[RFC 07/22] dm: blk: add UCLASS_PARTITION
AKASHI Takahiro
takahiro.akashi at linaro.org
Thu Oct 14 10:03:16 CEST 2021
Simon,
On Wed, Oct 13, 2021 at 12:05:58PM -0600, Simon Glass wrote:
> Hi Takahiro,
>
> On Tue, 12 Oct 2021 at 19:32, AKASHI Takahiro
> <takahiro.akashi at linaro.org> wrote:
> >
> > On Tue, Oct 12, 2021 at 11:14:17AM -0400, Tom Rini wrote:
> > > On Mon, Oct 11, 2021 at 10:14:00AM -0600, Simon Glass wrote:
> > > > Hi Heinrich,
> > > >
> > > > On Mon, 11 Oct 2021 at 09:02, Heinrich Schuchardt <xypron.glpk at gmx.de> wrote:
> > > > >
> > > > >
> > > > >
> > > > > On 10/11/21 16:54, Simon Glass wrote:
> > > > > > Hi Takahiro,
> > > > > >
> > > > > > On Sun, 10 Oct 2021 at 20:29, AKASHI Takahiro
> > > > > > <takahiro.akashi at linaro.org> wrote:
> > > > > >>
> > > > > >> Heinrich,
> > > > > >>
> > > > > >> On Fri, Oct 08, 2021 at 10:23:52AM +0200, Heinrich Schuchardt wrote:
> > > > > >>>
> > > > > >>>
> > > > > >>> On 10/8/21 02:51, AKASHI Takahiro wrote:
> > > > > >>>> On Mon, Oct 04, 2021 at 12:27:59PM +0900, AKASHI Takahiro wrote:
> > > > > >>>>> On Fri, Oct 01, 2021 at 11:30:37AM +0200, Heinrich Schuchardt wrote:
> > > > > >>>>>>
> > > > > >>>>>>
> > > > > >>>>>> On 10/1/21 07:01, AKASHI Takahiro wrote:
> > > > > >>>>>>> UCLASS_PARTITION device will be created as a child node of
> > > > > >>>>>>> UCLASS_BLK device.
> > > > > >>>>>>>
> > > > > >>>>>>> Signed-off-by: AKASHI Takahiro <takahiro.akashi at linaro.org>
> > > > > >>>>>>> ---
> > > > > >>>>>>> drivers/block/blk-uclass.c | 111 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> > > > > >>>>>>> include/blk.h | 9 +++
> > > > > >>>>>>> include/dm/uclass-id.h | 1 +
> > > > > >>>>>>> 3 files changed, 121 insertions(+)
> > > > > >>>>>>>
> > > > > >>>>>>> diff --git a/drivers/block/blk-uclass.c b/drivers/block/blk-uclass.c
> > > > > >>>>>>> index 83682dcc181a..dd7f3c0fe31e 100644
> > > > > >>>>>>> --- a/drivers/block/blk-uclass.c
> > > > > >>>>>>> +++ b/drivers/block/blk-uclass.c
> > > > > >>>>>>> @@ -12,6 +12,7 @@
> > > > > >>>>>>> #include <log.h>
> > > > > >>>>>>> #include <malloc.h>
> > > > > >>>>>>> #include <part.h>
> > > > > >>>>>>> +#include <string.h>
> > > > > >>>>>>> #include <dm/device-internal.h>
> > > > > >>>>>>> #include <dm/lists.h>
> > > > > >>>>>>> #include <dm/uclass-internal.h>
> > > > > >>>>>>> @@ -695,6 +696,44 @@ int blk_unbind_all(int if_type)
> > > > > >>>>>>> return 0;
> > > > > >>>>>>> }
> > > > > >>>>>>>
> > > > > >>>>>>> +int blk_create_partitions(struct udevice *parent)
> > > > > >>>>>>> +{
> > > > > >>>>>>> + int part, count;
> > > > > >>>>>>> + struct blk_desc *desc = dev_get_uclass_plat(parent);
> > > > > >>>>>>> + struct disk_partition info;
> > > > > >>>>>>> + struct disk_part *part_data;
> > > > > >>>>>>> + char devname[32];
> > > > > >>>>>>> + struct udevice *dev;
> > > > > >>>>>>> + int ret;
> > > > > >>>>>>> +
> > > > > >>>>>>> + if (!CONFIG_IS_ENABLED(PARTITIONS) ||
> > > > > >>>>>>> + !CONFIG_IS_ENABLED(HAVE_BLOCK_DEVICE))
> > > > > >>>>>>> + return 0;
> > > > > >>>>>>> +
> > > > > >>>>>>> + /* Add devices for each partition */
> > > > > >>>>>>> + for (count = 0, part = 1; part <= MAX_SEARCH_PARTITIONS; part++) {
> > > > > >>>>>>> + if (part_get_info(desc, part, &info))
> > > > > >>>>>>> + continue;
> > > > > >>>>>>> + snprintf(devname, sizeof(devname), "%s:%d", parent->name,
> > > > > >>>>>>> + part);
> > > > > >>>>>>> +
> > > > > >>>>>>> + ret = device_bind_driver(parent, "blk_partition",
> > > > > >>>>>>> + strdup(devname), &dev);
> > > > > >>>>>>> + if (ret)
> > > > > >>>>>>> + return ret;
> > > > > >>>>>>> +
> > > > > >>>>>>> + part_data = dev_get_uclass_plat(dev);
> > > > > >>>>>>> + part_data->partnum = part;
> > > > > >>>>>>> + part_data->gpt_part_info = info;
> > > > > >>>>>>> + count++;
> > > > > >>>>>>> +
> > > > > >>>>>>> + device_probe(dev);
> > > > > >>>>>>> + }
> > > > > >>>>>>> + debug("%s: %d partitions found in %s\n", __func__, count, parent->name);
> > > > > >>>>>>> +
> > > > > >>>>>>> + return 0;
> > > > > >>>>>>> +}
> > > > > >>>>>>> +
> > > > > >>>>>>> static int blk_post_probe(struct udevice *dev)
> > > > > >>>>>>> {
> > > > > >>>>>>> if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_PARTITIONS) &&
> > > > > >>>>>>> @@ -713,3 +752,75 @@ UCLASS_DRIVER(blk) = {
> > > > > >>>>>>> .post_probe = blk_post_probe,
> > > > > >>>>>>> .per_device_plat_auto = sizeof(struct blk_desc),
> > > > > >>>>>>> };
> > > > > >>>>>>> +
> > > > > >>>>>>> +static ulong blk_part_read(struct udevice *dev, lbaint_t start,
> > > > > >>>>>>> + lbaint_t blkcnt, void *buffer)
> > > > > >>>>>>> +{
> > > > > >>>>>>> + struct udevice *parent;
> > > > > >>>>>>> + struct disk_part *part;
> > > > > >>>>>>> + const struct blk_ops *ops;
> > > > > >>>>>>> +
> > > > > >>>>>>> + parent = dev_get_parent(dev);
> > > > > >>>>>>
> > > > > >>>>>> What device type will the parent have if it is a eMMC hardware partition?
> > > > > >>>>>>
> > > > > >>>>>>> + ops = blk_get_ops(parent);
> > > > > >>>>>>> + if (!ops->read)
> > > > > >>>>>>> + return -ENOSYS;
> > > > > >>>>>>> +
> > > > > >>>>>>> + part = dev_get_uclass_plat(dev);
> > > > > >>>>>>
> > > > > >>>>>> You should check that we do not access the block device past the
> > > > > >>>>>> partition end:
> > > > > >>>>>
> > > > > >>>>> Yes, I will fix all of checks.
> > > > > >>>>>
> > > > > >>>>>> struct blk_desc *desc = dev_get_uclass_plat(parent);
> > > > > >>>>>> if ((start + blkcnt) * desc->blksz < part->gpt_part_info.blksz)
> > > > > >>>>>> return -EFAULT.
> > > > > >>>>>>
> > > > > >>>>>>> + start += part->gpt_part_info.start;
> > > > > >>>>
> > > > > >>>> A better solution is:
> > > > > >>>> if (start >= part->gpt_part_info.size)
> > > > > >>>> return 0;
> > > > > >>>>
> > > > > >>>> if ((start + blkcnt) > part->gpt_part_info.size)
> > > > > >>>> blkcnt = part->gpt_part_info.size - start;
> > > > > >>>> start += part->gpt_part_info.start;
> > > > > >>>> instead of returning -EFAULT.
> > > > > >>>> (note that start and blkcnt are in "block".)
> > > > > >>>
> > > > > >>> What is your motivation to support an illegal access?
> > > > > >>>
> > > > > >>> We will implement the EFI_BLOCK_IO_PROTOCOL based on this function. The
> > > > > >>> ReadBlocks() and WriteBlocks() services must return
> > > > > >>> EFI_INVALID_PARAMETER if the read request contains LBAs that are not
> > > > > >>> valid.
> > > > > >>
> > > > > >> I interpreted that 'LBA' was the third parameter to ReadBlocks API,
> > > > > >> and that if the starting block is out of partition region, we should
> > > > > >> return an error (and if not, we still want to trim IO request to fit
> > > > > >> into partition size as other OS's API like linux does).
> > > > > >> Do you think it's incorrect?
> > > > > >
> > > > > > [..]
> > > > > >
> > > > > > Related to this patch I think that the partition type should be really
> > > > > > be a child of the media device:
> > > > > >
> > > > > > - MMC
> > > > > > |- BLK
> > > > > > |- PARTITION
> > > > > > |- BLK
> > > > > > |- PARTITION
> > > > > > |- BLK
> > > > > > |- PARTITION
> > > > > > |- BLK
> > > > > >
> > > > > > It seems more natural to me that putting the partitions under the
> > > > > > top-level BLK device, so that BLK remains a 'terminal' device.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > The partition uclass is different from BLK, of course. It could
> > > > > > contain information about the partition such as its partition number
> > > > > > and UUID.
> > > > >
> > > > > Do you mean hardware partition here? Otherwise I would not know what BLK
> > > > > should model.
> > > >
> > > > I mean that (I think) we should not use BLK to model partitions. A BLK
> > > > should just be a block device.
> > > >
> > > > I don't see any difference between a partition and a hardware
> > > > partition. We presumably end up with a hierarchy though. Do we need a
> > > > HWPARTITION uclass so we can handle the hardware partitions
> > > > differently?
> > >
> > > Note that for eMMC devices, hardware partitions are different from
> > > partition-table partitions. If you boot a system with an eMMC device up
> > > in Linux you typically get mmcblkN, mmcblkNboot0, mmcblkNboot1 and
> > > mmcblkNrpmb, each of which are hardware partitions. It gets tricky in
> > > U-Boot in that you can access each of these with 'mmc dev N M' where M
> > > defaults to 0 and is the user partition (mmcblkN), 1/2 are boot0/boot1
> > > and 3 is the rpmb area. The 'mmc' command also allows, when possible
> > > and implemented, configuring these partitions, again to the extent
> > > allowed, documented and implemented.
> >
> > Thank you. That is exactly what I tried to mention in my reply
> > at "part: call part_init() in blk_get_device_by_str() only for MMC"
>
> OK so it sounds like we agree that hwpartition and partition are
> different things.
Yes.
Please note, IIUC, that
* MMC hw partitions on a device are mapped to one udevice, differentiating
them by blk_desc->hwpart.
* Each NVME namespace on a device is mapped to a different udevice with
a different blk_desc->devnum (and nvme_dev->ns_id).
* Each UFS partition (or which is, I suppose, equivalent to scsi LUN) on
a device is mapped to a different udevice with a different blk_desc->devnum
(and blk_desc->lun).
So even though those type of devices have some kind of hardware partitions,
they are modelled differently in U-Boot.
(Obviously, I might be wrong here as I'm not quite familiar yet.)
> >
> > ---8<---
> > # On the other hand, we have to explicitly switch "hw partitions"
> > # with blk_select_hwpart_devnum() on MMC devices even though we use
> > # the *same* udevice(blk_desc).
> > --->8---
> >
> > The problem with the current U-Boot driver model is that all of "mmcblkN,
> > mmcblkNboot0, mmcblkNboot1 and mmcblkNrpmb" will be linked to the same
> > udevice. We have to do "mmc dev N M" or call blk_select_hwpart[_devnum]()
> > to distinguish them.
>
> Here's our chance to rethink this. What should the device hierarchy be
> for an MMC device? I made a proposal further up the thread.
Well,
On Mon, Oct 11, 2021 at 11:41:02AM -0600, Simon Glass wrote:
> On Mon, 11 Oct 2021 at 10:53, Heinrich Schuchardt <xypron.glpk at gmx.de> wrote:
> > >>> [..]
> > >>> Related to this patch I think that the partition type should be really
> > >>> be a child of the media device:
> > >>>
> > >>> - MMC
> > >>> |- BLK
> > >>> |- PARTITION
> > >>> |- BLK
> > >>> |- PARTITION
> > >>> |- BLK
> > >>> |- PARTITION
> > >>> |- BLK
> > >>>
> > >>> It seems more natural to me that putting the partitions under the
> > >>> top-level BLK device, so that BLK remains a 'terminal' device.
> > >>>
> > >>> The partition uclass is different from BLK, of course. It could
> > >>> contain information about the partition such as its partition number
> > >>> and UUID.
Yeah, but there is always 1-to-1 mapping between a partition and
a block (for a partition), so I still wonder whether it makes sense
to model partitions in the way above.
Alternatively, the following hierarchy also makes some sense.
(This is not what I have in my RFC though.)
- MMC
|- BLK (whole disk with part=0)
|- BLK (partition 1)
|- BLK (partition 2)
|- BLK (partition 3)
or
- MMC
|- DISK (whole disk)
||- BLK (partition 0)
||- BLK (partition 1)
||- BLK (partition 2)
||- BLK (partition 3)
Here
MMC: provides read/write operations (via blk_ops)
DISK: holds a geometry of a whole disk and other info
BLK: partition info (+ blk_ops + geo) (part=0 means a while disk)
> > >> Do you mean hardware partition here? Otherwise I would not know what BLK
> > >> should model.
> > >
> > > I mean that (I think) we should not use BLK to model partitions. A BLK
> > > should just be a block device.
> >
> > That is fine. But this implies that a software partition is the child of
> > a block partition and not the other way round. So the tree should like:
> >
> > MMC
> > |- BLK (user hardware partition)
> > ||- PARTITION 1 (software partition)
> > ||- PARTITION 2 (software partition)
> > |...
> > ||- PARTITION n (software partition)
> > |- BLK (rpmb hardware partition)
> > |- BLK (boot0 hardware partition)
> > |- BLK (boot1 hardware partition)
>
> I presume you meant to include a BLK device under each PARTITION?
>
> But anyway, I was more thinking of this:
>
> MMC
> | HWPARTITION rpmb
> || BLK whole rpmb
> || PARTITION 1
> ||| BLK
> || PARTITION 2
> ||| BLK
> || PARTITION 3
Do we have any reason to model a RPMB partition as a block device?
For linux, at least, mmcblkrpmb looks to be a character device.
> ||| BLK
> | HWPARTITION boot0
> || BLK
> (maybe have PARTITION in here too?
I don't know how boot partitions are used on a production system.
It's unlikely to have partitions on them given the purpose of "boot"
partitions?
> | HWPARTITION boot1
> (maybe have PARTITION in here too?
> || BLK
>
> >
> > >
> > > I don't see any difference between a partition and a hardware
> > > partition. We presumably end up with a hierarchy though. Do we need a
> > > HWPARTITION uclass so we can handle the hardware partitions
> > > differently?
> >
> > Software partitions are defined and discovered via partition tables.
> > Hardware partitions are defined in a hardware specific way.
> >
> > All software partitions map to HD() device tree nodes in UEFI.
> > An MMC device maps to an eMMC() node
> > MMC hardware partitions are mapped to Ctrl() nodes by EDK II. We should
> > do the same in U-Boot.
> > An SD-card maps to an SD() node.
> > An NVMe namespace maps to a NVMe() node.
> > An SCSI LUN maps to a Scsi() node.
> > SCSI channels of multiple channel controllers are mapped to Ctrl() nodes.
>
> I'm not quite sure about the terminology here. I'm not even talking
> about UEFI, really, just how best to model this stuff in U-Boot.
In UEFI world, each efi_disk has its own device path to identify the device.
For example, here is a text representation of device path for a scsi disk
partition:
/VenHw(e61d73b9-a384-4acc-aeab-82e828f3628b)/Scsi(0,0)/HD(1,GPT,ce86c5a7-b32a-488f-a346-88fe698e0edc,0x22,0x4c2a)
which is set to be created from a corresponding udevice (more strictly
blkc_desc + part).
So the issue Heinrich raised here is a matter of implementation of
this conversion (software partitions, and SCSI channels?) as well as
a modeling for some device type on U-Boot, i.e. MMC hardware partitions.
-Takahiro Akashi
> In U-Boot, UCLASS_SCSI should be a SCSI controller, not a device,
> right? I'm a little worried it is not modelled correctly. After all,
> what is the parent of a SCSI device?
>
> >
> > The simple file protocol is only provided by HD() nodes and not by nodes
> > representing hardware partitions. If the whole hardware partition is
> > formatted as a file system you would still create a HD() node with
> > partition number 0.
>
> Regards,
> Simon
---
>
> >
> > When it comes to UEFI, I hope we can currently support hw partitions
> > in this way:
> > => efidebug add boot -b 1 FOO mmc 0.1 /foo.bin ""
> > (".1" is a key, I have never tried this syntax though.)
> >
> > But probably its device path won't be properly formatted
> > as expected as Heinrich suggested.
> >
> > -Takahiro Akashi
> >
> >
> > > In terms of modeling, this is akin to how if you use a USB card reader
> > > that supports 4 different form-factor cards, you can end up with 4
> > > different devices showing up in Linux (if you have one of the nice card
> > > readers that supports multiple cards at once).
> > >
> > > --
> > > Tom
> >
> >
>
> Regards,
> Simon
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