Hi Mathias,
On 12/28/2022 7:47 AM, Mathias Nyman wrote:
On 24.12.2022 1.31, Wesley Cheng wrote:
Implement the XHCI operations for allocating and requesting for a secondary interrupter. The secondary interrupter can allow for events for a particular endpoint to be routed to a separate event ring. The event routing is defined when submitting a transfer descriptor to the USB HW. There is a specific field which denotes which interrupter ring to route the event to when the transfer is completed.
An example use case, such as audio packet offloading can utilize a separate event ring, so that these events can be routed to a different processor within the system. The processor would be able to independently submit transfers and handle its completions without intervention from the main processor.
Adding support for more xHCI interrupters than just the primary one make sense for both the offloading and virtualization cases.
xHCI support for several interrupters was probably added to support virtualization, to hand over usb devices to virtual machines and give them their own event ring and MSI/MSI-X vector.
In this offloading case you probably want to avoid xHC interrupts from this device completely, making sure it doesn't wake up the main CPU unnecessarily.
So is the idea here to let xhci driver set up the new interrupter, its event ring, and the endpoint transfer rings. Then pass the address of the endpoint transfer rings and the new event ring to the separate processor.
This separate processor then both polls the event ring for new events, sets its dequeue pointer, clears EHB bit, and queues new TRBs on the transfer ring.
so xhci driver does not handle any events for the audio part, and no audio data URBs are sent to usb core?
Your entire description is correct. To clarify, the interfaces which are non-audio will still be handled by the main processor. For example, a USB headset can have a HID interface as well for volume control. The HID interface will still be handled by the main processor, and events routed to the main event ring.
How about the control part? Is the control endpoint for this device still handled normally by usb core/xhci?
Control transfers are always handled on the main processor. Only audio interface's endpoints.
For the xhci parts I think we should start start by adding generic support for several interrupters, then add parts needed for offloading.
I can split up the patchsets to add interrupters first, then adding the offloading APIs in a separate patch.
Thanks Wesley Cheng