Re: How to upload fpga firmware

From: Moritz Fischer
Date: Wed Apr 22 2020 - 21:36:53 EST


Hi Sascha,

On Wed, Apr 22, 2020 at 01:44:32PM +0200, Sascha Hauer wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I wonder what can be done with the mainline state of drivers/fpga/. The
> entry to the framework seems to be fpga_mgr_load(). The only user of
> this function is fpga_region_program_fpga(). This in turn is only called
> in response of applying a device tree overlay. A device tree overlay is
> applied with of_overlay_fdt_apply() which has no users in the Kernel.

Yes. It is waiting for dt_overlays one way or another. I personally
don't currently have the bandwidth to work actively on this.

> My current task is to load a firmware to a FPGA. The code all seems to
> be there in the Kernel, it only lacks a way to trigger it. I am not very
> interested in device tree overlays since the FPGA appears as a PCI
> device (although applying a dtbo could enable the PCIe controller device
> tree node). Is there some mainline way to upload FPGA firmware? At the
> moment we are using the attached patch to trigger loading the firmware
> from userspace. Would something like this be acceptable for mainline?

We've looked into this sort of patches over the years and never came to
a general interface that really works.

The OPAE folks (and other users I know of) usually use FPGA Manager with
a higher layer on top of it that moves the bitstream into the kernel via
an ioctl().

One concept I had toyed with mentally, but haven't really gotten around
to implement is a 'discoverable' region, that would deal with the
necessary re-enumeration via a callback and have a sysfs interface
similar to what the patch below has.
This would essentially cover use-cases where you have a discoverable
device implemented in FPGA logic, such as say an FPGA hanging off of
PCIe bus that can get loaded over USB, a CPLD or some other side-band
mechanism. After loading the image you'd have to rescan the PCIe bus -
which - imho is the kernel's job.

What I really wanna avoid is creating another /dev/fpga0 / /dev/xdevcfg
that completely leaves the kernel in the dark about the fact that it
reconfigures a bit of hardware hanging off the bus.

In my ideal world you'd create a pci driver that binds to your device,
and creates mfd style subdevices for whatever you'd want your design to
do. One of these devices would be an FPGA and a FPGA region attached to
that FPGA manager. Your top level driver would co-ordinate the fact that
you are re-programming parts of the FPGA and create / destroy devices as
needed for the hardware contained in the bitstream.

[..]
> +static ssize_t firmware_name_show(struct device *dev,
> + struct device_attribute *attr,
> + char *buf)
> +{
> + struct fpga_region *region = to_fpga_region(dev);
> +
> + if (!region->info || !region->info->firmware_name)
> + return 0;
> +
> + return sprintf(buf, "%s\n", region->info->firmware_name);
> +}
> +
> +static ssize_t firmware_name_store(struct device *dev,
> + struct device_attribute *attr,
> + const char *firmware_name, size_t count)
> +{
> + struct fpga_region *region = to_fpga_region(dev);
> + struct fpga_image_info *info = region->info;
> + int error;
> +
> + if (!info) {
> + info = fpga_image_info_alloc(dev);
> + if (!info)
> + return -ENOMEM;
> + } else if (info->firmware_name) {
> + devm_kfree(dev, info->firmware_name);
> + }
> +
> + info->firmware_name = devm_kstrdup(dev, firmware_name, GFP_KERNEL);
> + if (!info->firmware_name)
> + return -ENOMEM;
> +
> + if (count > 0 && info->firmware_name[count - 1] == '\n')
> + info->firmware_name[count - 1] = '\0';
> +
> + region->info = info;
> + error = fpga_region_program_fpga(region);
> + if (error) {
> + devm_kfree(dev, info->firmware_name);
> + info->firmware_name = NULL;
> + }
> +
> + return error ? error : count;
> +}

Cheers,
Moritz