// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 // Copyright (C) 2025 Google LLC. //! SoC Driver Abstraction. //! //! C header: [`include/linux/sys_soc.h`](srctree/include/linux/sys_soc.h) use crate::{ bindings, error, prelude::*, str::CString, types::Opaque, // }; use core::ptr::NonNull; /// Attributes for a SoC device. /// /// These are both exported to userspace under /sys/devices/socX and provided to other drivers to /// match against via `soc_device_match` (not yet available in Rust) to enable quirks or /// device-specific support where necessary. /// /// All fields are freeform - they have no specific formatting, just defined meanings. /// For example, the [`machine`](`Attributes::machine`) field could be "DB8500" or /// "Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. SM8560 HDK", but regardless it should identify a board or product. pub struct Attributes { /// Should generally be a board ID or product ID. Examples /// include DB8500 (ST-Ericsson) or "Qualcomm Technologies, inc. SM8560 HDK". /// /// If this field is not populated, the SoC infrastructure will try to populate it from /// `/model` in the device tree. pub machine: Option, /// The broader class this SoC belongs to. Examples include ux500 /// (for DB8500) or Snapdragon (for SM8650). /// /// On chips with ARM firmware supporting SMCCC v1.2+, this may be a JEDEC JEP106 manufacturer /// identification. pub family: Option, /// The manufacturing revision of the part. Frequently this is MAJOR.MINOR, but not always. pub revision: Option, /// Serial Number - uniquely identifies a specific SoC. If present, should be unique (buying a /// replacement part should change it if present). This field cannot be matched on and is /// solely present to export through /sys. pub serial_number: Option, /// SoC ID - identifies a specific SoC kind in question, sometimes more specifically than /// `machine` if the same SoC is used in multiple products. Some devices use this to specify a /// SoC name, e.g. "I.MX??", and others just print an ID number (e.g. Tegra and Qualcomm). /// /// On chips with ARM firmware supporting SMCCC v1.2+, this may be a JEDEC JEP106 manufacturer /// identification (the family value) followed by a colon and then a 4-digit ID value. pub soc_id: Option, } struct BuiltAttributes { // While `inner` has pointers to `_backing`, it is to the interior of the `CStrings`, not // `backing` itself, so it does not need to be pinned. _backing: Attributes, // `Opaque` makes us `!Unpin`, as the registration holds a pointer to `inner` when used. inner: Opaque, } fn cstring_to_c(mcs: &Option) -> *const kernel::ffi::c_char { mcs.as_ref() .map(|cs| cs.as_char_ptr()) .unwrap_or(core::ptr::null()) } impl BuiltAttributes { fn as_mut_ptr(&self) -> *mut bindings::soc_device_attribute { self.inner.get() } } impl Attributes { fn build(self) -> BuiltAttributes { BuiltAttributes { inner: Opaque::new(bindings::soc_device_attribute { machine: cstring_to_c(&self.machine), family: cstring_to_c(&self.family), revision: cstring_to_c(&self.revision), serial_number: cstring_to_c(&self.serial_number), soc_id: cstring_to_c(&self.soc_id), data: core::ptr::null(), custom_attr_group: core::ptr::null(), }), _backing: self, } } } #[pin_data(PinnedDrop)] /// Registration handle for your soc_dev. If you let it go out of scope, your soc_dev will be /// unregistered. pub struct Registration { #[pin] attr: BuiltAttributes, soc_dev: NonNull, } // SAFETY: We provide no operations through `&Registration`. unsafe impl Sync for Registration {} // SAFETY: All pointers are normal allocations, not thread-specific. unsafe impl Send for Registration {} #[pinned_drop] impl PinnedDrop for Registration { fn drop(self: Pin<&mut Self>) { // SAFETY: Device always contains a live pointer to a soc_device that can be unregistered unsafe { bindings::soc_device_unregister(self.soc_dev.as_ptr()) } } } impl Registration { /// Register a new SoC device pub fn new(attr: Attributes) -> impl PinInit { try_pin_init!(Self { attr: attr.build(), soc_dev: { // SAFETY: // * The struct provided through attr is backed by pinned data next to it, // so as long as attr lives, the strings pointed to by the struct will too. // * `attr` is pinned, so the pinned data won't move. // * If it returns a device, and so others may try to read this data, by // caller invariant, `attr` won't be released until the device is. let raw_soc = error::from_err_ptr(unsafe { bindings::soc_device_register(attr.as_mut_ptr()) })?; NonNull::new(raw_soc).ok_or(EINVAL)? }, }? Error) } }