Commit ec3db1ec authored by Armin Wolf's avatar Armin Wolf Committed by Guenter Roeck

hwmon: (dell-smm) Add SMM interface documentation

Document the SMM interface as requested by Pali Rohar.
Since Dell does not offer any offical documentation
regarding the SMM interface, the necessary information
was extracted from the dell_smm_hwmon driver and other
sources.
Suggested-by: default avatarPali Rohár <pali@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: default avatarArmin Wolf <W_Armin@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: default avatarPali Rohár <pali@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220215191113.16640-7-W_Armin@gmx.deSigned-off-by: default avatarGuenter Roeck <linux@roeck-us.net>
parent 7cd682b0
......@@ -165,3 +165,183 @@ obtain the same information and to control the fan status. The ioctl
interface can be accessed from C programs or from shell using the
i8kctl utility. See the source file of ``i8kutils`` for more
information on how to use the ioctl interface.
SMM Interface
-------------
.. warning:: The SMM interface was reverse-engineered by trial-and-error
since Dell did not provide any Documentation,
please keep that in mind.
The driver uses the SMM interface to send commands to the system BIOS.
This interface is normally used by Dell's 32-bit diagnostic program or
on newer notebook models by the buildin BIOS diagnostics.
The SMM is triggered by writing to the special ioports ``0xb2`` and ``0x84``,
and may cause short hangs when the BIOS code is taking too long to
execute.
The SMM handler inside the system BIOS looks at the contents of the
``eax``, ``ebx``, ``ecx``, ``edx``, ``esi`` and ``edi`` registers.
Each register has a special purpose:
=============== ==================================
Register Purpose
=============== ==================================
eax Holds the command code before SMM,
holds the first result after SMM.
ebx Holds the arguments.
ecx Unknown, set to 0.
edx Holds the second result after SMM.
esi Unknown, set to 0.
edi Unknown, set to 0.
=============== ==================================
The SMM handler can signal a failure by either:
- setting the lower sixteen bits of ``eax`` to ``0xffff``
- not modifying ``eax`` at all
- setting the carry flag
SMM command codes
-----------------
=============== ======================= ================================================
Command Code Command Name Description
=============== ======================= ================================================
``0x0025`` Get Fn key status Returns the Fn key pressed after SMM:
- 9th bit in ``eax`` indicates Volume up
- 10th bit in ``eax`` indicates Volume down
- both bits indicate Volume mute
``0xa069`` Get power status Returns current power status after SMM:
- 1st bit in ``eax`` indicates Battery connected
- 3th bit in ``eax`` indicates AC connected
``0x00a3`` Get fan state Returns current fan state after SMM:
- 1st byte in ``eax`` holds the current
fan state (0 - 2 or 3)
``0x01a3`` Set fan state Sets the fan speed:
- 1st byte in ``ebx`` holds the fan number
- 2nd byte in ``ebx`` holds the desired
fan state (0 - 2 or 3)
``0x02a3`` Get fan speed Returns the current fan speed in RPM:
- 1st byte in ``ebx`` holds the fan number
- 1st word in ``eax`` holds the current
fan speed in RPM (after SMM)
``0x03a3`` Get fan type Returns the fan type:
- 1st byte in ``ebx`` holds the fan number
- 1st byte in ``eax`` holds the
fan type (after SMM):
- 5th bit indicates docking fan
- 1 indicates Processor fan
- 2 indicates Motherboard fan
- 3 indicates Video fan
- 4 indicates Power supply fan
- 5 indicates Chipset fan
- 6 indicates other fan type
``0x04a3`` Get nominal fan speed Returns the nominal RPM in each fan state:
- 1st byte in ``ebx`` holds the fan number
- 2nd byte in ``ebx`` holds the fan state
in question (0 - 2 or 3)
- 1st word in ``eax`` holds the nominal
fan speed in RPM (after SMM)
``0x05a3`` Get fan speed tolerance Returns the speed tolerance for each fan state:
- 1st byte in ``ebx`` holds the fan number
- 2nd byte in ``ebx`` holds the fan state
in question (0 - 2 or 3)
- 1st byte in ``eax`` returns the speed
tolerance
``0x10a3`` Get sensor temperature Returns the measured temperature:
- 1st byte in ``ebx`` holds the sensor number
- 1st byte in ``eax`` holds the measured
temperature (after SMM)
``0x11a3`` Get sensor type Returns the sensor type:
- 1st byte in ``ebx`` holds the sensor number
- 1st byte in ``eax`` holds the
temperature type (after SMM):
- 1 indicates CPU sensor
- 2 indicates GPU sensor
- 3 indicates SODIMM sensor
- 4 indicates other sensor type
- 5 indicates Ambient sensor
- 6 indicates other sensor type
``0xfea3`` Get SMM signature Returns Dell signature if interface
is supported (after SMM):
- ``eax`` holds 1145651527
(0x44494147 or "DIAG")
- ``edx`` holds 1145392204
(0x44454c4c or "DELL")
``0xffa3`` Get SMM signature Same as ``0xfea3``, check both.
=============== ======================= ================================================
There are additional commands for enabling (``0x31a3`` or ``0x35a3``) and
disabling (``0x30a3`` or ``0x34a3``) automatic fan speed control.
The commands are however causing severe sideeffects on many machines, so
they are not used by default.
On several machines (Inspiron 3505, Precision 490, Vostro 1720, ...), the
fans supports a 4th "magic" state, which signals the BIOS that automatic
fan control should be enabled for a specific fan.
However there are also some machines who do support a 4th regular fan state too,
but in case of the "magic" state, the nominal RPM reported for this state is a
placeholder value, which however is not always detectable.
Firmware Bugs
-------------
The SMM calls can behave erratic on some machines:
======================================================= =================
Firmware Bug Affected Machines
======================================================= =================
Reading of fan states return spurious errors. Precision 490
Reading of fan types causes erratic fan behaviour. Studio XPS 8000
Studio XPS 8100
Inspiron 580
Fan-related SMM calls take too long (about 500ms). Inspiron 7720
Vostro 3360
XPS 13 9333
XPS 15 L502X
======================================================= =================
In case you experience similar issues on your Dell machine, please
submit a bugreport on bugzilla to we can apply workarounds.
Limitations
-----------
The SMM calls can take too long to execute on some machines, causing
short hangs and/or audio glitches.
Also the fan state needs to be restored after suspend, as well as
the automatic mode settings.
When reading a temperature sensor, values above 127 degrees indicate
a BIOS read error or a deactivated sensor.
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