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NXP NFCRdLib Kernel BAL Module

Build Status

General

This is a linux kernel module for the NXP NFCRdLib BAL (Bus Abstraction Layer). It allows having the BAL within the Kernel while the NFCRdLib runs in user space. This may be required in order to reduce the latency introduced by unnecessary context switches when BAL also runs in user space.

Build the Module

Raspberry Pi

If you look into an out-of-the-box working version for raspberry pi, refer to https://github.com/christianeisendle/linux

Other Platforms

The module can be built out of the kernel tree ('extra' module). It requires the kernel sources checked out. The following example assumes that the kernel sources /usr/src/linux-source and this repo cloned to /usr/src/nxprdlib-kernel-bal.

cd /usr/src/linux-source
make modules_prepare
make M=/usr/src/nxprdlib-kernel-bal/bal 

The compiled module is available in /usr/src/nxprdlib-kernel-bal/bal/bal.ko. If it should be installed within the current system/kernel then sudo make M=/usr/src/nxprdlib-kernel-bal/bal/nxprdlib-kernel-bal modules_install can be called. Alternatively, the module can be manually copied to /lib/modules/YOUR_KERNEL_VERSION/extra and depmod -a needs to be issued.

Note: In order to compile the module the correct Module.symvers file (corresponding to the kernel in use) must be present in /usr/src/linux-source. There are two ways to get to this file:

  1. Build the kernel from scratch. This also generates the Module.symvers
  2. Get the Module.symvers for the kernel in use. On Debian/Ubuntu Module.symvers is part of the linux-headers package.

(See also http://askubuntu.com/questions/168279/how-do-i-build-a-single-in-tree-kernel-module). On Raspberry Pi the Module.symvers is available in this repository: https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/tree/master/extra (See also: https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/linux/kernel/building.md) Like for Module.symvers a proper .config file must be available in /usr/src/linux-source. Also this is automatically generates when building the kernel from scratch. If supported, the running kernel configuration is also present in /boot/config* and just needs to be copied to /usr/src/linux-source/.config.

A complete build example for Debian (assuming that linux-source and linux-headers package is already installed)

cd /usr/src/linux-source*/
cp /boot/config-* .config
cp /usr/src/linux-headers-`uname -r`/Module.symvers .
make modules_prepare
make M=/usr/src/nxprdlib-kernel-bal/bal
make M=/usr/src/nxprdlib-kernel-bal/bal modules_install

Raspberry Pi 2 Example:

cd /usr/src
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/raspberrypi/linux
cd linux
KERNEL=kernel7
make bcm2709_defconfig
# Note: Module7.symvers must fit with the kernel version!
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/raspberrypi/firmware/master/extra/Module7.symvers
mv Module7.symvers Module.symvers
make modules_prepare
make M=/usr/src/nxprdlib-kernel-bal/bal
make M=/usr/src/nxprdlib-kernel-bal/bal modules_install

Board Connection

The module requires an SPI device to be associated with it as well as a dedicated GPIO, configured as input which is connected to the BUSY pin of PN5180. This association happens either through device tree or SPI board info within platform/board specifc code, whichever is supported.

Device Tree

When using device tree the compatible string has to be set to "nxp,bal". An example device tree overlay can be found here: https://github.com/christianeisendle/linux/blob/rpi-4.4.y_bal/arch/arm/boot/dts/overlays/bal-overlay.dts

On Raspberry Pi's device tree it can be added like this:

cd /boot
sudo wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/christianeisendle/linux/rpi-4.4.y_bal/arch/arm/boot/dts/overlays/bal-overlay.dts
# Note: dtc is part of the device-tree-compiler package: sudo apt-get install device-tree-compiler
sudo dtc -I dts -O dtb -o bal.dtbo -@ bal-overlay.dts
sudo mv bal.dtbo overlays/

# Note: 
#   On older Kernels (e.g. 4.1.x) the naming conventions for overlays is different (xxx-overlay.dtb)
#   In this case the commands have to be called like this:
#   sudo dtc -I dts -O dtb -o bal-overlay.dtb -@ bal-overlay.dts
#   sudo mv bal-overlay.dtb overlays/

sudo echo "dtoverlay=bal" >> config.txt
# optional step: In case BUSY pin should be mapped to a different GPIO than 25, which is default:
sudo echo "dtparam=busy-pin-gpio=23" >> config.txt
# In this case BUSY is now routed to GPIO 23

SPI Board Info

In case device tree is not used the BAL module needs to be assigned to a spi_device within the spi_board_info struct of the platform specific code. In case of Raspberry Pi 2 the code is located within the kernel tree at arch/arm/mach-bcm2709/bcm2709.c

The existing bcm2708_spi_devices array needs to be adapted/modified in order to assign one SPI device with the BAL module instead of the spidev module. Example:

#include <linux/spi/bal_spi.h>

static struct bal_spi_platform_data balPlatformData = {
  .busy_pin = 25,
};

#ifdef CONFIG_BCM2708_SPIDEV
static struct spi_board_info bcm2708_spi_devices[] = {
	{
		.modalias = "bal",
		.max_speed_hz = 5000000,
		.bus_num = 0,
		.chip_select = 0,
		.mode = SPI_MODE_0,
		.platform_data = &balPlatformData,
	}
#ifdef CONFIG_SPI_SPIDEV
	, {
		.modalias = "spidev",
		.max_speed_hz = 500000,
		.bus_num = 0,
		.chip_select = 1,
		.mode = SPI_MODE_0,
	}
#endif
};
#endif

bal_spi.h is present in this repo in bal/include/linux/spi/bal_spi.h and needs to be copied to the linux source tree under include/linux/spi/. After applying these changes the Kernel needs to be recompiled.

Load the Module

Module can be loaded using modprobe:

sudo modprobe bal

Load during boot is Linux distribution specific - on Raspberry pi it can be done by adding the module to /etc/modules :

sudo echo "bal" >> /etc/modules

Change ownership of /dev/bal

The device node /dev/bal is populated with ownership root.root and access rights set to 0660. In order to change ownership or access rights persistently a rule to udevd needs to be added in order to perform appropriate actions when /dev/bal is populated or removed again. Following example for Raspberry Pi changes group of /dev/bal to spi where user pi is a member of.

echo "SUBSYSTEM==\"bal\", GROUP=\"spi\", MODE=\"0660\"" > /tmp/99-bal.rules
sudo mv /tmp/99-bal.rules /etc/udev/rules.d/

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