mbox series

[RESEND,v18,0/3] userspace MHI client interface driver

Message ID 1609958656-15064-1-git-send-email-hemantk@codeaurora.org
Headers show
Series userspace MHI client interface driver | expand

Message

Hemant Kumar Jan. 6, 2021, 6:44 p.m. UTC
This patch series adds support for UCI driver. UCI driver enables userspace
clients to communicate to external MHI devices like modem. UCI driver probe
creates standard character device file nodes for userspace clients to
perform open, read, write, poll and release file operations. These file
operations call MHI core layer APIs to perform data transfer using MHI bus
to communicate with MHI device. 

This interface allows exposing modem control channel(s) such as QMI, MBIM,
or AT commands to userspace which can be used to configure the modem using
tools such as libqmi, ModemManager, minicom (for AT), etc over MHI. This is
required as there are no kernel APIs to access modem control path for device
configuration. Data path transporting the network payload (IP), however, is
routed to the Linux network via the mhi-net driver. Currently driver supports
QMI channel. libqmi is userspace MHI client which communicates to a QMI
service using QMI channel. Please refer to
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/libqmi/ for additional information
on libqmi.

Patch is tested using arm64 and x86 based platform.

V18:
- Updated commit text for UCI to clarify why this driver is required for QMI
  over MHI. Also updated cover letter with same information.

v17:
- Updated commit text for UCI driver by mentioning about libqmi open-source
  userspace program that will be talking to this UCI kernel driver.
- UCI driver depends upon patch "bus: mhi: core: Add helper API to return number
  of free TREs".

v16:
- Removed reference of WLAN as an external MHI device in documentation and
  cover letter.

v15:
- Updated documentation related to poll and release operations.

V14:
- Fixed device file node format to /dev/<mhi_dev_name> instead of
  /dev/mhi_<mhi_dev_name> because "mhi" is already part of mhi device name.
  For example old format: /dev/mhi_mhi0_QMI new format: /dev/mhi0_QMI.
- Updated MHI documentation to reflect index mhi controller name in
  QMI usage example.

V13:
- Removed LOOPBACK channel from mhi_device_id table from this patch series.
  Pushing a new patch series to add support for LOOPBACK channel and the user
  space test application. Also removed the description from kernel documentation.
- Added QMI channel to mhi_device_id table. QMI channel has existing libqmi
  support from user space.
- Updated kernel Documentation for QMI channel and provided external reference
  for libqmi.
- Updated device file node name by appending mhi device name only, which already
  includes mhi controller device name.

V12:
- Added loopback test driver under selftest/drivers/mhi. Updated kernel
  documentation for the usage of the loopback test application.
- Addressed review comments for renaming variable names, updated inline
  comments and removed two redundant dev_dbg.

V11:
- Fixed review comments for UCI documentation by expanding TLAs and rewording
  some sentences.

V10:
- Replaced mutex_lock with mutex_lock_interruptible in read() and write() file
  ops call back.

V9:
- Renamed dl_lock to dl_pending _lock and pending list to dl_pending for
  clarity.
- Used read lock to protect cur_buf.
- Change transfer status check logic and only consider 0 and -EOVERFLOW as
  only success.
- Added __int to module init function.
- Print channel name instead of minor number upon successful probe.

V8:
- Fixed kernel test robot compilation error by changing %lu to %zu for
  size_t.
- Replaced uci with UCI in Kconfig, commit text, and comments in driver
  code.
- Fixed minor style related comments.

V7:
- Decoupled uci device and uci channel objects. uci device is
  associated with device file node. uci channel is associated
  with MHI channels. uci device refers to uci channel to perform
  MHI channel operations for device file operations like read()
  and write(). uci device increments its reference count for
  every open(). uci device calls mhi_uci_dev_start_chan() to start
  the MHI channel. uci channel object is tracking number of times
  MHI channel is referred. This allows to keep the MHI channel in
  start state until last release() is called. After that uci channel
  reference count goes to 0 and uci channel clean up is performed
  which stops the MHI channel. After the last call to release() if
  driver is removed uci reference count becomes 0 and uci object is
  cleaned up.
- Use separate uci channel read and write lock to fine grain locking
  between reader and writer.
- Use uci device lock to synchronize open, release and driver remove.
- Optimize for downlink only or uplink only UCI device.

V6:
- Moved uci.c to mhi directory.
- Updated Kconfig to add module information.
- Updated Makefile to rename uci object file name as mhi_uci
- Removed kref for open count

V5:
- Removed mhi_uci_drv structure.
- Used idr instead of creating global list of uci devices.
- Used kref instead of local ref counting for uci device and
  open count.
- Removed unlikely macro.

V4:
- Fix locking to protect proper struct members.
- Updated documentation describing uci client driver use cases.
- Fixed uci ref counting in mhi_uci_open for error case.
- Addressed style related review comments.

V3: Added documentation for MHI UCI driver.

V2:
- Added mutex lock to prevent multiple readers to access same
- mhi buffer which can result into use after free.

Hemant Kumar (3):
  bus: mhi: core: Move MHI_MAX_MTU to external header file
  docs: Add documentation for userspace client interface
  bus: mhi: Add userspace client interface driver

 Documentation/mhi/index.rst     |   1 +
 Documentation/mhi/uci.rst       |  95 ++++++
 drivers/bus/mhi/Kconfig         |  13 +
 drivers/bus/mhi/Makefile        |   3 +
 drivers/bus/mhi/core/internal.h |   1 -
 drivers/bus/mhi/uci.c           | 664 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 include/linux/mhi.h             |   3 +
 7 files changed, 779 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
 create mode 100644 Documentation/mhi/uci.rst
 create mode 100644 drivers/bus/mhi/uci.c

Comments

Manivannan Sadhasivam Jan. 13, 2021, 3:26 p.m. UTC | #1
Hi Greg,

On Wed, Jan 06, 2021 at 10:44:13AM -0800, Hemant Kumar wrote:
> This patch series adds support for UCI driver. UCI driver enables userspace

> clients to communicate to external MHI devices like modem. UCI driver probe

> creates standard character device file nodes for userspace clients to

> perform open, read, write, poll and release file operations. These file

> operations call MHI core layer APIs to perform data transfer using MHI bus

> to communicate with MHI device. 

> 

> This interface allows exposing modem control channel(s) such as QMI, MBIM,

> or AT commands to userspace which can be used to configure the modem using

> tools such as libqmi, ModemManager, minicom (for AT), etc over MHI. This is

> required as there are no kernel APIs to access modem control path for device

> configuration. Data path transporting the network payload (IP), however, is

> routed to the Linux network via the mhi-net driver. Currently driver supports

> QMI channel. libqmi is userspace MHI client which communicates to a QMI

> service using QMI channel. Please refer to

> https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/libqmi/ for additional information

> on libqmi.

> 

> Patch is tested using arm64 and x86 based platform.

> 


This series looks good to me and I'd like to merge it into mhi-next. You
shared your reviews on the previous revisions, so I'd like to get your
opinion first.

Thanks,
Mani

> V18:

> - Updated commit text for UCI to clarify why this driver is required for QMI

>   over MHI. Also updated cover letter with same information.

> 

> v17:

> - Updated commit text for UCI driver by mentioning about libqmi open-source

>   userspace program that will be talking to this UCI kernel driver.

> - UCI driver depends upon patch "bus: mhi: core: Add helper API to return number

>   of free TREs".

> 

> v16:

> - Removed reference of WLAN as an external MHI device in documentation and

>   cover letter.

> 

> v15:

> - Updated documentation related to poll and release operations.

> 

> V14:

> - Fixed device file node format to /dev/<mhi_dev_name> instead of

>   /dev/mhi_<mhi_dev_name> because "mhi" is already part of mhi device name.

>   For example old format: /dev/mhi_mhi0_QMI new format: /dev/mhi0_QMI.

> - Updated MHI documentation to reflect index mhi controller name in

>   QMI usage example.

> 

> V13:

> - Removed LOOPBACK channel from mhi_device_id table from this patch series.

>   Pushing a new patch series to add support for LOOPBACK channel and the user

>   space test application. Also removed the description from kernel documentation.

> - Added QMI channel to mhi_device_id table. QMI channel has existing libqmi

>   support from user space.

> - Updated kernel Documentation for QMI channel and provided external reference

>   for libqmi.

> - Updated device file node name by appending mhi device name only, which already

>   includes mhi controller device name.

> 

> V12:

> - Added loopback test driver under selftest/drivers/mhi. Updated kernel

>   documentation for the usage of the loopback test application.

> - Addressed review comments for renaming variable names, updated inline

>   comments and removed two redundant dev_dbg.

> 

> V11:

> - Fixed review comments for UCI documentation by expanding TLAs and rewording

>   some sentences.

> 

> V10:

> - Replaced mutex_lock with mutex_lock_interruptible in read() and write() file

>   ops call back.

> 

> V9:

> - Renamed dl_lock to dl_pending _lock and pending list to dl_pending for

>   clarity.

> - Used read lock to protect cur_buf.

> - Change transfer status check logic and only consider 0 and -EOVERFLOW as

>   only success.

> - Added __int to module init function.

> - Print channel name instead of minor number upon successful probe.

> 

> V8:

> - Fixed kernel test robot compilation error by changing %lu to %zu for

>   size_t.

> - Replaced uci with UCI in Kconfig, commit text, and comments in driver

>   code.

> - Fixed minor style related comments.

> 

> V7:

> - Decoupled uci device and uci channel objects. uci device is

>   associated with device file node. uci channel is associated

>   with MHI channels. uci device refers to uci channel to perform

>   MHI channel operations for device file operations like read()

>   and write(). uci device increments its reference count for

>   every open(). uci device calls mhi_uci_dev_start_chan() to start

>   the MHI channel. uci channel object is tracking number of times

>   MHI channel is referred. This allows to keep the MHI channel in

>   start state until last release() is called. After that uci channel

>   reference count goes to 0 and uci channel clean up is performed

>   which stops the MHI channel. After the last call to release() if

>   driver is removed uci reference count becomes 0 and uci object is

>   cleaned up.

> - Use separate uci channel read and write lock to fine grain locking

>   between reader and writer.

> - Use uci device lock to synchronize open, release and driver remove.

> - Optimize for downlink only or uplink only UCI device.

> 

> V6:

> - Moved uci.c to mhi directory.

> - Updated Kconfig to add module information.

> - Updated Makefile to rename uci object file name as mhi_uci

> - Removed kref for open count

> 

> V5:

> - Removed mhi_uci_drv structure.

> - Used idr instead of creating global list of uci devices.

> - Used kref instead of local ref counting for uci device and

>   open count.

> - Removed unlikely macro.

> 

> V4:

> - Fix locking to protect proper struct members.

> - Updated documentation describing uci client driver use cases.

> - Fixed uci ref counting in mhi_uci_open for error case.

> - Addressed style related review comments.

> 

> V3: Added documentation for MHI UCI driver.

> 

> V2:

> - Added mutex lock to prevent multiple readers to access same

> - mhi buffer which can result into use after free.

> 

> Hemant Kumar (3):

>   bus: mhi: core: Move MHI_MAX_MTU to external header file

>   docs: Add documentation for userspace client interface

>   bus: mhi: Add userspace client interface driver

> 

>  Documentation/mhi/index.rst     |   1 +

>  Documentation/mhi/uci.rst       |  95 ++++++

>  drivers/bus/mhi/Kconfig         |  13 +

>  drivers/bus/mhi/Makefile        |   3 +

>  drivers/bus/mhi/core/internal.h |   1 -

>  drivers/bus/mhi/uci.c           | 664 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

>  include/linux/mhi.h             |   3 +

>  7 files changed, 779 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)

>  create mode 100644 Documentation/mhi/uci.rst

>  create mode 100644 drivers/bus/mhi/uci.c

> 

> -- 

> The Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of the Code Aurora Forum,

> a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project

>
Manivannan Sadhasivam Jan. 19, 2021, 9:42 a.m. UTC | #2
Hi Greg,

On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 08:56:25PM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
> Hi Greg,

> 

> On Wed, Jan 06, 2021 at 10:44:13AM -0800, Hemant Kumar wrote:

> > This patch series adds support for UCI driver. UCI driver enables userspace

> > clients to communicate to external MHI devices like modem. UCI driver probe

> > creates standard character device file nodes for userspace clients to

> > perform open, read, write, poll and release file operations. These file

> > operations call MHI core layer APIs to perform data transfer using MHI bus

> > to communicate with MHI device. 

> > 

> > This interface allows exposing modem control channel(s) such as QMI, MBIM,

> > or AT commands to userspace which can be used to configure the modem using

> > tools such as libqmi, ModemManager, minicom (for AT), etc over MHI. This is

> > required as there are no kernel APIs to access modem control path for device

> > configuration. Data path transporting the network payload (IP), however, is

> > routed to the Linux network via the mhi-net driver. Currently driver supports

> > QMI channel. libqmi is userspace MHI client which communicates to a QMI

> > service using QMI channel. Please refer to

> > https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/libqmi/ for additional information

> > on libqmi.

> > 

> > Patch is tested using arm64 and x86 based platform.

> > 

> 

> This series looks good to me and I'd like to merge it into mhi-next. You

> shared your reviews on the previous revisions, so I'd like to get your

> opinion first.

> 


Ping!

Thanks,
Mani

> Thanks,

> Mani

> 

> > V18:

> > - Updated commit text for UCI to clarify why this driver is required for QMI

> >   over MHI. Also updated cover letter with same information.

> > 

> > v17:

> > - Updated commit text for UCI driver by mentioning about libqmi open-source

> >   userspace program that will be talking to this UCI kernel driver.

> > - UCI driver depends upon patch "bus: mhi: core: Add helper API to return number

> >   of free TREs".

> > 

> > v16:

> > - Removed reference of WLAN as an external MHI device in documentation and

> >   cover letter.

> > 

> > v15:

> > - Updated documentation related to poll and release operations.

> > 

> > V14:

> > - Fixed device file node format to /dev/<mhi_dev_name> instead of

> >   /dev/mhi_<mhi_dev_name> because "mhi" is already part of mhi device name.

> >   For example old format: /dev/mhi_mhi0_QMI new format: /dev/mhi0_QMI.

> > - Updated MHI documentation to reflect index mhi controller name in

> >   QMI usage example.

> > 

> > V13:

> > - Removed LOOPBACK channel from mhi_device_id table from this patch series.

> >   Pushing a new patch series to add support for LOOPBACK channel and the user

> >   space test application. Also removed the description from kernel documentation.

> > - Added QMI channel to mhi_device_id table. QMI channel has existing libqmi

> >   support from user space.

> > - Updated kernel Documentation for QMI channel and provided external reference

> >   for libqmi.

> > - Updated device file node name by appending mhi device name only, which already

> >   includes mhi controller device name.

> > 

> > V12:

> > - Added loopback test driver under selftest/drivers/mhi. Updated kernel

> >   documentation for the usage of the loopback test application.

> > - Addressed review comments for renaming variable names, updated inline

> >   comments and removed two redundant dev_dbg.

> > 

> > V11:

> > - Fixed review comments for UCI documentation by expanding TLAs and rewording

> >   some sentences.

> > 

> > V10:

> > - Replaced mutex_lock with mutex_lock_interruptible in read() and write() file

> >   ops call back.

> > 

> > V9:

> > - Renamed dl_lock to dl_pending _lock and pending list to dl_pending for

> >   clarity.

> > - Used read lock to protect cur_buf.

> > - Change transfer status check logic and only consider 0 and -EOVERFLOW as

> >   only success.

> > - Added __int to module init function.

> > - Print channel name instead of minor number upon successful probe.

> > 

> > V8:

> > - Fixed kernel test robot compilation error by changing %lu to %zu for

> >   size_t.

> > - Replaced uci with UCI in Kconfig, commit text, and comments in driver

> >   code.

> > - Fixed minor style related comments.

> > 

> > V7:

> > - Decoupled uci device and uci channel objects. uci device is

> >   associated with device file node. uci channel is associated

> >   with MHI channels. uci device refers to uci channel to perform

> >   MHI channel operations for device file operations like read()

> >   and write(). uci device increments its reference count for

> >   every open(). uci device calls mhi_uci_dev_start_chan() to start

> >   the MHI channel. uci channel object is tracking number of times

> >   MHI channel is referred. This allows to keep the MHI channel in

> >   start state until last release() is called. After that uci channel

> >   reference count goes to 0 and uci channel clean up is performed

> >   which stops the MHI channel. After the last call to release() if

> >   driver is removed uci reference count becomes 0 and uci object is

> >   cleaned up.

> > - Use separate uci channel read and write lock to fine grain locking

> >   between reader and writer.

> > - Use uci device lock to synchronize open, release and driver remove.

> > - Optimize for downlink only or uplink only UCI device.

> > 

> > V6:

> > - Moved uci.c to mhi directory.

> > - Updated Kconfig to add module information.

> > - Updated Makefile to rename uci object file name as mhi_uci

> > - Removed kref for open count

> > 

> > V5:

> > - Removed mhi_uci_drv structure.

> > - Used idr instead of creating global list of uci devices.

> > - Used kref instead of local ref counting for uci device and

> >   open count.

> > - Removed unlikely macro.

> > 

> > V4:

> > - Fix locking to protect proper struct members.

> > - Updated documentation describing uci client driver use cases.

> > - Fixed uci ref counting in mhi_uci_open for error case.

> > - Addressed style related review comments.

> > 

> > V3: Added documentation for MHI UCI driver.

> > 

> > V2:

> > - Added mutex lock to prevent multiple readers to access same

> > - mhi buffer which can result into use after free.

> > 

> > Hemant Kumar (3):

> >   bus: mhi: core: Move MHI_MAX_MTU to external header file

> >   docs: Add documentation for userspace client interface

> >   bus: mhi: Add userspace client interface driver

> > 

> >  Documentation/mhi/index.rst     |   1 +

> >  Documentation/mhi/uci.rst       |  95 ++++++

> >  drivers/bus/mhi/Kconfig         |  13 +

> >  drivers/bus/mhi/Makefile        |   3 +

> >  drivers/bus/mhi/core/internal.h |   1 -

> >  drivers/bus/mhi/uci.c           | 664 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

> >  include/linux/mhi.h             |   3 +

> >  7 files changed, 779 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)

> >  create mode 100644 Documentation/mhi/uci.rst

> >  create mode 100644 drivers/bus/mhi/uci.c

> > 

> > -- 

> > The Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of the Code Aurora Forum,

> > a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project

> >
Greg KH Jan. 19, 2021, 10:28 a.m. UTC | #3
On Tue, Jan 19, 2021 at 03:12:50PM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
> Hi Greg,

> 

> On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 08:56:25PM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:

> > Hi Greg,

> > 

> > On Wed, Jan 06, 2021 at 10:44:13AM -0800, Hemant Kumar wrote:

> > > This patch series adds support for UCI driver. UCI driver enables userspace

> > > clients to communicate to external MHI devices like modem. UCI driver probe

> > > creates standard character device file nodes for userspace clients to

> > > perform open, read, write, poll and release file operations. These file

> > > operations call MHI core layer APIs to perform data transfer using MHI bus

> > > to communicate with MHI device. 

> > > 

> > > This interface allows exposing modem control channel(s) such as QMI, MBIM,

> > > or AT commands to userspace which can be used to configure the modem using

> > > tools such as libqmi, ModemManager, minicom (for AT), etc over MHI. This is

> > > required as there are no kernel APIs to access modem control path for device

> > > configuration. Data path transporting the network payload (IP), however, is

> > > routed to the Linux network via the mhi-net driver. Currently driver supports

> > > QMI channel. libqmi is userspace MHI client which communicates to a QMI

> > > service using QMI channel. Please refer to

> > > https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/libqmi/ for additional information

> > > on libqmi.

> > > 

> > > Patch is tested using arm64 and x86 based platform.

> > > 

> > 

> > This series looks good to me and I'd like to merge it into mhi-next. You

> > shared your reviews on the previous revisions, so I'd like to get your

> > opinion first.

> > 

> 

> Ping!


Sorry, it's in my to-review queue, buried with other stuff at the
moment, but it's not lost...

greg k-h
Greg KH Jan. 27, 2021, 3:15 p.m. UTC | #4
On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 08:56:25PM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
> Hi Greg,
> 
> On Wed, Jan 06, 2021 at 10:44:13AM -0800, Hemant Kumar wrote:
> > This patch series adds support for UCI driver. UCI driver enables userspace
> > clients to communicate to external MHI devices like modem. UCI driver probe
> > creates standard character device file nodes for userspace clients to
> > perform open, read, write, poll and release file operations. These file
> > operations call MHI core layer APIs to perform data transfer using MHI bus
> > to communicate with MHI device. 
> > 
> > This interface allows exposing modem control channel(s) such as QMI, MBIM,
> > or AT commands to userspace which can be used to configure the modem using
> > tools such as libqmi, ModemManager, minicom (for AT), etc over MHI. This is
> > required as there are no kernel APIs to access modem control path for device
> > configuration. Data path transporting the network payload (IP), however, is
> > routed to the Linux network via the mhi-net driver. Currently driver supports
> > QMI channel. libqmi is userspace MHI client which communicates to a QMI
> > service using QMI channel. Please refer to
> > https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/libqmi/ for additional information
> > on libqmi.
> > 
> > Patch is tested using arm64 and x86 based platform.
> > 
> 
> This series looks good to me and I'd like to merge it into mhi-next. You
> shared your reviews on the previous revisions, so I'd like to get your
> opinion first.

If you get the networking people to give you an ack on this, it's fine
with me.

thanks,

greg k-h
Manivannan Sadhasivam Feb. 1, 2021, 10:55 a.m. UTC | #5
Hi Greg,

On Wed, Jan 27, 2021 at 04:15:42PM +0100, Greg KH wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 08:56:25PM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:

> > Hi Greg,

> > 

> > On Wed, Jan 06, 2021 at 10:44:13AM -0800, Hemant Kumar wrote:

> > > This patch series adds support for UCI driver. UCI driver enables userspace

> > > clients to communicate to external MHI devices like modem. UCI driver probe

> > > creates standard character device file nodes for userspace clients to

> > > perform open, read, write, poll and release file operations. These file

> > > operations call MHI core layer APIs to perform data transfer using MHI bus

> > > to communicate with MHI device. 

> > > 

> > > This interface allows exposing modem control channel(s) such as QMI, MBIM,

> > > or AT commands to userspace which can be used to configure the modem using

> > > tools such as libqmi, ModemManager, minicom (for AT), etc over MHI. This is

> > > required as there are no kernel APIs to access modem control path for device

> > > configuration. Data path transporting the network payload (IP), however, is

> > > routed to the Linux network via the mhi-net driver. Currently driver supports

> > > QMI channel. libqmi is userspace MHI client which communicates to a QMI

> > > service using QMI channel. Please refer to

> > > https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/libqmi/ for additional information

> > > on libqmi.

> > > 

> > > Patch is tested using arm64 and x86 based platform.

> > > 

> > 

> > This series looks good to me and I'd like to merge it into mhi-next. You

> > shared your reviews on the previous revisions, so I'd like to get your

> > opinion first.

> 

> If you get the networking people to give you an ack on this, it's fine

> with me.

> 


As discussed in previous iteration, this series is not belonging to networking
subsystem. The functionality provided by this series allows us to configure the
modem over MHI bus and the rest of the networking stuff happens over the
networking subsystem as usual.

This holds the same with USB and serial modems which we are having over decades
in mainline.

Thanks,
Mani

> thanks,

> 

> greg k-h
Manivannan Sadhasivam Feb. 2, 2021, 4:22 a.m. UTC | #6
+ Jakub, Dave

On Mon, Feb 01, 2021 at 05:43:22PM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 01, 2021 at 12:15:51PM +0100, Greg KH wrote:

> > On Mon, Feb 01, 2021 at 04:25:49PM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:

> > > Hi Greg,

> > > 

> > > On Wed, Jan 27, 2021 at 04:15:42PM +0100, Greg KH wrote:

> > > > On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 08:56:25PM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:

> > > > > Hi Greg,

> > > > > 

> > > > > On Wed, Jan 06, 2021 at 10:44:13AM -0800, Hemant Kumar wrote:

> > > > > > This patch series adds support for UCI driver. UCI driver enables userspace

> > > > > > clients to communicate to external MHI devices like modem. UCI driver probe

> > > > > > creates standard character device file nodes for userspace clients to

> > > > > > perform open, read, write, poll and release file operations. These file

> > > > > > operations call MHI core layer APIs to perform data transfer using MHI bus

> > > > > > to communicate with MHI device. 

> > > > > > 

> > > > > > This interface allows exposing modem control channel(s) such as QMI, MBIM,

> > > > > > or AT commands to userspace which can be used to configure the modem using

> > > > > > tools such as libqmi, ModemManager, minicom (for AT), etc over MHI. This is

> > > > > > required as there are no kernel APIs to access modem control path for device

> > > > > > configuration. Data path transporting the network payload (IP), however, is

> > > > > > routed to the Linux network via the mhi-net driver. Currently driver supports

> > > > > > QMI channel. libqmi is userspace MHI client which communicates to a QMI

> > > > > > service using QMI channel. Please refer to

> > > > > > https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/libqmi/ for additional information

> > > > > > on libqmi.

> > > > > > 

> > > > > > Patch is tested using arm64 and x86 based platform.

> > > > > > 

> > > > > 

> > > > > This series looks good to me and I'd like to merge it into mhi-next. You

> > > > > shared your reviews on the previous revisions, so I'd like to get your

> > > > > opinion first.

> > > > 

> > > > If you get the networking people to give you an ack on this, it's fine

> > > > with me.

> > > > 

> > > 

> > > As discussed in previous iteration, this series is not belonging to networking

> > > subsystem. The functionality provided by this series allows us to configure the

> > > modem over MHI bus and the rest of the networking stuff happens over the

> > > networking subsystem as usual.

> > 

> > Great, then it should be easy to get their acceptance :)

> > 

> > > This holds the same with USB and serial modems which we are having over decades

> > > in mainline.

> > 

> > I don't see the connection here, sorry.

> > 

> 

> For instance USB_NET_CDC_MBIM driver creates the /dev/cdc-wdmX chardev node for

> configuring the modems which supports MBIM protocol over USB. Like that, this

> driver creates /dev/mhiX_MBIM chardev node for configuring the modem over MHI

> bus instead of USB. The question arised why we are creating a chardev node for

> each supported configuration (channels in the case of MHI) and why can't we use

> the existing /dev/cdc-wdmZ interfaces? The anwser is there is no standard

> subsystem for WWAN and all the drivers represent a chardev which gets used by

> the userspace tools such a Network manager for establishing connection.

> 

> And /dev/cdc-wdmX is restricted to the USB CDC devices.

> 

> Hope this clarifies!

> 


Jakub, Dave, Adding you both to get your reviews on this series. I've
provided an explanation above and in the previous iteration [1].

Thanks,
Mani

[1] https://lkml.org/lkml/2020/12/12/16

> Thanks,

> Mani

> 

> > thanks,

> > 

> > greg k-h
Jakub Kicinski Feb. 3, 2021, 4:10 a.m. UTC | #7
On Tue, 2 Feb 2021 09:52:08 +0530 Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
> > > I don't see the connection here, sorry.

> > 

> > For instance USB_NET_CDC_MBIM driver creates the /dev/cdc-wdmX chardev node for

> > configuring the modems which supports MBIM protocol over USB. Like that, this

> > driver creates /dev/mhiX_MBIM chardev node for configuring the modem over MHI

> > bus instead of USB. The question arised why we are creating a chardev node for

> > each supported configuration (channels in the case of MHI) and why can't we use

> > the existing /dev/cdc-wdmZ interfaces? The anwser is there is no standard

> > subsystem for WWAN and all the drivers represent a chardev which gets used by

> > the userspace tools such a Network manager for establishing connection.

> > 

> > And /dev/cdc-wdmX is restricted to the USB CDC devices.

> > 

> > Hope this clarifies!

> 

> Jakub, Dave, Adding you both to get your reviews on this series. I've

> provided an explanation above and in the previous iteration [1].


Let's be clear what the review would be for. Yet another QMI chardev 
or the "UCI" direct generic user space to firmware pipe?
Manivannan Sadhasivam Feb. 3, 2021, 4:15 a.m. UTC | #8
Hi Jakub, 

On 3 February 2021 9:40:08 AM IST, Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> wrote:
>On Tue, 2 Feb 2021 09:52:08 +0530 Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:

>> > > I don't see the connection here, sorry.

>> > 

>> > For instance USB_NET_CDC_MBIM driver creates the /dev/cdc-wdmX

>chardev node for

>> > configuring the modems which supports MBIM protocol over USB. Like

>that, this

>> > driver creates /dev/mhiX_MBIM chardev node for configuring the

>modem over MHI

>> > bus instead of USB. The question arised why we are creating a

>chardev node for

>> > each supported configuration (channels in the case of MHI) and why

>can't we use

>> > the existing /dev/cdc-wdmZ interfaces? The anwser is there is no

>standard

>> > subsystem for WWAN and all the drivers represent a chardev which

>gets used by

>> > the userspace tools such a Network manager for establishing

>connection.

>> > 

>> > And /dev/cdc-wdmX is restricted to the USB CDC devices.

>> > 

>> > Hope this clarifies!

>> 

>> Jakub, Dave, Adding you both to get your reviews on this series. I've

>> provided an explanation above and in the previous iteration [1].

>

>Let's be clear what the review would be for. Yet another QMI chardev 

>or the "UCI" direct generic user space to firmware pipe?


The current patchset only supports QMI channel so I'd request you to review the chardev node created for it. The QMI chardev node created will be unique for the MHI bus and the number of nodes depends on the MHI controllers in the system (typically 1 but not limited). 

Thanks, 
Mani

-- 
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
Jakub Kicinski Feb. 3, 2021, 6:05 p.m. UTC | #9
On Wed, 03 Feb 2021 09:45:06 +0530 Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
> >> Jakub, Dave, Adding you both to get your reviews on this series. I've

> >> provided an explanation above and in the previous iteration [1].  

> >

> >Let's be clear what the review would be for. Yet another QMI chardev 

> >or the "UCI" direct generic user space to firmware pipe?  

> 

> The current patchset only supports QMI channel so I'd request you to

> review the chardev node created for it. The QMI chardev node created

> will be unique for the MHI bus and the number of nodes depends on the

> MHI controllers in the system (typically 1 but not limited). 


If you want to add a MHI QMI driver, please write a QMI-only driver.
This generic "userspace client interface" driver is a no go. Nobody will
have the time and attention to police what you throw in there later.
Loic Poulain Feb. 3, 2021, 6:28 p.m. UTC | #10
Hi Jakub,

On Wed, 3 Feb 2021 at 19:05, Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> wrote:
>
> On Wed, 03 Feb 2021 09:45:06 +0530 Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
> > >> Jakub, Dave, Adding you both to get your reviews on this series. I've
> > >> provided an explanation above and in the previous iteration [1].
> > >
> > >Let's be clear what the review would be for. Yet another QMI chardev
> > >or the "UCI" direct generic user space to firmware pipe?
> >
> > The current patchset only supports QMI channel so I'd request you to
> > review the chardev node created for it. The QMI chardev node created
> > will be unique for the MHI bus and the number of nodes depends on the
> > MHI controllers in the system (typically 1 but not limited).
>
> If you want to add a MHI QMI driver, please write a QMI-only driver.
> This generic "userspace client interface" driver is a no go. Nobody will
> have the time and attention to police what you throw in there later.

Think it should be seen as filtered userspace access to MHI bus
(filtered because not all channels are exposed), again it's not
specific to MHI, any bus in Linux offers that (i2c, spi, usb, serial,
etc...). It will not be specific to QMI, since we will also need it
for MBIM (modem control path), AT commands, and GPS (NMEA frames), all
these protocols are usually handled by userspace tools and not linked
to any internal Linux framework, so it would be better not having a
dedicated chardev for each of them.

Regards,
Loic
Bjorn Andersson Feb. 3, 2021, 6:34 p.m. UTC | #11
On Wed 03 Feb 12:05 CST 2021, Jakub Kicinski wrote:

> On Wed, 03 Feb 2021 09:45:06 +0530 Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
> > >> Jakub, Dave, Adding you both to get your reviews on this series. I've
> > >> provided an explanation above and in the previous iteration [1].  
> > >
> > >Let's be clear what the review would be for. Yet another QMI chardev 
> > >or the "UCI" direct generic user space to firmware pipe?  
> > 
> > The current patchset only supports QMI channel so I'd request you to
> > review the chardev node created for it. The QMI chardev node created
> > will be unique for the MHI bus and the number of nodes depends on the
> > MHI controllers in the system (typically 1 but not limited). 
> 
> If you want to add a MHI QMI driver, please write a QMI-only driver.

But said QMI driver would be identical to what is proposed here, given
that the libqmi [1] communicates in the raw messages of the given MHI
channel. Should I then propose another copy of the same driver for
transporting debug messages between [2] and the modem? And a third copy
to support firmware flashing using [3].

[1] https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/libqmi/
[2] https://github.com/andersson/diag
[3] https://github.com/andersson/qdl

> This generic "userspace client interface" driver is a no go. Nobody will
> have the time and attention to police what you throw in there later.

PCI devices implementing this must have a MHI controller driver, which
explicitly needs to specify which logical channels should be exposed to
userspace using the UCI driver. So in contrast to things like USBFS or
the tty layer - which is used to implement "network devices" today -
there is a natural point of policing this.

Regards,
Bjorn
Aleksander Morgado Feb. 9, 2021, 9:20 a.m. UTC | #12
Hey Jakub

On Wed, Feb 3, 2021 at 7:41 PM Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> wrote:
>
> On Wed, 3 Feb 2021 19:28:28 +0100 Loic Poulain wrote:
> > On Wed, 3 Feb 2021 at 19:05, Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> wrote:
> > > On Wed, 03 Feb 2021 09:45:06 +0530 Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
> > > > The current patchset only supports QMI channel so I'd request you to
> > > > review the chardev node created for it. The QMI chardev node created
> > > > will be unique for the MHI bus and the number of nodes depends on the
> > > > MHI controllers in the system (typically 1 but not limited).
> > >
> > > If you want to add a MHI QMI driver, please write a QMI-only driver.
> > > This generic "userspace client interface" driver is a no go. Nobody will
> > > have the time and attention to police what you throw in there later.
> >
> > Think it should be seen as filtered userspace access to MHI bus
> > (filtered because not all channels are exposed), again it's not
> > specific to MHI, any bus in Linux offers that (i2c, spi, usb, serial,
> > etc...). It will not be specific to QMI, since we will also need it
> > for MBIM (modem control path), AT commands, and GPS (NMEA frames), all
> > these protocols are usually handled by userspace tools and not linked
> > to any internal Linux framework, so it would be better not having a
> > dedicated chardev for each of them.
>
> The more people argue for this backdoor interface the more distrustful
> of it we'll become. Keep going at your own peril.

Are your worries that this driver will end up being used for many more
things than the initial wwan control port management being suggested
here? If so, what would be the suggested alternative for this
integration? Just a different way to access those control ports
instead of a chardev? A per port type specific driver?

This may be a stupid suggestion, but would the integration look less a
backdoor if it would have been named "mhi_wwan" and it exposed already
all the AT+DIAG+QMI+MBIM+NMEA possible channels as chardevs, not just
QMI?
Jakub Kicinski Feb. 9, 2021, 4:17 p.m. UTC | #13
On Tue, 9 Feb 2021 10:20:30 +0100 Aleksander Morgado wrote:
> This may be a stupid suggestion, but would the integration look less a
> backdoor if it would have been named "mhi_wwan" and it exposed already
> all the AT+DIAG+QMI+MBIM+NMEA possible channels as chardevs, not just
> QMI?

What's DIAG? Who's going to remember that this is a backdoor driver 
a year from now when Qualcomm sends a one liner patches which just 
adds a single ID to open another channel?
Manivannan Sadhasivam Feb. 10, 2021, 6:25 a.m. UTC | #14
On Tue, Feb 09, 2021 at 08:17:44AM -0800, Jakub Kicinski wrote:
> On Tue, 9 Feb 2021 10:20:30 +0100 Aleksander Morgado wrote:
> > This may be a stupid suggestion, but would the integration look less a
> > backdoor if it would have been named "mhi_wwan" and it exposed already
> > all the AT+DIAG+QMI+MBIM+NMEA possible channels as chardevs, not just
> > QMI?
> 
> What's DIAG? Who's going to remember that this is a backdoor driver 
> a year from now when Qualcomm sends a one liner patches which just 
> adds a single ID to open another channel?

I really appreciate your feedback on this driver eventhough I'm not
inclined with you calling this driver a "backdoor interface". But can
you please propose a solution on how to make this driver a good one as
per your thoughts?

I really don't know what bothers you even if the userspace tools making
use of these chardevs are available openly (you can do the audit and see
if anything wrong we are doing). And exposing the raw access to the
hardware is not a new thing in kernel. There are several existing
subsystems/drivers does this as pointed out by Bjorn. Moreover we don't
have in-kernel APIs for the functionalities exposed by this driver and
creating one is not feasible as explained by many.

So please let us know the path forward on this series. We are open to
any suggestions but you haven't provided one till now.

Thanks,
Mani
Jakub Kicinski Feb. 10, 2021, 6:41 p.m. UTC | #15
On Wed, 10 Feb 2021 11:55:31 +0530 Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 09, 2021 at 08:17:44AM -0800, Jakub Kicinski wrote:
> > On Tue, 9 Feb 2021 10:20:30 +0100 Aleksander Morgado wrote:  
> > > This may be a stupid suggestion, but would the integration look less a
> > > backdoor if it would have been named "mhi_wwan" and it exposed already
> > > all the AT+DIAG+QMI+MBIM+NMEA possible channels as chardevs, not just
> > > QMI?  
> > 
> > What's DIAG? Who's going to remember that this is a backdoor driver 
> > a year from now when Qualcomm sends a one liner patches which just 
> > adds a single ID to open another channel?  
> 
> I really appreciate your feedback on this driver eventhough I'm not
> inclined with you calling this driver a "backdoor interface". But can
> you please propose a solution on how to make this driver a good one as
> per your thoughts?
> 
> I really don't know what bothers you even if the userspace tools making
> use of these chardevs are available openly (you can do the audit and see
> if anything wrong we are doing).

What bothers me is maintaining shim drivers which just shuttle opaque
messages between user space and firmware. One of which definitely is,
and the other may well be, proprietary. This is an open source project,
users are supposed to be able to meaningfully change the behavior of
the system.

What bothers me is that we have 3 WWAN vendors all doing their own
thing and no common Linux API for WWAN. It may have been fine 10 years
ago, but WWAN is increasingly complex and important.

> And exposing the raw access to the
> hardware is not a new thing in kernel. There are several existing
> subsystems/drivers does this as pointed out by Bjorn. Moreover we don't
> have in-kernel APIs for the functionalities exposed by this driver and
> creating one is not feasible as explained by many.
> 
> So please let us know the path forward on this series. We are open to
> any suggestions but you haven't provided one till now.

Well. You sure know how to aggravate people. I said clearly that you
can move forward on purpose build drivers (e.g. for WWAN). There is no
way forward on this common shim driver as far as I'm concerned.
Jeffrey Hugo Feb. 10, 2021, 7:18 p.m. UTC | #16
On 2/10/2021 11:41 AM, Jakub Kicinski wrote:
> On Wed, 10 Feb 2021 11:55:31 +0530 Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
>> On Tue, Feb 09, 2021 at 08:17:44AM -0800, Jakub Kicinski wrote:
>>> On Tue, 9 Feb 2021 10:20:30 +0100 Aleksander Morgado wrote:
>>>> This may be a stupid suggestion, but would the integration look less a
>>>> backdoor if it would have been named "mhi_wwan" and it exposed already
>>>> all the AT+DIAG+QMI+MBIM+NMEA possible channels as chardevs, not just
>>>> QMI?
>>>
>>> What's DIAG? Who's going to remember that this is a backdoor driver
>>> a year from now when Qualcomm sends a one liner patches which just
>>> adds a single ID to open another channel?
>>
>> I really appreciate your feedback on this driver eventhough I'm not
>> inclined with you calling this driver a "backdoor interface". But can
>> you please propose a solution on how to make this driver a good one as
>> per your thoughts?
>>
>> I really don't know what bothers you even if the userspace tools making
>> use of these chardevs are available openly (you can do the audit and see
>> if anything wrong we are doing).
> 
> What bothers me is maintaining shim drivers which just shuttle opaque
> messages between user space and firmware. One of which definitely is,
> and the other may well be, proprietary. This is an open source project,
> users are supposed to be able to meaningfully change the behavior of
> the system.

Interesting.  So, based on that, the TCP/IP stack is going to be ripped 
out of Linux?  I can write a proprietary userspace application which 
uses the TCP/IP stack to shuttle opaque messages through the kernel to a 
remote system, which could be running Windows (a proprietary OS with 
typically proprietary applications).  I've infact done that in another 
life.  Proprietary talking to proprietary with the Linux kernel in the 
middle.  I suspect you'll have an aggressively different opinion, but at 
this simplified level, it's really no different from the proposed 
mhi_uci driver here, or any of the numerous other examples provided.

The Linux kernel does not get to say everything must be open.  There is 
an explicit license stating that - 
LICENSES/exceptions/Linux-syscall-note  Yes, it's ideal if things are 
open, but it seems contradictory to espouse wanting choice, but then 
denying certain choices.
Frankly, folks have pointed out open source applications that wish to 
use this, so no, it's not all closed.

Put another way, you keep going in circles (I know you've argued the 
same for others in the discussion) - why is this specifically different 
from the other "shim drivers" which "shuttle proprietary messages" which 
already exist and are maintained in Linus' tree today?  All I'm seeing 
is "I don't like it" which is not a technical reason, and "proprietary 
is bad" which frankly, I think the horses were let out of the barn back 
in 1991 when Linus first created Linux.

> 
> What bothers me is that we have 3 WWAN vendors all doing their own
> thing and no common Linux API for WWAN. It may have been fine 10 years
> ago, but WWAN is increasingly complex and important.
> 
>> And exposing the raw access to the
>> hardware is not a new thing in kernel. There are several existing
>> subsystems/drivers does this as pointed out by Bjorn. Moreover we don't
>> have in-kernel APIs for the functionalities exposed by this driver and
>> creating one is not feasible as explained by many.
>>
>> So please let us know the path forward on this series. We are open to
>> any suggestions but you haven't provided one till now.
> 
> Well. You sure know how to aggravate people. I said clearly that you
> can move forward on purpose build drivers (e.g. for WWAN). There is no
> way forward on this common shim driver as far as I'm concerned.
>
Aleksander Morgado Feb. 11, 2021, 9:26 a.m. UTC | #17
> What bothers me is maintaining shim drivers which just shuttle opaque
> messages between user space and firmware. One of which definitely is,
> and the other may well be, proprietary. This is an open source project,
> users are supposed to be able to meaningfully change the behavior of
> the system.

libqmi is an open source library under the LGPL; so all the messages
that are passed between e.g. ModemManager and the modem firmware can
be easily inspected by anyone. It is true, though, that libqmi may
also allow passing "unknown" messages between other proprietary third
party applications and the firmware, but that is very much like any
other modem control port that we already have; be it a plain tty, or a
ttyUSB or a ttyACM or a cdc-wdm port. The kernel drivers are passing
unknown stuff between modem firmware and userspace; I don't see how
the kernel driver would be interested in any other thing really. QMI
and MBIM are just 2 binary protocols (and we have libqmi and libmbim),
and there's a generic 3GPP AT command set, but every vendor then has
its own interpretation of that AT command set, and vendor-specific AT
commands, and what not. From my point of view, it's not like the
kernel should know or have much to say on what's being passed to the
modem.

>
> What bothers me is that we have 3 WWAN vendors all doing their own
> thing and no common Linux API for WWAN. It may have been fine 10 years
> ago, but WWAN is increasingly complex and important.
>

A WWAN modem is nowadays a complete Linux system itself with tons of
features, and if there is sometime a generic WWAN system in the kernel
providing API/ABI for generic features (e.g. data connection), that
API/ABI should anyway provide access to pass messages (be it binary,
or text AT commands) between firmware and userspace, for all the other
side features for which no generic API/ABI is provided by that
hypothetical generic WWAN system. Unless we don't want any of those
side features... like Voice call management, SMS, USSD, GNSS, SAR,
OMA-DM, carrier config selection, multi-SIM setups...
Aleksander Morgado Feb. 28, 2021, 2:12 p.m. UTC | #18
Hey Manivannan, Jakub & all,

>
> So please let us know the path forward on this series. We are open to
> any suggestions but you haven't provided one till now.
>

I just found out that Sierra Wireless also provides their own version
of mhi-net and mhi-uci in precompiled binaries for several Ubuntu
kernel versions and other setups; and that made me extremely unhappy.
They're not the only manufacturer doing that; most of them are doing
it, because we don't have yet a common solution in upstream Linux. Not
the first time we've seen this either, see the per-vendor GobiNet
implementations vs the upstream qmi_wwan one. I was hoping we could
avoid that mess again with the newer Qualcomm modules! :)

In ModemManager we've always *forced* all manufacturers we interact
with to first do the work in upstream Linux, and then we integrate
support in MM for those drivers. We've never accepted support for
vendor-specific proprietary kernel drivers, and that's something I
would personally like to keep on doing. The sad status right now is
that any user that wants to use the newer 5G modules with Qualcomm
chipsets, they need to go look for manufacturer-built precompiled
drivers for their specific kernel, and also then patch ModemManager
and the tools themselves. Obviously almost no one is doing all that,
except for some company with resources or a lot of interest. Some of
these new 5G modules are PCIe-only by default, unless some pin in the
chipset is brought up and then some of them may switch to USB support.
No one is really doing that either, as tampering with the hardware
voids warranty.

The iosm driver is also stalled in the mailing list and there doesn't
seem to be a lot of real need for a new common wwan subsystem to
rework everything...

I'm not involved with the mhi-uci driver development at all, and I
also don't have anything to say on what goes in the upstream kernel
and what doesn't. But as one of the ModemManager/libqmi/libmbim
maintainers I would like to represent all the users of these modules
that are right now forced to look for shady binary precompiled drivers
out there... that is no better solution than this proposed mhi-uci
common driver.

Manivannan, are you attempting to rework the mhi-uci driver in a
different way, or have you given up? Is there anything I could help
with?

Jakub, is there really no way you can be convinced that this mhi-uci
driver isn't that bad after all? :) All the mhi-net bits are already
integrated I think, even the MBIM support over MHI in the net device,
but all that is truly useless without a way to control the modem
sending and receiving messages.

Sorry for being back again with this discussion :)

Cheers!


--
Aleksander
https://aleksander.es
Manivannan Sadhasivam Feb. 28, 2021, 3:52 p.m. UTC | #19
On Sun, Feb 28, 2021 at 03:12:42PM +0100, Aleksander Morgado wrote:
> Hey Manivannan, Jakub & all,
> 
> >
> > So please let us know the path forward on this series. We are open to
> > any suggestions but you haven't provided one till now.
> >
> 
> I just found out that Sierra Wireless also provides their own version
> of mhi-net and mhi-uci in precompiled binaries for several Ubuntu
> kernel versions and other setups; and that made me extremely unhappy.
> They're not the only manufacturer doing that; most of them are doing
> it, because we don't have yet a common solution in upstream Linux. Not
> the first time we've seen this either, see the per-vendor GobiNet
> implementations vs the upstream qmi_wwan one. I was hoping we could
> avoid that mess again with the newer Qualcomm modules! :)
> 
> In ModemManager we've always *forced* all manufacturers we interact
> with to first do the work in upstream Linux, and then we integrate
> support in MM for those drivers. We've never accepted support for
> vendor-specific proprietary kernel drivers, and that's something I
> would personally like to keep on doing. The sad status right now is
> that any user that wants to use the newer 5G modules with Qualcomm
> chipsets, they need to go look for manufacturer-built precompiled
> drivers for their specific kernel, and also then patch ModemManager
> and the tools themselves. Obviously almost no one is doing all that,
> except for some company with resources or a lot of interest. Some of
> these new 5G modules are PCIe-only by default, unless some pin in the
> chipset is brought up and then some of them may switch to USB support.
> No one is really doing that either, as tampering with the hardware
> voids warranty.
> 
> The iosm driver is also stalled in the mailing list and there doesn't
> seem to be a lot of real need for a new common wwan subsystem to
> rework everything...
> 
> I'm not involved with the mhi-uci driver development at all, and I
> also don't have anything to say on what goes in the upstream kernel
> and what doesn't. But as one of the ModemManager/libqmi/libmbim
> maintainers I would like to represent all the users of these modules
> that are right now forced to look for shady binary precompiled drivers
> out there... that is no better solution than this proposed mhi-uci
> common driver.
> 
> Manivannan, are you attempting to rework the mhi-uci driver in a
> different way, or have you given up? Is there anything I could help
> with?
> 

Hemant is currently in-charge of the MHI UCI development effort. We were
thinking about doing "mhi-wwan" driver which just exposes the channels needed
for WWAN as Jakub said "you can move forward on purpose build drivers
(e.g. for WWAN)." But we are open to other suggestions also.

Thanks,
Mani