1===================================
2SocketCAN - Controller Area Network
3===================================
4
5Overview / What is SocketCAN
6============================
7
8The socketcan package is an implementation of CAN protocols
9(Controller Area Network) for Linux.  CAN is a networking technology
10which has widespread use in automation, embedded devices, and
11automotive fields.  While there have been other CAN implementations
12for Linux based on character devices, SocketCAN uses the Berkeley
13socket API, the Linux network stack and implements the CAN device
14drivers as network interfaces.  The CAN socket API has been designed
15as similar as possible to the TCP/IP protocols to allow programmers,
16familiar with network programming, to easily learn how to use CAN
17sockets.
18
19
20.. _socketcan-motivation:
21
22Motivation / Why Using the Socket API
23=====================================
24
25There have been CAN implementations for Linux before SocketCAN so the
26question arises, why we have started another project.  Most existing
27implementations come as a device driver for some CAN hardware, they
28are based on character devices and provide comparatively little
29functionality.  Usually, there is only a hardware-specific device
30driver which provides a character device interface to send and
31receive raw CAN frames, directly to/from the controller hardware.
32Queueing of frames and higher-level transport protocols like ISO-TP
33have to be implemented in user space applications.  Also, most
34character-device implementations support only one single process to
35open the device at a time, similar to a serial interface.  Exchanging
36the CAN controller requires employment of another device driver and
37often the need for adaption of large parts of the application to the
38new driver's API.
39
40SocketCAN was designed to overcome all of these limitations.  A new
41protocol family has been implemented which provides a socket interface
42to user space applications and which builds upon the Linux network
43layer, enabling use all of the provided queueing functionality.  A device
44driver for CAN controller hardware registers itself with the Linux
45network layer as a network device, so that CAN frames from the
46controller can be passed up to the network layer and on to the CAN
47protocol family module and also vice-versa.  Also, the protocol family
48module provides an API for transport protocol modules to register, so
49that any number of transport protocols can be loaded or unloaded
50dynamically.  In fact, the can core module alone does not provide any
51protocol and cannot be used without loading at least one additional
52protocol module.  Multiple sockets can be opened at the same time,
53on different or the same protocol module and they can listen/send
54frames on different or the same CAN IDs.  Several sockets listening on
55the same interface for frames with the same CAN ID are all passed the
56same received matching CAN frames.  An application wishing to
57communicate using a specific transport protocol, e.g. ISO-TP, just
58selects that protocol when opening the socket, and then can read and
59write application data byte streams, without having to deal with
60CAN-IDs, frames, etc.
61
62Similar functionality visible from user-space could be provided by a
63character device, too, but this would lead to a technically inelegant
64solution for a couple of reasons:
65
66* **Intricate usage:**  Instead of passing a protocol argument to
67  socket(2) and using bind(2) to select a CAN interface and CAN ID, an
68  application would have to do all these operations using ioctl(2)s.
69
70* **Code duplication:**  A character device cannot make use of the Linux
71  network queueing code, so all that code would have to be duplicated
72  for CAN networking.
73
74* **Abstraction:**  In most existing character-device implementations, the
75  hardware-specific device driver for a CAN controller directly
76  provides the character device for the application to work with.
77  This is at least very unusual in Unix systems for both, char and
78  block devices.  For example you don't have a character device for a
79  certain UART of a serial interface, a certain sound chip in your
80  computer, a SCSI or IDE controller providing access to your hard
81  disk or tape streamer device.  Instead, you have abstraction layers
82  which provide a unified character or block device interface to the
83  application on the one hand, and a interface for hardware-specific
84  device drivers on the other hand.  These abstractions are provided
85  by subsystems like the tty layer, the audio subsystem or the SCSI
86  and IDE subsystems for the devices mentioned above.
87
88  The easiest way to implement a CAN device driver is as a character
89  device without such a (complete) abstraction layer, as is done by most
90  existing drivers.  The right way, however, would be to add such a
91  layer with all the functionality like registering for certain CAN
92  IDs, supporting several open file descriptors and (de)multiplexing
93  CAN frames between them, (sophisticated) queueing of CAN frames, and
94  providing an API for device drivers to register with.  However, then
95  it would be no more difficult, or may be even easier, to use the
96  networking framework provided by the Linux kernel, and this is what
97  SocketCAN does.
98
99The use of the networking framework of the Linux kernel is just the
100natural and most appropriate way to implement CAN for Linux.
101
102
103.. _socketcan-concept:
104
105SocketCAN Concept
106=================
107
108As described in :ref:`socketcan-motivation` the main goal of SocketCAN is to
109provide a socket interface to user space applications which builds
110upon the Linux network layer. In contrast to the commonly known
111TCP/IP and ethernet networking, the CAN bus is a broadcast-only(!)
112medium that has no MAC-layer addressing like ethernet. The CAN-identifier
113(can_id) is used for arbitration on the CAN-bus. Therefore the CAN-IDs
114have to be chosen uniquely on the bus. When designing a CAN-ECU
115network the CAN-IDs are mapped to be sent by a specific ECU.
116For this reason a CAN-ID can be treated best as a kind of source address.
117
118
119.. _socketcan-receive-lists:
120
121Receive Lists
122-------------
123
124The network transparent access of multiple applications leads to the
125problem that different applications may be interested in the same
126CAN-IDs from the same CAN network interface. The SocketCAN core
127module - which implements the protocol family CAN - provides several
128high efficient receive lists for this reason. If e.g. a user space
129application opens a CAN RAW socket, the raw protocol module itself
130requests the (range of) CAN-IDs from the SocketCAN core that are
131requested by the user. The subscription and unsubscription of
132CAN-IDs can be done for specific CAN interfaces or for all(!) known
133CAN interfaces with the can_rx_(un)register() functions provided to
134CAN protocol modules by the SocketCAN core (see :ref:`socketcan-core-module`).
135To optimize the CPU usage at runtime the receive lists are split up
136into several specific lists per device that match the requested
137filter complexity for a given use-case.
138
139
140.. _socketcan-local-loopback1:
141
142Local Loopback of Sent Frames
143-----------------------------
144
145As known from other networking concepts the data exchanging
146applications may run on the same or different nodes without any
147change (except for the according addressing information):
148
149.. code::
150
151	 ___   ___   ___                   _______   ___
152	| _ | | _ | | _ |                 | _   _ | | _ |
153	||A|| ||B|| ||C||                 ||A| |B|| ||C||
154	|___| |___| |___|                 |_______| |___|
155	  |     |     |                       |       |
156	-----------------(1)- CAN bus -(2)---------------
157
158To ensure that application A receives the same information in the
159example (2) as it would receive in example (1) there is need for
160some kind of local loopback of the sent CAN frames on the appropriate
161node.
162
163The Linux network devices (by default) just can handle the
164transmission and reception of media dependent frames. Due to the
165arbitration on the CAN bus the transmission of a low prio CAN-ID
166may be delayed by the reception of a high prio CAN frame. To
167reflect the correct [#f1]_ traffic on the node the loopback of the sent
168data has to be performed right after a successful transmission. If
169the CAN network interface is not capable of performing the loopback for
170some reason the SocketCAN core can do this task as a fallback solution.
171See :ref:`socketcan-local-loopback2` for details (recommended).
172
173The loopback functionality is enabled by default to reflect standard
174networking behaviour for CAN applications. Due to some requests from
175the RT-SocketCAN group the loopback optionally may be disabled for each
176separate socket. See sockopts from the CAN RAW sockets in :ref:`socketcan-raw-sockets`.
177
178.. [#f1] you really like to have this when you're running analyser
179       tools like 'candump' or 'cansniffer' on the (same) node.
180
181
182.. _socketcan-network-problem-notifications:
183
184Network Problem Notifications
185-----------------------------
186
187The use of the CAN bus may lead to several problems on the physical
188and media access control layer. Detecting and logging of these lower
189layer problems is a vital requirement for CAN users to identify
190hardware issues on the physical transceiver layer as well as
191arbitration problems and error frames caused by the different
192ECUs. The occurrence of detected errors are important for diagnosis
193and have to be logged together with the exact timestamp. For this
194reason the CAN interface driver can generate so called Error Message
195Frames that can optionally be passed to the user application in the
196same way as other CAN frames. Whenever an error on the physical layer
197or the MAC layer is detected (e.g. by the CAN controller) the driver
198creates an appropriate error message frame. Error messages frames can
199be requested by the user application using the common CAN filter
200mechanisms. Inside this filter definition the (interested) type of
201errors may be selected. The reception of error messages is disabled
202by default. The format of the CAN error message frame is briefly
203described in the Linux header file "include/uapi/linux/can/error.h".
204
205
206How to use SocketCAN
207====================
208
209Like TCP/IP, you first need to open a socket for communicating over a
210CAN network. Since SocketCAN implements a new protocol family, you
211need to pass PF_CAN as the first argument to the socket(2) system
212call. Currently, there are two CAN protocols to choose from, the raw
213socket protocol and the broadcast manager (BCM). So to open a socket,
214you would write::
215
216    s = socket(PF_CAN, SOCK_RAW, CAN_RAW);
217
218and::
219
220    s = socket(PF_CAN, SOCK_DGRAM, CAN_BCM);
221
222respectively.  After the successful creation of the socket, you would
223normally use the bind(2) system call to bind the socket to a CAN
224interface (which is different from TCP/IP due to different addressing
225- see :ref:`socketcan-concept`). After binding (CAN_RAW) or connecting (CAN_BCM)
226the socket, you can read(2) and write(2) from/to the socket or use
227send(2), sendto(2), sendmsg(2) and the recv* counterpart operations
228on the socket as usual. There are also CAN specific socket options
229described below.
230
231The Classical CAN frame structure (aka CAN 2.0B), the CAN FD frame structure
232and the sockaddr structure are defined in include/linux/can.h:
233
234.. code-block:: C
235
236    struct can_frame {
237            canid_t can_id;  /* 32 bit CAN_ID + EFF/RTR/ERR flags */
238            union {
239                    /* CAN frame payload length in byte (0 .. CAN_MAX_DLEN)
240                     * was previously named can_dlc so we need to carry that
241                     * name for legacy support
242                     */
243                    __u8 len;
244                    __u8 can_dlc; /* deprecated */
245            };
246            __u8    __pad;   /* padding */
247            __u8    __res0;  /* reserved / padding */
248            __u8    len8_dlc; /* optional DLC for 8 byte payload length (9 .. 15) */
249            __u8    data[8] __attribute__((aligned(8)));
250    };
251
252Remark: The len element contains the payload length in bytes and should be
253used instead of can_dlc. The deprecated can_dlc was misleadingly named as
254it always contained the plain payload length in bytes and not the so called
255'data length code' (DLC).
256
257To pass the raw DLC from/to a Classical CAN network device the len8_dlc
258element can contain values 9 .. 15 when the len element is 8 (the real
259payload length for all DLC values greater or equal to 8).
260
261The alignment of the (linear) payload data[] to a 64bit boundary
262allows the user to define their own structs and unions to easily access
263the CAN payload. There is no given byteorder on the CAN bus by
264default. A read(2) system call on a CAN_RAW socket transfers a
265struct can_frame to the user space.
266
267The sockaddr_can structure has an interface index like the
268PF_PACKET socket, that also binds to a specific interface:
269
270.. code-block:: C
271
272    struct sockaddr_can {
273            sa_family_t can_family;
274            int         can_ifindex;
275            union {
276                    /* transport protocol class address info (e.g. ISOTP) */
277                    struct { canid_t rx_id, tx_id; } tp;
278
279                    /* J1939 address information */
280                    struct {
281                            /* 8 byte name when using dynamic addressing */
282                            __u64 name;
283
284                            /* pgn:
285                             * 8 bit: PS in PDU2 case, else 0
286                             * 8 bit: PF
287                             * 1 bit: DP
288                             * 1 bit: reserved
289                             */
290                            __u32 pgn;
291
292                            /* 1 byte address */
293                            __u8 addr;
294                    } j1939;
295
296                    /* reserved for future CAN protocols address information */
297            } can_addr;
298    };
299
300To determine the interface index an appropriate ioctl() has to
301be used (example for CAN_RAW sockets without error checking):
302
303.. code-block:: C
304
305    int s;
306    struct sockaddr_can addr;
307    struct ifreq ifr;
308
309    s = socket(PF_CAN, SOCK_RAW, CAN_RAW);
310
311    strcpy(ifr.ifr_name, "can0" );
312    ioctl(s, SIOCGIFINDEX, &ifr);
313
314    addr.can_family = AF_CAN;
315    addr.can_ifindex = ifr.ifr_ifindex;
316
317    bind(s, (struct sockaddr *)&addr, sizeof(addr));
318
319    (..)
320
321To bind a socket to all(!) CAN interfaces the interface index must
322be 0 (zero). In this case the socket receives CAN frames from every
323enabled CAN interface. To determine the originating CAN interface
324the system call recvfrom(2) may be used instead of read(2). To send
325on a socket that is bound to 'any' interface sendto(2) is needed to
326specify the outgoing interface.
327
328Reading CAN frames from a bound CAN_RAW socket (see above) consists
329of reading a struct can_frame:
330
331.. code-block:: C
332
333    struct can_frame frame;
334
335    nbytes = read(s, &frame, sizeof(struct can_frame));
336
337    if (nbytes < 0) {
338            perror("can raw socket read");
339            return 1;
340    }
341
342    /* paranoid check ... */
343    if (nbytes < sizeof(struct can_frame)) {
344            fprintf(stderr, "read: incomplete CAN frame\n");
345            return 1;
346    }
347
348    /* do something with the received CAN frame */
349
350Writing CAN frames can be done similarly, with the write(2) system call::
351
352    nbytes = write(s, &frame, sizeof(struct can_frame));
353
354When the CAN interface is bound to 'any' existing CAN interface
355(addr.can_ifindex = 0) it is recommended to use recvfrom(2) if the
356information about the originating CAN interface is needed:
357
358.. code-block:: C
359
360    struct sockaddr_can addr;
361    struct ifreq ifr;
362    socklen_t len = sizeof(addr);
363    struct can_frame frame;
364
365    nbytes = recvfrom(s, &frame, sizeof(struct can_frame),
366                      0, (struct sockaddr*)&addr, &len);
367
368    /* get interface name of the received CAN frame */
369    ifr.ifr_ifindex = addr.can_ifindex;
370    ioctl(s, SIOCGIFNAME, &ifr);
371    printf("Received a CAN frame from interface %s", ifr.ifr_name);
372
373To write CAN frames on sockets bound to 'any' CAN interface the
374outgoing interface has to be defined certainly:
375
376.. code-block:: C
377
378    strcpy(ifr.ifr_name, "can0");
379    ioctl(s, SIOCGIFINDEX, &ifr);
380    addr.can_ifindex = ifr.ifr_ifindex;
381    addr.can_family  = AF_CAN;
382
383    nbytes = sendto(s, &frame, sizeof(struct can_frame),
384                    0, (struct sockaddr*)&addr, sizeof(addr));
385
386An accurate timestamp can be obtained with an ioctl(2) call after reading
387a message from the socket:
388
389.. code-block:: C
390
391    struct timeval tv;
392    ioctl(s, SIOCGSTAMP, &tv);
393
394The timestamp has a resolution of one microsecond and is set automatically
395at the reception of a CAN frame.
396
397Remark about CAN FD (flexible data rate) support:
398
399Generally the handling of CAN FD is very similar to the formerly described
400examples. The new CAN FD capable CAN controllers support two different
401bitrates for the arbitration phase and the payload phase of the CAN FD frame
402and up to 64 bytes of payload. This extended payload length breaks all the
403kernel interfaces (ABI) which heavily rely on the CAN frame with fixed eight
404bytes of payload (struct can_frame) like the CAN_RAW socket. Therefore e.g.
405the CAN_RAW socket supports a new socket option CAN_RAW_FD_FRAMES that
406switches the socket into a mode that allows the handling of CAN FD frames
407and Classical CAN frames simultaneously (see :ref:`socketcan-rawfd`).
408
409The struct canfd_frame is defined in include/linux/can.h:
410
411.. code-block:: C
412
413    struct canfd_frame {
414            canid_t can_id;  /* 32 bit CAN_ID + EFF/RTR/ERR flags */
415            __u8    len;     /* frame payload length in byte (0 .. 64) */
416            __u8    flags;   /* additional flags for CAN FD */
417            __u8    __res0;  /* reserved / padding */
418            __u8    __res1;  /* reserved / padding */
419            __u8    data[64] __attribute__((aligned(8)));
420    };
421
422The struct canfd_frame and the existing struct can_frame have the can_id,
423the payload length and the payload data at the same offset inside their
424structures. This allows to handle the different structures very similar.
425When the content of a struct can_frame is copied into a struct canfd_frame
426all structure elements can be used as-is - only the data[] becomes extended.
427
428When introducing the struct canfd_frame it turned out that the data length
429code (DLC) of the struct can_frame was used as a length information as the
430length and the DLC has a 1:1 mapping in the range of 0 .. 8. To preserve
431the easy handling of the length information the canfd_frame.len element
432contains a plain length value from 0 .. 64. So both canfd_frame.len and
433can_frame.len are equal and contain a length information and no DLC.
434For details about the distinction of CAN and CAN FD capable devices and
435the mapping to the bus-relevant data length code (DLC), see :ref:`socketcan-can-fd-driver`.
436
437The length of the two CAN(FD) frame structures define the maximum transfer
438unit (MTU) of the CAN(FD) network interface and skbuff data length. Two
439definitions are specified for CAN specific MTUs in include/linux/can.h:
440
441.. code-block:: C
442
443  #define CAN_MTU   (sizeof(struct can_frame))   == 16  => Classical CAN frame
444  #define CANFD_MTU (sizeof(struct canfd_frame)) == 72  => CAN FD frame
445
446
447Returned Message Flags
448----------------------
449
450When using the system call recvmsg(2) on a RAW or a BCM socket, the
451msg->msg_flags field may contain the following flags:
452
453MSG_DONTROUTE:
454	set when the received frame was created on the local host.
455
456MSG_CONFIRM:
457	set when the frame was sent via the socket it is received on.
458	This flag can be interpreted as a 'transmission confirmation' when the
459	CAN driver supports the echo of frames on driver level, see
460	:ref:`socketcan-local-loopback1` and :ref:`socketcan-local-loopback2`.
461	(Note: In order to receive such messages on a RAW socket,
462	CAN_RAW_RECV_OWN_MSGS must be set.)
463
464
465.. _socketcan-raw-sockets:
466
467RAW Protocol Sockets with can_filters (SOCK_RAW)
468------------------------------------------------
469
470Using CAN_RAW sockets is extensively comparable to the commonly
471known access to CAN character devices. To meet the new possibilities
472provided by the multi user SocketCAN approach, some reasonable
473defaults are set at RAW socket binding time:
474
475- The filters are set to exactly one filter receiving everything
476- The socket only receives valid data frames (=> no error message frames)
477- The loopback of sent CAN frames is enabled (see :ref:`socketcan-local-loopback2`)
478- The socket does not receive its own sent frames (in loopback mode)
479
480These default settings may be changed before or after binding the socket.
481To use the referenced definitions of the socket options for CAN_RAW
482sockets, include <linux/can/raw.h>.
483
484
485.. _socketcan-rawfilter:
486
487RAW socket option CAN_RAW_FILTER
488~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
489
490The reception of CAN frames using CAN_RAW sockets can be controlled
491by defining 0 .. n filters with the CAN_RAW_FILTER socket option.
492
493The CAN filter structure is defined in include/linux/can.h:
494
495.. code-block:: C
496
497    struct can_filter {
498            canid_t can_id;
499            canid_t can_mask;
500    };
501
502A filter matches, when:
503
504.. code-block:: C
505
506    <received_can_id> & mask == can_id & mask
507
508which is analogous to known CAN controllers hardware filter semantics.
509The filter can be inverted in this semantic, when the CAN_INV_FILTER
510bit is set in can_id element of the can_filter structure. In
511contrast to CAN controller hardware filters the user may set 0 .. n
512receive filters for each open socket separately:
513
514.. code-block:: C
515
516    struct can_filter rfilter[2];
517
518    rfilter[0].can_id   = 0x123;
519    rfilter[0].can_mask = CAN_SFF_MASK;
520    rfilter[1].can_id   = 0x200;
521    rfilter[1].can_mask = 0x700;
522
523    setsockopt(s, SOL_CAN_RAW, CAN_RAW_FILTER, &rfilter, sizeof(rfilter));
524
525To disable the reception of CAN frames on the selected CAN_RAW socket:
526
527.. code-block:: C
528
529    setsockopt(s, SOL_CAN_RAW, CAN_RAW_FILTER, NULL, 0);
530
531To set the filters to zero filters is quite obsolete as to not read
532data causes the raw socket to discard the received CAN frames. But
533having this 'send only' use-case we may remove the receive list in the
534Kernel to save a little (really a very little!) CPU usage.
535
536CAN Filter Usage Optimisation
537.............................
538
539The CAN filters are processed in per-device filter lists at CAN frame
540reception time. To reduce the number of checks that need to be performed
541while walking through the filter lists the CAN core provides an optimized
542filter handling when the filter subscription focusses on a single CAN ID.
543
544For the possible 2048 SFF CAN identifiers the identifier is used as an index
545to access the corresponding subscription list without any further checks.
546For the 2^29 possible EFF CAN identifiers a 10 bit XOR folding is used as
547hash function to retrieve the EFF table index.
548
549To benefit from the optimized filters for single CAN identifiers the
550CAN_SFF_MASK or CAN_EFF_MASK have to be set into can_filter.mask together
551with set CAN_EFF_FLAG and CAN_RTR_FLAG bits. A set CAN_EFF_FLAG bit in the
552can_filter.mask makes clear that it matters whether a SFF or EFF CAN ID is
553subscribed. E.g. in the example from above:
554
555.. code-block:: C
556
557    rfilter[0].can_id   = 0x123;
558    rfilter[0].can_mask = CAN_SFF_MASK;
559
560both SFF frames with CAN ID 0x123 and EFF frames with 0xXXXXX123 can pass.
561
562To filter for only 0x123 (SFF) and 0x12345678 (EFF) CAN identifiers the
563filter has to be defined in this way to benefit from the optimized filters:
564
565.. code-block:: C
566
567    struct can_filter rfilter[2];
568
569    rfilter[0].can_id   = 0x123;
570    rfilter[0].can_mask = (CAN_EFF_FLAG | CAN_RTR_FLAG | CAN_SFF_MASK);
571    rfilter[1].can_id   = 0x12345678 | CAN_EFF_FLAG;
572    rfilter[1].can_mask = (CAN_EFF_FLAG | CAN_RTR_FLAG | CAN_EFF_MASK);
573
574    setsockopt(s, SOL_CAN_RAW, CAN_RAW_FILTER, &rfilter, sizeof(rfilter));
575
576
577RAW Socket Option CAN_RAW_ERR_FILTER
578~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
579
580As described in :ref:`socketcan-network-problem-notifications` the CAN interface driver can generate so
581called Error Message Frames that can optionally be passed to the user
582application in the same way as other CAN frames. The possible
583errors are divided into different error classes that may be filtered
584using the appropriate error mask. To register for every possible
585error condition CAN_ERR_MASK can be used as value for the error mask.
586The values for the error mask are defined in linux/can/error.h:
587
588.. code-block:: C
589
590    can_err_mask_t err_mask = ( CAN_ERR_TX_TIMEOUT | CAN_ERR_BUSOFF );
591
592    setsockopt(s, SOL_CAN_RAW, CAN_RAW_ERR_FILTER,
593               &err_mask, sizeof(err_mask));
594
595
596RAW Socket Option CAN_RAW_LOOPBACK
597~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
598
599To meet multi user needs the local loopback is enabled by default
600(see :ref:`socketcan-local-loopback1` for details). But in some embedded use-cases
601(e.g. when only one application uses the CAN bus) this loopback
602functionality can be disabled (separately for each socket):
603
604.. code-block:: C
605
606    int loopback = 0; /* 0 = disabled, 1 = enabled (default) */
607
608    setsockopt(s, SOL_CAN_RAW, CAN_RAW_LOOPBACK, &loopback, sizeof(loopback));
609
610
611RAW socket option CAN_RAW_RECV_OWN_MSGS
612~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
613
614When the local loopback is enabled, all the sent CAN frames are
615looped back to the open CAN sockets that registered for the CAN
616frames' CAN-ID on this given interface to meet the multi user
617needs. The reception of the CAN frames on the same socket that was
618sending the CAN frame is assumed to be unwanted and therefore
619disabled by default. This default behaviour may be changed on
620demand:
621
622.. code-block:: C
623
624    int recv_own_msgs = 1; /* 0 = disabled (default), 1 = enabled */
625
626    setsockopt(s, SOL_CAN_RAW, CAN_RAW_RECV_OWN_MSGS,
627               &recv_own_msgs, sizeof(recv_own_msgs));
628
629Note that reception of a socket's own CAN frames are subject to the same
630filtering as other CAN frames (see :ref:`socketcan-rawfilter`).
631
632.. _socketcan-rawfd:
633
634RAW Socket Option CAN_RAW_FD_FRAMES
635~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
636
637CAN FD support in CAN_RAW sockets can be enabled with a new socket option
638CAN_RAW_FD_FRAMES which is off by default. When the new socket option is
639not supported by the CAN_RAW socket (e.g. on older kernels), switching the
640CAN_RAW_FD_FRAMES option returns the error -ENOPROTOOPT.
641
642Once CAN_RAW_FD_FRAMES is enabled the application can send both CAN frames
643and CAN FD frames. OTOH the application has to handle CAN and CAN FD frames
644when reading from the socket:
645
646.. code-block:: C
647
648    CAN_RAW_FD_FRAMES enabled:  CAN_MTU and CANFD_MTU are allowed
649    CAN_RAW_FD_FRAMES disabled: only CAN_MTU is allowed (default)
650
651Example:
652
653.. code-block:: C
654
655    [ remember: CANFD_MTU == sizeof(struct canfd_frame) ]
656
657    struct canfd_frame cfd;
658
659    nbytes = read(s, &cfd, CANFD_MTU);
660
661    if (nbytes == CANFD_MTU) {
662            printf("got CAN FD frame with length %d\n", cfd.len);
663            /* cfd.flags contains valid data */
664    } else if (nbytes == CAN_MTU) {
665            printf("got Classical CAN frame with length %d\n", cfd.len);
666            /* cfd.flags is undefined */
667    } else {
668            fprintf(stderr, "read: invalid CAN(FD) frame\n");
669            return 1;
670    }
671
672    /* the content can be handled independently from the received MTU size */
673
674    printf("can_id: %X data length: %d data: ", cfd.can_id, cfd.len);
675    for (i = 0; i < cfd.len; i++)
676            printf("%02X ", cfd.data[i]);
677
678When reading with size CANFD_MTU only returns CAN_MTU bytes that have
679been received from the socket a Classical CAN frame has been read into the
680provided CAN FD structure. Note that the canfd_frame.flags data field is
681not specified in the struct can_frame and therefore it is only valid in
682CANFD_MTU sized CAN FD frames.
683
684Implementation hint for new CAN applications:
685
686To build a CAN FD aware application use struct canfd_frame as basic CAN
687data structure for CAN_RAW based applications. When the application is
688executed on an older Linux kernel and switching the CAN_RAW_FD_FRAMES
689socket option returns an error: No problem. You'll get Classical CAN frames
690or CAN FD frames and can process them the same way.
691
692When sending to CAN devices make sure that the device is capable to handle
693CAN FD frames by checking if the device maximum transfer unit is CANFD_MTU.
694The CAN device MTU can be retrieved e.g. with a SIOCGIFMTU ioctl() syscall.
695
696
697RAW socket option CAN_RAW_JOIN_FILTERS
698~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
699
700The CAN_RAW socket can set multiple CAN identifier specific filters that
701lead to multiple filters in the af_can.c filter processing. These filters
702are indenpendent from each other which leads to logical OR'ed filters when
703applied (see :ref:`socketcan-rawfilter`).
704
705This socket option joines the given CAN filters in the way that only CAN
706frames are passed to user space that matched *all* given CAN filters. The
707semantic for the applied filters is therefore changed to a logical AND.
708
709This is useful especially when the filterset is a combination of filters
710where the CAN_INV_FILTER flag is set in order to notch single CAN IDs or
711CAN ID ranges from the incoming traffic.
712
713
714Broadcast Manager Protocol Sockets (SOCK_DGRAM)
715-----------------------------------------------
716
717The Broadcast Manager protocol provides a command based configuration
718interface to filter and send (e.g. cyclic) CAN messages in kernel space.
719
720Receive filters can be used to down sample frequent messages; detect events
721such as message contents changes, packet length changes, and do time-out
722monitoring of received messages.
723
724Periodic transmission tasks of CAN frames or a sequence of CAN frames can be
725created and modified at runtime; both the message content and the two
726possible transmit intervals can be altered.
727
728A BCM socket is not intended for sending individual CAN frames using the
729struct can_frame as known from the CAN_RAW socket. Instead a special BCM
730configuration message is defined. The basic BCM configuration message used
731to communicate with the broadcast manager and the available operations are
732defined in the linux/can/bcm.h include. The BCM message consists of a
733message header with a command ('opcode') followed by zero or more CAN frames.
734The broadcast manager sends responses to user space in the same form:
735
736.. code-block:: C
737
738    struct bcm_msg_head {
739            __u32 opcode;                   /* command */
740            __u32 flags;                    /* special flags */
741            __u32 count;                    /* run 'count' times with ival1 */
742            struct timeval ival1, ival2;    /* count and subsequent interval */
743            canid_t can_id;                 /* unique can_id for task */
744            __u32 nframes;                  /* number of can_frames following */
745            struct can_frame frames[0];
746    };
747
748The aligned payload 'frames' uses the same basic CAN frame structure defined
749at the beginning of :ref:`socketcan-rawfd` and in the include/linux/can.h include. All
750messages to the broadcast manager from user space have this structure.
751
752Note a CAN_BCM socket must be connected instead of bound after socket
753creation (example without error checking):
754
755.. code-block:: C
756
757    int s;
758    struct sockaddr_can addr;
759    struct ifreq ifr;
760
761    s = socket(PF_CAN, SOCK_DGRAM, CAN_BCM);
762
763    strcpy(ifr.ifr_name, "can0");
764    ioctl(s, SIOCGIFINDEX, &ifr);
765
766    addr.can_family = AF_CAN;
767    addr.can_ifindex = ifr.ifr_ifindex;
768
769    connect(s, (struct sockaddr *)&addr, sizeof(addr));
770
771    (..)
772
773The broadcast manager socket is able to handle any number of in flight
774transmissions or receive filters concurrently. The different RX/TX jobs are
775distinguished by the unique can_id in each BCM message. However additional
776CAN_BCM sockets are recommended to communicate on multiple CAN interfaces.
777When the broadcast manager socket is bound to 'any' CAN interface (=> the
778interface index is set to zero) the configured receive filters apply to any
779CAN interface unless the sendto() syscall is used to overrule the 'any' CAN
780interface index. When using recvfrom() instead of read() to retrieve BCM
781socket messages the originating CAN interface is provided in can_ifindex.
782
783
784Broadcast Manager Operations
785~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
786
787The opcode defines the operation for the broadcast manager to carry out,
788or details the broadcast managers response to several events, including
789user requests.
790
791Transmit Operations (user space to broadcast manager):
792
793TX_SETUP:
794	Create (cyclic) transmission task.
795
796TX_DELETE:
797	Remove (cyclic) transmission task, requires only can_id.
798
799TX_READ:
800	Read properties of (cyclic) transmission task for can_id.
801
802TX_SEND:
803	Send one CAN frame.
804
805Transmit Responses (broadcast manager to user space):
806
807TX_STATUS:
808	Reply to TX_READ request (transmission task configuration).
809
810TX_EXPIRED:
811	Notification when counter finishes sending at initial interval
812	'ival1'. Requires the TX_COUNTEVT flag to be set at TX_SETUP.
813
814Receive Operations (user space to broadcast manager):
815
816RX_SETUP:
817	Create RX content filter subscription.
818
819RX_DELETE:
820	Remove RX content filter subscription, requires only can_id.
821
822RX_READ:
823	Read properties of RX content filter subscription for can_id.
824
825Receive Responses (broadcast manager to user space):
826
827RX_STATUS:
828	Reply to RX_READ request (filter task configuration).
829
830RX_TIMEOUT:
831	Cyclic message is detected to be absent (timer ival1 expired).
832
833RX_CHANGED:
834	BCM message with updated CAN frame (detected content change).
835	Sent on first message received or on receipt of revised CAN messages.
836
837
838Broadcast Manager Message Flags
839~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
840
841When sending a message to the broadcast manager the 'flags' element may
842contain the following flag definitions which influence the behaviour:
843
844SETTIMER:
845	Set the values of ival1, ival2 and count
846
847STARTTIMER:
848	Start the timer with the actual values of ival1, ival2
849	and count. Starting the timer leads simultaneously to emit a CAN frame.
850
851TX_COUNTEVT:
852	Create the message TX_EXPIRED when count expires
853
854TX_ANNOUNCE:
855	A change of data by the process is emitted immediately.
856
857TX_CP_CAN_ID:
858	Copies the can_id from the message header to each
859	subsequent frame in frames. This is intended as usage simplification. For
860	TX tasks the unique can_id from the message header may differ from the
861	can_id(s) stored for transmission in the subsequent struct can_frame(s).
862
863RX_FILTER_ID:
864	Filter by can_id alone, no frames required (nframes=0).
865
866RX_CHECK_DLC:
867	A change of the DLC leads to an RX_CHANGED.
868
869RX_NO_AUTOTIMER:
870	Prevent automatically starting the timeout monitor.
871
872RX_ANNOUNCE_RESUME:
873	If passed at RX_SETUP and a receive timeout occurred, a
874	RX_CHANGED message will be generated when the (cyclic) receive restarts.
875
876TX_RESET_MULTI_IDX:
877	Reset the index for the multiple frame transmission.
878
879RX_RTR_FRAME:
880	Send reply for RTR-request (placed in op->frames[0]).
881
882CAN_FD_FRAME:
883	The CAN frames following the bcm_msg_head are struct canfd_frame's
884
885Broadcast Manager Transmission Timers
886~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
887
888Periodic transmission configurations may use up to two interval timers.
889In this case the BCM sends a number of messages ('count') at an interval
890'ival1', then continuing to send at another given interval 'ival2'. When
891only one timer is needed 'count' is set to zero and only 'ival2' is used.
892When SET_TIMER and START_TIMER flag were set the timers are activated.
893The timer values can be altered at runtime when only SET_TIMER is set.
894
895
896Broadcast Manager message sequence transmission
897~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
898
899Up to 256 CAN frames can be transmitted in a sequence in the case of a cyclic
900TX task configuration. The number of CAN frames is provided in the 'nframes'
901element of the BCM message head. The defined number of CAN frames are added
902as array to the TX_SETUP BCM configuration message:
903
904.. code-block:: C
905
906    /* create a struct to set up a sequence of four CAN frames */
907    struct {
908            struct bcm_msg_head msg_head;
909            struct can_frame frame[4];
910    } mytxmsg;
911
912    (..)
913    mytxmsg.msg_head.nframes = 4;
914    (..)
915
916    write(s, &mytxmsg, sizeof(mytxmsg));
917
918With every transmission the index in the array of CAN frames is increased
919and set to zero at index overflow.
920
921
922Broadcast Manager Receive Filter Timers
923~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
924
925The timer values ival1 or ival2 may be set to non-zero values at RX_SETUP.
926When the SET_TIMER flag is set the timers are enabled:
927
928ival1:
929	Send RX_TIMEOUT when a received message is not received again within
930	the given time. When START_TIMER is set at RX_SETUP the timeout detection
931	is activated directly - even without a former CAN frame reception.
932
933ival2:
934	Throttle the received message rate down to the value of ival2. This
935	is useful to reduce messages for the application when the signal inside the
936	CAN frame is stateless as state changes within the ival2 period may get
937	lost.
938
939Broadcast Manager Multiplex Message Receive Filter
940~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
941
942To filter for content changes in multiplex message sequences an array of more
943than one CAN frames can be passed in a RX_SETUP configuration message. The
944data bytes of the first CAN frame contain the mask of relevant bits that
945have to match in the subsequent CAN frames with the received CAN frame.
946If one of the subsequent CAN frames is matching the bits in that frame data
947mark the relevant content to be compared with the previous received content.
948Up to 257 CAN frames (multiplex filter bit mask CAN frame plus 256 CAN
949filters) can be added as array to the TX_SETUP BCM configuration message:
950
951.. code-block:: C
952
953    /* usually used to clear CAN frame data[] - beware of endian problems! */
954    #define U64_DATA(p) (*(unsigned long long*)(p)->data)
955
956    struct {
957            struct bcm_msg_head msg_head;
958            struct can_frame frame[5];
959    } msg;
960
961    msg.msg_head.opcode  = RX_SETUP;
962    msg.msg_head.can_id  = 0x42;
963    msg.msg_head.flags   = 0;
964    msg.msg_head.nframes = 5;
965    U64_DATA(&msg.frame[0]) = 0xFF00000000000000ULL; /* MUX mask */
966    U64_DATA(&msg.frame[1]) = 0x01000000000000FFULL; /* data mask (MUX 0x01) */
967    U64_DATA(&msg.frame[2]) = 0x0200FFFF000000FFULL; /* data mask (MUX 0x02) */
968    U64_DATA(&msg.frame[3]) = 0x330000FFFFFF0003ULL; /* data mask (MUX 0x33) */
969    U64_DATA(&msg.frame[4]) = 0x4F07FC0FF0000000ULL; /* data mask (MUX 0x4F) */
970
971    write(s, &msg, sizeof(msg));
972
973
974Broadcast Manager CAN FD Support
975~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
976
977The programming API of the CAN_BCM depends on struct can_frame which is
978given as array directly behind the bcm_msg_head structure. To follow this
979schema for the CAN FD frames a new flag 'CAN_FD_FRAME' in the bcm_msg_head
980flags indicates that the concatenated CAN frame structures behind the
981bcm_msg_head are defined as struct canfd_frame:
982
983.. code-block:: C
984
985    struct {
986            struct bcm_msg_head msg_head;
987            struct canfd_frame frame[5];
988    } msg;
989
990    msg.msg_head.opcode  = RX_SETUP;
991    msg.msg_head.can_id  = 0x42;
992    msg.msg_head.flags   = CAN_FD_FRAME;
993    msg.msg_head.nframes = 5;
994    (..)
995
996When using CAN FD frames for multiplex filtering the MUX mask is still
997expected in the first 64 bit of the struct canfd_frame data section.
998
999
1000Connected Transport Protocols (SOCK_SEQPACKET)
1001----------------------------------------------
1002
1003(to be written)
1004
1005
1006Unconnected Transport Protocols (SOCK_DGRAM)
1007--------------------------------------------
1008
1009(to be written)
1010
1011
1012.. _socketcan-core-module:
1013
1014SocketCAN Core Module
1015=====================
1016
1017The SocketCAN core module implements the protocol family
1018PF_CAN. CAN protocol modules are loaded by the core module at
1019runtime. The core module provides an interface for CAN protocol
1020modules to subscribe needed CAN IDs (see :ref:`socketcan-receive-lists`).
1021
1022
1023can.ko Module Params
1024--------------------
1025
1026- **stats_timer**:
1027  To calculate the SocketCAN core statistics
1028  (e.g. current/maximum frames per second) this 1 second timer is
1029  invoked at can.ko module start time by default. This timer can be
1030  disabled by using stattimer=0 on the module commandline.
1031
1032- **debug**:
1033  (removed since SocketCAN SVN r546)
1034
1035
1036procfs content
1037--------------
1038
1039As described in :ref:`socketcan-receive-lists` the SocketCAN core uses several filter
1040lists to deliver received CAN frames to CAN protocol modules. These
1041receive lists, their filters and the count of filter matches can be
1042checked in the appropriate receive list. All entries contain the
1043device and a protocol module identifier::
1044
1045    foo@bar:~$ cat /proc/net/can/rcvlist_all
1046
1047    receive list 'rx_all':
1048      (vcan3: no entry)
1049      (vcan2: no entry)
1050      (vcan1: no entry)
1051      device   can_id   can_mask  function  userdata   matches  ident
1052       vcan0     000    00000000  f88e6370  f6c6f400         0  raw
1053      (any: no entry)
1054
1055In this example an application requests any CAN traffic from vcan0::
1056
1057    rcvlist_all - list for unfiltered entries (no filter operations)
1058    rcvlist_eff - list for single extended frame (EFF) entries
1059    rcvlist_err - list for error message frames masks
1060    rcvlist_fil - list for mask/value filters
1061    rcvlist_inv - list for mask/value filters (inverse semantic)
1062    rcvlist_sff - list for single standard frame (SFF) entries
1063
1064Additional procfs files in /proc/net/can::
1065
1066    stats       - SocketCAN core statistics (rx/tx frames, match ratios, ...)
1067    reset_stats - manual statistic reset
1068    version     - prints SocketCAN core and ABI version (removed in Linux 5.10)
1069
1070
1071Writing Own CAN Protocol Modules
1072--------------------------------
1073
1074To implement a new protocol in the protocol family PF_CAN a new
1075protocol has to be defined in include/linux/can.h .
1076The prototypes and definitions to use the SocketCAN core can be
1077accessed by including include/linux/can/core.h .
1078In addition to functions that register the CAN protocol and the
1079CAN device notifier chain there are functions to subscribe CAN
1080frames received by CAN interfaces and to send CAN frames::
1081
1082    can_rx_register   - subscribe CAN frames from a specific interface
1083    can_rx_unregister - unsubscribe CAN frames from a specific interface
1084    can_send          - transmit a CAN frame (optional with local loopback)
1085
1086For details see the kerneldoc documentation in net/can/af_can.c or
1087the source code of net/can/raw.c or net/can/bcm.c .
1088
1089
1090CAN Network Drivers
1091===================
1092
1093Writing a CAN network device driver is much easier than writing a
1094CAN character device driver. Similar to other known network device
1095drivers you mainly have to deal with:
1096
1097- TX: Put the CAN frame from the socket buffer to the CAN controller.
1098- RX: Put the CAN frame from the CAN controller to the socket buffer.
1099
1100See e.g. at Documentation/networking/netdevices.rst . The differences
1101for writing CAN network device driver are described below:
1102
1103
1104General Settings
1105----------------
1106
1107.. code-block:: C
1108
1109    dev->type  = ARPHRD_CAN; /* the netdevice hardware type */
1110    dev->flags = IFF_NOARP;  /* CAN has no arp */
1111
1112    dev->mtu = CAN_MTU; /* sizeof(struct can_frame) -> Classical CAN interface */
1113
1114    or alternative, when the controller supports CAN with flexible data rate:
1115    dev->mtu = CANFD_MTU; /* sizeof(struct canfd_frame) -> CAN FD interface */
1116
1117The struct can_frame or struct canfd_frame is the payload of each socket
1118buffer (skbuff) in the protocol family PF_CAN.
1119
1120
1121.. _socketcan-local-loopback2:
1122
1123Local Loopback of Sent Frames
1124-----------------------------
1125
1126As described in :ref:`socketcan-local-loopback1` the CAN network device driver should
1127support a local loopback functionality similar to the local echo
1128e.g. of tty devices. In this case the driver flag IFF_ECHO has to be
1129set to prevent the PF_CAN core from locally echoing sent frames
1130(aka loopback) as fallback solution::
1131
1132    dev->flags = (IFF_NOARP | IFF_ECHO);
1133
1134
1135CAN Controller Hardware Filters
1136-------------------------------
1137
1138To reduce the interrupt load on deep embedded systems some CAN
1139controllers support the filtering of CAN IDs or ranges of CAN IDs.
1140These hardware filter capabilities vary from controller to
1141controller and have to be identified as not feasible in a multi-user
1142networking approach. The use of the very controller specific
1143hardware filters could make sense in a very dedicated use-case, as a
1144filter on driver level would affect all users in the multi-user
1145system. The high efficient filter sets inside the PF_CAN core allow
1146to set different multiple filters for each socket separately.
1147Therefore the use of hardware filters goes to the category 'handmade
1148tuning on deep embedded systems'. The author is running a MPC603e
1149@133MHz with four SJA1000 CAN controllers from 2002 under heavy bus
1150load without any problems ...
1151
1152
1153Switchable Termination Resistors
1154--------------------------------
1155
1156CAN bus requires a specific impedance across the differential pair,
1157typically provided by two 120Ohm resistors on the farthest nodes of
1158the bus. Some CAN controllers support activating / deactivating a
1159termination resistor(s) to provide the correct impedance.
1160
1161Query the available resistances::
1162
1163    $ ip -details link show can0
1164    ...
1165    termination 120 [ 0, 120 ]
1166
1167Activate the terminating resistor::
1168
1169    $ ip link set dev can0 type can termination 120
1170
1171Deactivate the terminating resistor::
1172
1173    $ ip link set dev can0 type can termination 0
1174
1175To enable termination resistor support to a can-controller, either
1176implement in the controller's struct can-priv::
1177
1178    termination_const
1179    termination_const_cnt
1180    do_set_termination
1181
1182or add gpio control with the device tree entries from
1183Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/can/can-controller.yaml
1184
1185
1186The Virtual CAN Driver (vcan)
1187-----------------------------
1188
1189Similar to the network loopback devices, vcan offers a virtual local
1190CAN interface. A full qualified address on CAN consists of
1191
1192- a unique CAN Identifier (CAN ID)
1193- the CAN bus this CAN ID is transmitted on (e.g. can0)
1194
1195so in common use cases more than one virtual CAN interface is needed.
1196
1197The virtual CAN interfaces allow the transmission and reception of CAN
1198frames without real CAN controller hardware. Virtual CAN network
1199devices are usually named 'vcanX', like vcan0 vcan1 vcan2 ...
1200When compiled as a module the virtual CAN driver module is called vcan.ko
1201
1202Since Linux Kernel version 2.6.24 the vcan driver supports the Kernel
1203netlink interface to create vcan network devices. The creation and
1204removal of vcan network devices can be managed with the ip(8) tool::
1205
1206  - Create a virtual CAN network interface:
1207       $ ip link add type vcan
1208
1209  - Create a virtual CAN network interface with a specific name 'vcan42':
1210       $ ip link add dev vcan42 type vcan
1211
1212  - Remove a (virtual CAN) network interface 'vcan42':
1213       $ ip link del vcan42
1214
1215
1216The CAN Network Device Driver Interface
1217---------------------------------------
1218
1219The CAN network device driver interface provides a generic interface
1220to setup, configure and monitor CAN network devices. The user can then
1221configure the CAN device, like setting the bit-timing parameters, via
1222the netlink interface using the program "ip" from the "IPROUTE2"
1223utility suite. The following chapter describes briefly how to use it.
1224Furthermore, the interface uses a common data structure and exports a
1225set of common functions, which all real CAN network device drivers
1226should use. Please have a look to the SJA1000 or MSCAN driver to
1227understand how to use them. The name of the module is can-dev.ko.
1228
1229
1230Netlink interface to set/get devices properties
1231~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1232
1233The CAN device must be configured via netlink interface. The supported
1234netlink message types are defined and briefly described in
1235"include/linux/can/netlink.h". CAN link support for the program "ip"
1236of the IPROUTE2 utility suite is available and it can be used as shown
1237below:
1238
1239Setting CAN device properties::
1240
1241    $ ip link set can0 type can help
1242    Usage: ip link set DEVICE type can
1243        [ bitrate BITRATE [ sample-point SAMPLE-POINT] ] |
1244        [ tq TQ prop-seg PROP_SEG phase-seg1 PHASE-SEG1
1245          phase-seg2 PHASE-SEG2 [ sjw SJW ] ]
1246
1247        [ dbitrate BITRATE [ dsample-point SAMPLE-POINT] ] |
1248        [ dtq TQ dprop-seg PROP_SEG dphase-seg1 PHASE-SEG1
1249          dphase-seg2 PHASE-SEG2 [ dsjw SJW ] ]
1250
1251        [ loopback { on | off } ]
1252        [ listen-only { on | off } ]
1253        [ triple-sampling { on | off } ]
1254        [ one-shot { on | off } ]
1255        [ berr-reporting { on | off } ]
1256        [ fd { on | off } ]
1257        [ fd-non-iso { on | off } ]
1258        [ presume-ack { on | off } ]
1259        [ cc-len8-dlc { on | off } ]
1260
1261        [ restart-ms TIME-MS ]
1262        [ restart ]
1263
1264        Where: BITRATE       := { 1..1000000 }
1265               SAMPLE-POINT  := { 0.000..0.999 }
1266               TQ            := { NUMBER }
1267               PROP-SEG      := { 1..8 }
1268               PHASE-SEG1    := { 1..8 }
1269               PHASE-SEG2    := { 1..8 }
1270               SJW           := { 1..4 }
1271               RESTART-MS    := { 0 | NUMBER }
1272
1273Display CAN device details and statistics::
1274
1275    $ ip -details -statistics link show can0
1276    2: can0: <NOARP,UP,LOWER_UP,ECHO> mtu 16 qdisc pfifo_fast state UP qlen 10
1277      link/can
1278      can <TRIPLE-SAMPLING> state ERROR-ACTIVE restart-ms 100
1279      bitrate 125000 sample_point 0.875
1280      tq 125 prop-seg 6 phase-seg1 7 phase-seg2 2 sjw 1
1281      sja1000: tseg1 1..16 tseg2 1..8 sjw 1..4 brp 1..64 brp-inc 1
1282      clock 8000000
1283      re-started bus-errors arbit-lost error-warn error-pass bus-off
1284      41         17457      0          41         42         41
1285      RX: bytes  packets  errors  dropped overrun mcast
1286      140859     17608    17457   0       0       0
1287      TX: bytes  packets  errors  dropped carrier collsns
1288      861        112      0       41      0       0
1289
1290More info to the above output:
1291
1292"<TRIPLE-SAMPLING>"
1293	Shows the list of selected CAN controller modes: LOOPBACK,
1294	LISTEN-ONLY, or TRIPLE-SAMPLING.
1295
1296"state ERROR-ACTIVE"
1297	The current state of the CAN controller: "ERROR-ACTIVE",
1298	"ERROR-WARNING", "ERROR-PASSIVE", "BUS-OFF" or "STOPPED"
1299
1300"restart-ms 100"
1301	Automatic restart delay time. If set to a non-zero value, a
1302	restart of the CAN controller will be triggered automatically
1303	in case of a bus-off condition after the specified delay time
1304	in milliseconds. By default it's off.
1305
1306"bitrate 125000 sample-point 0.875"
1307	Shows the real bit-rate in bits/sec and the sample-point in the
1308	range 0.000..0.999. If the calculation of bit-timing parameters
1309	is enabled in the kernel (CONFIG_CAN_CALC_BITTIMING=y), the
1310	bit-timing can be defined by setting the "bitrate" argument.
1311	Optionally the "sample-point" can be specified. By default it's
1312	0.000 assuming CIA-recommended sample-points.
1313
1314"tq 125 prop-seg 6 phase-seg1 7 phase-seg2 2 sjw 1"
1315	Shows the time quanta in ns, propagation segment, phase buffer
1316	segment 1 and 2 and the synchronisation jump width in units of
1317	tq. They allow to define the CAN bit-timing in a hardware
1318	independent format as proposed by the Bosch CAN 2.0 spec (see
1319	chapter 8 of http://www.semiconductors.bosch.de/pdf/can2spec.pdf).
1320
1321"sja1000: tseg1 1..16 tseg2 1..8 sjw 1..4 brp 1..64 brp-inc 1 clock 8000000"
1322	Shows the bit-timing constants of the CAN controller, here the
1323	"sja1000". The minimum and maximum values of the time segment 1
1324	and 2, the synchronisation jump width in units of tq, the
1325	bitrate pre-scaler and the CAN system clock frequency in Hz.
1326	These constants could be used for user-defined (non-standard)
1327	bit-timing calculation algorithms in user-space.
1328
1329"re-started bus-errors arbit-lost error-warn error-pass bus-off"
1330	Shows the number of restarts, bus and arbitration lost errors,
1331	and the state changes to the error-warning, error-passive and
1332	bus-off state. RX overrun errors are listed in the "overrun"
1333	field of the standard network statistics.
1334
1335Setting the CAN Bit-Timing
1336~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1337
1338The CAN bit-timing parameters can always be defined in a hardware
1339independent format as proposed in the Bosch CAN 2.0 specification
1340specifying the arguments "tq", "prop_seg", "phase_seg1", "phase_seg2"
1341and "sjw"::
1342
1343    $ ip link set canX type can tq 125 prop-seg 6 \
1344				phase-seg1 7 phase-seg2 2 sjw 1
1345
1346If the kernel option CONFIG_CAN_CALC_BITTIMING is enabled, CIA
1347recommended CAN bit-timing parameters will be calculated if the bit-
1348rate is specified with the argument "bitrate"::
1349
1350    $ ip link set canX type can bitrate 125000
1351
1352Note that this works fine for the most common CAN controllers with
1353standard bit-rates but may *fail* for exotic bit-rates or CAN system
1354clock frequencies. Disabling CONFIG_CAN_CALC_BITTIMING saves some
1355space and allows user-space tools to solely determine and set the
1356bit-timing parameters. The CAN controller specific bit-timing
1357constants can be used for that purpose. They are listed by the
1358following command::
1359
1360    $ ip -details link show can0
1361    ...
1362      sja1000: clock 8000000 tseg1 1..16 tseg2 1..8 sjw 1..4 brp 1..64 brp-inc 1
1363
1364
1365Starting and Stopping the CAN Network Device
1366~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1367
1368A CAN network device is started or stopped as usual with the command
1369"ifconfig canX up/down" or "ip link set canX up/down". Be aware that
1370you *must* define proper bit-timing parameters for real CAN devices
1371before you can start it to avoid error-prone default settings::
1372
1373    $ ip link set canX up type can bitrate 125000
1374
1375A device may enter the "bus-off" state if too many errors occurred on
1376the CAN bus. Then no more messages are received or sent. An automatic
1377bus-off recovery can be enabled by setting the "restart-ms" to a
1378non-zero value, e.g.::
1379
1380    $ ip link set canX type can restart-ms 100
1381
1382Alternatively, the application may realize the "bus-off" condition
1383by monitoring CAN error message frames and do a restart when
1384appropriate with the command::
1385
1386    $ ip link set canX type can restart
1387
1388Note that a restart will also create a CAN error message frame (see
1389also :ref:`socketcan-network-problem-notifications`).
1390
1391
1392.. _socketcan-can-fd-driver:
1393
1394CAN FD (Flexible Data Rate) Driver Support
1395------------------------------------------
1396
1397CAN FD capable CAN controllers support two different bitrates for the
1398arbitration phase and the payload phase of the CAN FD frame. Therefore a
1399second bit timing has to be specified in order to enable the CAN FD bitrate.
1400
1401Additionally CAN FD capable CAN controllers support up to 64 bytes of
1402payload. The representation of this length in can_frame.len and
1403canfd_frame.len for userspace applications and inside the Linux network
1404layer is a plain value from 0 .. 64 instead of the CAN 'data length code'.
1405The data length code was a 1:1 mapping to the payload length in the Classical
1406CAN frames anyway. The payload length to the bus-relevant DLC mapping is
1407only performed inside the CAN drivers, preferably with the helper
1408functions can_fd_dlc2len() and can_fd_len2dlc().
1409
1410The CAN netdevice driver capabilities can be distinguished by the network
1411devices maximum transfer unit (MTU)::
1412
1413  MTU = 16 (CAN_MTU)   => sizeof(struct can_frame)   => Classical CAN device
1414  MTU = 72 (CANFD_MTU) => sizeof(struct canfd_frame) => CAN FD capable device
1415
1416The CAN device MTU can be retrieved e.g. with a SIOCGIFMTU ioctl() syscall.
1417N.B. CAN FD capable devices can also handle and send Classical CAN frames.
1418
1419When configuring CAN FD capable CAN controllers an additional 'data' bitrate
1420has to be set. This bitrate for the data phase of the CAN FD frame has to be
1421at least the bitrate which was configured for the arbitration phase. This
1422second bitrate is specified analogue to the first bitrate but the bitrate
1423setting keywords for the 'data' bitrate start with 'd' e.g. dbitrate,
1424dsample-point, dsjw or dtq and similar settings. When a data bitrate is set
1425within the configuration process the controller option "fd on" can be
1426specified to enable the CAN FD mode in the CAN controller. This controller
1427option also switches the device MTU to 72 (CANFD_MTU).
1428
1429The first CAN FD specification presented as whitepaper at the International
1430CAN Conference 2012 needed to be improved for data integrity reasons.
1431Therefore two CAN FD implementations have to be distinguished today:
1432
1433- ISO compliant:     The ISO 11898-1:2015 CAN FD implementation (default)
1434- non-ISO compliant: The CAN FD implementation following the 2012 whitepaper
1435
1436Finally there are three types of CAN FD controllers:
1437
14381. ISO compliant (fixed)
14392. non-ISO compliant (fixed, like the M_CAN IP core v3.0.1 in m_can.c)
14403. ISO/non-ISO CAN FD controllers (switchable, like the PEAK PCAN-USB FD)
1441
1442The current ISO/non-ISO mode is announced by the CAN controller driver via
1443netlink and displayed by the 'ip' tool (controller option FD-NON-ISO).
1444The ISO/non-ISO-mode can be altered by setting 'fd-non-iso {on|off}' for
1445switchable CAN FD controllers only.
1446
1447Example configuring 500 kbit/s arbitration bitrate and 4 Mbit/s data bitrate::
1448
1449    $ ip link set can0 up type can bitrate 500000 sample-point 0.75 \
1450                                   dbitrate 4000000 dsample-point 0.8 fd on
1451    $ ip -details link show can0
1452    5: can0: <NOARP,UP,LOWER_UP,ECHO> mtu 72 qdisc pfifo_fast state UNKNOWN \
1453             mode DEFAULT group default qlen 10
1454    link/can  promiscuity 0
1455    can <FD> state ERROR-ACTIVE (berr-counter tx 0 rx 0) restart-ms 0
1456          bitrate 500000 sample-point 0.750
1457          tq 50 prop-seg 14 phase-seg1 15 phase-seg2 10 sjw 1
1458          pcan_usb_pro_fd: tseg1 1..64 tseg2 1..16 sjw 1..16 brp 1..1024 \
1459          brp-inc 1
1460          dbitrate 4000000 dsample-point 0.800
1461          dtq 12 dprop-seg 7 dphase-seg1 8 dphase-seg2 4 dsjw 1
1462          pcan_usb_pro_fd: dtseg1 1..16 dtseg2 1..8 dsjw 1..4 dbrp 1..1024 \
1463          dbrp-inc 1
1464          clock 80000000
1465
1466Example when 'fd-non-iso on' is added on this switchable CAN FD adapter::
1467
1468   can <FD,FD-NON-ISO> state ERROR-ACTIVE (berr-counter tx 0 rx 0) restart-ms 0
1469
1470
1471Supported CAN Hardware
1472----------------------
1473
1474Please check the "Kconfig" file in "drivers/net/can" to get an actual
1475list of the support CAN hardware. On the SocketCAN project website
1476(see :ref:`socketcan-resources`) there might be further drivers available, also for
1477older kernel versions.
1478
1479
1480.. _socketcan-resources:
1481
1482SocketCAN Resources
1483===================
1484
1485The Linux CAN / SocketCAN project resources (project site / mailing list)
1486are referenced in the MAINTAINERS file in the Linux source tree.
1487Search for CAN NETWORK [LAYERS|DRIVERS].
1488
1489Credits
1490=======
1491
1492- Oliver Hartkopp (PF_CAN core, filters, drivers, bcm, SJA1000 driver)
1493- Urs Thuermann (PF_CAN core, kernel integration, socket interfaces, raw, vcan)
1494- Jan Kizka (RT-SocketCAN core, Socket-API reconciliation)
1495- Wolfgang Grandegger (RT-SocketCAN core & drivers, Raw Socket-API reviews, CAN device driver interface, MSCAN driver)
1496- Robert Schwebel (design reviews, PTXdist integration)
1497- Marc Kleine-Budde (design reviews, Kernel 2.6 cleanups, drivers)
1498- Benedikt Spranger (reviews)
1499- Thomas Gleixner (LKML reviews, coding style, posting hints)
1500- Andrey Volkov (kernel subtree structure, ioctls, MSCAN driver)
1501- Matthias Brukner (first SJA1000 CAN netdevice implementation Q2/2003)
1502- Klaus Hitschler (PEAK driver integration)
1503- Uwe Koppe (CAN netdevices with PF_PACKET approach)
1504- Michael Schulze (driver layer loopback requirement, RT CAN drivers review)
1505- Pavel Pisa (Bit-timing calculation)
1506- Sascha Hauer (SJA1000 platform driver)
1507- Sebastian Haas (SJA1000 EMS PCI driver)
1508- Markus Plessing (SJA1000 EMS PCI driver)
1509- Per Dalen (SJA1000 Kvaser PCI driver)
1510- Sam Ravnborg (reviews, coding style, kbuild help)
1511