On 02-03-21, 14:24, Jie Deng wrote:
> Not for the full duplex. As Paolo explained in those links.
> We defined a combined request called "write-read request"
>
> "
> This is when a write is followed by a read: the master
> starts off the transmission with a write, then sends a second START,
> then continues with a read from the same address.
I think above talks about the real I2C protocol at bus level ?
> In theory there's no difference between one multi-segment transaction
> and many single-segment transactions _in a single-master scenario_.
>
> However, it is a plausible configuration to have multiple guests sharing
> an I2C host device as if they were multiple master.
>
> So the spec should provide a way at least to support for transactions with
> 1 write and 1 read segment in one request to the same address.
> "
> From the perspective of specification design, it hopes to provide more
> choices
> while from the perspective of specific implementation, we can choose what we
> need
> as long as it does not violate the specification.
That is fine, but what I was not able to understand was how do we get
to know if we should expect both write and read bufs after the out
header or only one of them ?
I think I have understood that part now, we need to look at incnt and
outcnt and make out what kind of transfer we need to do.
- If outcnt == 1 and incnt == 2, then it is read operation.
- If outcnt == 2 and incnt == 1, then it is write operation.
- If outcnt == 2 and incnt == 2, then it is read-write operation.
Anything else is invalid. Is my understanding correct here ?
> Since the current Linux driver doesn't use this mechanism. I'm considering
> to move
> the "struct virtio_i2c_req" into the driver and use one "buf" instead.
Linux can very much have its own definition of the structure and so I
am not in favor of any such structure in the spec as well, it confuses
people (like me) :).
--
viresh
On 2021/3/2 15:24, Viresh Kumar wrote:
> On 02-03-21, 14:24, Jie Deng wrote:
>> Not for the full duplex. As Paolo explained in those links.
>> We defined a combined request called "write-read request"
>>
>> "
>> This is when a write is followed by a read: the master
>> starts off the transmission with a write, then sends a second START,
>> then continues with a read from the same address.
> I think above talks about the real I2C protocol at bus level ?
>
>> In theory there's no difference between one multi-segment transaction
>> and many single-segment transactions _in a single-master scenario_.
>>
>> However, it is a plausible configuration to have multiple guests sharing
>> an I2C host device as if they were multiple master.
>>
>> So the spec should provide a way at least to support for transactions with
>> 1 write and 1 read segment in one request to the same address.
>> "
>> From the perspective of specification design, it hopes to provide more
>> choices
>> while from the perspective of specific implementation, we can choose what we
>> need
>> as long as it does not violate the specification.
> That is fine, but what I was not able to understand was how do we get
> to know if we should expect both write and read bufs after the out
> header or only one of them ?
>
> I think I have understood that part now, we need to look at incnt and
> outcnt and make out what kind of transfer we need to do.
>
> - If outcnt == 1 and incnt == 2, then it is read operation.
> - If outcnt == 2 and incnt == 1, then it is write operation.
> - If outcnt == 2 and incnt == 2, then it is read-write operation.
>
> Anything else is invalid. Is my understanding correct here ?
Correct. By checking the sequences of descriptor's R/W in the virtqueue,
You can know the type of request. A simple state machine can be used to
classify in this case.
O I I : read request.
O O I : write request.
O O I I : read-write request.
But if only using the first two types like in this driver, the backend
will be much easier to
implement since the request is fixed to 3 descriptors and we only need
to check the second
descriptor to know the type.
>
>> Since the current Linux driver doesn't use this mechanism. I'm considering
>> to move
>> the "struct virtio_i2c_req" into the driver and use one "buf" instead.
> Linux can very much have its own definition of the structure and so I
> am not in favor of any such structure in the spec as well, it confuses
> people (like me) :).
>