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-.. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
-.. document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
-.. Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software
-.. Foundation, with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts
-.. and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included at
-.. Documentation/media/uapi/fdl-appendix.rst.
-..
-.. TODO: replace it to GFDL-1.1-or-later WITH no-invariant-sections
-
-CEC Pin Framework Error Injection
-=================================
-
-The CEC Pin Framework is a core CEC framework for CEC hardware that only
-has low-level support for the CEC bus. Most hardware today will have
-high-level CEC support where the hardware deals with driving the CEC bus,
-but some older devices aren't that fancy. However, this framework also
-allows you to connect the CEC pin to a GPIO on e.g. a Raspberry Pi and
-you have now made a CEC adapter.
-
-What makes doing this so interesting is that since we have full control
-over the bus it is easy to support error injection. This is ideal to
-test how well CEC adapters can handle error conditions.
-
-Currently only the cec-gpio driver (when the CEC line is directly
-connected to a pull-up GPIO line) and the AllWinner A10/A20 drm driver
-support this framework.
-
-If ``CONFIG_CEC_PIN_ERROR_INJ`` is enabled, then error injection is available
-through debugfs. Specifically, in ``/sys/kernel/debug/cec/cecX/`` there is
-now an ``error-inj`` file.
-
-.. note::
-
- The error injection commands are not a stable ABI and may change in the
- future.
-
-With ``cat error-inj`` you can see both the possible commands and the current
-error injection status::
-
- $ cat /sys/kernel/debug/cec/cec0/error-inj
- # Clear error injections:
- # clear clear all rx and tx error injections
- # rx-clear clear all rx error injections
- # tx-clear clear all tx error injections
- # <op> clear clear all rx and tx error injections for <op>
- # <op> rx-clear clear all rx error injections for <op>
- # <op> tx-clear clear all tx error injections for <op>
- #
- # RX error injection:
- # <op>[,<mode>] rx-nack NACK the message instead of sending an ACK
- # <op>[,<mode>] rx-low-drive <bit> force a low-drive condition at this bit position
- # <op>[,<mode>] rx-add-byte add a spurious byte to the received CEC message
- # <op>[,<mode>] rx-remove-byte remove the last byte from the received CEC message
- # <op>[,<mode>] rx-arb-lost <poll> generate a POLL message to trigger an arbitration lost
- #
- # TX error injection settings:
- # tx-ignore-nack-until-eom ignore early NACKs until EOM
- # tx-custom-low-usecs <usecs> define the 'low' time for the custom pulse
- # tx-custom-high-usecs <usecs> define the 'high' time for the custom pulse
- # tx-custom-pulse transmit the custom pulse once the bus is idle
- #
- # TX error injection:
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-no-eom don't set the EOM bit
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-early-eom set the EOM bit one byte too soon
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-add-bytes <num> append <num> (1-255) spurious bytes to the message
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-remove-byte drop the last byte from the message
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-short-bit <bit> make this bit shorter than allowed
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-long-bit <bit> make this bit longer than allowed
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-custom-bit <bit> send the custom pulse instead of this bit
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-short-start send a start pulse that's too short
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-long-start send a start pulse that's too long
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-custom-start send the custom pulse instead of the start pulse
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-last-bit <bit> stop sending after this bit
- # <op>[,<mode>] tx-low-drive <bit> force a low-drive condition at this bit position
- #
- # <op> CEC message opcode (0-255) or 'any'
- # <mode> 'once' (default), 'always', 'toggle' or 'off'
- # <bit> CEC message bit (0-159)
- # 10 bits per 'byte': bits 0-7: data, bit 8: EOM, bit 9: ACK
- # <poll> CEC poll message used to test arbitration lost (0x00-0xff, default 0x0f)
- # <usecs> microseconds (0-10000000, default 1000)
-
- clear
-
-You can write error injection commands to ``error-inj`` using
-``echo 'cmd' >error-inj`` or ``cat cmd.txt >error-inj``. The ``cat error-inj``
-output contains the current error commands. You can save the output to a file
-and use it as an input to ``error-inj`` later.
-
-Basic Syntax
-------------
-
-Leading spaces/tabs are ignored. If the next character is a ``#`` or the end
-of the line was reached, then the whole line is ignored. Otherwise a command
-is expected.
-
-The error injection commands fall in two main groups: those relating to
-receiving CEC messages and those relating to transmitting CEC messages. In
-addition, there are commands to clear existing error injection commands and
-to create custom pulses on the CEC bus.
-
-Most error injection commands can be executed for specific CEC opcodes or for
-all opcodes (``any``). Each command also has a 'mode' which can be ``off``
-(can be used to turn off an existing error injection command), ``once``
-(the default) which will trigger the error injection only once for the next
-received or transmitted message, ``always`` to always trigger the error
-injection and ``toggle`` to toggle the error injection on or off for every
-transmit or receive.
-
-So '``any rx-nack``' will NACK the next received CEC message,
-'``any,always rx-nack``' will NACK all received CEC messages and
-'``0x82,toggle rx-nack``' will only NACK if an Active Source message was
-received and do that only for every other received message.
-
-After an error was injected with mode ``once`` the error injection command
-is cleared automatically, so ``once`` is a one-time deal.
-
-All combinations of ``<op>`` and error injection commands can co-exist. So
-this is fine::
-
- 0x9e tx-add-bytes 1
- 0x9e tx-early-eom
- 0x9f tx-add-bytes 2
- any rx-nack
-
-All four error injection commands will be active simultaneously.
-
-However, if the same ``<op>`` and command combination is specified,
-but with different arguments::
-
- 0x9e tx-add-bytes 1
- 0x9e tx-add-bytes 2
-
-Then the second will overwrite the first.
-
-Clear Error Injections
-----------------------
-
-``clear``
- Clear all error injections.
-
-``rx-clear``
- Clear all receive error injections
-
-``tx-clear``
- Clear all transmit error injections
-
-``<op> clear``
- Clear all error injections for the given opcode.
-
-``<op> rx-clear``
- Clear all receive error injections for the given opcode.
-
-``<op> tx-clear``
- Clear all transmit error injections for the given opcode.
-
-Receive Messages
-----------------
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] rx-nack``
- NACK broadcast messages and messages directed to this CEC adapter.
- Every byte of the message will be NACKed in case the transmitter
- keeps transmitting after the first byte was NACKed.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] rx-low-drive <bit>``
- Force a Low Drive condition at this bit position. If <op> specifies
- a specific CEC opcode then the bit position must be at least 18,
- otherwise the opcode hasn't been received yet. This tests if the
- transmitter can handle the Low Drive condition correctly and reports
- the error correctly. Note that a Low Drive in the first 4 bits can also
- be interpreted as an Arbitration Lost condition by the transmitter.
- This is implementation dependent.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] rx-add-byte``
- Add a spurious 0x55 byte to the received CEC message, provided
- the message was 15 bytes long or less. This is useful to test
- the high-level protocol since spurious bytes should be ignored.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] rx-remove-byte``
- Remove the last byte from the received CEC message, provided it
- was at least 2 bytes long. This is useful to test the high-level
- protocol since messages that are too short should be ignored.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] rx-arb-lost <poll>``
- Generate a POLL message to trigger an Arbitration Lost condition.
- This command is only allowed for ``<op>`` values of ``next`` or ``all``.
- As soon as a start bit has been received the CEC adapter will switch
- to transmit mode and it will transmit a POLL message. By default this is
- 0x0f, but it can also be specified explicitly via the ``<poll>`` argument.
-
- This command can be used to test the Arbitration Lost condition in
- the remote CEC transmitter. Arbitration happens when two CEC adapters
- start sending a message at the same time. In that case the initiator
- with the most leading zeroes wins and the other transmitter has to
- stop transmitting ('Arbitration Lost'). This is very hard to test,
- except by using this error injection command.
-
- This does not work if the remote CEC transmitter has logical address
- 0 ('TV') since that will always win.
-
-Transmit Messages
------------------
-
-``tx-ignore-nack-until-eom``
- This setting changes the behavior of transmitting CEC messages. Normally
- as soon as the receiver NACKs a byte the transmit will stop, but the
- specification also allows that the full message is transmitted and only
- at the end will the transmitter look at the ACK bit. This is not
- recommended behavior since there is no point in keeping the CEC bus busy
- for longer than is strictly needed. Especially given how slow the bus is.
-
- This setting can be used to test how well a receiver deals with
- transmitters that ignore NACKs until the very end of the message.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-no-eom``
- Don't set the EOM bit. Normally the last byte of the message has the EOM
- (End-Of-Message) bit set. With this command the transmit will just stop
- without ever sending an EOM. This can be used to test how a receiver
- handles this case. Normally receivers have a time-out after which
- they will go back to the Idle state.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-early-eom``
- Set the EOM bit one byte too soon. This obviously only works for messages
- of two bytes or more. The EOM bit will be set for the second-to-last byte
- and not for the final byte. The receiver should ignore the last byte in
- this case. Since the resulting message is likely to be too short for this
- same reason the whole message is typically ignored. The receiver should be
- in Idle state after the last byte was transmitted.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-add-bytes <num>``
- Append ``<num>`` (1-255) spurious bytes to the message. The extra bytes
- have the value of the byte position in the message. So if you transmit a
- two byte message (e.g. a Get CEC Version message) and add 2 bytes, then
- the full message received by the remote CEC adapter is
- ``0x40 0x9f 0x02 0x03``.
-
- This command can be used to test buffer overflows in the receiver. E.g.
- what does it do when it receives more than the maximum message size of 16
- bytes.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-remove-byte``
- Drop the last byte from the message, provided the message is at least
- two bytes long. The receiver should ignore messages that are too short.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-short-bit <bit>``
- Make this bit period shorter than allowed. The bit position cannot be
- an Ack bit. If <op> specifies a specific CEC opcode then the bit position
- must be at least 18, otherwise the opcode hasn't been received yet.
- Normally the period of a data bit is between 2.05 and 2.75 milliseconds.
- With this command the period of this bit is 1.8 milliseconds, this is
- done by reducing the time the CEC bus is high. This bit period is less
- than is allowed and the receiver should respond with a Low Drive
- condition.
-
- This command is ignored for 0 bits in bit positions 0 to 3. This is
- because the receiver also looks for an Arbitration Lost condition in
- those first four bits and it is undefined what will happen if it
- sees a too-short 0 bit.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-long-bit <bit>``
- Make this bit period longer than is valid. The bit position cannot be
- an Ack bit. If <op> specifies a specific CEC opcode then the bit position
- must be at least 18, otherwise the opcode hasn't been received yet.
- Normally the period of a data bit is between 2.05 and 2.75 milliseconds.
- With this command the period of this bit is 2.9 milliseconds, this is
- done by increasing the time the CEC bus is high.
-
- Even though this bit period is longer than is valid it is undefined what
- a receiver will do. It might just accept it, or it might time out and
- return to Idle state. Unfortunately the CEC specification is silent about
- this.
-
- This command is ignored for 0 bits in bit positions 0 to 3. This is
- because the receiver also looks for an Arbitration Lost condition in
- those first four bits and it is undefined what will happen if it
- sees a too-long 0 bit.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-short-start``
- Make this start bit period shorter than allowed. Normally the period of
- a start bit is between 4.3 and 4.7 milliseconds. With this command the
- period of the start bit is 4.1 milliseconds, this is done by reducing
- the time the CEC bus is high. This start bit period is less than is
- allowed and the receiver should return to Idle state when this is detected.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-long-start``
- Make this start bit period longer than is valid. Normally the period of
- a start bit is between 4.3 and 4.7 milliseconds. With this command the
- period of the start bit is 5 milliseconds, this is done by increasing
- the time the CEC bus is high. This start bit period is more than is
- valid and the receiver should return to Idle state when this is detected.
-
- Even though this start bit period is longer than is valid it is undefined
- what a receiver will do. It might just accept it, or it might time out and
- return to Idle state. Unfortunately the CEC specification is silent about
- this.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-last-bit <bit>``
- Just stop transmitting after this bit. If <op> specifies a specific CEC
- opcode then the bit position must be at least 18, otherwise the opcode
- hasn't been received yet. This command can be used to test how the receiver
- reacts when a message just suddenly stops. It should time out and go back
- to Idle state.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-low-drive <bit>``
- Force a Low Drive condition at this bit position. If <op> specifies a
- specific CEC opcode then the bit position must be at least 18, otherwise
- the opcode hasn't been received yet. This can be used to test how the
- receiver handles Low Drive conditions. Note that if this happens at bit
- positions 0-3 the receiver can interpret this as an Arbitration Lost
- condition. This is implementation dependent.
-
-Custom Pulses
--------------
-
-``tx-custom-low-usecs <usecs>``
- This defines the duration in microseconds that the custom pulse pulls
- the CEC line low. The default is 1000 microseconds.
-
-``tx-custom-high-usecs <usecs>``
- This defines the duration in microseconds that the custom pulse keeps the
- CEC line high (unless another CEC adapter pulls it low in that time).
- The default is 1000 microseconds. The total period of the custom pulse is
- ``tx-custom-low-usecs + tx-custom-high-usecs``.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-custom-bit <bit>``
- Send the custom bit instead of a regular data bit. The bit position cannot
- be an Ack bit. If <op> specifies a specific CEC opcode then the bit
- position must be at least 18, otherwise the opcode hasn't been received yet.
-
-``<op>[,<mode>] tx-custom-start``
- Send the custom bit instead of a regular start bit.
-
-``tx-custom-pulse``
- Transmit a single custom pulse as soon as the CEC bus is idle.