os161/kern/arch/sys161/dev/lamebus_machdep.c
2015-12-23 00:50:04 +00:00

335 lines
7.9 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (c) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2008, 2009
* The President and Fellows of Harvard College.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
* may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
* without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE UNIVERSITY AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE UNIVERSITY OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include <types.h>
#include <kern/unistd.h>
#include <lib.h>
#include <mips/specialreg.h>
#include <mips/trapframe.h>
#include <cpu.h>
#include <spl.h>
#include <clock.h>
#include <thread.h>
#include <current.h>
#include <membar.h>
#include <synch.h>
#include <mainbus.h>
#include <sys161/bus.h>
#include <lamebus/lamebus.h>
#include "autoconf.h"
/*
* CPU frequency used by the on-chip timer.
*
* Note that we really ought to measure the CPU frequency against the
* real-time clock instead of compiling it in like this.
*/
#define CPU_FREQUENCY 25000000 /* 25 MHz */
/*
* Access to the on-chip timer.
*
* The c0_count register increments on every cycle; when the value
* matches the c0_compare register, the timer interrupt line is
* asserted. Writing to c0_compare again clears the interrupt.
*/
static
void
mips_timer_set(uint32_t count)
{
/*
* $11 == c0_compare; we can't use the symbolic name inside
* the asm string.
*/
__asm volatile(
".set push;" /* save assembler mode */
".set mips32;" /* allow MIPS32 registers */
"mtc0 %0, $11;" /* do it */
".set pop" /* restore assembler mode */
:: "r" (count));
}
/*
* LAMEbus data for the system. (We have only one LAMEbus per system.)
* This does not need to be locked, because it's constant once
* initialized, and initialized before we start other threads or CPUs.
*/
static struct lamebus_softc *lamebus;
void
mainbus_bootstrap(void)
{
/* Interrupts should be off (and have been off since startup) */
KASSERT(curthread->t_curspl > 0);
/* Initialize the system LAMEbus data */
lamebus = lamebus_init();
/* Probe CPUs (should these be done as device attachments instead?) */
lamebus_find_cpus(lamebus);
/*
* Print the device name for the main bus.
*/
kprintf("lamebus0 (system main bus)\n");
/*
* Now we can take interrupts without croaking, so turn them on.
* Some device probes might require being able to get interrupts.
*/
spl0();
/*
* Now probe all the devices attached to the bus.
* (This amounts to all devices.)
*/
autoconf_lamebus(lamebus, 0);
/*
* Configure the MIPS on-chip timer to interrupt HZ times a second.
*/
mips_timer_set(CPU_FREQUENCY / HZ);
}
/*
* Start all secondary CPUs.
*/
void
mainbus_start_cpus(void)
{
lamebus_start_cpus(lamebus);
}
/*
* Function to generate the memory address (in the uncached segment)
* for the specified offset into the specified slot's region of the
* LAMEbus.
*/
void *
lamebus_map_area(struct lamebus_softc *bus, int slot, uint32_t offset)
{
uint32_t address;
(void)bus; // not needed
KASSERT(slot >= 0 && slot < LB_NSLOTS);
address = LB_BASEADDR + slot*LB_SLOT_SIZE + offset;
return (void *)address;
}
/*
* Read a 32-bit register from a LAMEbus device.
*/
uint32_t
lamebus_read_register(struct lamebus_softc *bus, int slot, uint32_t offset)
{
uint32_t *ptr;
ptr = lamebus_map_area(bus, slot, offset);
/*
* Make sure the load happens after anything the device has
* been doing.
*/
membar_load_load();
return *ptr;
}
/*
* Write a 32-bit register of a LAMEbus device.
*/
void
lamebus_write_register(struct lamebus_softc *bus, int slot,
uint32_t offset, uint32_t val)
{
uint32_t *ptr;
ptr = lamebus_map_area(bus, slot, offset);
*ptr = val;
/*
* Make sure the store happens before we do anything else to
* the device.
*/
membar_store_store();
}
/*
* Power off the system.
*/
void
mainbus_poweroff(void)
{
/*
*
* Note that lamebus_write_register() doesn't actually access
* the bus argument, so this will still work if we get here
* before the bus is initialized.
*/
lamebus_poweroff(lamebus);
}
/*
* Reboot the system.
*/
void
mainbus_reboot(void)
{
/*
* The MIPS doesn't appear to have any on-chip reset.
* LAMEbus doesn't have a reset control, so we just
* power off instead of rebooting. This would not be
* so great in a real system, but it's fine for what
* we're doing.
*/
kprintf("Cannot reboot - powering off instead, sorry.\n");
mainbus_poweroff();
}
/*
* Halt the system.
* On some systems, this would return to the boot monitor. But we don't
* have one.
*/
void
mainbus_halt(void)
{
cpu_halt();
}
/*
* Called to reset the system from panic().
*
* By the time we get here, the system may well be sufficiently hosed
* as to panic recursively if we do much of anything. So just power off.
* (We'd reboot, but System/161 doesn't do that.)
*/
void
mainbus_panic(void)
{
mainbus_poweroff();
}
/*
* Function to get the size of installed physical RAM from the LAMEbus
* controller.
*/
uint32_t
mainbus_ramsize(void)
{
uint32_t ramsize;
ramsize = lamebus_ramsize();
/*
* This is the same as the last physical address, as long as
* we have less than 508 megabytes of memory. The LAMEbus I/O
* area occupies the space between 508 megabytes and 512
* megabytes, so if we had more RAM than this it would have to
* be discontiguous. This is not a case we are going to worry
* about.
*/
if (ramsize > 508*1024*1024) {
ramsize = 508*1024*1024;
}
return ramsize;
}
/*
* Send IPI.
*/
void
mainbus_send_ipi(struct cpu *target)
{
lamebus_assert_ipi(lamebus, target);
}
/*
* Interrupt dispatcher.
*/
/* Wiring of LAMEbus interrupts to bits in the cause register */
#define LAMEBUS_IRQ_BIT 0x00000400 /* all system bus slots */
#define LAMEBUS_IPI_BIT 0x00000800 /* inter-processor interrupt */
#define MIPS_TIMER_BIT 0x00008000 /* on-chip timer */
void
mainbus_interrupt(struct trapframe *tf)
{
uint32_t cause;
bool seen = false;
/* interrupts should be off */
KASSERT(curthread->t_curspl > 0);
cause = tf->tf_cause;
if (cause & LAMEBUS_IRQ_BIT) {
lamebus_interrupt(lamebus);
seen = true;
}
if (cause & LAMEBUS_IPI_BIT) {
interprocessor_interrupt();
lamebus_clear_ipi(lamebus, curcpu);
seen = true;
}
if (cause & MIPS_TIMER_BIT) {
/* Reset the timer (this clears the interrupt) */
mips_timer_set(CPU_FREQUENCY / HZ);
/* and call hardclock */
hardclock();
seen = true;
}
if (!seen) {
if ((cause & CCA_IRQS) == 0) {
/*
* Don't panic here; this can happen if an
* interrupt line asserts (very) briefly and
* turns off again before we get as far as
* reading the cause register. This was
* actually seen... once.
*/
}
else {
/*
* But if we get an interrupt on an interrupt
* line that's not supposed to be wired up,
* complain.
*/
panic("Unknown interrupt; cause register is %08x\n",
cause);
}
}
}