| Linux I2C fault injection | 
 | ========================= | 
 |  | 
 | The GPIO based I2C bus master driver can be configured to provide fault | 
 | injection capabilities. It is then meant to be connected to another I2C bus | 
 | which is driven by the I2C bus master driver under test. The GPIO fault | 
 | injection driver can create special states on the bus which the other I2C bus | 
 | master driver should handle gracefully. | 
 |  | 
 | Once the Kconfig option I2C_GPIO_FAULT_INJECTOR is enabled, there will be an | 
 | 'i2c-fault-injector' subdirectory in the Kernel debugfs filesystem, usually | 
 | mounted at /sys/kernel/debug. There will be a separate subdirectory per GPIO | 
 | driven I2C bus. Each subdirectory will contain files to trigger the fault | 
 | injection. They will be described now along with their intended use-cases. | 
 |  | 
 | "scl" | 
 | ----- | 
 |  | 
 | By reading this file, you get the current state of SCL. By writing, you can | 
 | change its state to either force it low or to release it again. So, by using | 
 | "echo 0 > scl" you force SCL low and thus, no communication will be possible | 
 | because the bus master under test will not be able to clock. It should detect | 
 | the condition of SCL being unresponsive and report an error to the upper | 
 | layers. | 
 |  | 
 | "sda" | 
 | ----- | 
 |  | 
 | By reading this file, you get the current state of SDA. By writing, you can | 
 | change its state to either force it low or to release it again. So, by using | 
 | "echo 0 > sda" you force SDA low and thus, data cannot be transmitted. The bus | 
 | master under test should detect this condition and trigger a bus recovery (see | 
 | I2C specification version 4, section 3.1.16) using the helpers of the Linux I2C | 
 | core (see 'struct bus_recovery_info'). However, the bus recovery will not | 
 | succeed because SDA is still pinned low until you manually release it again | 
 | with "echo 1 > sda". A test with an automatic release can be done with the | 
 | following class of fault injectors. | 
 |  | 
 | Introduction to incomplete transfers | 
 | ------------------------------------ | 
 |  | 
 | The following fault injectors create situations where SDA will be held low by a | 
 | device. Bus recovery should be able to fix these situations. But please note: | 
 | there are I2C client devices which detect a stuck SDA on their side and release | 
 | it on their own after a few milliseconds. Also, there might be an external | 
 | device deglitching and monitoring the I2C bus. It could also detect a stuck SDA | 
 | and will init a bus recovery on its own. If you want to implement bus recovery | 
 | in a bus master driver, make sure you checked your hardware setup for such | 
 | devices before. And always verify with a scope or logic analyzer! | 
 |  | 
 | "incomplete_address_phase" | 
 | -------------------------- | 
 |  | 
 | This file is write only and you need to write the address of an existing I2C | 
 | client device to it. Then, a read transfer to this device will be started, but | 
 | it will stop at the ACK phase after the address of the client has been | 
 | transmitted. Because the device will ACK its presence, this results in SDA | 
 | being pulled low by the device while SCL is high. So, similar to the "sda" file | 
 | above, the bus master under test should detect this condition and try a bus | 
 | recovery. This time, however, it should succeed and the device should release | 
 | SDA after toggling SCL. | 
 |  | 
 | "incomplete_write_byte" | 
 | ----------------------- | 
 |  | 
 | Similar to above, this file is write only and you need to write the address of | 
 | an existing I2C client device to it. | 
 |  | 
 | The injector will again stop at one ACK phase, so the device will keep SDA low | 
 | because it acknowledges data. However, there are two differences compared to | 
 | 'incomplete_address_phase': | 
 |  | 
 | a) the message sent out will be a write message | 
 | b) after the address byte, a 0x00 byte will be transferred. Then, stop at ACK. | 
 |  | 
 | This is a highly delicate state, the device is set up to write any data to | 
 | register 0x00 (if it has registers) when further clock pulses happen on SCL. | 
 | This is why bus recovery (up to 9 clock pulses) must either check SDA or send | 
 | additional STOP conditions to ensure the bus has been released. Otherwise | 
 | random data will be written to a device! | 
 |  |