 For example, the dummy PCM driver and the serial MIDI driver are found 99 in this directory. In the sub-directories, there is code for components 100 which are independent from bus and cpu architectures. 101 102 drivers/mpu401 103 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 104 105 The MPU401 and MPU401-UART modules are stored here. 106 107 drivers/opl3 and opl4 108 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 109 110 The OPL3 and OPL4 FM-synth stuff is found here. 111 112 i2c directory 113 ------------- 114 115 This contains the ALSA i2c components. 116 117 Although there is a standard i2c layer on Linux, ALSA has its own i2c 118 code for some cards, because the soundcard needs only a simple operation 119 and the standard i2c API is too complicated for such a purpose. 120 121 synth directory 122 --------------- 123 124 This contains the synth middle-level modules. 125 126 So far, there is only Emu8000/Emu10k1 synth driver under the 127 ``synth/emux`` sub-directory. 128 129 pci directory 130 ------------- 131 132 This directory and its sub-directories hold the top-level card modules 133 for PCI soundcards and the code specific to the PCI BUS. 134 135 The drivers compiled from a single file are stored directly in the pci 136 directory, while the drivers with several source files are stored on 137 their own sub-directory (e.g. emu10k1, ice1712). 138 139 isa directory 140 ------------- 141 142 This directory and its sub-directories hold the top-level card modules 143 for ISA soundcards. 144 145 arm, ppc, and sparc directories 146 ------------------------------- 147 148 They are used for top-level card modules which are specific to one of 149 these architectures. 150 151 usb directory 152 ------------- 153 154 This directory contains the USB-audio driver. 155 The USB MIDI driver is integrated in the usb-audio driver. 156 157 pcmcia directory 158 ---------------- 159 160 The PCMCIA, especially PCCard drivers will go here. CardBus drivers will 161 be in the pci directory, because their API is identical to that of 162 standard PCI cards. 163 164 soc directory 165 ------------- 166 167 This directory contains the codes for ASoC (ALSA System on Chip) 168 layer including ASoC core, codec and machine drivers. 169 170 oss directory 171 ------------- 172 173 This contains OSS/Lite code. 174 At the time of writing, all code has been removed except for dmasound 175 on m68k. 176 177 178 Basic Flow for PCI Drivers 179 ========================== 180 181 Outline 182 ------- 183 184 The minimum flow for PCI soundcards is as follows: 185 186 - define the PCI ID table (see the section `PCI Entries`_). 187 188 - create ``probe`` callback. 189 190 - create ``remove`` callback. 191 192 - create a struct pci_driver structure 193 containing the three pointers above. 194 195 - create an ``init`` function just calling the 196 :c:func:`pci_register_driver()` to register the pci_driver 197 table defined above. 198 199 - create an ``exit`` function to call the 200 :c:func:`pci_unregister_driver()` function. 201 202 Full Code Example 203 ----------------- 204 205 The code example is shown below. Some parts are kept unimplemented at 206 this moment but will be filled in the next sections. The numbers in the 207 comment lines of the :c:func:`snd_mychip_probe()` function refer 208 to details explained in the following section. 209 210 :: 211 212 #include <linux/init.h> 213 #include <linux/pci.h> 214 #include <linux/slab.h> 215 #include <sound/core.h> 216 #include <sound/initval.h> 217 218 /* module parameters (see "Module Parameters") */ 219 /* SNDRV_CARDS: maximum number of cards supported by this module */ 220 static int index[SNDRV_CARDS] = SNDRV_DEFAULT_IDX; 221 static char *id[SNDRV_CARDS] = SNDRV_DEFAULT_STR; 222 static bool enable[SNDRV_CARDS] = SNDRV_DEFAULT_ENABLE_PNP; 223 224 /* definition of the chip-specific record */ 225 struct mychip { 226 struct snd_card *card; 227 /* the rest of the implementation will be in section 228 * "PCI Resource Management" 229 */ 230 }; 231 232 /* chip-specific destructor 233 * (see "PCI Resource Management") 234 */ 235 static int snd_mychip_free(struct mychip *chip) 236 { 237 .... /* will be implemented later... */ 238 } 239 240 /* component-destructor 241 * (see "Management of Cards and Components") 242 */ 243 static int snd_mychip_dev_free(struct snd_device *device) 244 { 245 return snd_mychip_free(device->device_data); 246 } 247 248 /* chip-specific constructor 249 * (see "Management of Cards and Components") 250 */ 251 static int snd_mychip_create(struct snd_card *card, 252 struct pci_dev *pci, 253 struct mychip **rchip) 254 { 255 struct mychip *chip; 256 int err; 257 static const struct snd_device_ops ops = { 258 .dev_free = snd_mychip_dev_free, 259 }; 260 261 *rchip = NULL; 262 263 /* check PCI availability here 264 * (see "PCI Resource Management") 265 */ 266 .... 267 268 /* allocate a chip-specific data with zero filled */ 269 chip = kzalloc(sizeof(*chip), GFP_KERNEL); 270 if (chip == NULL) 271 return -ENOMEM; 272 273 chip->card = card; 274 275 /* rest of initialization here; will be implemented 276 * later, see "PCI Resource Management" 277 */ 278 .... 279 280 err = snd_device_new(card, SNDRV_DEV_LOWLEVEL, chip, &ops); 281 if (err < 0) { 282 snd_mychip_free(chip); 283 return err; 284 } 285 286 *rchip = chip; 287 return 0; 288 } 289 290 /* constructor -- see "Driver Constructor" sub-section */ 291 static int snd_mychip_probe(struct pci_dev *pci, 292 const struct pci_device_id *pci_id) 293 { 294 static int dev; 295 struct snd_card *card; 296 struct mychip *chip; 297 int err; 298 299 /* (1) */ 300 if (dev >= SNDRV_CARDS) 301 return -ENODEV; 302 if (!enable[dev]) { 303 dev++; 304 return -ENOENT; 305 } 306 307 /* (2) */ 308 err = snd_card_new(&pci->dev, index[dev], id[dev], THIS_MODULE, 309 0, &card); 310 if (err < 0) 311 return err; 312 313 /* (3) */ 314 err = snd_mychip_create(card, pci, &chip); 315 if (err < 0) 316 goto error; 317 318 /* (4) */ 319 strcpy(card->driver, "My Chip"); 320 strcpy(card->shortname, "My Own Chip 123"); 321 sprintf(card->longname, "%s at 0x%lx irq %i", 322 card->shortname, chip->port, chip->irq); 323 324 /* (5) */ 325 .... /* implemented later */ 326 327 /* (6) */ 328 err = snd_card_register(card); 329 if (err < 0) 330 goto error; 331 332 /* (7) */ 333 pci_set_drvdata(pci, card); 334 dev++; 335 return 0; 336 337 error: 338 snd_card_free(card); 339 return err; 340 } 341 342 /* destructor -- see the "Destructor" sub-section */ 343 static void snd_mychip_remove(struct pci_dev *pci) 344 { 345 snd_card_free(pci_get_drvdata(pci)); 346 } 347 348 349 350 Driver Constructor 351 ------------------ 352 353 The real constructor of PCI drivers is the ``probe`` callback. The 354 ``probe`` callback and other component-constructors which are called 355 from the ``probe`` callback cannot be used with the ``__init`` prefix 356 because any PCI device could be a hotplug device. 357 358 In the ``probe`` callback, the following scheme is often used. 359 360 1) Check and increment the device index. 361 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 362 363 :: 364 365 static int dev; 366 .... 367 if (dev >= SNDRV_CARDS) 368 return -ENODEV; 369 if (!enable[dev]) { 370 dev++; 371 return -ENOENT; 372 } 373 374 375 where ``enable[dev]`` is the module option. 376 377 Each time the ``probe`` callback is called, check the availability of 378 the device. If not available, simply increment the device index and 379 return. dev will be incremented also later (`step 7 380 <7) Set the PCI driver data and return zero._>`__). 381 382 2) Create a card instance 383 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 384 385 :: 386 387 struct snd_card *card; 388 int err; 389 .... 390 err = snd_card_new(&pci->dev, index[dev], id[dev], THIS_MODULE, 391 0, &card); 392 393 394 The details will be explained in the section `Management of Cards and 395 Components`_. 396 397 3) Create a main component 398 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 399 400 In this part, the PCI resources are allocated:: 401 402 struct mychip *chip; 403 .... 404 err = snd_mychip_create(card, pci, &chip); 405 if (err < 0) 406 goto error; 407 408 The details will be explained in the section `PCI Resource 409 Management`_. 410 411 When something goes wrong, the probe function needs to deal with the 412 error. In this example, we have a single error handling path placed 413 at the end of the function:: 414 415 error: 416 snd_card_free(card); 417 return err; 418 419 Since each component can be properly freed, the single 420 :c:func:`snd_card_free()` call should suffice in most cases. 421 422 423 4) Set the driver ID and name strings. 424 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 425 426 :: 427 428 strcpy(card->driver, "My Chip"); 429 strcpy(card->shortname, "My Own Chip 123"); 430 sprintf(card->longname, "%s at 0x%lx irq %i", 431 card->shortname, chip->port, chip->irq); 432 433 The driver field holds the minimal ID string of the chip. This is used 434 by alsa-lib's configurator, so keep it simple but unique. Even the 435 same driver can have different driver IDs to distinguish the 436 functionality of each chip type. 437 438 The shortname field is a string shown as more verbose name. The longname 439 field contains the information shown in ``/proc/asound/cards``. 440 441 5) Create other components, such as mixer, MIDI, etc. 442 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 443 444 Here you define the basic components such as `PCM <PCM Interface_>`__, 445 mixer (e.g. `AC97 <API for AC97 Codec_>`__), MIDI (e.g. 446 `MPU-401 <MIDI (MPU401-UART) Interface_>`__), and other interfaces. 447 Also, if you want a `proc file <Proc Interface_>`__, define it here, 448 too. 449 450 6) Register the card instance. 451 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 452 453 :: 454 455 err = snd_card_register(card); 456 if (err < 0) 457 goto error; 458 459 Will be explained in the section `Management of Cards and 460 Components`_, too. 461 462 7) Set the PCI driver data and return zero. 463 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 464 465 :: 466 467 pci_set_drvdata(pci, card); 468 dev++; 469 return 0; 470 471 In the above, the card record is stored. This pointer is used in the 472 remove callback and power-management callbacks, too. 473 474 Destructor 475 ---------- 476 477 The destructor, the remove callback, simply releases the card instance. 478 Then the ALSA middle layer will release all the attached components 479 automatically. 480 481 It would be typically just calling :c:func:`snd_card_free()`:: 482 483 static void snd_mychip_remove(struct pci_dev *pci) 484 { 485 snd_card_free(pci_get_drvdata(pci)); 486 } 487 488 489 The above code assumes that the card pointer is set to the PCI driver 490 data. 491 492 Header Files 493 ------------ 494 495 For the above example, at least the following include files are 496 necessary:: 497 498 #include <linux/init.h> 499 #include <linux/pci.h> 500 #include <linux/slab.h> 501 #include <sound/core.h> 502 #include <sound/initval.h> 503 504 where the last one is necessary only when module options are defined 505 in the source file. If the code is split into several files, the files 506 without module options don't need them. 507 508 In addition to these headers, you'll need ``<linux/interrupt.h>`` for 509 interrupt handling, and ``<linux/io.h>`` for I/O access. If you use the 510 :c:func:`mdelay()` or :c:func:`udelay()` functions, you'll need 511 to include ``<linux/delay.h>`` too. 512 513 The ALSA interfaces like the PCM and control APIs are defined in other 514 ``<sound/xxx.h>`` header files. They have to be included after 515 ``<sound/core.h>``. 516 517 Management of Cards and Components 518 ================================== 519 520 Card Instance 521 ------------- 522 523 For each soundcard, a “card” record must be allocated. 524 525 A card record is the headquarters of the soundcard. It manages the whole 526 list of devices (components) on the soundcard, such as PCM, mixers, 527 MIDI, synthesizer, and so on. Also, the card record holds the ID and the 528 name strings of the card, manages the root of proc files, and controls 529 the power-management states and hotplug disconnections. The component 530 list on the card record is used to manage the correct release of 531 resources at destruction. 532 533 As mentioned above, to create a card instance, call 534 :c:func:`snd_card_new()`:: 535 536 struct snd_card *card; 537 int err; 538 err = snd_card_new(&pci->dev, index, id, module, extra_size, &card); 539 540 541 The function takes six arguments: the parent device pointer, the 542 card-index number, the id string, the module pointer (usually 543 ``THIS_MODULE``), the size of extra-data space, and the pointer to 544 return the card instance. The extra_size argument is used to allocate 545 card->private_data for the chip-specific data. Note that these data are 546 allocated by :c:func:`snd_card_new()`. 547 548 The first argument, the pointer of struct device, specifies the parent 549 device. For PCI devices, typically ``&pci->`` is passed there. 550 551 Components 552 ---------- 553 554 After the card is created, you can attach the components (devices) to 555 the card instance. In an ALSA driver, a component is represented as a 556 struct snd_device object. A component 557 can be a PCM instance, a control interface, a raw MIDI interface, etc. 558 Each such instance has one component entry. 559 560 A component can be created via the :c:func:`snd_device_new()` 561 function:: 562 563 snd_device_new(card, SNDRV_DEV_XXX, chip, &ops); 564 565 This takes the card pointer, the device-level (``SNDRV_DEV_XXX``), the 566 data pointer, and the callback pointers (``&ops``). The device-level 567 defines the type of components and the order of registration and 568 de-registration. For most components, the device-level is already 569 defined. For a user-defined component, you can use 570 ``SNDRV_DEV_LOWLEVEL``. 571 572 This function itself doesn't allocate the data space. The data must be 573 allocated manually beforehand, and its pointer is passed as the 574 argument. This pointer (``chip`` in the above example) is used as the 575 identifier for the instance. 576 577 Each pre-defined ALSA component such as AC97 and PCM calls 578 :c:func:`snd_device_new()` inside its constructor. The destructor 579 for each component is defined in the callback pointers. Hence, you don't 580 need to take care of calling a destructor for such a component. 581 582 If you wish to create your own component, you need to set the destructor 583 function to the dev_free callback in the ``ops``, so that it can be 584 released automatically via :c:func:`snd_card_free()`. The next 585 example will show an implementation of chip-specific data. 586 587 Chip-Specific Data 588 ------------------ 589 590 Chip-specific information, e.g. the I/O port address, its resource 591 pointer, or the irq number, is stored in the chip-specific record:: 592 593 struct mychip { 594 .... 595 }; 596 597 598 In general, there are two ways of allocating the chip record. 599 600 1. Allocating via :c:func:`snd_card_new()`. 601 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 602 603 As mentioned above, you can pass the extra-data-length to the 5th 604 argument of :c:func:`snd_card_new()`, e.g.:: 605 606 err = snd_card_new(&pci->dev, index[dev], id[dev], THIS_MODULE, 607 sizeof(struct mychip), &card); 608 609 struct mychip is the type of the chip record. 610 611 In return, the allocated record can be accessed as 612 613 :: 614 615 struct mychip *chip = card->private_data; 616 617 With this method, you don't have to allocate twice. The record is 618 released together with the card instance. 619 620 2. Allocating an extra device. 621 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 622 623 After allocating a card instance via :c:func:`snd_card_new()` 624 (with ``0`` on the 4th arg), call :c:func:`kzalloc()`:: 625 626 struct snd_card *card; 627 struct mychip *chip; 628 err = snd_card_new(&pci->dev, index[dev], id[dev], THIS_MODULE, 629 0, &card); 630 ..... 631 chip = kzalloc(sizeof(*chip), GFP_KERNEL); 632 633 The chip record should have the field to hold the card pointer at least, 634 635 :: 636 637 struct mychip { 638 struct snd_card *card; 639 .... 640 }; 641 642 643 Then, set the card pointer in the returned chip instance:: 644 645 chip->card = card; 646 647 Next, initialize the fields, and register this chip record as a 648 low-level device with a specified ``ops``:: 649 650 static const struct snd_device_ops ops = { 651 .dev_free = snd_mychip_dev_free, 652 }; 653 .... 654 snd_device_new(card, SNDRV_DEV_LOWLEVEL, chip, &ops); 655 656 :c:func:`snd_mychip_dev_free()` is the device-destructor 657 function, which will call the real destructor:: 658 659 static int snd_mychip_dev_free(struct snd_device *device) 660 { 661 return snd_mychip_free(device->device_data); 662 } 663 664 where :c:func:`snd_mychip_free()` is the real destructor. 665 666 The demerit of this method is the obviously larger amount of code. 667 The merit is, however, that you can trigger your own callback at 668 registering and disconnecting the card via a setting in snd_device_ops. 669 About registering and disconnecting the card, see the subsections 670 below. 671 672 673 Registration and Release 674 ------------------------ 675 676 After all components are assigned, register the card instance by calling 677 :c:func:`snd_card_register()`. Access to the device files is 678 enabled at this point. That is, before 679 :c:func:`snd_card_register()` is called, the components are safely 680 inaccessible from external side. If this call fails, exit the probe 681 function after releasing the card via :c:func:`snd_card_free()`. 682 683 For releasing the card instance, you can call simply 684 :c:func:`snd_card_free()`. As mentioned earlier, all components 685 are released automatically by this call. 686 687 For a device which allows hotplugging, you can use 688 :c:func:`snd_card_free_when_closed()`. This one will postpone 689 the destruction until all devices are closed. 690 691 PCI Resource Management 692 ======================= 693 694 Full Code Example 695 ----------------- 696 697 In this section, we'll complete the chip-specific constructor, 698 destructor and PCI entries. Example code is shown first, below:: 699 700 struct mychip { 701 struct snd_card *card; 702 struct pci_dev *pci; 703 704 unsigned long port; 705 int irq; 706 }; 707 708 static int snd_mychip_free(struct mychip *chip) 709 { 710 /* disable hardware here if any */ 711 .... /* (not implemented in this document) */ 712 713 /* release the irq */ 714 if (chip->irq >= 0) 715 free_irq(chip->irq, chip); 716 /* release the I/O ports & memory */ 717 pci_release_regions(chip->pci); 718 /* disable the PCI entry */ 719 pci_disable_device(chip->pci); 720 /* release the data */ 721 kfree(chip); 722 return 0; 723 } 724 725 /* chip-specific constructor */ 726 static int snd_mychip_create(struct snd_card *card, 727 struct pci_dev *pci, 728 struct mychip **rchip) 729 { 730 struct mychip *chip; 731 int err; 732 static const struct snd_device_ops ops = { 733 .dev_free = snd_mychip_dev_free, 734 }; 735 736 *rchip = NULL; 737 738 /* initialize the PCI entry */ 739 err = pci_enable_device(pci); 740 if (err < 0) 741 return err; 742 /* check PCI availability (28bit DMA) */ 743 if (pci_set_dma_mask(pci, DMA_BIT_MASK(28)) < 0 || 744 pci_set_consistent_dma_mask(pci, DMA_BIT_MASK(28)) < 0) { 745 printk(KERN_ERR "error to set 28bit mask DMA\n"); 746 pci_disable_device(pci); 747 return -ENXIO; 748 } 749 750 chip = kzalloc(sizeof(*chip), GFP_KERNEL); 751 if (chip == NULL) { 752 pci_disable_device(pci); 753 return -ENOMEM; 754 } 755 756 /* initialize the stuff */ 757 chip->card = card; 758 chip->pci = pci; 759 chip->irq = -1; 760 761 /* (1) PCI resource allocation */ 762 err = pci_request_regions(pci, "My Chip"); 763 if (err < 0) { 764 kfree(chip); 765 pci_disable_device(pci); 766 return err; 767 } 768 chip->port = pci_resource_start(pci, 0); 769 if (request_irq(pci->irq, snd_mychip_interrupt, 770 IRQF_SHARED, KBUILD_MODNAME, chip)) { 771 printk(KERN_ERR "cannot grab irq %d\n", pci->irq); 772 snd_mychip_free(chip); 773 return -EBUSY; 774 } 775 chip->irq = pci->irq; 776 card->sync_irq = chip->irq; 777 778 /* (2) initialization of the chip hardware */ 779 .... /* (not implemented in this document) */ 780 781 err = snd_device_new(card, SNDRV_DEV_LOWLEVEL, chip, &ops); 782 if (err < 0) { 783 snd_mychip_free(chip); 784 return err; 785 } 786 787 *rchip = chip; 788 return 0; 789 } 790 791 /* PCI IDs */ 792 static struct pci_device_id snd_mychip_ids[] = { 793 { PCI_VENDOR_ID_FOO, PCI_DEVICE_ID_BAR, 794 PCI_ANY_ID, PCI_ANY_ID, 0, 0, 0, }, 795 .... 796 { 0, } 797 }; 798 MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(pci, snd_mychip_ids); 799 800 /* pci_driver definition */ 801 static struct pci_driver driver = { 802 .name = KBUILD_MODNAME, 803 .id_table = snd_mychip_ids, 804 .probe = snd_mychip_probe, 805 .remove = snd_mychip_remove, 806 }; 807 808 /* module initialization */ 809 static int __init alsa_card_mychip_init(void) 810 { 811 return pci_register_driver(&driver); 812 } 813 814 /* module clean up */ 815 static void __exit alsa_card_mychip_exit(void) 816 { 817 pci_unregister_driver(&driver); 818 } 819 820 module_init(alsa_card_mychip_init) 821 module_exit(alsa_card_mychip_exit) 822 823 EXPORT_NO_SYMBOLS; /* for old kernels only */ 824 825 Some Hafta's 826 ------------ 827 828 The allocation of PCI resources is done in the ``probe`` function, and 829 usually an extra :c:func:`xxx_create()` function is written for this 830 purpose. 831 832 In the case of PCI devices, you first have to call the 833 :c:func:`pci_enable_device()` function before allocating 834 resources. Also, you need to set the proper PCI DMA mask to limit the 835 accessed I/O range. In some cases, you might need to call 836 :c:func:`pci_set_master()` function, too. 837 838 Suppose a 28bit mask, the code to be added would look like:: 839 840 err = pci_enable_device(pci); 841 if (err < 0) 842 return err; 843 if (pci_set_dma_mask(pci, DMA_BIT_MASK(28)) < 0 || 844 pci_set_consistent_dma_mask(pci, DMA_BIT_MASK(28)) < 0) { 845 printk(KERN_ERR "error to set 28bit mask DMA\n"); 846 pci_disable_device(pci); 847 return -ENXIO; 848 } 849 850 851 Resource Allocation 852 ------------------- 853 854 The allocation of I/O ports and irqs is done via standard kernel 855 functions. These resources must be released in the destructor 856 function (see below). 857 858 Now assume that the PCI device has an I/O port with 8 bytes and an 859 interrupt. Then struct mychip will have the 860 following fields:: 861 862 struct mychip { 863 struct snd_card *card; 864 865 unsigned long port; 866 int irq; 867 }; 868 869 870 For an I/O port (and also a memory region), you need to have the 871 resource pointer for the standard resource management. For an irq, you 872 have to keep only the irq number (integer). But you need to initialize 873 this number to -1 before actual allocation, since irq 0 is valid. The 874 port address and its resource pointer can be initialized as null by 875 :c:func:`kzalloc()` automatically, so you don't have to take care of 876 resetting them. 877 878 The allocation of an I/O port is done like this:: 879 880 err = pci_request_regions(pci, "My Chip"); 881 if (err < 0) { 882 kfree(chip); 883 pci_disable_device(pci); 884 return err; 885 } 886 chip->port = pci_resource_start(pci, 0); 887 888 It will reserve the I/O port region of 8 bytes of the given PCI device. 889 The returned value, ``chip->res_port``, is allocated via 890 :c:func:`kmalloc()` by :c:func:`request_region()`. The pointer 891 must be released via :c:func:`kfree()`, but there is a problem with 892 this. This issue will be explained later. 893 894 The allocation of an interrupt source is done like this:: 895 896 if (request_irq(pci->irq, snd_mychip_interrupt, 897 IRQF_SHARED, KBUILD_MODNAME, chip)) { 898 printk(KERN_ERR "cannot grab irq %d\n", pci->irq); 899 snd_mychip_free(chip); 900 return -EBUSY; 901 } 902 chip->irq = pci->irq; 903 904 where :c:func:`snd_mychip_interrupt()` is the interrupt handler 905 defined `later <PCM Interrupt Handler_>`__. Note that 906 ``chip->irq`` should be defined only when :c:func:`request_irq()` 907 succeeded. 908 909 On the PCI bus, interrupts can be shared. Thus, ``IRQF_SHARED`` is used 910 as the interrupt flag of :c:func:`request_irq()`. 911 912 The last argument of :c:func:`request_irq()` is the data pointer 913 passed to the interrupt handler. Usually, the chip-specific record is 914 used for that, but you can use what you like, too. 915 916 I won't give details about the interrupt handler at this point, but at 917 least its appearance can be explained now. The interrupt handler looks 918 usually as follows:: 919 920 static irqreturn_t snd_mychip_interrupt(int irq, void *dev_id) 921 { 922 struct mychip *chip = dev_id; 923 .... 924 return IRQ_HANDLED; 925 } 926 927 After requesting the IRQ, you can passed it to ``card->sync_irq`` 928 field:: 929 930 card->irq = chip->irq; 931 932 This allows the PCM core to automatically call 933 :c:func:`synchronize_irq()` at the right time, like before ``hw_free``. 934 See the later section `sync_stop callback`_ for details. 935 936 Now let's write the corresponding destructor for the resources above. 937 The role of destructor is simple: disable the hardware (if already 938 activated) and release the resources. So far, we have no hardware part, 939 so the disabling code is not written here. 940 941 To release the resources, the “check-and-release” method is a safer way. 942 For the interrupt, do like this:: 943 944 if (chip->irq >= 0) 945 free_irq(chip->irq, chip); 946 947 Since the irq number can start from 0, you should initialize 948 ``chip->irq`` with a negative value (e.g. -1), so that you can check 949 the validity of the irq number as above. 950 951 When you requested I/O ports or memory regions via 952 :c:func:`pci_request_region()` or 953 :c:func:`pci_request_regions()` like in this example, release the 954 resource(s) using the corresponding function, 955 :c:func:`pci_release_region()` or 956 :c:func:`pci_release_regions()`:: 957 958 pci_release_regions(chip->pci); 959 960 When you requested manually via :c:func:`request_region()` or 961 :c:func:`request_mem_region()`, you can release it via 962 :c:func:`release_resource()`. Suppose that you keep the resource 963 pointer returned from :c:func:`request_region()` in 964 chip->res_port, the release procedure looks like:: 965 966 release_and_free_resource(chip->res_port); 967 968 Don't forget to call :c:func:`pci_disable_device()` before the 969 end. 970 971 And finally, release the chip-specific record:: 972 973 kfree(chip); 974 975 We didn't implement the hardware disabling part above. If you 976 need to do this, please note that the destructor may be called even 977 before the initialization of the chip is completed. It would be better 978 to have a flag to skip hardware disabling if the hardware was not 979 initialized yet. 980 981 When the chip-data is assigned to the card using 982 :c:func:`snd_device_new()` with ``SNDRV_DEV_LOWLELVEL``, its 983 destructor is called last. That is, it is assured that all other 984 components like PCMs and controls have already been released. You don't 985 have to stop PCMs, etc. explicitly, but just call low-level hardware 986 stopping. 987 988 The management of a memory-mapped region is almost as same as the 989 management of an I/O port. You'll need two fields as follows:: 990 991 struct mychip { 992 .... 993 unsigned long iobase_phys; 994 void __iomem *iobase_virt; 995 }; 996 997 and the allocation would look like below:: 998 999 err = pci_request_regions(pci, "My Chip"); 1000 if (err < 0) { 1001 kfree(chip); 1002 return err; 1003 } 1004 chip->iobase_phys = pci_resource_start(pci, 0); 1005 chip->iobase_virt = ioremap(chip->iobase_phys, 1006 pci_resource_len(pci, 0)); 1007 1008 and the corresponding destructor would be:: 1009 1010 static int snd_mychip_free(struct mychip *chip) 1011 { 1012 .... 1013 if (chip->iobase_virt) 1014 iounmap(chip->iobase_virt); 1015 .... 1016 pci_release_regions(chip->pci); 1017 .... 1018 } 1019 1020 Of course, a modern way with :c:func:`pci_iomap()` will make things a 1021 bit easier, too:: 1022 1023 err = pci_request_regions(pci, "My Chip"); 1024 if (err < 0) { 1025 kfree(chip); 1026 return err; 1027 } 1028 chip->iobase_virt = pci_iomap(pci, 0, 0); 1029 1030 which is paired with :c:func:`pci_iounmap()` at destructor. 1031 1032 1033 PCI Entries 1034 ----------- 1035 1036 So far, so good. Let's finish the missing PCI stuff. At first, we need a 1037 struct pci_device_id table for 1038 this chipset. It's a table of PCI vendor/device ID number, and some 1039 masks. 1040 1041 For example:: 1042 1043 static struct pci_device_id snd_mychip_ids[] = { 1044 { PCI_VENDOR_ID_FOO, PCI_DEVICE_ID_BAR, 1045 PCI_ANY_ID, PCI_ANY_ID, 0, 0, 0, }, 1046 .... 1047 { 0, } 1048 }; 1049 MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(pci, snd_mychip_ids); 1050 1051 The first and second fields of the struct pci_device_id are the vendor 1052 and device IDs. If you have no reason to filter the matching devices, you can 1053 leave the remaining fields as above. The last field of the 1054 struct pci_device_id contains private data for this entry. You can specify 1055 any value here, for example, to define specific operations for supported 1056 device IDs. Such an example is found in the intel8x0 driver. 1057 1058 The last entry of this list is the terminator. You must specify this 1059 all-zero entry. 1060 1061 Then, prepare the struct pci_driver 1062 record:: 1063 1064 static struct pci_driver driver = { 1065 .name = KBUILD_MODNAME, 1066 .id_table = snd_mychip_ids, 1067 .probe = snd_mychip_probe, 1068 .remove = snd_mychip_remove, 1069 }; 1070 1071 The ``probe`` and ``remove`` functions have already been defined in 1072 the previous sections. The ``name`` field is the name string of this 1073 device. Note that you must not use slashes (“/”) in this string. 1074 1075 And at last, the module entries:: 1076 1077 static int __init alsa_card_mychip_init(void) 1078 { 1079 return pci_register_driver(&driver); 1080 } 1081 1082 static void __exit alsa_card_mychip_exit(void) 1083 { 1084 pci_unregister_driver(&driver); 1085 } 1086 1087 module_init(alsa_card_mychip_init) 1088 module_exit(alsa_card_mychip_exit) 1089 1090 Note that these module entries are tagged with ``__init`` and ``__exit`` 1091 prefixes. 1092 1093 That's all! 1094 1095 PCM Interface 1096 ============= 1097 1098 General 1099 ------- 1100 1101 The PCM middle layer of ALSA is quite powerful and it is only necessary 1102 for each driver to implement the low-level functions to access its 1103 hardware. 1104 1105 To access the PCM layer, you need to include ``<sound/pcm.h>`` 1106 first. In addition, ``<sound/pcm_params.h>`` might be needed if you 1107 access some functions related with hw_param. 1108 1109 Each card device can have up to four PCM instances. A PCM instance 1110 corresponds to a PCM device file. The limitation of number of instances 1111 comes only from the available bit size of Linux' device numbers. 1112 Once 64bit device numbers are used, we'll have more PCM instances 1113 available. 1114 1115 A PCM instance consists of PCM playback and capture streams, and each 1116 PCM stream consists of one or more PCM substreams. Some soundcards 1117 support multiple playback functions. For example, emu10k1 has a PCM 1118 playback of 32 stereo substreams. In this case, at each open, a free 1119 substream is (usually) automatically chosen and opened. Meanwhile, when 1120 only one substream exists and it was already opened, a subsequent open 1121 will either block or error with ``EAGAIN`` according to the file open 1122 mode. But you don't have to care about such details in your driver. The 1123 PCM middle layer will take care of such work. 1124 1125 Full Code Example 1126 ----------------- 1127 1128 The example code below does not include any hardware access routines but 1129 shows only the skeleton, how to build up the PCM interfaces:: 1130 1131 #include <sound/pcm.h> 1132 .... 1133 1134 /* hardware definition */ 1135 static struct snd_pcm_hardware snd_mychip_playback_hw = { 1136 .info = (SNDRV_PCM_INFO_MMAP | 1137 SNDRV_PCM_INFO_INTERLEAVED | 1138 SNDRV_PCM_INFO_BLOCK_TRANSFER | 1139 SNDRV_PCM_INFO_MMAP_VALID), 1140 .formats = SNDRV_PCM_FMTBIT_S16_LE, 1141 .rates = SNDRV_PCM_RATE_8000_48000, 1142 .rate_min = 8000, 1143 .rate_max = 48000, 1144 .channels_min = 2, 1145 .channels_max = 2, 1146 .buffer_bytes_max = 32768, 1147 .period_bytes_min = 4096, 1148 .period_bytes_max = 32768, 1149 .periods_min = 1, 1150 .periods_max = 1024, 1151 }; 1152 1153 /* hardware definition */ 1154 static struct snd_pcm_hardware snd_mychip_capture_hw = { 1155 .info = (SNDRV_PCM_INFO_MMAP | 1156 SNDRV_PCM_INFO_INTERLEAVED | 1157 SNDRV_PCM_INFO_BLOCK_TRANSFER | 1158 SNDRV_PCM_INFO_MMAP_VALID), 1159 .formats = SNDRV_PCM_FMTBIT_S16_LE, 1160 .rates = SNDRV_PCM_RATE_8000_48000, 1161 .rate_min = 8000, 1162 .rate_max = 48000, 1163 .channels_min = 2, 1164 .channels_max = 2, 1165 .buffer_bytes_max = 32768, 1166 .period_bytes_min = 4096, 1167 .period_bytes_max = 32768, 1168 .periods_min = 1, 1169 .periods_max = 1024, 1170 }; 1171 1172 /* open callback */ 1173 static int snd_mychip_playback_open(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 1174 { 1175 struct mychip *chip = snd_pcm_substream_chip(substream); 1176 struct snd_pcm_runtime *runtime = substream->runtime; 1177 1178 runtime->hw = snd_mychip_playback_hw; 1179 /* more hardware-initialization will be done here */ 1180 .... 1181 return 0; 1182 } 1183 1184 /* close callback */ 1185 static int snd_mychip_playback_close(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 1186 { 1187 struct mychip *chip = snd_pcm_substream_chip(substream); 1188 /* the hardware-specific codes will be here */ 1189 .... 1190 return 0; 1191 1192 } 1193 1194 /* open callback */ 1195 static int snd_mychip_capture_open(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 1196 { 1197 struct mychip *chip = snd_pcm_substream_chip(substream); 1198 struct snd_pcm_runtime *runtime = substream->runtime; 1199 1200 runtime->hw = snd_mychip_capture_hw; 1201 /* more hardware-initialization will be done here */ 1202 .... 1203 return 0; 1204 } 1205 1206 /* close callback */ 1207 static int snd_mychip_capture_close(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 1208 { 1209 struct mychip *chip = snd_pcm_substream_chip(substream); 1210 /* the hardware-specific codes will be here */ 1211 .... 1212 return 0; 1213 } 1214 1215 /* hw_params callback */ 1216 static int snd_mychip_pcm_hw_params(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream, 1217 struct snd_pcm_hw_params *hw_params) 1218 { 1219 /* the hardware-specific codes will be here */ 1220 .... 1221 return 0; 1222 } 1223 1224 /* hw_free callback */ 1225 static int snd_mychip_pcm_hw_free(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 1226 { 1227 /* the hardware-specific codes will be here */ 1228 .... 1229 return 0; 1230 } 1231 1232 /* prepare callback */ 1233 static int snd_mychip_pcm_prepare(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 1234 { 1235 struct mychip *chip = snd_pcm_substream_chip(substream); 1236 struct snd_pcm_runtime *runtime = substream->runtime; 1237 1238 /* set up the hardware with the current configuration 1239 * for example... 1240 */ 1241 mychip_set_sample_format(chip, runtime->format); 1242 mychip_set_sample_rate(chip, runtime->rate); 1243 mychip_set_channels(chip, runtime->channels); 1244 mychip_set_dma_setup(chip, runtime->dma_addr, 1245 chip->buffer_size, 1246 chip->period_size); 1247 return 0; 1248 } 1249 1250 /* trigger callback */ 1251 static int snd_mychip_pcm_trigger(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream, 1252 int cmd) 1253 { 1254 switch (cmd) { 1255 case SNDRV_PCM_TRIGGER_START: 1256 /* do something to start the PCM engine */ 1257 .... 1258 break; 1259 case SNDRV_PCM_TRIGGER_STOP: 1260 /* do something to stop the PCM engine */ 1261 .... 1262 break; 1263 default: 1264 return -EINVAL; 1265 } 1266 } 1267 1268 /* pointer callback */ 1269 static snd_pcm_uframes_t 1270 snd_mychip_pcm_pointer(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 1271 { 1272 struct mychip *chip = snd_pcm_substream_chip(substream); 1273 unsigned int current_ptr; 1274 1275 /* get the current hardware pointer */ 1276 current_ptr = mychip_get_hw_pointer(chip); 1277 return current_ptr; 1278 } 1279 1280 /* operators */ 1281 static struct snd_pcm_ops snd_mychip_playback_ops = { 1282 .open = snd_mychip_playback_open, 1283 .close = snd_mychip_playback_close, 1284 .hw_params = snd_mychip_pcm_hw_params, 1285 .hw_free = snd_mychip_pcm_hw_free, 1286 .prepare = snd_mychip_pcm_prepare, 1287 .trigger = snd_mychip_pcm_trigger, 1288 .pointer = snd_mychip_pcm_pointer, 1289 }; 1290 1291 /* operators */ 1292 static struct snd_pcm_ops snd_mychip_capture_ops = { 1293 .open = snd_mychip_capture_open, 1294 .close = snd_mychip_capture_close, 1295 .hw_params = snd_mychip_pcm_hw_params, 1296 .hw_free = snd_mychip_pcm_hw_free, 1297 .prepare = snd_mychip_pcm_prepare, 1298 .trigger = snd_mychip_pcm_trigger, 1299 .pointer = snd_mychip_pcm_pointer, 1300 }; 1301 1302 /* 1303 * definitions of capture are omitted here... 1304 */ 1305 1306 /* create a pcm device */ 1307 static int snd_mychip_new_pcm(struct mychip *chip) 1308 { 1309 struct snd_pcm *pcm; 1310 int err; 1311 1312 err = snd_pcm_new(chip->card, "My Chip", 0, 1, 1, &pcm); 1313 if (err < 0) 1314 return err; 1315 pcm->private_data = chip; 1316 strcpy(pcm->name, "My Chip"); 1317 chip->pcm = pcm; 1318 /* set operators */ 1319 snd_pcm_set_ops(pcm, SNDRV_PCM_STREAM_PLAYBACK, 1320 &snd_mychip_playback_ops); 1321 snd_pcm_set_ops(pcm, SNDRV_PCM_STREAM_CAPTURE, 1322 &snd_mychip_capture_ops); 1323 /* pre-allocation of buffers */ 1324 /* NOTE: this may fail */ 1325 snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer_all(pcm, SNDRV_DMA_TYPE_DEV, 1326 &chip->pci->dev, 1327 64*1024, 64*1024); 1328 return 0; 1329 } 1330 1331 1332 PCM Constructor 1333 --------------- 1334 1335 A PCM instance is allocated by the :c:func:`snd_pcm_new()` 1336 function. It would be better to create a constructor for the PCM, namely:: 1337 1338 static int snd_mychip_new_pcm(struct mychip *chip) 1339 { 1340 struct snd_pcm *pcm; 1341 int err; 1342 1343 err = snd_pcm_new(chip->card, "My Chip", 0, 1, 1, &pcm); 1344 if (err < 0) 1345 return err; 1346 pcm->private_data = chip; 1347 strcpy(pcm->name, "My Chip"); 1348 chip->pcm = pcm; 1349 ... 1350 return 0; 1351 } 1352 1353 The :c:func:`snd_pcm_new()` function takes six arguments. The 1354 first argument is the card pointer to which this PCM is assigned, and 1355 the second is the ID string. 1356 1357 The third argument (``index``, 0 in the above) is the index of this new 1358 PCM. It begins from zero. If you create more than one PCM instances, 1359 specify the different numbers in this argument. For example, ``index = 1360 1`` for the second PCM device. 1361 1362 The fourth and fifth arguments are the number of substreams for playback 1363 and capture, respectively. Here 1 is used for both arguments. When no 1364 playback or capture substreams are available, pass 0 to the 1365 corresponding argument. 1366 1367 If a chip supports multiple playbacks or captures, you can specify more 1368 numbers, but they must be handled properly in open/close, etc. 1369 callbacks. When you need to know which substream you are referring to, 1370 then it can be obtained from struct snd_pcm_substream data passed to each 1371 callback as follows:: 1372 1373 struct snd_pcm_substream *substream; 1374 int index = substream->number; 1375 1376 1377 After the PCM is created, you need to set operators for each PCM stream:: 1378 1379 snd_pcm_set_ops(pcm, SNDRV_PCM_STREAM_PLAYBACK, 1380 &snd_mychip_playback_ops); 1381 snd_pcm_set_ops(pcm, SNDRV_PCM_STREAM_CAPTURE, 1382 &snd_mychip_capture_ops); 1383 1384 The operators are defined typically like this:: 1385 1386 static struct snd_pcm_ops snd_mychip_playback_ops = { 1387 .open = snd_mychip_pcm_open, 1388 .close = snd_mychip_pcm_close, 1389 .hw_params = snd_mychip_pcm_hw_params, 1390 .hw_free = snd_mychip_pcm_hw_free, 1391 .prepare = snd_mychip_pcm_prepare, 1392 .trigger = snd_mychip_pcm_trigger, 1393 .pointer = snd_mychip_pcm_pointer, 1394 }; 1395 1396 All the callbacks are described in the Operators_ subsection. 1397 1398 After setting the operators, you probably will want to pre-allocate the 1399 buffer and set up the managed allocation mode. 1400 For that, simply call the following:: 1401 1402 snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer_all(pcm, SNDRV_DMA_TYPE_DEV, 1403 &chip->pci->dev, 1404 64*1024, 64*1024); 1405 1406 It will allocate a buffer up to 64kB by default. Buffer management 1407 details will be described in the later section `Buffer and Memory 1408 Management`_. 1409 1410 Additionally, you can set some extra information for this PCM in 1411 ``pcm->info_flags``. The available values are defined as 1412 ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_XXX`` in ``<sound/asound.h>``, which is used for the 1413 hardware definition (described later). When your soundchip supports only 1414 half-duplex, specify it like this:: 1415 1416 pcm->info_flags = SNDRV_PCM_INFO_HALF_DUPLEX; 1417 1418 1419 ... And the Destructor? 1420 ----------------------- 1421 1422 The destructor for a PCM instance is not always necessary. Since the PCM 1423 device will be released by the middle layer code automatically, you 1424 don't have to call the destructor explicitly. 1425 1426 The destructor would be necessary if you created special records 1427 internally and needed to release them. In such a case, set the 1428 destructor function to ``pcm->private_free``:: 1429 1430 static void mychip_pcm_free(struct snd_pcm *pcm) 1431 { 1432 struct mychip *chip = snd_pcm_chip(pcm); 1433 /* free your own data */ 1434 kfree(chip->my_private_pcm_data); 1435 /* do what you like else */ 1436 .... 1437 } 1438 1439 static int snd_mychip_new_pcm(struct mychip *chip) 1440 { 1441 struct snd_pcm *pcm; 1442 .... 1443 /* allocate your own data */ 1444 chip->my_private_pcm_data = kmalloc(...); 1445 /* set the destructor */ 1446 pcm->private_data = chip; 1447 pcm->private_free = mychip_pcm_free; 1448 .... 1449 } 1450 1451 1452 1453 Runtime Pointer - The Chest of PCM Information 1454 ---------------------------------------------- 1455 1456 When the PCM substream is opened, a PCM runtime instance is allocated 1457 and assigned to the substream. This pointer is accessible via 1458 ``substream->runtime``. This runtime pointer holds most information you 1459 need to control the PCM: a copy of hw_params and sw_params 1460 configurations, the buffer pointers, mmap records, spinlocks, etc. 1461 1462 The definition of runtime instance is found in ``<sound/pcm.h>``. Here 1463 is the relevant part of this file:: 1464 1465 struct _snd_pcm_runtime { 1466 /* -- Status -- */ 1467 struct snd_pcm_substream *trigger_master; 1468 snd_timestamp_t trigger_tstamp; /* trigger timestamp */ 1469 int overrange; 1470 snd_pcm_uframes_t avail_max; 1471 snd_pcm_uframes_t hw_ptr_base; /* Position at buffer restart */ 1472 snd_pcm_uframes_t hw_ptr_interrupt; /* Position at interrupt time*/ 1473 1474 /* -- HW params -- */ 1475 snd_pcm_access_t access; /* access mode */ 1476 snd_pcm_format_t format; /* SNDRV_PCM_FORMAT_* */ 1477 snd_pcm_subformat_t subformat; /* subformat */ 1478 unsigned int rate; /* rate in Hz */ 1479 unsigned int channels; /* channels */ 1480 snd_pcm_uframes_t period_size; /* period size */ 1481 unsigned int periods; /* periods */ 1482 snd_pcm_uframes_t buffer_size; /* buffer size */ 1483 unsigned int tick_time; /* tick time */ 1484 snd_pcm_uframes_t min_align; /* Min alignment for the format */ 1485 size_t byte_align; 1486 unsigned int frame_bits; 1487 unsigned int sample_bits; 1488 unsigned int info; 1489 unsigned int rate_num; 1490 unsigned int rate_den; 1491 1492 /* -- SW params -- */ 1493 struct timespec tstamp_mode; /* mmap timestamp is updated */ 1494 unsigned int period_step; 1495 unsigned int sleep_min; /* min ticks to sleep */ 1496 snd_pcm_uframes_t start_threshold; 1497 /* 1498 * The following two thresholds alleviate playback buffer underruns; when 1499 * hw_avail drops below the threshold, the respective action is triggered: 1500 */ 1501 snd_pcm_uframes_t stop_threshold; /* - stop playback */ 1502 snd_pcm_uframes_t silence_threshold; /* - pre-fill buffer with silence */ 1503 snd_pcm_uframes_t silence_size; /* max size of silence pre-fill; when >= boundary, 1504 * fill played area with silence immediately */ 1505 snd_pcm_uframes_t boundary; /* pointers wrap point */ 1506 1507 /* internal data of auto-silencer */ 1508 snd_pcm_uframes_t silence_start; /* starting pointer to silence area */ 1509 snd_pcm_uframes_t silence_filled; /* size filled with silence */ 1510 1511 snd_pcm_sync_id_t sync; /* hardware synchronization ID */ 1512 1513 /* -- mmap -- */ 1514 volatile struct snd_pcm_mmap_status *status; 1515 volatile struct snd_pcm_mmap_control *control; 1516 atomic_t mmap_count; 1517 1518 /* -- locking / scheduling -- */ 1519 spinlock_t lock; 1520 wait_queue_head_t sleep; 1521 struct timer_list tick_timer; 1522 struct fasync_struct *fasync; 1523 1524 /* -- private section -- */ 1525 void *private_data; 1526 void (*private_free)(struct snd_pcm_runtime *runtime); 1527 1528 /* -- hardware description -- */ 1529 struct snd_pcm_hardware hw; 1530 struct snd_pcm_hw_constraints hw_constraints; 1531 1532 /* -- timer -- */ 1533 unsigned int timer_resolution; /* timer resolution */ 1534 1535 /* -- DMA -- */ 1536 unsigned char *dma_area; /* DMA area */ 1537 dma_addr_t dma_addr; /* physical bus address (not accessible from main CPU) */ 1538 size_t dma_bytes; /* size of DMA area */ 1539 1540 struct snd_dma_buffer *dma_buffer_p; /* allocated buffer */ 1541 1542 #if defined(CONFIG_SND_PCM_OSS) || defined(CONFIG_SND_PCM_OSS_MODULE) 1543 /* -- OSS things -- */ 1544 struct snd_pcm_oss_runtime oss; 1545 #endif 1546 }; 1547 1548 1549 For the operators (callbacks) of each sound driver, most of these 1550 records are supposed to be read-only. Only the PCM middle-layer changes 1551 / updates them. The exceptions are the hardware description (hw) DMA 1552 buffer information and the private data. Besides, if you use the 1553 standard managed buffer allocation mode, you don't need to set the 1554 DMA buffer information by yourself. 1555 1556 In the sections below, important records are explained. 1557 1558 Hardware Description 1559 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1560 1561 The hardware descriptor (struct snd_pcm_hardware) contains the definitions of 1562 the fundamental hardware configuration. Above all, you'll need to define this 1563 in the `PCM open callback`_. Note that the runtime instance holds a copy of 1564 the descriptor, not a pointer to the existing descriptor. That is, 1565 in the open callback, you can modify the copied descriptor 1566 (``runtime->hw``) as you need. For example, if the maximum number of 1567 channels is 1 only on some chip models, you can still use the same 1568 hardware descriptor and change the channels_max later:: 1569 1570 struct snd_pcm_runtime *runtime = substream->runtime; 1571 ... 1572 runtime->hw = snd_mychip_playback_hw; /* common definition */ 1573 if (chip->model == VERY_OLD_ONE) 1574 runtime->hw.channels_max = 1; 1575 1576 Typically, you'll have a hardware descriptor as below:: 1577 1578 static struct snd_pcm_hardware snd_mychip_playback_hw = { 1579 .info = (SNDRV_PCM_INFO_MMAP | 1580 SNDRV_PCM_INFO_INTERLEAVED | 1581 SNDRV_PCM_INFO_BLOCK_TRANSFER | 1582 SNDRV_PCM_INFO_MMAP_VALID), 1583 .formats = SNDRV_PCM_FMTBIT_S16_LE, 1584 .rates = SNDRV_PCM_RATE_8000_48000, 1585 .rate_min = 8000, 1586 .rate_max = 48000, 1587 .channels_min = 2, 1588 .channels_max = 2, 1589 .buffer_bytes_max = 32768, 1590 .period_bytes_min = 4096, 1591 .period_bytes_max = 32768, 1592 .periods_min = 1, 1593 .periods_max = 1024, 1594 }; 1595 1596 - The ``info`` field contains the type and capabilities of this 1597 PCM. The bit flags are defined in ``<sound/asound.h>`` as 1598 ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_XXX``. Here, at least, you have to specify whether 1599 mmap is supported and which interleaving formats are 1600 supported. When the hardware supports mmap, add the 1601 ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_MMAP`` flag here. When the hardware supports the 1602 interleaved or the non-interleaved formats, the 1603 ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_INTERLEAVED`` or ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_NONINTERLEAVED`` 1604 flag must be set, respectively. If both are supported, you can set 1605 both, too. 1606 1607 In the above example, ``MMAP_VALID`` and ``BLOCK_TRANSFER`` are 1608 specified for the OSS mmap mode. Usually both are set. Of course, 1609 ``MMAP_VALID`` is set only if mmap is really supported. 1610 1611 The other possible flags are ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_PAUSE`` and 1612 ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_RESUME``. The ``PAUSE`` bit means that the PCM 1613 supports the “pause” operation, while the ``RESUME`` bit means that 1614 the PCM supports the full “suspend/resume” operation. If the 1615 ``PAUSE`` flag is set, the ``trigger`` callback below must handle 1616 the corresponding (pause push/release) commands. The suspend/resume 1617 trigger commands can be defined even without the ``RESUME`` 1618 flag. See the `Power Management`_ section for details. 1619 1620 When the PCM substreams can be synchronized (typically, 1621 synchronized start/stop of a playback and a capture stream), you 1622 can give ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_SYNC_START``, too. In this case, you'll 1623 need to check the linked-list of PCM substreams in the trigger 1624 callback. This will be described in a later section. 1625 1626 - The ``formats`` field contains the bit-flags of supported formats 1627 (``SNDRV_PCM_FMTBIT_XXX``). If the hardware supports more than one 1628 format, give all or'ed bits. In the example above, the signed 16bit 1629 little-endian format is specified. 1630 1631 - The ``rates`` field contains the bit-flags of supported rates 1632 (``SNDRV_PCM_RATE_XXX``). When the chip supports continuous rates, 1633 pass the ``CONTINUOUS`` bit additionally. The pre-defined rate bits 1634 are provided only for typical rates. If your chip supports 1635 unconventional rates, you need to add the ``KNOT`` bit and set up 1636 the hardware constraint manually (explained later). 1637 1638 - ``rate_min`` and ``rate_max`` define the minimum and maximum sample 1639 rate. This should correspond somehow to ``rates`` bits. 1640 1641 - ``channels_min`` and ``channels_max`` define, as you might have already 1642 expected, the minimum and maximum number of channels. 1643 1644 - ``buffer_bytes_max`` defines the maximum buffer size in 1645 bytes. There is no ``buffer_bytes_min`` field, since it can be 1646 calculated from the minimum period size and the minimum number of 1647 periods. Meanwhile, ``period_bytes_min`` and ``period_bytes_max`` 1648 define the minimum and maximum size of the period in bytes. 1649 ``periods_max`` and ``periods_min`` define the maximum and minimum 1650 number of periods in the buffer. 1651 1652 The “period” is a term that corresponds to a fragment in the OSS 1653 world. The period defines the point at which a PCM interrupt is 1654 generated. This point strongly depends on the hardware. Generally, 1655 a smaller period size will give you more interrupts, which results 1656 in being able to fill/drain the buffer more timely. In the case of 1657 capture, this size defines the input latency. On the other hand, 1658 the whole buffer size defines the output latency for the playback 1659 direction. 1660 1661 - There is also a field ``fifo_size``. This specifies the size of the 1662 hardware FIFO, but currently it is neither used by the drivers nor 1663 in the alsa-lib. So, you can ignore this field. 1664 1665 PCM Configurations 1666 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1667 1668 Ok, let's go back again to the PCM runtime records. The most 1669 frequently referred records in the runtime instance are the PCM 1670 configurations. The PCM configurations are stored in the runtime 1671 instance after the application sends ``hw_params`` data via 1672 alsa-lib. There are many fields copied from hw_params and sw_params 1673 structs. For example, ``format`` holds the format type chosen by the 1674 application. This field contains the enum value 1675 ``SNDRV_PCM_FORMAT_XXX``. 1676 1677 One thing to be noted is that the configured buffer and period sizes 1678 are stored in “frames” in the runtime. In the ALSA world, ``1 frame = 1679 channels \* samples-size``. For conversion between frames and bytes, 1680 you can use the :c:func:`frames_to_bytes()` and 1681 :c:func:`bytes_to_frames()` helper functions:: 1682 1683 period_bytes = frames_to_bytes(runtime, runtime->period_size); 1684 1685 Also, many software parameters (sw_params) are stored in frames, too. 1686 Please check the type of the field. ``snd_pcm_uframes_t`` is for 1687 frames as unsigned integer while ``snd_pcm_sframes_t`` is for 1688 frames as signed integer. 1689 1690 DMA Buffer Information 1691 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1692 1693 The DMA buffer is defined by the following four fields: ``dma_area``, 1694 ``dma_addr``, ``dma_bytes`` and ``dma_private``. ``dma_area`` 1695 holds the buffer pointer (the logical address). You can call 1696 :c:func:`memcpy()` from/to this pointer. Meanwhile, ``dma_addr`` holds 1697 the physical address of the buffer. This field is specified only when 1698 the buffer is a linear buffer. ``dma_bytes`` holds the size of the 1699 buffer in bytes. ``dma_private`` is used for the ALSA DMA allocator. 1700 1701 If you use either the managed buffer allocation mode or the standard 1702 API function :c:func:`snd_pcm_lib_malloc_pages()` for allocating the buffer, 1703 these fields are set by the ALSA middle layer, and you should *not* 1704 change them by yourself. You can read them but not write them. On the 1705 other hand, if you want to allocate the buffer by yourself, you'll 1706 need to manage it in the hw_params callback. At least, ``dma_bytes`` is 1707 mandatory. ``dma_area`` is necessary when the buffer is mmapped. If 1708 your driver doesn't support mmap, this field is not 1709 necessary. ``dma_addr`` is also optional. You can use dma_private as 1710 you like, too. 1711 1712 Running Status 1713 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1714 1715 The running status can be referred via ``runtime->status``. This is 1716 a pointer to a struct snd_pcm_mmap_status record. 1717 For example, you can get the current 1718 DMA hardware pointer via ``runtime->status->hw_ptr``. 1719 1720 The DMA application pointer can be referred via ``runtime->control``, 1721 which points to a struct snd_pcm_mmap_control record. 1722 However, accessing this value directly is not recommended. 1723 1724 Private Data 1725 ~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1726 1727 You can allocate a record for the substream and store it in 1728 ``runtime->private_data``. Usually, this is done in the `PCM open 1729 callback`_. Don't mix this with ``pcm->private_data``. The 1730 ``pcm->private_data`` usually points to the chip instance assigned 1731 statically at creation time of the PCM device, while 1732 ``runtime->private_data`` 1733 points to a dynamic data structure created in the PCM open 1734 callback:: 1735 1736 static int snd_xxx_open(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 1737 { 1738 struct my_pcm_data *data; 1739 .... 1740 data = kmalloc(sizeof(*data), GFP_KERNEL); 1741 substream->runtime->private_data = data; 1742 .... 1743 } 1744 1745 1746 The allocated object must be released in the `close callback`_. 1747 1748 Operators 1749 --------- 1750 1751 OK, now let me give details about each PCM callback (``ops``). In 1752 general, every callback must return 0 if successful, or a negative 1753 error number such as ``-EINVAL``. To choose an appropriate error 1754 number, it is advised to check what value other parts of the kernel 1755 return when the same kind of request fails. 1756 1757 Each callback function takes at least one argument containing a 1758 struct snd_pcm_substream pointer. To retrieve the chip 1759 record from the given substream instance, you can use the following 1760 macro:: 1761 1762 int xxx(...) { 1763 struct mychip *chip = snd_pcm_substream_chip(substream); 1764 .... 1765 } 1766 1767 The macro reads ``substream->private_data``, which is a copy of 1768 ``pcm->private_data``. You can override the former if you need to 1769 assign different data records per PCM substream. For example, the 1770 cmi8330 driver assigns different ``private_data`` for playback and 1771 capture directions, because it uses two different codecs (SB- and 1772 AD-compatible) for different directions. 1773 1774 PCM open callback 1775 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1776 1777 :: 1778 1779 static int snd_xxx_open(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream); 1780 1781 This is called when a PCM substream is opened. 1782 1783 At least, here you have to initialize the ``runtime->hw`` 1784 record. Typically, this is done like this:: 1785 1786 static int snd_xxx_open(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 1787 { 1788 struct mychip *chip = snd_pcm_substream_chip(substream); 1789 struct snd_pcm_runtime *runtime = substream->runtime; 1790 1791 runtime->hw = snd_mychip_playback_hw; 1792 return 0; 1793 } 1794 1795 where ``snd_mychip_playback_hw`` is the pre-defined hardware 1796 description. 1797 1798 You can allocate private data in this callback, as described in the 1799 `Private Data`_ section. 1800 1801 If the hardware configuration needs more constraints, set the hardware 1802 constraints here, too. See Constraints_ for more details. 1803 1804 close callback 1805 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1806 1807 :: 1808 1809 static int snd_xxx_close(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream); 1810 1811 1812 Obviously, this is called when a PCM substream is closed. 1813 1814 Any private instance for a PCM substream allocated in the ``open`` 1815 callback will be released here:: 1816 1817 static int snd_xxx_close(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 1818 { 1819 .... 1820 kfree(substream->runtime->private_data); 1821 .... 1822 } 1823 1824 ioctl callback 1825 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1826 1827 This is used for any special call to PCM ioctls. But usually you can 1828 leave it NULL, then the PCM core calls the generic ioctl callback 1829 function :c:func:`snd_pcm_lib_ioctl()`. If you need to deal with a 1830 unique setup of channel info or reset procedure, you can pass your own 1831 callback function here. 1832 1833 hw_params callback 1834 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1835 1836 :: 1837 1838 static int snd_xxx_hw_params(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream, 1839 struct snd_pcm_hw_params *hw_params); 1840 1841 This is called when the hardware parameters (``hw_params``) are set up 1842 by the application, that is, once when the buffer size, the period 1843 size, the format, etc. are defined for the PCM substream. 1844 1845 Many hardware setups should be done in this callback, including the 1846 allocation of buffers. 1847 1848 Parameters to be initialized are retrieved by the 1849 :c:func:`params_xxx()` macros. 1850 1851 When you choose managed buffer allocation mode for the substream, 1852 a buffer is already allocated before this callback gets 1853 called. Alternatively, you can call a helper function below for 1854 allocating the buffer:: 1855 1856 snd_pcm_lib_malloc_pages(substream, params_buffer_bytes(hw_params)); 1857 1858 :c:func:`snd_pcm_lib_malloc_pages()` is available only when the 1859 DMA buffers have been pre-allocated. See the section `Buffer Types`_ 1860 for more details. 1861 1862 Note that this one and the ``prepare`` callback may be called multiple 1863 times per initialization. For example, the OSS emulation may call these 1864 callbacks at each change via its ioctl. 1865 1866 Thus, you need to be careful not to allocate the same buffers many 1867 times, which will lead to memory leaks! Calling the helper function 1868 above many times is OK. It will release the previous buffer 1869 automatically when it was already allocated. 1870 1871 Another note is that this callback is non-atomic (schedulable) by 1872 default, i.e. when no ``nonatomic`` flag set. This is important, 1873 because the ``trigger`` callback is atomic (non-schedulable). That is, 1874 mutexes or any schedule-related functions are not available in the 1875 ``trigger`` callback. Please see the subsection Atomicity_ for 1876 details. 1877 1878 hw_free callback 1879 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1880 1881 :: 1882 1883 static int snd_xxx_hw_free(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream); 1884 1885 This is called to release the resources allocated via 1886 ``hw_params``. 1887 1888 This function is always called before the close callback is called. 1889 Also, the callback may be called multiple times, too. Keep track 1890 whether each resource was already released. 1891 1892 When you have chosen managed buffer allocation mode for the PCM 1893 substream, the allocated PCM buffer will be automatically released 1894 after this callback gets called. Otherwise you'll have to release the 1895 buffer manually. Typically, when the buffer was allocated from the 1896 pre-allocated pool, you can use the standard API function 1897 :c:func:`snd_pcm_lib_malloc_pages()` like:: 1898 1899 snd_pcm_lib_free_pages(substream); 1900 1901 prepare callback 1902 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1903 1904 :: 1905 1906 static int snd_xxx_prepare(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream); 1907 1908 This callback is called when the PCM is “prepared”. You can set the 1909 format type, sample rate, etc. here. The difference from ``hw_params`` 1910 is that the ``prepare`` callback will be called each time 1911 :c:func:`snd_pcm_prepare()` is called, i.e. when recovering after 1912 underruns, etc. 1913 1914 Note that this callback is non-atomic. You can use 1915 schedule-related functions safely in this callback. 1916 1917 In this and the following callbacks, you can refer to the values via 1918 the runtime record, ``substream->runtime``. For example, to get the 1919 current rate, format or channels, access to ``runtime->rate``, 1920 ``runtime->format`` or ``runtime->channels``, respectively. The 1921 physical address of the allocated buffer is set to 1922 ``runtime->dma_area``. The buffer and period sizes are in 1923 ``runtime->buffer_size`` and ``runtime->period_size``, respectively. 1924 1925 Be careful that this callback will be called many times at each setup, 1926 too. 1927 1928 trigger callback 1929 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1930 1931 :: 1932 1933 static int snd_xxx_trigger(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream, int cmd); 1934 1935 This is called when the PCM is started, stopped or paused. 1936 1937 The action is specified in the second argument, ``SNDRV_PCM_TRIGGER_XXX`` 1938 defined in ``<sound/pcm.h>``. At least, the ``START`` 1939 and ``STOP`` commands must be defined in this callback:: 1940 1941 switch (cmd) { 1942 case SNDRV_PCM_TRIGGER_START: 1943 /* do something to start the PCM engine */ 1944 break; 1945 case SNDRV_PCM_TRIGGER_STOP: 1946 /* do something to stop the PCM engine */ 1947 break; 1948 default: 1949 return -EINVAL; 1950 } 1951 1952 When the PCM supports the pause operation (given in the info field of 1953 the hardware table), the ``PAUSE_PUSH`` and ``PAUSE_RELEASE`` commands 1954 must be handled here, too. The former is the command to pause the PCM, 1955 and the latter to restart the PCM again. 1956 1957 When the PCM supports the suspend/resume operation, regardless of full 1958 or partial suspend/resume support, the ``SUSPEND`` and ``RESUME`` 1959 commands must be handled, too. These commands are issued when the 1960 power-management status is changed. Obviously, the ``SUSPEND`` and 1961 ``RESUME`` commands suspend and resume the PCM substream, and usually, 1962 they are identical to the ``STOP`` and ``START`` commands, respectively. 1963 See the `Power Management`_ section for details. 1964 1965 As mentioned, this callback is atomic by default unless the ``nonatomic`` 1966 flag set, and you cannot call functions which may sleep. The 1967 ``trigger`` callback should be as minimal as possible, just really 1968 triggering the DMA. The other stuff should be initialized in 1969 ``hw_params`` and ``prepare`` callbacks properly beforehand. 1970 1971 sync_stop callback 1972 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1973 1974 :: 1975 1976 static int snd_xxx_sync_stop(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream); 1977 1978 This callback is optional, and NULL can be passed. It's called after 1979 the PCM core stops the stream, before it changes the stream state via 1980 ``prepare``, ``hw_params`` or ``hw_free``. 1981 Since the IRQ handler might be still pending, we need to wait until 1982 the pending task finishes before moving to the next step; otherwise it 1983 might lead to a crash due to resource conflicts or access to freed 1984 resources. A typical behavior is to call a synchronization function 1985 like :c:func:`synchronize_irq()` here. 1986 1987 For the majority of drivers that need only a call of 1988 :c:func:`synchronize_irq()`, there is a simpler setup, too. 1989 While keeping the ``sync_stop`` PCM callback NULL, the driver can set 1990 the ``card->sync_irq`` field to the returned interrupt number after 1991 requesting an IRQ, instead. Then PCM core will call 1992 :c:func:`synchronize_irq()` with the given IRQ appropriately. 1993 1994 If the IRQ handler is released by the card destructor, you don't need 1995 to clear ``card->sync_irq``, as the card itself is being released. 1996 So, usually you'll need to add just a single line for assigning 1997 ``card->sync_irq`` in the driver code unless the driver re-acquires 1998 the IRQ. When the driver frees and re-acquires the IRQ dynamically 1999 (e.g. for suspend/resume), it needs to clear and re-set 2000 ``card->sync_irq`` again appropriately. 2001 2002 pointer callback 2003 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2004 2005 :: 2006 2007 static snd_pcm_uframes_t snd_xxx_pointer(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 2008 2009 This callback is called when the PCM middle layer inquires the current 2010 hardware position in the buffer. The position must be returned in 2011 frames, ranging from 0 to ``buffer_size - 1``. 2012 2013 This is usually called from the buffer-update routine in the PCM 2014 middle layer, which is invoked when :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed()` 2015 is called by the interrupt routine. Then the PCM middle layer updates 2016 the position and calculates the available space, and wakes up the 2017 sleeping poll threads, etc. 2018 2019 This callback is also atomic by default. 2020 2021 copy and fill_silence ops 2022 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2023 2024 These callbacks are not mandatory, and can be omitted in most cases. 2025 These callbacks are used when the hardware buffer cannot be in the 2026 normal memory space. Some chips have their own buffer in the hardware 2027 which is not mappable. In such a case, you have to transfer the data 2028 manually from the memory buffer to the hardware buffer. Or, if the 2029 buffer is non-contiguous on both physical and virtual memory spaces, 2030 these callbacks must be defined, too. 2031 2032 If these two callbacks are defined, copy and set-silence operations 2033 are done by them. The details will be described in the later section 2034 `Buffer and Memory Management`_. 2035 2036 ack callback 2037 ~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2038 2039 This callback is also not mandatory. This callback is called when the 2040 ``appl_ptr`` is updated in read or write operations. Some drivers like 2041 emu10k1-fx and cs46xx need to track the current ``appl_ptr`` for the 2042 internal buffer, and this callback is useful only for such a purpose. 2043 2044 The callback function may return 0 or a negative error. When the 2045 return value is ``-EPIPE``, PCM core treats that as a buffer XRUN, 2046 and changes the state to ``SNDRV_PCM_STATE_XRUN`` automatically. 2047 2048 This callback is atomic by default. 2049 2050 page callback 2051 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2052 2053 This callback is optional too. The mmap calls this callback to get the 2054 page fault address. 2055 2056 You need no special callback for the standard SG-buffer or vmalloc- 2057 buffer. Hence this callback should be rarely used. 2058 2059 mmap callback 2060 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2061 2062 This is another optional callback for controlling mmap behavior. 2063 When defined, the PCM core calls this callback when a page is 2064 memory-mapped, instead of using the standard helper. 2065 If you need special handling (due to some architecture or 2066 device-specific issues), implement everything here as you like. 2067 2068 2069 PCM Interrupt Handler 2070 --------------------- 2071 2072 The remainder of the PCM stuff is the PCM interrupt handler. The role 2073 of the PCM 2074 interrupt handler in the sound driver is to update the buffer position 2075 and to tell the PCM middle layer when the buffer position goes across 2076 the specified period boundary. To inform about this, call the 2077 :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed()` function. 2078 2079 There are several ways sound chips can generate interrupts. 2080 2081 Interrupts at the period (fragment) boundary 2082 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2083 2084 This is the most frequently found type: the hardware generates an 2085 interrupt at each period boundary. In this case, you can call 2086 :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed()` at each interrupt. 2087 2088 :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed()` takes the substream pointer as 2089 its argument. Thus, you need to keep the substream pointer accessible 2090 from the chip instance. For example, define ``substream`` field in the 2091 chip record to hold the current running substream pointer, and set the 2092 pointer value at ``open`` callback (and reset at ``close`` callback). 2093 2094 If you acquire a spinlock in the interrupt handler, and the lock is used 2095 in other PCM callbacks, too, then you have to release the lock before 2096 calling :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed()`, because 2097 :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed()` calls other PCM callbacks 2098 inside. 2099 2100 Typical code would look like:: 2101 2102 2103 static irqreturn_t snd_mychip_interrupt(int irq, void *dev_id) 2104 { 2105 struct mychip *chip = dev_id; 2106 spin_lock(&chip->lock); 2107 .... 2108 if (pcm_irq_invoked(chip)) { 2109 /* call updater, unlock before it */ 2110 spin_unlock(&chip->lock); 2111 snd_pcm_period_elapsed(chip->substream); 2112 spin_lock(&chip->lock); 2113 /* acknowledge the interrupt if necessary */ 2114 } 2115 .... 2116 spin_unlock(&chip->lock); 2117 return IRQ_HANDLED; 2118 } 2119 2120 Also, when the device can detect a buffer underrun/overrun, the driver 2121 can notify the XRUN status to the PCM core by calling 2122 :c:func:`snd_pcm_stop_xrun()`. This function stops the stream and sets 2123 the PCM state to ``SNDRV_PCM_STATE_XRUN``. Note that it must be called 2124 outside the PCM stream lock, hence it can't be called from the atomic 2125 callback. 2126 2127 2128 High frequency timer interrupts 2129 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2130 2131 This happens when the hardware doesn't generate interrupts at the period 2132 boundary but issues timer interrupts at a fixed timer rate (e.g. es1968 2133 or ymfpci drivers). In this case, you need to check the current hardware 2134 position and accumulate the processed sample length at each interrupt. 2135 When the accumulated size exceeds the period size, call 2136 :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed()` and reset the accumulator. 2137 2138 Typical code would look as follows:: 2139 2140 2141 static irqreturn_t snd_mychip_interrupt(int irq, void *dev_id) 2142 { 2143 struct mychip *chip = dev_id; 2144 spin_lock(&chip->lock); 2145 .... 2146 if (pcm_irq_invoked(chip)) { 2147 unsigned int last_ptr, size; 2148 /* get the current hardware pointer (in frames) */ 2149 last_ptr = get_hw_ptr(chip); 2150 /* calculate the processed frames since the 2151 * last update 2152 */ 2153 if (last_ptr < chip->last_ptr) 2154 size = runtime->buffer_size + last_ptr 2155 - chip->last_ptr; 2156 else 2157 size = last_ptr - chip->last_ptr; 2158 /* remember the last updated point */ 2159 chip->last_ptr = last_ptr; 2160 /* accumulate the size */ 2161 chip->size += size; 2162 /* over the period boundary? */ 2163 if (chip->size >= runtime->period_size) { 2164 /* reset the accumulator */ 2165 chip->size %= runtime->period_size; 2166 /* call updater */ 2167 spin_unlock(&chip->lock); 2168 snd_pcm_period_elapsed(substream); 2169 spin_lock(&chip->lock); 2170 } 2171 /* acknowledge the interrupt if necessary */ 2172 } 2173 .... 2174 spin_unlock(&chip->lock); 2175 return IRQ_HANDLED; 2176 } 2177 2178 2179 2180 On calling :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed()` 2181 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2182 2183 In both cases, even if more than one period has elapsed, you don't have 2184 to call :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed()` many times. Call only 2185 once. And the PCM layer will check the current hardware pointer and 2186 update to the latest status. 2187 2188 Atomicity 2189 --------- 2190 2191 One of the most important (and thus difficult to debug) problems in 2192 kernel programming are race conditions. In the Linux kernel, they are 2193 usually avoided via spin-locks, mutexes or semaphores. In general, if a 2194 race condition can happen in an interrupt handler, it has to be managed 2195 atomically, and you have to use a spinlock to protect the critical 2196 section. If the critical section is not in interrupt handler code and if 2197 taking a relatively long time to execute is acceptable, you should use 2198 mutexes or semaphores instead. 2199 2200 As already seen, some PCM callbacks are atomic and some are not. For 2201 example, the ``hw_params`` callback is non-atomic, while the ``trigger`` 2202 callback is atomic. This means, the latter is called already in a 2203 spinlock held by the PCM middle layer, the PCM stream lock. Please 2204 take this atomicity into account when you choose a locking scheme in 2205 the callbacks. 2206 2207 In the atomic callbacks, you cannot use functions which may call 2208 :c:func:`schedule()` or go to :c:func:`sleep()`. Semaphores and 2209 mutexes can sleep, and hence they cannot be used inside the atomic 2210 callbacks (e.g. ``trigger`` callback). To implement some delay in such a 2211 callback, please use :c:func:`udelay()` or :c:func:`mdelay()`. 2212 2213 All three atomic callbacks (trigger, pointer, and ack) are called with 2214 local interrupts disabled. 2215 2216 However, it is possible to request all PCM operations to be non-atomic. 2217 This assumes that all call sites are in 2218 non-atomic contexts. For example, the function 2219 :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed()` is called typically from the 2220 interrupt handler. But, if you set up the driver to use a threaded 2221 interrupt handler, this call can be in non-atomic context, too. In such 2222 a case, you can set the ``nonatomic`` field of the struct snd_pcm object 2223 after creating it. When this flag is set, mutex and rwsem are used internally 2224 in the PCM core instead of spin and rwlocks, so that you can call all PCM 2225 functions safely in a non-atomic 2226 context. 2227 2228 Also, in some cases, you might need to call 2229 :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed()` in the atomic context (e.g. the 2230 period gets elapsed during ``ack`` or other callback). There is a 2231 variant that can be called inside the PCM stream lock 2232 :c:func:`snd_pcm_period_elapsed_under_stream_lock()` for that purpose, 2233 too. 2234 2235 Constraints 2236 ----------- 2237 2238 Due to physical limitations, hardware is not infinitely configurable. 2239 These limitations are expressed by setting constraints. 2240 2241 For example, in order to restrict the sample rates to some supported 2242 values, use :c:func:`snd_pcm_hw_constraint_list()`. You need to 2243 call this function in the open callback:: 2244 2245 static unsigned int rates[] = 2246 {4000, 10000, 22050, 44100}; 2247 static struct snd_pcm_hw_constraint_list constraints_rates = { 2248 .count = ARRAY_SIZE(rates), 2249 .list = rates, 2250 .mask = 0, 2251 }; 2252 2253 static int snd_mychip_pcm_open(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream) 2254 { 2255 int err; 2256 .... 2257 err = snd_pcm_hw_constraint_list(substream->runtime, 0, 2258 SNDRV_PCM_HW_PARAM_RATE, 2259 &constraints_rates); 2260 if (err < 0) 2261 return err; 2262 .... 2263 } 2264 2265 There are many different constraints. Look at ``sound/pcm.h`` for a 2266 complete list. You can even define your own constraint rules. For 2267 example, let's suppose my_chip can manage a substream of 1 channel if 2268 and only if the format is ``S16_LE``, otherwise it supports any format 2269 specified in struct snd_pcm_hardware (or in any other 2270 constraint_list). You can build a rule like this:: 2271 2272 static int hw_rule_channels_by_format(struct snd_pcm_hw_params *params, 2273 struct snd_pcm_hw_rule *rule) 2274 { 2275 struct snd_interval *c = hw_param_interval(params, 2276 SNDRV_PCM_HW_PARAM_CHANNELS); 2277 struct snd_mask *f = hw_param_mask(params, SNDRV_PCM_HW_PARAM_FORMAT); 2278 struct snd_interval ch; 2279 2280 snd_interval_any(&ch); 2281 if (f->bits[0] == SNDRV_PCM_FMTBIT_S16_LE) { 2282 ch.min = ch.max = 1; 2283 ch.integer = 1; 2284 return snd_interval_refine(c, &ch); 2285 } 2286 return 0; 2287 } 2288 2289 2290 Then you need to call this function to add your rule:: 2291 2292 snd_pcm_hw_rule_add(substream->runtime, 0, SNDRV_PCM_HW_PARAM_CHANNELS, 2293 hw_rule_channels_by_format, NULL, 2294 SNDRV_PCM_HW_PARAM_FORMAT, -1); 2295 2296 The rule function is called when an application sets the PCM format, and 2297 it refines the number of channels accordingly. But an application may 2298 set the number of channels before setting the format. Thus you also need 2299 to define the inverse rule:: 2300 2301 static int hw_rule_format_by_channels(struct snd_pcm_hw_params *params, 2302 struct snd_pcm_hw_rule *rule) 2303 { 2304 struct snd_interval *c = hw_param_interval(params, 2305 SNDRV_PCM_HW_PARAM_CHANNELS); 2306 struct snd_mask *f = hw_param_mask(params, SNDRV_PCM_HW_PARAM_FORMAT); 2307 struct snd_mask fmt; 2308 2309 snd_mask_any(&fmt); /* Init the struct */ 2310 if (c->min < 2) { 2311 fmt.bits[0] &= SNDRV_PCM_FMTBIT_S16_LE; 2312 return snd_mask_refine(f, &fmt); 2313 } 2314 return 0; 2315 } 2316 2317 2318 ... and in the open callback:: 2319 2320 snd_pcm_hw_rule_add(substream->runtime, 0, SNDRV_PCM_HW_PARAM_FORMAT, 2321 hw_rule_format_by_channels, NULL, 2322 SNDRV_PCM_HW_PARAM_CHANNELS, -1); 2323 2324 One typical usage of the hw constraints is to align the buffer size 2325 with the period size. By default, ALSA PCM core doesn't enforce the 2326 buffer size to be aligned with the period size. For example, it'd be 2327 possible to have a combination like 256 period bytes with 999 buffer 2328 bytes. 2329 2330 Many device chips, however, require the buffer to be a multiple of 2331 periods. In such a case, call 2332 :c:func:`snd_pcm_hw_constraint_integer()` for 2333 ``SNDRV_PCM_HW_PARAM_PERIODS``:: 2334 2335 snd_pcm_hw_constraint_integer(substream->runtime, 2336 SNDRV_PCM_HW_PARAM_PERIODS); 2337 2338 This assures that the number of periods is integer, hence the buffer 2339 size is aligned with the period size. 2340 2341 The hw constraint is a very powerful mechanism to define the 2342 preferred PCM configuration, and there are relevant helpers. 2343 I won't give more details here, rather I would like to say, “Luke, use 2344 the source.” 2345 2346 Control Interface 2347 ================= 2348 2349 General 2350 ------- 2351 2352 The control interface is used widely for many switches, sliders, etc. 2353 which are accessed from user-space. Its most important use is the mixer 2354 interface. In other words, since ALSA 0.9.x, all the mixer stuff is 2355 implemented on the control kernel API. 2356 2357 ALSA has a well-defined AC97 control module. If your chip supports only 2358 the AC97 and nothing else, you can skip this section. 2359 2360 The control API is defined in ``<sound/control.h>``. Include this file 2361 if you want to add your own controls. 2362 2363 Definition of Controls 2364 ---------------------- 2365 2366 To create a new control, you need to define the following three 2367 callbacks: ``info``, ``get`` and ``put``. Then, define a 2368 struct snd_kcontrol_new record, such as:: 2369 2370 2371 static struct snd_kcontrol_new my_control = { 2372 .iface = SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_IFACE_MIXER, 2373 .name = "PCM Playback Switch", 2374 .index = 0, 2375 .access = SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_ACCESS_READWRITE, 2376 .private_value = 0xffff, 2377 .info = my_control_info, 2378 .get = my_control_get, 2379 .put = my_control_put 2380 }; 2381 2382 2383 The ``iface`` field specifies the control type, 2384 ``SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_IFACE_XXX``, which is usually ``MIXER``. Use ``CARD`` 2385 for global controls that are not logically part of the mixer. If the 2386 control is closely associated with some specific device on the sound 2387 card, use ``HWDEP``, ``PCM``, ``RAWMIDI``, ``TIMER``, or ``SEQUENCER``, 2388 and specify the device number with the ``device`` and ``subdevice`` 2389 fields. 2390 2391 The ``name`` is the name identifier string. Since ALSA 0.9.x, the 2392 control name is very important, because its role is classified from 2393 its name. There are pre-defined standard control names. The details 2394 are described in the `Control Names`_ subsection. 2395 2396 The ``index`` field holds the index number of this control. If there 2397 are several different controls with the same name, they can be 2398 distinguished by the index number. This is the case when several 2399 codecs exist on the card. If the index is zero, you can omit the 2400 definition above. 2401 2402 The ``access`` field contains the access type of this control. Give 2403 the combination of bit masks, ``SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_ACCESS_XXX``, 2404 there. The details will be explained in the `Access Flags`_ 2405 subsection. 2406 2407 The ``private_value`` field contains an arbitrary long integer value 2408 for this record. When using the generic ``info``, ``get`` and ``put`` 2409 callbacks, you can pass a value through this field. If several small 2410 numbers are necessary, you can combine them in bitwise. Or, it's 2411 possible to store a pointer (casted to unsigned long) of some record in 2412 this field, too. 2413 2414 The ``tlv`` field can be used to provide metadata about the control; 2415 see the `Metadata`_ subsection. 2416 2417 The other three are `Control Callbacks`_. 2418 2419 Control Names 2420 ------------- 2421 2422 There are some standards to define the control names. A control is 2423 usually defined from the three parts as “SOURCE DIRECTION FUNCTION”. 2424 2425 The first, ``SOURCE``, specifies the source of the control, and is a 2426 string such as “Master”, “PCM”, “CD” and “Line”. There are many 2427 pre-defined sources. 2428 2429 The second, ``DIRECTION``, is one of the following strings according to 2430 the direction of the control: “Playback”, “Capture”, “Bypass Playback” 2431 and “Bypass Capture”. Or, it can be omitted, meaning both playback and 2432 capture directions. 2433 2434 The third, ``FUNCTION``, is one of the following strings according to 2435 the function of the control: “Switch”, “Volume” and “Route”. 2436 2437 The example of control names are, thus, “Master Capture Switch” or “PCM 2438 Playback Volume”. 2439 2440 There are some exceptions: 2441 2442 Global capture and playback 2443 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2444 2445 “Capture Source”, “Capture Switch” and “Capture Volume” are used for the 2446 global capture (input) source, switch and volume. Similarly, “Playback 2447 Switch” and “Playback Volume” are used for the global output gain switch 2448 and volume. 2449 2450 Tone-controls 2451 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2452 2453 tone-control switch and volumes are specified like “Tone Control - XXX”, 2454 e.g. “Tone Control - Switch”, “Tone Control - Bass”, “Tone Control - 2455 Center”. 2456 2457 3D controls 2458 ~~~~~~~~~~~ 2459 2460 3D-control switches and volumes are specified like “3D Control - XXX”, 2461 e.g. “3D Control - Switch”, “3D Control - Center”, “3D Control - Space”. 2462 2463 Mic boost 2464 ~~~~~~~~~ 2465 2466 Mic-boost switch is set as “Mic Boost” or “Mic Boost (6dB)”. 2467 2468 More precise information can be found in 2469 ``Documentation/sound/designs/control-names.rst``. 2470 2471 Access Flags 2472 ------------ 2473 2474 The access flag is the bitmask which specifies the access type of the 2475 given control. The default access type is 2476 ``SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_ACCESS_READWRITE``, which means both read and write are 2477 allowed to this control. When the access flag is omitted (i.e. = 0), it 2478 is considered as ``READWRITE`` access by default. 2479 2480 When the control is read-only, pass ``SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_ACCESS_READ`` 2481 instead. In this case, you don't have to define the ``put`` callback. 2482 Similarly, when the control is write-only (although it's a rare case), 2483 you can use the ``WRITE`` flag instead, and you don't need the ``get`` 2484 callback. 2485 2486 If the control value changes frequently (e.g. the VU meter), 2487 ``VOLATILE`` flag should be given. This means that the control may be 2488 changed without `Change notification`_. Applications should poll such 2489 a control constantly. 2490 2491 When the control may be updated, but currently has no effect on anything, 2492 setting the ``INACTIVE`` flag may be appropriate. For example, PCM 2493 controls should be inactive while no PCM device is open. 2494 2495 There are ``LOCK`` and ``OWNER`` flags to change the write permissions. 2496 2497 Control Callbacks 2498 ----------------- 2499 2500 info callback 2501 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2502 2503 The ``info`` callback is used to get detailed information on this 2504 control. This must store the values of the given 2505 struct snd_ctl_elem_info object. For example, 2506 for a boolean control with a single element:: 2507 2508 2509 static int snd_myctl_mono_info(struct snd_kcontrol *kcontrol, 2510 struct snd_ctl_elem_info *uinfo) 2511 { 2512 uinfo->type = SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_TYPE_BOOLEAN; 2513 uinfo->count = 1; 2514 uinfo->value.integer.min = 0; 2515 uinfo->value.integer.max = 1; 2516 return 0; 2517 } 2518 2519 2520 2521 The ``type`` field specifies the type of the control. There are 2522 ``BOOLEAN``, ``INTEGER``, ``ENUMERATED``, ``BYTES``, ``IEC958`` and 2523 ``INTEGER64``. The ``count`` field specifies the number of elements in 2524 this control. For example, a stereo volume would have count = 2. The 2525 ``value`` field is a union, and the values stored depend on the 2526 type. The boolean and integer types are identical. 2527 2528 The enumerated type is a bit different from the others. You'll need to 2529 set the string for the selectec item index:: 2530 2531 static int snd_myctl_enum_info(struct snd_kcontrol *kcontrol, 2532 struct snd_ctl_elem_info *uinfo) 2533 { 2534 static char *texts[4] = { 2535 "First", "Second", "Third", "Fourth" 2536 }; 2537 uinfo->type = SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_TYPE_ENUMERATED; 2538 uinfo->count = 1; 2539 uinfo->value.enumerated.items = 4; 2540 if (uinfo->value.enumerated.item > 3) 2541 uinfo->value.enumerated.item = 3; 2542 strcpy(uinfo->value.enumerated.name, 2543 texts[uinfo->value.enumerated.item]); 2544 return 0; 2545 } 2546 2547 The above callback can be simplified with a helper function, 2548 :c:func:`snd_ctl_enum_info()`. The final code looks like below. 2549 (You can pass ``ARRAY_SIZE(texts)`` instead of 4 in the third argument; 2550 it's a matter of taste.) 2551 2552 :: 2553 2554 static int snd_myctl_enum_info(struct snd_kcontrol *kcontrol, 2555 struct snd_ctl_elem_info *uinfo) 2556 { 2557 static char *texts[4] = { 2558 "First", "Second", "Third", "Fourth" 2559 }; 2560 return snd_ctl_enum_info(uinfo, 1, 4, texts); 2561 } 2562 2563 2564 Some common info callbacks are available for your convenience: 2565 :c:func:`snd_ctl_boolean_mono_info()` and 2566 :c:func:`snd_ctl_boolean_stereo_info()`. Obviously, the former 2567 is an info callback for a mono channel boolean item, just like 2568 :c:func:`snd_myctl_mono_info()` above, and the latter is for a 2569 stereo channel boolean item. 2570 2571 get callback 2572 ~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2573 2574 This callback is used to read the current value of the control, so it 2575 can be returned to user-space. 2576 2577 For example:: 2578 2579 static int snd_myctl_get(struct snd_kcontrol *kcontrol, 2580 struct snd_ctl_elem_value *ucontrol) 2581 { 2582 struct mychip *chip = snd_kcontrol_chip(kcontrol); 2583 ucontrol->value.integer.value[0] = get_some_value(chip); 2584 return 0; 2585 } 2586 2587 2588 2589 The ``value`` field depends on the type of control as well as on the 2590 info callback. For example, the sb driver uses this field to store the 2591 register offset, the bit-shift and the bit-mask. The ``private_value`` 2592 field is set as follows:: 2593 2594 .private_value = reg | (shift << 16) | (mask << 24) 2595 2596 and is retrieved in callbacks like:: 2597 2598 static int snd_sbmixer_get_single(struct snd_kcontrol *kcontrol, 2599 struct snd_ctl_elem_value *ucontrol) 2600 { 2601 int reg = kcontrol->private_value & 0xff; 2602 int shift = (kcontrol->private_value >> 16) & 0xff; 2603 int mask = (kcontrol->private_value >> 24) & 0xff; 2604 .... 2605 } 2606 2607 In the ``get`` callback, you have to fill all the elements if the 2608 control has more than one element, i.e. ``count > 1``. In the example 2609 above, we filled only one element (``value.integer.value[0]``) since 2610 ``count = 1`` is assumed. 2611 2612 put callback 2613 ~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2614 2615 This callback is used to write a value coming from user-space. 2616 2617 For example:: 2618 2619 static int snd_myctl_put(struct snd_kcontrol *kcontrol, 2620 struct snd_ctl_elem_value *ucontrol) 2621 { 2622 struct mychip *chip = snd_kcontrol_chip(kcontrol); 2623 int changed = 0; 2624 if (chip->current_value != 2625 ucontrol->value.integer.value[0]) { 2626 change_current_value(chip, 2627 ucontrol->value.integer.value[0]); 2628 changed = 1; 2629 } 2630 return changed; 2631 } 2632 2633 2634 2635 As seen above, you have to return 1 if the value is changed. If the 2636 value is not changed, return 0 instead. If any fatal error happens, 2637 return a negative error code as usual. 2638 2639 As in the ``get`` callback, when the control has more than one 2640 element, all elements must be evaluated in this callback, too. 2641 2642 Callbacks are not atomic 2643 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2644 2645 All these three callbacks are not-atomic. 2646 2647 Control Constructor 2648 ------------------- 2649 2650 When everything is ready, finally we can create a new control. To create 2651 a control, there are two functions to be called, 2652 :c:func:`snd_ctl_new1()` and :c:func:`snd_ctl_add()`. 2653 2654 In the simplest way, you can do it like this:: 2655 2656 err = snd_ctl_add(card, snd_ctl_new1(&my_control, chip)); 2657 if (err < 0) 2658 return err; 2659 2660 where ``my_control`` is the struct snd_kcontrol_new object defined above, 2661 and chip is the object pointer to be passed to kcontrol->private_data which 2662 can be referred to in callbacks. 2663 2664 :c:func:`snd_ctl_new1()` allocates a new struct snd_kcontrol instance, and 2665 :c:func:`snd_ctl_add()` assigns the given control component to the 2666 card. 2667 2668 Change Notification 2669 ------------------- 2670 2671 If you need to change and update a control in the interrupt routine, you 2672 can call :c:func:`snd_ctl_notify()`. For example:: 2673 2674 snd_ctl_notify(card, SNDRV_CTL_EVENT_MASK_VALUE, id_pointer); 2675 2676 This function takes the card pointer, the event-mask, and the control id 2677 pointer for the notification. The event-mask specifies the types of 2678 notification, for example, in the above example, the change of control 2679 values is notified. The id pointer is the pointer of struct snd_ctl_elem_id 2680 to be notified. You can find some examples in ``es1938.c`` or ``es1968.c`` 2681 for hardware volume interrupts. 2682 2683 Metadata 2684 -------- 2685 2686 To provide information about the dB values of a mixer control, use one of 2687 the ``DECLARE_TLV_xxx`` macros from ``<sound/tlv.h>`` to define a 2688 variable containing this information, set the ``tlv.p`` field to point to 2689 this variable, and include the ``SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_ACCESS_TLV_READ`` flag 2690 in the ``access`` field; like this:: 2691 2692 static DECLARE_TLV_DB_SCALE(db_scale_my_control, -4050, 150, 0); 2693 2694 static struct snd_kcontrol_new my_control = { 2695 ... 2696 .access = SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_ACCESS_READWRITE | 2697 SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_ACCESS_TLV_READ, 2698 ... 2699 .tlv.p = db_scale_my_control, 2700 }; 2701 2702 2703 The :c:func:`DECLARE_TLV_DB_SCALE()` macro defines information 2704 about a mixer control where each step in the control's value changes the 2705 dB value by a constant dB amount. The first parameter is the name of the 2706 variable to be defined. The second parameter is the minimum value, in 2707 units of 0.01 dB. The third parameter is the step size, in units of 0.01 2708 dB. Set the fourth parameter to 1 if the minimum value actually mutes 2709 the control. 2710 2711 The :c:func:`DECLARE_TLV_DB_LINEAR()` macro defines information 2712 about a mixer control where the control's value affects the output 2713 linearly. The first parameter is the name of the variable to be defined. 2714 The second parameter is the minimum value, in units of 0.01 dB. The 2715 third parameter is the maximum value, in units of 0.01 dB. If the 2716 minimum value mutes the control, set the second parameter to 2717 ``TLV_DB_GAIN_MUTE``. 2718 2719 API for AC97 Codec 2720 ================== 2721 2722 General 2723 ------- 2724 2725 The ALSA AC97 codec layer is a well-defined one, and you don't have to 2726 write much code to control it. Only low-level control routines are 2727 necessary. The AC97 codec API is defined in ``<sound/ac97_codec.h>``. 2728 2729 Full Code Example 2730 ----------------- 2731 2732 :: 2733 2734 struct mychip { 2735 .... 2736 struct snd_ac97 *ac97; 2737 .... 2738 }; 2739 2740 static unsigned short snd_mychip_ac97_read(struct snd_ac97 *ac97, 2741 unsigned short reg) 2742 { 2743 struct mychip *chip = ac97->private_data; 2744 .... 2745 /* read a register value here from the codec */ 2746 return the_register_value; 2747 } 2748 2749 static void snd_mychip_ac97_write(struct snd_ac97 *ac97, 2750 unsigned short reg, unsigned short val) 2751 { 2752 struct mychip *chip = ac97->private_data; 2753 .... 2754 /* write the given register value to the codec */ 2755 } 2756 2757 static int snd_mychip_ac97(struct mychip *chip) 2758 { 2759 struct snd_ac97_bus *bus; 2760 struct snd_ac97_template ac97; 2761 int err; 2762 static struct snd_ac97_bus_ops ops = { 2763 .write = snd_mychip_ac97_write, 2764 .read = snd_mychip_ac97_read, 2765 }; 2766 2767 err = snd_ac97_bus(chip->card, 0, &ops, NULL, &bus); 2768 if (err < 0) 2769 return err; 2770 memset(&ac97, 0, sizeof(ac97)); 2771 ac97.private_data = chip; 2772 return snd_ac97_mixer(bus, &ac97, &chip->ac97); 2773 } 2774 2775 2776 AC97 Constructor 2777 ---------------- 2778 2779 To create an ac97 instance, first call :c:func:`snd_ac97_bus()` 2780 with an ``ac97_bus_ops_t`` record with callback functions:: 2781 2782 struct snd_ac97_bus *bus; 2783 static struct snd_ac97_bus_ops ops = { 2784 .write = snd_mychip_ac97_write, 2785 .read = snd_mychip_ac97_read, 2786 }; 2787 2788 snd_ac97_bus(card, 0, &ops, NULL, &pbus); 2789 2790 The bus record is shared among all belonging ac97 instances. 2791 2792 And then call :c:func:`snd_ac97_mixer()` with a struct snd_ac97_template 2793 record together with the bus pointer created above:: 2794 2795 struct snd_ac97_template ac97; 2796 int err; 2797 2798 memset(&ac97, 0, sizeof(ac97)); 2799 ac97.private_data = chip; 2800 snd_ac97_mixer(bus, &ac97, &chip->ac97); 2801 2802 where chip->ac97 is a pointer to a newly created ``ac97_t`` 2803 instance. In this case, the chip pointer is set as the private data, 2804 so that the read/write callback functions can refer to this chip 2805 instance. This instance is not necessarily stored in the chip 2806 record. If you need to change the register values from the driver, or 2807 need the suspend/resume of ac97 codecs, keep this pointer to pass to 2808 the corresponding functions. 2809 2810 AC97 Callbacks 2811 -------------- 2812 2813 The standard callbacks are ``read`` and ``write``. Obviously they 2814 correspond to the functions for read and write accesses to the 2815 hardware low-level codes. 2816 2817 The ``read`` callback returns the register value specified in the 2818 argument:: 2819 2820 static unsigned short snd_mychip_ac97_read(struct snd_ac97 *ac97, 2821 unsigned short reg) 2822 { 2823 struct mychip *chip = ac97->private_data; 2824 .... 2825 return the_register_value; 2826 } 2827 2828 Here, the chip can be cast from ``ac97->private_data``. 2829 2830 Meanwhile, the ``write`` callback is used to set the register 2831 value:: 2832 2833 static void snd_mychip_ac97_write(struct snd_ac97 *ac97, 2834 unsigned short reg, unsigned short val) 2835 2836 2837 These callbacks are non-atomic like the control API callbacks. 2838 2839 There are also other callbacks: ``reset``, ``wait`` and ``init``. 2840 2841 The ``reset`` callback is used to reset the codec. If the chip 2842 requires a special kind of reset, you can define this callback. 2843 2844 The ``wait`` callback is used to add some waiting time in the standard 2845 initialization of the codec. If the chip requires the extra waiting 2846 time, define this callback. 2847 2848 The ``init`` callback is used for additional initialization of the 2849 codec. 2850 2851 Updating Registers in The Driver 2852 -------------------------------- 2853 2854 If you need to access to the codec from the driver, you can call the 2855 following functions: :c:func:`snd_ac97_write()`, 2856 :c:func:`snd_ac97_read()`, :c:func:`snd_ac97_update()` and 2857 :c:func:`snd_ac97_update_bits()`. 2858 2859 Both :c:func:`snd_ac97_write()` and 2860 :c:func:`snd_ac97_update()` functions are used to set a value to 2861 the given register (``AC97_XXX``). The difference between them is that 2862 :c:func:`snd_ac97_update()` doesn't write a value if the given 2863 value has been already set, while :c:func:`snd_ac97_write()` 2864 always rewrites the value:: 2865 2866 snd_ac97_write(ac97, AC97_MASTER, 0x8080); 2867 snd_ac97_update(ac97, AC97_MASTER, 0x8080); 2868 2869 :c:func:`snd_ac97_read()` is used to read the value of the given 2870 register. For example:: 2871 2872 value = snd_ac97_read(ac97, AC97_MASTER); 2873 2874 :c:func:`snd_ac97_update_bits()` is used to update some bits in 2875 the given register:: 2876 2877 snd_ac97_update_bits(ac97, reg, mask, value); 2878 2879 Also, there is a function to change the sample rate (of a given register 2880 such as ``AC97_PCM_FRONT_DAC_RATE``) when VRA or DRA is supported by the 2881 codec: :c:func:`snd_ac97_set_rate()`:: 2882 2883 snd_ac97_set_rate(ac97, AC97_PCM_FRONT_DAC_RATE, 44100); 2884 2885 2886 The following registers are available to set the rate: 2887 ``AC97_PCM_MIC_ADC_RATE``, ``AC97_PCM_FRONT_DAC_RATE``, 2888 ``AC97_PCM_LR_ADC_RATE``, ``AC97_SPDIF``. When ``AC97_SPDIF`` is 2889 specified, the register is not really changed but the corresponding 2890 IEC958 status bits will be updated. 2891 2892 Clock Adjustment 2893 ---------------- 2894 2895 In some chips, the clock of the codec isn't 48000 but using a PCI clock 2896 (to save a quartz!). In this case, change the field ``bus->clock`` to 2897 the corresponding value. For example, intel8x0 and es1968 drivers have 2898 their own function to read from the clock. 2899 2900 Proc Files 2901 ---------- 2902 2903 The ALSA AC97 interface will create a proc file such as 2904 ``/proc/asound/card0/codec97#0/ac97#0-0`` and ``ac97#0-0+regs``. You 2905 can refer to these files to see the current status and registers of 2906 the codec. 2907 2908 Multiple Codecs 2909 --------------- 2910 2911 When there are several codecs on the same card, you need to call 2912 :c:func:`snd_ac97_mixer()` multiple times with ``ac97.num=1`` or 2913 greater. The ``num`` field specifies the codec number. 2914 2915 If you set up multiple codecs, you either need to write different 2916 callbacks for each codec or check ``ac97->num`` in the callback 2917 routines. 2918 2919 MIDI (MPU401-UART) Interface 2920 ============================ 2921 2922 General 2923 ------- 2924 2925 Many soundcards have built-in MIDI (MPU401-UART) interfaces. When the 2926 soundcard supports the standard MPU401-UART interface, most likely you 2927 can use the ALSA MPU401-UART API. The MPU401-UART API is defined in 2928 ``<sound/mpu401.h>``. 2929 2930 Some soundchips have a similar but slightly different implementation of 2931 mpu401 stuff. For example, emu10k1 has its own mpu401 routines. 2932 2933 MIDI Constructor 2934 ---------------- 2935 2936 To create a rawmidi object, call :c:func:`snd_mpu401_uart_new()`:: 2937 2938 struct snd_rawmidi *rmidi; 2939 snd_mpu401_uart_new(card, 0, MPU401_HW_MPU401, port, info_flags, 2940 irq, &rmidi); 2941 2942 2943 The first argument is the card pointer, and the second is the index of 2944 this component. You can create up to 8 rawmidi devices. 2945 2946 The third argument is the type of the hardware, ``MPU401_HW_XXX``. If 2947 it's not a special one, you can use ``MPU401_HW_MPU401``. 2948 2949 The 4th argument is the I/O port address. Many backward-compatible 2950 MPU401 have an I/O port such as 0x330. Or, it might be a part of its own 2951 PCI I/O region. It depends on the chip design. 2952 2953 The 5th argument is a bitflag for additional information. When the I/O 2954 port address above is part of the PCI I/O region, the MPU401 I/O port 2955 might have been already allocated (reserved) by the driver itself. In 2956 such a case, pass a bit flag ``MPU401_INFO_INTEGRATED``, and the 2957 mpu401-uart layer will allocate the I/O ports by itself. 2958 2959 When the controller supports only the input or output MIDI stream, pass 2960 the ``MPU401_INFO_INPUT`` or ``MPU401_INFO_OUTPUT`` bitflag, 2961 respectively. Then the rawmidi instance is created as a single stream. 2962 2963 ``MPU401_INFO_MMIO`` bitflag is used to change the access method to MMIO 2964 (via readb and writeb) instead of iob and outb. In this case, you have 2965 to pass the iomapped address to :c:func:`snd_mpu401_uart_new()`. 2966 2967 When ``MPU401_INFO_TX_IRQ`` is set, the output stream isn't checked in 2968 the default interrupt handler. The driver needs to call 2969 :c:func:`snd_mpu401_uart_interrupt_tx()` by itself to start 2970 processing the output stream in the irq handler. 2971 2972 If the MPU-401 interface shares its interrupt with the other logical 2973 devices on the card, set ``MPU401_INFO_IRQ_HOOK`` (see 2974 `below <MIDI Interrupt Handler_>`__). 2975 2976 Usually, the port address corresponds to the command port and port + 1 2977 corresponds to the data port. If not, you may change the ``cport`` 2978 field of struct snd_mpu401 manually afterward. 2979 However, struct snd_mpu401 pointer is 2980 not returned explicitly by :c:func:`snd_mpu401_uart_new()`. You 2981 need to cast ``rmidi->private_data`` to struct snd_mpu401 explicitly:: 2982 2983 struct snd_mpu401 *mpu; 2984 mpu = rmidi->private_data; 2985 2986 and reset the ``cport`` as you like:: 2987 2988 mpu->cport = my_own_control_port; 2989 2990 The 6th argument specifies the ISA irq number that will be allocated. If 2991 no interrupt is to be allocated (because your code is already allocating 2992 a shared interrupt, or because the device does not use interrupts), pass 2993 -1 instead. For a MPU-401 device without an interrupt, a polling timer 2994 will be used instead. 2995 2996 MIDI Interrupt Handler 2997 ---------------------- 2998 2999 When the interrupt is allocated in 3000 :c:func:`snd_mpu401_uart_new()`, an exclusive ISA interrupt 3001 handler is automatically used, hence you don't have anything else to do 3002 than creating the mpu401 stuff. Otherwise, you have to set 3003 ``MPU401_INFO_IRQ_HOOK``, and call 3004 :c:func:`snd_mpu401_uart_interrupt()` explicitly from your own 3005 interrupt handler when it has determined that a UART interrupt has 3006 occurred. 3007 3008 In this case, you need to pass the private_data of the returned rawmidi 3009 object from :c:func:`snd_mpu401_uart_new()` as the second 3010 argument of :c:func:`snd_mpu401_uart_interrupt()`:: 3011 3012 snd_mpu401_uart_interrupt(irq, rmidi->private_data, regs); 3013 3014 3015 RawMIDI Interface 3016 ================= 3017 3018 Overview 3019 -------- 3020 3021 The raw MIDI interface is used for hardware MIDI ports that can be 3022 accessed as a byte stream. It is not used for synthesizer chips that do 3023 not directly understand MIDI. 3024 3025 ALSA handles file and buffer management. All you have to do is to write 3026 some code to move data between the buffer and the hardware. 3027 3028 The rawmidi API is defined in ``<sound/rawmidi.h>``. 3029 3030 RawMIDI Constructor 3031 ------------------- 3032 3033 To create a rawmidi device, call the :c:func:`snd_rawmidi_new()` 3034 function:: 3035 3036 struct snd_rawmidi *rmidi; 3037 err = snd_rawmidi_new(chip->card, "MyMIDI", 0, outs, ins, &rmidi); 3038 if (err < 0) 3039 return err; 3040 rmidi->private_data = chip; 3041 strcpy(rmidi->name, "My MIDI"); 3042 rmidi->info_flags = SNDRV_RAWMIDI_INFO_OUTPUT | 3043 SNDRV_RAWMIDI_INFO_INPUT | 3044 SNDRV_RAWMIDI_INFO_DUPLEX; 3045 3046 The first argument is the card pointer, the second argument is the ID 3047 string. 3048 3049 The third argument is the index of this component. You can create up to 3050 8 rawmidi devices. 3051 3052 The fourth and fifth arguments are the number of output and input 3053 substreams, respectively, of this device (a substream is the equivalent 3054 of a MIDI port). 3055 3056 Set the ``info_flags`` field to specify the capabilities of the 3057 device. Set ``SNDRV_RAWMIDI_INFO_OUTPUT`` if there is at least one 3058 output port, ``SNDRV_RAWMIDI_INFO_INPUT`` if there is at least one 3059 input port, and ``SNDRV_RAWMIDI_INFO_DUPLEX`` if the device can handle 3060 output and input at the same time. 3061 3062 After the rawmidi device is created, you need to set the operators 3063 (callbacks) for each substream. There are helper functions to set the 3064 operators for all the substreams of a device:: 3065 3066 snd_rawmidi_set_ops(rmidi, SNDRV_RAWMIDI_STREAM_OUTPUT, &snd_mymidi_output_ops); 3067 snd_rawmidi_set_ops(rmidi, SNDRV_RAWMIDI_STREAM_INPUT, &snd_mymidi_input_ops); 3068 3069 The operators are usually defined like this:: 3070 3071 static struct snd_rawmidi_ops snd_mymidi_output_ops = { 3072 .open = snd_mymidi_output_open, 3073 .close = snd_mymidi_output_close, 3074 .trigger = snd_mymidi_output_trigger, 3075 }; 3076 3077 These callbacks are explained in the `RawMIDI Callbacks`_ section. 3078 3079 If there are more than one substream, you should give a unique name to 3080 each of them:: 3081 3082 struct snd_rawmidi_substream *substream; 3083 list_for_each_entry(substream, 3084 &rmidi->streams[SNDRV_RAWMIDI_STREAM_OUTPUT].substreams, 3085 list { 3086 sprintf(substream->name, "My MIDI Port %d", substream->number + 1); 3087 } 3088 /* same for SNDRV_RAWMIDI_STREAM_INPUT */ 3089 3090 RawMIDI Callbacks 3091 ----------------- 3092 3093 In all the callbacks, the private data that you've set for the rawmidi 3094 device can be accessed as ``substream->rmidi->private_data``. 3095 3096 If there is more than one port, your callbacks can determine the port 3097 index from the struct snd_rawmidi_substream data passed to each 3098 callback:: 3099 3100 struct snd_rawmidi_substream *substream; 3101 int index = substream->number; 3102 3103 RawMIDI open callback 3104 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3105 3106 :: 3107 3108 static int snd_xxx_open(struct snd_rawmidi_substream *substream); 3109 3110 3111 This is called when a substream is opened. You can initialize the 3112 hardware here, but you shouldn't start transmitting/receiving data yet. 3113 3114 RawMIDI close callback 3115 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3116 3117 :: 3118 3119 static int snd_xxx_close(struct snd_rawmidi_substream *substream); 3120 3121 Guess what. 3122 3123 The ``open`` and ``close`` callbacks of a rawmidi device are 3124 serialized with a mutex, and can sleep. 3125 3126 Rawmidi trigger callback for output substreams 3127 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3128 3129 :: 3130 3131 static void snd_xxx_output_trigger(struct snd_rawmidi_substream *substream, int up); 3132 3133 3134 This is called with a nonzero ``up`` parameter when there is some data 3135 in the substream buffer that must be transmitted. 3136 3137 To read data from the buffer, call 3138 :c:func:`snd_rawmidi_transmit_peek()`. It will return the number 3139 of bytes that have been read; this will be less than the number of bytes 3140 requested when there are no more data in the buffer. After the data have 3141 been transmitted successfully, call 3142 :c:func:`snd_rawmidi_transmit_ack()` to remove the data from the 3143 substream buffer:: 3144 3145 unsigned char data; 3146 while (snd_rawmidi_transmit_peek(substream, &data, 1) == 1) { 3147 if (snd_mychip_try_to_transmit(data)) 3148 snd_rawmidi_transmit_ack(substream, 1); 3149 else 3150 break; /* hardware FIFO full */ 3151 } 3152 3153 If you know beforehand that the hardware will accept data, you can use 3154 the :c:func:`snd_rawmidi_transmit()` function which reads some 3155 data and removes them from the buffer at once:: 3156 3157 while (snd_mychip_transmit_possible()) { 3158 unsigned char data; 3159 if (snd_rawmidi_transmit(substream, &data, 1) != 1) 3160 break; /* no more data */ 3161 snd_mychip_transmit(data); 3162 } 3163 3164 If you know beforehand how many bytes you can accept, you can use a 3165 buffer size greater than one with the ``snd_rawmidi_transmit*()`` functions. 3166 3167 The ``trigger`` callback must not sleep. If the hardware FIFO is full 3168 before the substream buffer has been emptied, you have to continue 3169 transmitting data later, either in an interrupt handler, or with a 3170 timer if the hardware doesn't have a MIDI transmit interrupt. 3171 3172 The ``trigger`` callback is called with a zero ``up`` parameter when 3173 the transmission of data should be aborted. 3174 3175 RawMIDI trigger callback for input substreams 3176 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3177 3178 :: 3179 3180 static void snd_xxx_input_trigger(struct snd_rawmidi_substream *substream, int up); 3181 3182 3183 This is called with a nonzero ``up`` parameter to enable receiving data, 3184 or with a zero ``up`` parameter do disable receiving data. 3185 3186 The ``trigger`` callback must not sleep; the actual reading of data 3187 from the device is usually done in an interrupt handler. 3188 3189 When data reception is enabled, your interrupt handler should call 3190 :c:func:`snd_rawmidi_receive()` for all received data:: 3191 3192 void snd_mychip_midi_interrupt(...) 3193 { 3194 while (mychip_midi_available()) { 3195 unsigned char data; 3196 data = mychip_midi_read(); 3197 snd_rawmidi_receive(substream, &data, 1); 3198 } 3199 } 3200 3201 3202 drain callback 3203 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3204 3205 :: 3206 3207 static void snd_xxx_drain(struct snd_rawmidi_substream *substream); 3208 3209 3210 This is only used with output substreams. This function should wait 3211 until all data read from the substream buffer have been transmitted. 3212 This ensures that the device can be closed and the driver unloaded 3213 without losing data. 3214 3215 This callback is optional. If you do not set ``drain`` in the struct 3216 snd_rawmidi_ops structure, ALSA will simply wait for 50 milliseconds 3217 instead. 3218 3219 Miscellaneous Devices 3220 ===================== 3221 3222 FM OPL3 3223 ------- 3224 3225 The FM OPL3 is still used in many chips (mainly for backward 3226 compatibility). ALSA has a nice OPL3 FM control layer, too. The OPL3 API 3227 is defined in ``<sound/opl3.h>``. 3228 3229 FM registers can be directly accessed through the direct-FM API, defined 3230 in ``<sound/asound_fm.h>``. In ALSA native mode, FM registers are 3231 accessed through the Hardware-Dependent Device direct-FM extension API, 3232 whereas in OSS compatible mode, FM registers can be accessed with the 3233 OSS direct-FM compatible API in ``/dev/dmfmX`` device. 3234 3235 To create the OPL3 component, you have two functions to call. The first 3236 one is a constructor for the ``opl3_t`` instance:: 3237 3238 struct snd_opl3 *opl3; 3239 snd_opl3_create(card, lport, rport, OPL3_HW_OPL3_XXX, 3240 integrated, &opl3); 3241 3242 The first argument is the card pointer, the second one is the left port 3243 address, and the third is the right port address. In most cases, the 3244 right port is placed at the left port + 2. 3245 3246 The fourth argument is the hardware type. 3247 3248 When the left and right ports have been already allocated by the card 3249 driver, pass non-zero to the fifth argument (``integrated``). Otherwise, 3250 the opl3 module will allocate the specified ports by itself. 3251 3252 When the accessing the hardware requires special method instead of the 3253 standard I/O access, you can create opl3 instance separately with 3254 :c:func:`snd_opl3_new()`:: 3255 3256 struct snd_opl3 *opl3; 3257 snd_opl3_new(card, OPL3_HW_OPL3_XXX, &opl3); 3258 3259 Then set ``command``, ``private_data`` and ``private_free`` for the 3260 private access function, the private data and the destructor. The 3261 ``l_port`` and ``r_port`` are not necessarily set. Only the command 3262 must be set properly. You can retrieve the data from the 3263 ``opl3->private_data`` field. 3264 3265 After creating the opl3 instance via :c:func:`snd_opl3_new()`, 3266 call :c:func:`snd_opl3_init()` to initialize the chip to the 3267 proper state. Note that :c:func:`snd_opl3_create()` always calls 3268 it internally. 3269 3270 If the opl3 instance is created successfully, then create a hwdep device 3271 for this opl3:: 3272 3273 struct snd_hwdep *opl3hwdep; 3274 snd_opl3_hwdep_new(opl3, 0, 1, &opl3hwdep); 3275 3276 The first argument is the ``opl3_t`` instance you created, and the 3277 second is the index number, usually 0. 3278 3279 The third argument is the index-offset for the sequencer client assigned 3280 to the OPL3 port. When there is an MPU401-UART, give 1 for here (UART 3281 always takes 0). 3282 3283 Hardware-Dependent Devices 3284 -------------------------- 3285 3286 Some chips need user-space access for special controls or for loading 3287 the micro code. In such a case, you can create a hwdep 3288 (hardware-dependent) device. The hwdep API is defined in 3289 ``<sound/hwdep.h>``. You can find examples in opl3 driver or 3290 ``isa/sb/sb16_csp.c``. 3291 3292 The creation of the ``hwdep`` instance is done via 3293 :c:func:`snd_hwdep_new()`:: 3294 3295 struct snd_hwdep *hw; 3296 snd_hwdep_new(card, "My HWDEP", 0, &hw); 3297 3298 where the third argument is the index number. 3299 3300 You can then pass any pointer value to the ``private_data``. If you 3301 assign private data, you should define a destructor, too. The 3302 destructor function is set in the ``private_free`` field:: 3303 3304 struct mydata *p = kmalloc(sizeof(*p), GFP_KERNEL); 3305 hw->private_data = p; 3306 hw->private_free = mydata_free; 3307 3308 and the implementation of the destructor would be:: 3309 3310 static void mydata_free(struct snd_hwdep *hw) 3311 { 3312 struct mydata *p = hw->private_data; 3313 kfree(p); 3314 } 3315 3316 The arbitrary file operations can be defined for this instance. The file 3317 operators are defined in the ``ops`` table. For example, assume that 3318 this chip needs an ioctl:: 3319 3320 hw->ops.open = mydata_open; 3321 hw->ops.ioctl = mydata_ioctl; 3322 hw->ops.release = mydata_release; 3323 3324 And implement the callback functions as you like. 3325 3326 IEC958 (S/PDIF) 3327 --------------- 3328 3329 Usually the controls for IEC958 devices are implemented via the control 3330 interface. There is a macro to compose a name string for IEC958 3331 controls, :c:func:`SNDRV_CTL_NAME_IEC958()` defined in 3332 ``<include/asound.h>``. 3333 3334 There are some standard controls for IEC958 status bits. These controls 3335 use the type ``SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_TYPE_IEC958``, and the size of element is 3336 fixed as 4 bytes array (value.iec958.status[x]). For the ``info`` 3337 callback, you don't specify the value field for this type (the count 3338 field must be set, though). 3339 3340 “IEC958 Playback Con Mask” is used to return the bit-mask for the IEC958 3341 status bits of consumer mode. Similarly, “IEC958 Playback Pro Mask” 3342 returns the bitmask for professional mode. They are read-only controls. 3343 3344 Meanwhile, “IEC958 Playback Default” control is defined for getting and 3345 setting the current default IEC958 bits. 3346 3347 Due to historical reasons, both variants of the Playback Mask and the 3348 Playback Default controls can be implemented on either a 3349 ``SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_IFACE_PCM`` or a ``SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_IFACE_MIXER`` iface. 3350 Drivers should expose the mask and default on the same iface though. 3351 3352 In addition, you can define the control switches to enable/disable or to 3353 set the raw bit mode. The implementation will depend on the chip, but 3354 the control should be named as “IEC958 xxx”, preferably using the 3355 :c:func:`SNDRV_CTL_NAME_IEC958()` macro. 3356 3357 You can find several cases, for example, ``pci/emu10k1``, 3358 ``pci/ice1712``, or ``pci/cmipci.c``. 3359 3360 Buffer and Memory Management 3361 ============================ 3362 3363 Buffer Types 3364 ------------ 3365 3366 ALSA provides several different buffer allocation functions depending on 3367 the bus and the architecture. All these have a consistent API. The 3368 allocation of physically-contiguous pages is done via the 3369 :c:func:`snd_malloc_xxx_pages()` function, where xxx is the bus 3370 type. 3371 3372 The allocation of pages with fallback is done via 3373 :c:func:`snd_dma_alloc_pages_fallback()`. This function tries 3374 to allocate the specified number of pages, but if not enough pages are 3375 available, it tries to reduce the request size until enough space 3376 is found, down to one page. 3377 3378 To release the pages, call the :c:func:`snd_dma_free_pages()` 3379 function. 3380 3381 Usually, ALSA drivers try to allocate and reserve a large contiguous 3382 physical space at the time the module is loaded for later use. This 3383 is called “pre-allocation”. As already written, you can call the 3384 following function at PCM instance construction time (in the case of PCI 3385 bus):: 3386 3387 snd_pcm_lib_preallocate_pages_for_all(pcm, SNDRV_DMA_TYPE_DEV, 3388 &pci->dev, size, max); 3389 3390 where ``size`` is the byte size to be pre-allocated and ``max`` is 3391 the maximum size settable via the ``prealloc`` proc file. The 3392 allocator will try to get an area as large as possible within the 3393 given size. 3394 3395 The second argument (type) and the third argument (device pointer) are 3396 dependent on the bus. For normal devices, pass the device pointer 3397 (typically identical as ``card->dev``) to the third argument with 3398 ``SNDRV_DMA_TYPE_DEV`` type. 3399 3400 A continuous buffer unrelated to the 3401 bus can be pre-allocated with ``SNDRV_DMA_TYPE_CONTINUOUS`` type. 3402 You can pass NULL to the device pointer in that case, which is the 3403 default mode implying to allocate with the ``GFP_KERNEL`` flag. 3404 If you need a restricted (lower) address, set up the coherent DMA mask 3405 bits for the device, and pass the device pointer, like the normal 3406 device memory allocations. For this type, it's still allowed to pass 3407 NULL to the device pointer, too, if no address restriction is needed. 3408 3409 For the scatter-gather buffers, use ``SNDRV_DMA_TYPE_DEV_SG`` with the 3410 device pointer (see the `Non-Contiguous Buffers`_ section). 3411 3412 Once the buffer is pre-allocated, you can use the allocator in the 3413 ``hw_params`` callback:: 3414 3415 snd_pcm_lib_malloc_pages(substream, size); 3416 3417 Note that you have to pre-allocate to use this function. 3418 3419 But most drivers use the "managed buffer allocation mode" instead 3420 of manual allocation and release. 3421 This is done by calling :c:func:`snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer_all()` 3422 instead of :c:func:`snd_pcm_lib_preallocate_pages_for_all()`:: 3423 3424 snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer_all(pcm, SNDRV_DMA_TYPE_DEV, 3425 &pci->dev, size, max); 3426 3427 where the passed arguments are identical for both functions. 3428 The difference in the managed mode is that PCM core will call 3429 :c:func:`snd_pcm_lib_malloc_pages()` internally already before calling 3430 the PCM ``hw_params`` callback, and call :c:func:`snd_pcm_lib_free_pages()` 3431 after the PCM ``hw_free`` callback automatically. So the driver 3432 doesn't have to call these functions explicitly in its callback any 3433 longer. This allows many drivers to have NULL ``hw_params`` and 3434 ``hw_free`` entries. 3435 3436 External Hardware Buffers 3437 ------------------------- 3438 3439 Some chips have their own hardware buffers and DMA transfer from the 3440 host memory is not available. In such a case, you need to either 1) 3441 copy/set the audio data directly to the external hardware buffer, or 2) 3442 make an intermediate buffer and copy/set the data from it to the 3443 external hardware buffer in interrupts (or in tasklets, preferably). 3444 3445 The first case works fine if the external hardware buffer is large 3446 enough. This method doesn't need any extra buffers and thus is more 3447 efficient. You need to define the ``copy`` callback 3448 for the data transfer, in addition to the ``fill_silence`` 3449 callback for playback. However, there is a drawback: it cannot be 3450 mmapped. The examples are GUS's GF1 PCM or emu8000's wavetable PCM. 3451 3452 The second case allows for mmap on the buffer, although you have to 3453 handle an interrupt or a tasklet to transfer the data from the 3454 intermediate buffer to the hardware buffer. You can find an example in 3455 the vxpocket driver. 3456 3457 Another case is when the chip uses a PCI memory-map region for the 3458 buffer instead of the host memory. In this case, mmap is available only 3459 on certain architectures like the Intel one. In non-mmap mode, the data 3460 cannot be transferred as in the normal way. Thus you need to define the 3461 ``copy`` and ``fill_silence`` callbacks as well, 3462 as in the cases above. Examples are found in ``rme32.c`` and 3463 ``rme96.c``. 3464 3465 The implementation of the ``copy`` and 3466 ``silence`` callbacks depends upon whether the hardware supports 3467 interleaved or non-interleaved samples. The ``copy`` callback is 3468 defined like below, a bit differently depending on whether the direction 3469 is playback or capture:: 3470 3471 static int playback_copy(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream, 3472 int channel, unsigned long pos, 3473 struct iov_iter *src, unsigned long count); 3474 static int capture_copy(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream, 3475 int channel, unsigned long pos, 3476 struct iov_iter *dst, unsigned long count); 3477 3478 In the case of interleaved samples, the second argument (``channel``) is 3479 not used. The third argument (``pos``) specifies the position in bytes. 3480 3481 The meaning of the fourth argument is different between playback and 3482 capture. For playback, it holds the source data pointer, and for 3483 capture, it's the destination data pointer. 3484 3485 The last argument is the number of bytes to be copied. 3486 3487 What you have to do in this callback is again different between playback 3488 and capture directions. In the playback case, you copy the given amount 3489 of data (``count``) at the specified pointer (``src``) to the specified 3490 offset (``pos``) in the hardware buffer. When coded like memcpy-like 3491 way, the copy would look like:: 3492 3493 my_memcpy_from_iter(my_buffer + pos, src, count); 3494 3495 For the capture direction, you copy the given amount of data (``count``) 3496 at the specified offset (``pos``) in the hardware buffer to the 3497 specified pointer (``dst``):: 3498 3499 my_memcpy_to_iter(dst, my_buffer + pos, count); 3500 3501 The given ``src`` or ``dst`` a struct iov_iter pointer containing the 3502 pointer and the size. Use the existing helpers to copy or access the 3503 data as defined in ``linux/uio.h``. 3504 3505 Careful readers might notice that these callbacks receive the 3506 arguments in bytes, not in frames like other callbacks. It's because 3507 this makes coding easier like in the examples above, and also it makes 3508 it easier to unify both the interleaved and non-interleaved cases, as 3509 explained below. 3510 3511 In the case of non-interleaved samples, the implementation will be a bit 3512 more complicated. The callback is called for each channel, passed in 3513 the second argument, so in total it's called N times per transfer. 3514 3515 The meaning of the other arguments are almost the same as in the 3516 interleaved case. The callback is supposed to copy the data from/to 3517 the given user-space buffer, but only for the given channel. For 3518 details, please check ``isa/gus/gus_pcm.c`` or ``pci/rme9652/rme9652.c`` 3519 as examples. 3520 3521 Usually for the playback, another callback ``fill_silence`` is 3522 defined. It's implemented in a similar way as the copy callbacks 3523 above:: 3524 3525 static int silence(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream, int channel, 3526 unsigned long pos, unsigned long count); 3527 3528 The meanings of arguments are the same as in the ``copy`` callback, 3529 although there is no buffer pointer 3530 argument. In the case of interleaved samples, the channel argument has 3531 no meaning, as for the ``copy`` callback. 3532 3533 The role of the ``fill_silence`` callback is to set the given amount 3534 (``count``) of silence data at the specified offset (``pos``) in the 3535 hardware buffer. Suppose that the data format is signed (that is, the 3536 silent-data is 0), and the implementation using a memset-like function 3537 would look like:: 3538 3539 my_memset(my_buffer + pos, 0, count); 3540 3541 In the case of non-interleaved samples, again, the implementation 3542 becomes a bit more complicated, as it's called N times per transfer 3543 for each channel. See, for example, ``isa/gus/gus_pcm.c``. 3544 3545 Non-Contiguous Buffers 3546 ---------------------- 3547 3548 If your hardware supports a page table as in emu10k1 or buffer 3549 descriptors as in via82xx, you can use scatter-gather (SG) DMA. ALSA 3550 provides an interface for handling SG-buffers. The API is provided in 3551 ``<sound/pcm.h>``. 3552 3553 For creating the SG-buffer handler, call 3554 :c:func:`snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer()` or 3555 :c:func:`snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer_all()` with 3556 ``SNDRV_DMA_TYPE_DEV_SG`` in the PCM constructor like for other PCI 3557 pre-allocations. You need to pass ``&pci->dev``, where pci is 3558 the struct pci_dev pointer of the chip as well:: 3559 3560 snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer_all(pcm, SNDRV_DMA_TYPE_DEV_SG, 3561 &pci->dev, size, max); 3562 3563 The ``struct snd_sg_buf`` instance is created as 3564 ``substream->dma_private`` in turn. You can cast the pointer like:: 3565 3566 struct snd_sg_buf *sgbuf = (struct snd_sg_buf *)substream->dma_private; 3567 3568 Then in the :c:func:`snd_pcm_lib_malloc_pages()` call, the common SG-buffer 3569 handler will allocate the non-contiguous kernel pages of the given size 3570 and map them as virtually contiguous memory. The virtual pointer 3571 is addressed via runtime->dma_area. The physical address 3572 (``runtime->dma_addr``) is set to zero, because the buffer is 3573 physically non-contiguous. The physical address table is set up in 3574 ``sgbuf->table``. You can get the physical address at a certain offset 3575 via :c:func:`snd_pcm_sgbuf_get_addr()`. 3576 3577 If you need to release the SG-buffer data explicitly, call the 3578 standard API function :c:func:`snd_pcm_lib_free_pages()` as usual. 3579 3580 Vmalloc'ed Buffers 3581 ------------------ 3582 3583 It's possible to use a buffer allocated via :c:func:`vmalloc()`, for 3584 example, for an intermediate buffer. 3585 You can simply allocate it via the standard 3586 :c:func:`snd_pcm_lib_malloc_pages()` and co. after setting up the 3587 buffer preallocation with ``SNDRV_DMA_TYPE_VMALLOC`` type:: 3588 3589 snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer_all(pcm, SNDRV_DMA_TYPE_VMALLOC, 3590 NULL, 0, 0); 3591 3592 NULL is passed as the device pointer argument, which indicates 3593 that default pages (GFP_KERNEL and GFP_HIGHMEM) will be 3594 allocated. 3595 3596 Also, note that zero is passed as both the size and the max size 3597 argument here. Since each vmalloc call should succeed at any time, 3598 we don't need to pre-allocate the buffers like other continuous 3599 pages. 3600 3601 Proc Interface 3602 ============== 3603 3604 ALSA provides an easy interface for procfs. The proc files are very 3605 useful for debugging. I recommend you set up proc files if you write a 3606 driver and want to get a running status or register dumps. The API is 3607 found in ``<sound/info.h>``. 3608 3609 To create a proc file, call :c:func:`snd_card_proc_new()`:: 3610 3611 struct snd_info_entry *entry; 3612 int err = snd_card_proc_new(card, "my-file", &entry); 3613 3614 where the second argument specifies the name of the proc file to be 3615 created. The above example will create a file ``my-file`` under the 3616 card directory, e.g. ``/proc/asound/card0/my-file``. 3617 3618 Like other components, the proc entry created via 3619 :c:func:`snd_card_proc_new()` will be registered and released 3620 automatically in the card registration and release functions. 3621 3622 When the creation is successful, the function stores a new instance in 3623 the pointer given in the third argument. It is initialized as a text 3624 proc file for read only. To use this proc file as a read-only text file 3625 as-is, set the read callback with private data via 3626 :c:func:`snd_info_set_text_ops()`:: 3627 3628 snd_info_set_text_ops(entry, chip, my_proc_read); 3629 3630 where the second argument (``chip``) is the private data to be used in 3631 the callback. The third parameter specifies the read buffer size and 3632 the fourth (``my_proc_read``) is the callback function, which is 3633 defined like:: 3634 3635 static void my_proc_read(struct snd_info_entry *entry, 3636 struct snd_info_buffer *buffer); 3637 3638 In the read callback, use :c:func:`snd_iprintf()` for output 3639 strings, which works just like normal :c:func:`printf()`. For 3640 example:: 3641 3642 static void my_proc_read(struct snd_info_entry *entry, 3643 struct snd_info_buffer *buffer) 3644 { 3645 struct my_chip *chip = entry->private_data; 3646 3647 snd_iprintf(buffer, "This is my chip!\n"); 3648 snd_iprintf(buffer, "Port = %ld\n", chip->port); 3649 } 3650 3651 The file permissions can be changed afterwards. By default, they are 3652 read only for all users. If you want to add write permission for the 3653 user (root by default), do as follows:: 3654 3655 entry->mode = S_IFREG | S_IRUGO | S_IWUSR; 3656 3657 and set the write buffer size and the callback:: 3658 3659 entry->c.text.write = my_proc_write; 3660 3661 In the write callback, you can use :c:func:`snd_info_get_line()` 3662 to get a text line, and :c:func:`snd_info_get_str()` to retrieve 3663 a string from the line. Some examples are found in 3664 ``core/oss/mixer_oss.c``, core/oss/and ``pcm_oss.c``. 3665 3666 For a raw-data proc-file, set the attributes as follows:: 3667 3668 static const struct snd_info_entry_ops my_file_io_ops = { 3669 .read = my_file_io_read, 3670 }; 3671 3672 entry->content = SNDRV_INFO_CONTENT_DATA; 3673 entry->private_data = chip; 3674 entry->c.ops = &my_file_io_ops; 3675 entry->size = 4096; 3676 entry->mode = S_IFREG | S_IRUGO; 3677 3678 For raw data, ``size`` field must be set properly. This specifies 3679 the maximum size of the proc file access. 3680 3681 The read/write callbacks of raw mode are more direct than the text mode. 3682 You need to use a low-level I/O functions such as 3683 :c:func:`copy_from_user()` and :c:func:`copy_to_user()` to transfer the 3684 data:: 3685 3686 static ssize_t my_file_io_read(struct snd_info_entry *entry, 3687 void *file_private_data, 3688 struct file *file, 3689 char *buf, 3690 size_t count, 3691 loff_t pos) 3692 { 3693 if (copy_to_user(buf, local_data + pos, count)) 3694 return -EFAULT; 3695 return count; 3696 } 3697 3698 If the size of the info entry has been set up properly, ``count`` and 3699 ``pos`` are guaranteed to fit within 0 and the given size. You don't 3700 have to check the range in the callbacks unless any other condition is 3701 required. 3702 3703 Power Management 3704 ================ 3705 3706 If the chip is supposed to work with suspend/resume functions, you need 3707 to add power-management code to the driver. The additional code for 3708 power-management should be ifdef-ed with ``CONFIG_PM``, or annotated 3709 with __maybe_unused attribute; otherwise the compiler will complain. 3710 3711 If the driver *fully* supports suspend/resume that is, the device can be 3712 properly resumed to its state when suspend was called, you can set the 3713 ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_RESUME`` flag in the PCM info field. Usually, this is 3714 possible when the registers of the chip can be safely saved and restored 3715 to RAM. If this is set, the trigger callback is called with 3716 ``SNDRV_PCM_TRIGGER_RESUME`` after the resume callback completes. 3717 3718 Even if the driver doesn't support PM fully but partial suspend/resume 3719 is still possible, it's still worthy to implement suspend/resume 3720 callbacks. In such a case, applications would reset the status by 3721 calling :c:func:`snd_pcm_prepare()` and restart the stream 3722 appropriately. Hence, you can define suspend/resume callbacks below but 3723 don't set the ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_RESUME`` info flag to the PCM. 3724 3725 Note that the trigger with SUSPEND can always be called when 3726 :c:func:`snd_pcm_suspend_all()` is called, regardless of the 3727 ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_RESUME`` flag. The ``RESUME`` flag affects only the 3728 behavior of :c:func:`snd_pcm_resume()`. (Thus, in theory, 3729 ``SNDRV_PCM_TRIGGER_RESUME`` isn't needed to be handled in the trigger 3730 callback when no ``SNDRV_PCM_INFO_RESUME`` flag is set. But, it's better 3731 to keep it for compatibility reasons.) 3732 3733 The driver needs to define the 3734 suspend/resume hooks according to the bus the device is connected to. In 3735 the case of PCI drivers, the callbacks look like below:: 3736 3737 static int __maybe_unused snd_my_suspend(struct device *dev) 3738 { 3739 .... /* do things for suspend */ 3740 return 0; 3741 } 3742 static int __maybe_unused snd_my_resume(struct device *dev) 3743 { 3744 .... /* do things for suspend */ 3745 return 0; 3746 } 3747 3748 The scheme of the real suspend job is as follows: 3749 3750 1. Retrieve the card and the chip data. 3751 3752 2. Call :c:func:`snd_power_change_state()` with 3753 ``SNDRV_CTL_POWER_D3hot`` to change the power status. 3754 3755 3. If AC97 codecs are used, call :c:func:`snd_ac97_suspend()` for 3756 each codec. 3757 3758 4. Save the register values if necessary. 3759 3760 5. Stop the hardware if necessary. 3761 3762 Typical code would look like:: 3763 3764 static int __maybe_unused mychip_suspend(struct device *dev) 3765 { 3766 /* (1) */ 3767 struct snd_card *card = dev_get_drvdata(dev); 3768 struct mychip *chip = card->private_data; 3769 /* (2) */ 3770 snd_power_change_state(card, SNDRV_CTL_POWER_D3hot); 3771 /* (3) */ 3772 snd_ac97_suspend(chip->ac97); 3773 /* (4) */ 3774 snd_mychip_save_registers(chip); 3775 /* (5) */ 3776 snd_mychip_stop_hardware(chip); 3777 return 0; 3778 } 3779 3780 3781 The scheme of the real resume job is as follows: 3782 3783 1. Retrieve the card and the chip data. 3784 3785 2. Re-initialize the chip. 3786 3787 3. Restore the saved registers if necessary. 3788 3789 4. Resume the mixer, e.g. by calling :c:func:`snd_ac97_resume()`. 3790 3791 5. Restart the hardware (if any). 3792 3793 6. Call :c:func:`snd_power_change_state()` with 3794 ``SNDRV_CTL_POWER_D0`` to notify the processes. 3795 3796 Typical code would look like:: 3797 3798 static int __maybe_unused mychip_resume(struct pci_dev *pci) 3799 { 3800 /* (1) */ 3801 struct snd_card *card = dev_get_drvdata(dev); 3802 struct mychip *chip = card->private_data; 3803 /* (2) */ 3804 snd_mychip_reinit_chip(chip); 3805 /* (3) */ 3806 snd_mychip_restore_registers(chip); 3807 /* (4) */ 3808 snd_ac97_resume(chip->ac97); 3809 /* (5) */ 3810 snd_mychip_restart_chip(chip); 3811 /* (6) */ 3812 snd_power_change_state(card, SNDRV_CTL_POWER_D0); 3813 return 0; 3814 } 3815 3816 Note that, at the time this callback gets called, the PCM stream has 3817 been already suspended via its own PM ops calling 3818 :c:func:`snd_pcm_suspend_all()` internally. 3819 3820 OK, we have all callbacks now. Let's set them up. In the initialization 3821 of the card, make sure that you can get the chip data from the card 3822 instance, typically via ``private_data`` field, in case you created the 3823 chip data individually:: 3824 3825 static int snd_mychip_probe(struct pci_dev *pci, 3826 const struct pci_device_id *pci_id) 3827 { 3828 .... 3829 struct snd_card *card; 3830 struct mychip *chip; 3831 int err; 3832 .... 3833 err = snd_card_new(&pci->dev, index[dev], id[dev], THIS_MODULE, 3834 0, &card); 3835 .... 3836 chip = kzalloc(sizeof(*chip), GFP_KERNEL); 3837 .... 3838 card->private_data = chip; 3839 .... 3840 } 3841 3842 When you created the chip data with :c:func:`snd_card_new()`, it's 3843 anyway accessible via ``private_data`` field:: 3844 3845 static int snd_mychip_probe(struct pci_dev *pci, 3846 const struct pci_device_id *pci_id) 3847 { 3848 .... 3849 struct snd_card *card; 3850 struct mychip *chip; 3851 int err; 3852 .... 3853 err = snd_card_new(&pci->dev, index[dev], id[dev], THIS_MODULE, 3854 sizeof(struct mychip), &card); 3855 .... 3856 chip = card->private_data; 3857 .... 3858 } 3859 3860 If you need space to save the registers, allocate the buffer for it 3861 here, too, since it would be fatal if you cannot allocate a memory in 3862 the suspend phase. The allocated buffer should be released in the 3863 corresponding destructor. 3864 3865 And next, set suspend/resume callbacks to the pci_driver:: 3866 3867 static DEFINE_SIMPLE_DEV_PM_OPS(snd_my_pm_ops, mychip_suspend, mychip_resume); 3868 3869 static struct pci_driver driver = { 3870 .name = KBUILD_MODNAME, 3871 .id_table = snd_my_ids, 3872 .probe = snd_my_probe, 3873 .remove = snd_my_remove, 3874 .driver = { 3875 .pm = &snd_my_pm_ops, 3876 }, 3877 }; 3878 3879 Module Parameters 3880 ================= 3881 3882 There are standard module options for ALSA. At least, each module should 3883 have the ``index``, ``id`` and ``enable`` options. 3884 3885 If the module supports multiple cards (usually up to 8 = ``SNDRV_CARDS`` 3886 cards), they should be arrays. The default initial values are defined 3887 already as constants for easier programming:: 3888 3889 static int index[SNDRV_CARDS] = SNDRV_DEFAULT_IDX; 3890 static char *id[SNDRV_CARDS] = SNDRV_DEFAULT_STR; 3891 static int enable[SNDRV_CARDS] = SNDRV_DEFAULT_ENABLE_PNP; 3892 3893 If the module supports only a single card, they could be single 3894 variables, instead. ``enable`` option is not always necessary in this 3895 case, but it would be better to have a dummy option for compatibility. 3896 3897 The module parameters must be declared with the standard 3898 ``module_param()``, ``module_param_array()`` and 3899 :c:func:`MODULE_PARM_DESC()` macros. 3900 3901 Typical code would look as below:: 3902 3903 #define CARD_NAME "My Chip" 3904 3905 module_param_array(index, int, NULL, 0444); 3906 MODULE_PARM_DESC(index, "Index value for " CARD_NAME " soundcard."); 3907 module_param_array(id, charp, NULL, 0444); 3908 MODULE_PARM_DESC(id, "ID string for " CARD_NAME " soundcard."); 3909 module_param_array(enable, bool, NULL, 0444); 3910 MODULE_PARM_DESC(enable, "Enable " CARD_NAME " soundcard."); 3911 3912 Also, don't forget to define the module description and the license. 3913 Especially, the recent modprobe requires to define the 3914 module license as GPL, etc., otherwise the system is shown as “tainted”:: 3915 3916 MODULE_DESCRIPTION("Sound driver for My Chip"); 3917 MODULE_LICENSE("GPL"); 3918 3919 3920 Device-Managed Resources 3921 ======================== 3922 3923 In the examples above, all resources are allocated and released 3924 manually. But human beings are lazy in nature, especially developers 3925 are lazier. So there are some ways to automate the release part; it's 3926 the (device-)managed resources aka devres or devm family. For 3927 example, an object allocated via :c:func:`devm_kmalloc()` will be 3928 freed automatically at unbinding the device. 3929 3930 ALSA core provides also the device-managed helper, namely, 3931 :c:func:`snd_devm_card_new()` for creating a card object. 3932 Call this functions instead of the normal :c:func:`snd_card_new()`, 3933 and you can forget the explicit :c:func:`snd_card_free()` call, as 3934 it's called automagically at error and removal paths. 3935 3936 One caveat is that the call of :c:func:`snd_card_free()` would be put 3937 at the beginning of the call chain only after you call 3938 :c:func:`snd_card_register()`. 3939 3940 Also, the ``private_free`` callback is always called at the card free, 3941 so be careful to put the hardware clean-up procedure in 3942 ``private_free`` callback. It might be called even before you 3943 actually set up at an earlier error path. For avoiding such an 3944 invalid initialization, you can set ``private_free`` callback after 3945 :c:func:`snd_card_register()` call succeeds. 3946 3947 Another thing to be remarked is that you should use device-managed 3948 helpers for each component as much as possible once when you manage 3949 the card in that way. Mixing up with the normal and the managed 3950 resources may screw up the release order. 3951 3952 3953 How To Put Your Driver Into ALSA Tree 3954 ===================================== 3955 3956 General 3957 ------- 3958 3959 So far, you've learned how to write the driver codes. And you might have 3960 a question now: how to put my own driver into the ALSA driver tree? Here 3961 (finally :) the standard procedure is described briefly. 3962 3963 Suppose that you create a new PCI driver for the card “xyz”. The card 3964 module name would be snd-xyz. The new driver is usually put into the 3965 alsa-driver tree, ``sound/pci`` directory in the case of PCI 3966 cards. 3967 3968 In the following sections, the driver code is supposed to be put into 3969 Linux kernel tree. The two cases are covered: a driver consisting of a 3970 single source file and one consisting of several source files. 3971 3972 Driver with A Single Source File 3973 -------------------------------- 3974 3975 1. Modify sound/pci/Makefile 3976 3977 Suppose you have a file xyz.c. Add the following two lines:: 3978 3979 snd-xyz-y := xyz.o 3980 obj-$(CONFIG_SND_XYZ) += snd-xyz.o 3981 3982 2. Create the Kconfig entry 3983 3984 Add the new entry of Kconfig for your xyz driver:: 3985 3986 config SND_XYZ 3987 tristate "Foobar XYZ" 3988 depends on SND 3989 select SND_PCM 3990 help 3991 Say Y here to include support for Foobar XYZ soundcard. 3992 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: 3993 the module will be called snd-xyz. 3994 3995 The line ``select SND_PCM`` specifies that the driver xyz supports PCM. 3996 In addition to SND_PCM, the following components are supported for 3997 select command: SND_RAWMIDI, SND_TIMER, SND_HWDEP, SND_MPU401_UART, 3998 SND_OPL3_LIB, SND_OPL4_LIB, SND_VX_LIB, SND_AC97_CODEC. 3999 Add the select command for each supported component. 4000 4001 Note that some selections imply the lowlevel selections. For example, 4002 PCM includes TIMER, MPU401_UART includes RAWMIDI, AC97_CODEC 4003 includes PCM, and OPL3_LIB includes HWDEP. You don't need to give 4004 the lowlevel selections again. 4005 4006 For the details of Kconfig script, refer to the kbuild documentation. 4007 4008 Drivers with Several Source Files 4009 --------------------------------- 4010 4011 Suppose that the driver snd-xyz have several source files. They are 4012 located in the new subdirectory, sound/pci/xyz. 4013 4014 1. Add a new directory (``sound/pci/xyz``) in ``sound/pci/Makefile`` 4015 as below:: 4016 4017 obj-$(CONFIG_SND) += sound/pci/xyz/ 4018 4019 4020 2. Under the directory ``sound/pci/xyz``, create a Makefile:: 4021 4022 snd-xyz-y := xyz.o abc.o def.o 4023 obj-$(CONFIG_SND_XYZ) += snd-xyz.o 4024 4025 3. Create the Kconfig entry 4026 4027 This procedure is as same as in the last section. 4028 4029 4030 Useful Functions 4031 ================ 4032 4033 :c:func:`snd_BUG()` 4034 ------------------- 4035 4036 It shows the ``BUG?`` message and stack trace as well as 4037 :c:func:`snd_BUG_ON()` at the point. It's useful to show that a 4038 fatal error happens there. 4039 4040 When no debug flag is set, this macro is ignored. 4041 4042 :c:func:`snd_BUG_ON()` 4043 ---------------------- 4044 4045 :c:func:`snd_BUG_ON()` macro is similar with 4046 :c:func:`WARN_ON()` macro. For example, snd_BUG_ON(!pointer); or 4047 it can be used as the condition, if (snd_BUG_ON(non_zero_is_bug)) 4048 return -EINVAL; 4049 4050 The macro takes an conditional expression to evaluate. When 4051 ``CONFIG_SND_DEBUG``, is set, if the expression is non-zero, it shows 4052 the warning message such as ``BUG? (xxx)`` normally followed by stack 4053 trace. In both cases it returns the evaluated value. 4054 4055 Acknowledgments 4056 =============== 4057 4058 I would like to thank Phil Kerr for his help for improvement and 4059 corrections of this document. 4060 4061 Kevin Conder reformatted the original plain-text to the DocBook format. 4062 4063 Giuliano Pochini corrected typos and contributed the example codes in 4064 the hardware constraints section.
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