[PATCH 1/2] firmware: include drivers/firmware/Kconfig unconditionally

Bjorn Andersson bjorn.andersson at linaro.org
Wed Sep 29 07:15:31 PDT 2021


On Tue 28 Sep 04:24 CDT 2021, Charles Keepax wrote:

> On Tue, Sep 28, 2021 at 10:51:36AM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> > On Tue, Sep 28, 2021 at 10:37 AM Charles Keepax
> > <ckeepax at opensource.cirrus.com> wrote:
> > > I guess the question might be where else would said code go?
> > > drivers/firmware seemed most obvious, all the other locations
> > > I can think of don't really make sense. Can't really put it a bus
> > > like spi/i2c etc. because we have parts on many buses. Can't
> > > really put it in a functional subsystem (audio/input etc.) since
> > > the whole idea was to try and get some independence from that so
> > > we don't have parts including subsystems they don't use. Could
> > > maybe put it in MFD, but no hard guarantee every part using it
> > > will be an MFD device and I am fairly confident Lee will feel it
> > > isn't MFD code as it doesn't relate to managing multiple devices.
> > > Only other option I can think of would be to make some sort of
> > > drivers/dsp or maybe drivers/cs_dsp, but not clear to me that is
> > > obviously better than using drivers/firmware.
> > 
> > Other DSPs use the drivers/remoteproc/ subsystem, but that
> > is more for general-purpose DSPs that can load application
> > specific firmware rather than loading a single firmware blob
> > as you'd normally do with the request_firmware() style interface.
> > 
> > Not sure if that fits what you do. Can you point to a high-level
> > description of what this DSP does besides audio, and how
> > flexible it is? That might help find the right place for this.
> 
> Hm... wasn't aware of that one, we should probably investigate that
> a little more at this end. From a quick look, seems a bit more like
> it is designed for much larger more general purpose probably memory
> mapped DSPs. I guess our code is a little more firmware parsing
> and loading, and a bit less generic remote proceedure call stuff.
> 

You're correct, remoteproc tends to situations where you have
multi-function firmware; be it at a single point in time, or due to
different firmware choices. Where you essentially boot some firmware on
the remoteproc and from that instantiate one of more functional devices
based on the loaded firmware.

> I am not sure there is great deal available publically on the
> DSP core. It is talked about in a few of our datasheets, see
> section 4.4 in [1]. But a basic description might be it is a
> signal processing focused, very small DSP core. If can be loaded
> with different firmwares at runtime, and indeed might be doing say
> echo cancellation in one use-case, or always on voice detect in
> another. Functionally it is very unlikely to be used for anything
> besides signal processing inside the device it is in, since it is
> typically quite integrated with that hardware and will be sitting
> behind a slow bus, like I2C or SPI.
> 

To me it sounds like the main difference compared to above is that you
have a single function that owns and controls the DSP and implements
that function - i.e. the audio driver probes, boots the DSP, if there's
a problem the audio driver will handle it etc.


When it comes to firmware parsing, that might be a somewhat unrelated
topic. E.g. in the Qualcomm case, the same customized ELF header is used
in both for remoteproc devices and in function-specific devices. For
this we extracted the relevant functions into a library of some common
helpers, which can be found in drivers/soc/qcom/mdt_loader.c.

Regards,
Bjorn

> Current users are all audio, planning to upstream some haptics
> parts soon, with possible other uses in the future.
> 
> [1] https://statics.cirrus.com/pubs/proDatasheet/CS48L32_DS1219F4.pdf
> 
> Thanks,
> Charles



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