| What: /dev/fw[0-9]+ |
| Date: May 2007 |
| KernelVersion: 2.6.22 |
| Contact: linux1394-devel@lists.sourceforge.net |
| Description: |
| The character device files /dev/fw* are the interface between |
| firewire-core and IEEE 1394 device drivers implemented in |
| userspace. The ioctl(2)- and read(2)-based ABI is defined and |
| documented in <linux/firewire-cdev.h>. |
| |
| This ABI offers most of the features which firewire-core also |
| exposes to kernelspace IEEE 1394 drivers. |
| |
| Each /dev/fw* is associated with one IEEE 1394 node, which can |
| be remote or local nodes. Operations on a /dev/fw* file have |
| different scope: |
| - The 1394 node which is associated with the file: |
| - Asynchronous request transmission |
| - Get the Configuration ROM |
| - Query node ID |
| - Query maximum speed of the path between this node |
| and local node |
| - The 1394 bus (i.e. "card") to which the node is attached to: |
| - Isochronous stream transmission and reception |
| - Asynchronous stream transmission and reception |
| - Asynchronous broadcast request transmission |
| - PHY packet transmission and reception |
| - Allocate, reallocate, deallocate isochronous |
| resources (channels, bandwidth) at the bus's IRM |
| - Query node IDs of local node, root node, IRM, bus |
| manager |
| - Query cycle time |
| - Bus reset initiation, bus reset event reception |
| - All 1394 buses: |
| - Allocation of IEEE 1212 address ranges on the local |
| link layers, reception of inbound requests to such |
| an address range, asynchronous response transmission |
| to inbound requests |
| - Addition of descriptors or directories to the local |
| nodes' Configuration ROM |
| |
| Due to the different scope of operations and in order to let |
| userland implement different access permission models, some |
| operations are restricted to /dev/fw* files that are associated |
| with a local node: |
| - Addition of descriptors or directories to the local |
| nodes' Configuration ROM |
| - PHY packet transmission and reception |
| |
| A /dev/fw* file remains associated with one particular node |
| during its entire life time. Bus topology changes, and hence |
| node ID changes, are tracked by firewire-core. ABI users do not |
| need to be aware of topology. |
| |
| The following file operations are supported: |
| |
| open(2) |
| Currently the only useful flags are O_RDWR. |
| |
| ioctl(2) |
| Initiate various actions. Some take immediate effect, others |
| are performed asynchronously while or after the ioctl returns. |
| See the inline documentation in <linux/firewire-cdev.h> for |
| descriptions of all ioctls. |
| |
| poll(2), select(2), epoll_wait(2) etc. |
| Watch for events to become available to be read. |
| |
| read(2) |
| Receive various events. There are solicited events like |
| outbound asynchronous transaction completion or isochronous |
| buffer completion, and unsolicited events such as bus resets, |
| request reception, or PHY packet reception. Always use a read |
| buffer which is large enough to receive the largest event that |
| could ever arrive. See <linux/firewire-cdev.h> for descriptions |
| of all event types and for which ioctls affect reception of |
| events. |
| |
| mmap(2) |
| Allocate a DMA buffer for isochronous reception or transmission |
| and map it into the process address space. The arguments should |
| be used as follows: addr = NULL, length = the desired buffer |
| size, i.e. number of packets times size of largest packet, |
| prot = at least PROT_READ for reception and at least PROT_WRITE |
| for transmission, flags = MAP_SHARED, fd = the handle to the |
| /dev/fw*, offset = 0. |
| |
| Isochronous reception works in packet-per-buffer fashion except |
| for multichannel reception which works in buffer-fill mode. |
| |
| munmap(2) |
| Unmap the isochronous I/O buffer from the process address space. |
| |
| close(2) |
| Besides stopping and freeing I/O contexts that were associated |
| with the file descriptor, back out any changes to the local |
| nodes' Configuration ROM. Deallocate isochronous channels and |
| bandwidth at the IRM that were marked for kernel-assisted |
| re- and deallocation. |
| |
| Users: libraw1394 |
| libdc1394 |
| libhinawa |
| tools like linux-firewire-utils, fwhack, ... |