Virtio-gpio¶
virtio-gpio provides a virtual GPIO controller, which will map part of native GPIOs to UOS, UOS can perform GPIO operations through it, including setting values, including set/get value, set/get direction and set configuration (only Open Source and Open Drain types are currently supported). GPIOs quite often be used as IRQs, typically for wakeup events, virtio-gpio supports level and edge interrupt trigger modes.
The virtio-gpio architecture is shown below
Virtio-gpio is implemented as a virtio legacy device in the ACRN device model (DM), and is registered as a PCI virtio device to the guest OS. No changes are required in the frontend Linux virtio-gpio except that the guest (UOS) kernel should be built with CONFIG_VIRTIO_GPIO=y
.
There are three virtqueues used between FE and BE, one for gpio operations, one for irq request and one for irq event notification.
Virtio-gpio FE driver will register a gpiochip and irqchip when it is probed, the base and number of gpio are generated by the BE. Each gpiochip or irqchip operation(e.g. get_direction of gpiochip or irq_set_type of irqchip) will trigger a virtqueue_kick on its own virtqueue. If some gpio has been set to interrupt mode, the interrupt events will be handled within the irq virtqueue callback.
GPIO mapping¶
- Each UOS has only one GPIO chip instance, its number of GPIO is based on acrn-dm command line and GPIO base always start from 0.
- Each GPIO is exclusive, uos can’t map the same native gpio.
- Each acrn-dm maximum number of GPIO is 64.
Usage¶
add the following parameters into command line:
-s <slot>,virtio-gpio,<@controller_name{offset|name[=mapping_name]:offset|name[=mapping_name]:…}@controller_name{…}…]>
- controller_name: Input “ls /sys/bus/gpio/devices” to check native gpio controller information.Usually, the devices represent the controller_name, you can use it as controller_name directly. You can also input “cat /sys/bus/gpio/device/XXX/dev” to get device id that can be used to match /dev/XXX, then use XXX as the controller_name. On MRB and NUC platforms, the controller_name are gpiochip0, gpiochip1, gpiochip2.gpiochip3.
- offset|name: you can use gpio offset or its name to locate one native gpio within the gpio controller.
- mapping_name: This is optional, if you want to use a customized name for a FE gpio, you can set a new name for a FE virtual gpio.
Example¶
Map three native gpio to UOS, they are native gpiochip0 with offset of 1 and 6, and with the name “reset”. In UOS, the three gpio has no name, and base from 0.:
-s 10,virtio-gpio,@gpiochip0{1:6:reset}
Map four native gpio to UOS, native gpiochip0’s gpio with offset 1 and offset 6 map to FE virtual gpio with offset 0 and offset 1 without names, native gpiochip0’s gpio with name “reset” maps to FE virtual gpio with offset 2 and its name is “shutdown”, native gpiochip1’s gpio with offset 0 maps to FE virtual gpio with offset 3 and its name is “reset”.:
-s 10,virtio-gpio,@gpiochip0{1:6:reset=shutdown}@gpiochip1{0=reset}