source: rtems-docs/cpu_supplement/sparc.rst @ be428d1

4.115
Last change on this file since be428d1 was f233256, checked in by Chris Johns <chrisj@…>, on 10/06/16 at 22:13:16

Clean up the CPU Supplement.

  • Property mode set to 100644
File size: 36.3 KB
Line 
1.. comment SPDX-License-Identifier: CC-BY-SA-4.0
2
3.. COMMENT: COPYRIGHT (c) 1988-2002.
4.. COMMENT: On-Line Applications Research Corporation (OAR).
5.. COMMENT: All rights reserved.
6
7SPARC Specific Information
8##########################
9
10The Real Time Executive for Multiprocessor Systems (RTEMS) is designed to be
11portable across multiple processor architectures.  However, the nature of
12real-time systems makes it essential that the application designer understand
13certain processor dependent implementation details.  These processor
14dependencies include calling convention, board support package issues,
15interrupt processing, exact RTEMS memory requirements, performance data, header
16files, and the assembly language interface to the executive.
17
18This document discusses the SPARC architecture dependencies in this port of
19RTEMS.  This architectural port is for SPARC Version 7 and
208. Implementations for SPARC V9 are in the sparc64 target.
21
22It is highly recommended that the SPARC RTEMS application developer obtain and
23become familiar with the documentation for the processor being used as well as
24the specification for the revision of the SPARC architecture which corresponds
25to that processor.
26
27**SPARC Architecture Documents**
28
29For information on the SPARC architecture, refer to the following documents
30available from SPARC International, Inc.  (http://www.sparc.com):
31
32- SPARC Standard Version 7.
33
34- SPARC Standard Version 8.
35
36**ERC32 Specific Information**
37
38The European Space Agency's ERC32 is a three chip computing core implementing a
39SPARC V7 processor and associated support circuitry for embedded space
40applications. The integer and floating-point units (90C601E & 90C602E) are
41based on the Cypress 7C601 and 7C602, with additional error-detection and
42recovery functions. The memory controller (MEC) implements system support
43functions such as address decoding, memory interface, DMA interface, UARTs,
44timers, interrupt control, write-protection, memory reconfiguration and
45error-detection.  The core is designed to work at 25MHz, but using space
46qualified memories limits the system frequency to around 15 MHz, resulting in a
47performance of 10 MIPS and 2 MFLOPS.
48
49Information on the ERC32 and a number of development support tools, such as the
50SPARC Instruction Simulator (SIS), are freely available on the Internet.  The
51following documents and SIS are available via anonymous ftp or pointing your
52web browser at ftp://ftp.estec.esa.nl/pub/ws/wsd/erc32.
53
54- ERC32 System Design Document
55
56- MEC Device Specification
57
58Additionally, the SPARC RISC User's Guide from Matra MHS documents the
59functionality of the integer and floating point units including the instruction
60set information.  To obtain this document as well as ERC32 components and VHDL
61models contact:
62
63    Matra MHS SA
64    3 Avenue du Centre, BP 309,
65    78054 St-Quentin-en-Yvelines,
66    Cedex, France
67    VOICE: +31-1-30607087
68    FAX: +31-1-30640693
69
70Amar Guennon (amar.guennon@matramhs.fr) is familiar with the ERC32.
71
72CPU Model Dependent Features
73============================
74
75Microprocessors are generally classified into families with a variety of CPU
76models or implementations within that family.  Within a processor family, there
77is a high level of binary compatibility.  This family may be based on either an
78architectural specification or on maintaining compatibility with a popular
79processor.  Recent microprocessor families such as the SPARC or PowerPC are
80based on an architectural specification which is independent or any particular
81CPU model or implementation.  Older families such as the M68xxx and the iX86
82evolved as the manufacturer strived to produce higher performance processor
83models which maintained binary compatibility with older models.
84
85RTEMS takes advantage of the similarity of the various models within a CPU
86family.  Although the models do vary in significant ways, the high level of
87compatibility makes it possible to share the bulk of the CPU dependent
88executive code across the entire family.
89
90CPU Model Feature Flags
91-----------------------
92
93Each processor family supported by RTEMS has a list of features which vary
94between CPU models within a family.  For example, the most common model
95dependent feature regardless of CPU family is the presence or absence of a
96floating point unit or coprocessor.  When defining the list of features present
97on a particular CPU model, one simply notes that floating point hardware is or
98is not present and defines a single constant appropriately.  Conditional
99compilation is utilized to include the appropriate source code for this CPU
100model's feature set.  It is important to note that this means that RTEMS is
101thus compiled using the appropriate feature set and compilation flags optimal
102for this CPU model used.  The alternative would be to generate a binary which
103would execute on all family members using only the features which were always
104present.
105
106This section presents the set of features which vary across SPARC
107implementations and are of importance to RTEMS.  The set of CPU model feature
108macros are defined in the file cpukit/score/cpu/sparc/sparc.h based upon the
109particular CPU model defined on the compilation command line.
110
111CPU Model Name
112~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
113
114The macro CPU_MODEL_NAME is a string which designates the name of this CPU
115model.  For example, for the European Space Agency's ERC32 SPARC model, this
116macro is set to the string "erc32".
117
118Floating Point Unit
119~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
120
121The macro SPARC_HAS_FPU is set to 1 to indicate that this CPU model has a
122hardware floating point unit and 0 otherwise.
123
124Bitscan Instruction
125~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
126
127The macro SPARC_HAS_BITSCAN is set to 1 to indicate that this CPU model has the
128bitscan instruction.  For example, this instruction is supported by the Fujitsu
129SPARClite family.
130
131Number of Register Windows
132~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
133
134The macro SPARC_NUMBER_OF_REGISTER_WINDOWS is set to indicate the number of
135register window sets implemented by this CPU model.  The SPARC architecture
136allows a for a maximum of thirty-two register window sets although most
137implementations only include eight.
138
139Low Power Mode
140~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
141
142The macro SPARC_HAS_LOW_POWER_MODE is set to one to indicate that this CPU
143model has a low power mode.  If low power is enabled, then there must be CPU
144model specific implementation of the IDLE task in cpukit/score/cpu/sparc/cpu.c.
145The low power mode IDLE task should be of the form:
146
147.. code-block:: c
148
149    while ( TRUE ) {
150        enter low power mode
151    }
152
153The code required to enter low power mode is CPU model specific.
154
155CPU Model Implementation Notes
156------------------------------
157
158The ERC32 is a custom SPARC V7 implementation based on the Cypress 601/602
159chipset.  This CPU has a number of on-board peripherals and was developed by
160the European Space Agency to target space applications.  RTEMS currently
161provides support for the following peripherals:
162
163- UART Channels A and B
164
165- General Purpose Timer
166
167- Real Time Clock
168
169- Watchdog Timer (so it can be disabled)
170
171- Control Register (so powerdown mode can be enabled)
172
173- Memory Control Register
174
175- Interrupt Control
176
177The General Purpose Timer and Real Time Clock Timer provided with the ERC32
178share the Timer Control Register.  Because the Timer Control Register is write
179only, we must mirror it in software and insure that writes to one timer do not
180alter the current settings and status of the other timer.  Routines are
181provided in erc32.h which promote the view that the two timers are completely
182independent.  By exclusively using these routines to access the Timer Control
183Register, the application can view the system as having a General Purpose Timer
184Control Register and a Real Time Clock Timer Control Register rather than the
185single shared value.
186
187The RTEMS Idle thread take advantage of the low power mode provided by the
188ERC32.  Low power mode is entered during idle loops and is enabled at
189initialization time.
190
191Calling Conventions
192===================
193
194Each high-level language compiler generates subroutine entry and exit code
195based upon a set of rules known as the application binary interface (ABI)
196calling convention.  These rules address the following issues:
197
198- register preservation and usage
199
200- parameter passing
201
202- call and return mechanism
203
204An ABI calling convention is of importance when interfacing to subroutines
205written in another language either assembly or high-level.  It determines also
206the set of registers to be saved or restored during a context switch and
207interrupt processing.
208
209The ABI relevant for RTEMS on SPARC is defined by SYSTEM V APPLICATION BINARY
210INTERFACE, SPARC Processor Supplement, Third Edition.
211
212Programming Model
213-----------------
214
215This section discusses the programming model for the SPARC architecture.
216
217Non-Floating Point Registers
218~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
219
220The SPARC architecture defines thirty-two non-floating point registers directly
221visible to the programmer.  These are divided into four sets:
222
223- input registers
224
225- local registers
226
227- output registers
228
229- global registers
230
231Each register is referred to by either two or three names in the SPARC
232reference manuals.  First, the registers are referred to as r0 through r31 or
233with the alternate notation r[0] through r[31].  Second, each register is a
234member of one of the four sets listed above.  Finally, some registers have an
235architecturally defined role in the programming model which provides an
236alternate name.  The following table describes the mapping between the 32
237registers and the register sets:
238
239+-----------------+----------------+------------------+
240| Register Number | Register Names |   Description    |
241+-----------------+----------------+------------------+
242|     0 - 7       |    g0 - g7     | Global Registers |
243+-----------------+----------------+------------------+
244|     8 - 15      |    o0 - o7     | Output Registers |
245+-----------------+----------------+------------------+
246|    16 - 23      |    l0 - l7     | Local Registers  |
247+-----------------+----------------+------------------+
248|    24 - 31      |    i0 - i7     | Input Registers  |
249+-----------------+----------------+------------------+
250
251As mentioned above, some of the registers serve defined roles in the
252programming model.  The following table describes the role of each of these
253registers:
254
255+---------------+----------------+----------------------+
256| Register Name | Alternate Name |      Description     |
257+---------------+----------------+----------------------+
258|     g0        |      na        |    reads return 0    |
259|               |                |  writes are ignored  |
260+---------------+----------------+----------------------+
261|     o6        |      sp        |     stack pointer    |
262+---------------+----------------+----------------------+
263|     i6        |      fp        |     frame pointer    |
264+---------------+----------------+----------------------+
265|     i7        |      na        |    return address    |
266+---------------+----------------+----------------------+
267
268The registers g2 through g4 are reserved for applications.  GCC uses them as
269volatile registers by default.  So they are treated like volatile registers in
270RTEMS as well.
271
272The register g6 is reserved for the operating system and contains the address
273of the per-CPU control block of the current processor.  This register is
274initialized during system start and then remains unchanged.  It is not
275saved/restored by the context switch or interrupt processing code.
276
277The register g7 is reserved for the operating system and contains the thread
278pointer used for thread-local storage (TLS) as mandated by the SPARC ABI.
279
280Floating Point Registers
281~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
282
283The SPARC V7 architecture includes thirty-two, thirty-two bit registers.  These
284registers may be viewed as follows:
285
286- 32 single precision floating point or integer registers (f0, f1, ... f31)
287
288- 16 double precision floating point registers (f0, f2, f4, ... f30)
289
290- 8 extended precision floating point registers (f0, f4, f8, ... f28)
291
292The floating point status register (FSR) specifies the behavior of the floating
293point unit for rounding, contains its condition codes, version specification,
294and trap information.
295
296According to the ABI all floating point registers and the floating point status
297register (FSR) are volatile.  Thus the floating point context of a thread is
298the empty set.  The rounding direction is a system global state and must not be
299modified by threads.
300
301A queue of the floating point instructions which have started execution but not
302yet completed is maintained.  This queue is needed to support the multiple
303cycle nature of floating point operations and to aid floating point exception
304trap handlers.  Once a floating point exception has been encountered, the queue
305is frozen until it is emptied by the trap handler.  The floating point queue is
306loaded by launching instructions.  It is emptied normally when the floating
307point completes all outstanding instructions and by floating point exception
308handlers with the store double floating point queue (stdfq) instruction.
309
310Special Registers
311~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
312
313The SPARC architecture includes two special registers which are critical to the
314programming model: the Processor State Register (psr) and the Window Invalid
315Mask (wim).  The psr contains the condition codes, processor interrupt level,
316trap enable bit, supervisor mode and previous supervisor mode bits, version
317information, floating point unit and coprocessor enable bits, and the current
318window pointer (cwp).  The cwp field of the psr and wim register are used to
319manage the register windows in the SPARC architecture.  The register windows
320are discussed in more detail below.
321
322Register Windows
323----------------
324
325The SPARC architecture includes the concept of register windows.  An overly
326simplistic way to think of these windows is to imagine them as being an
327infinite supply of "fresh" register sets available for each subroutine to use.
328In reality, they are much more complicated.
329
330The save instruction is used to obtain a new register window.  This instruction
331decrements the current window pointer, thus providing a new set of registers
332for use.  This register set includes eight fresh local registers for use
333exclusively by this subroutine.  When done with a register set, the restore
334instruction increments the current window pointer and the previous register set
335is once again available.
336
337The two primary issues complicating the use of register windows are that (1)
338the set of register windows is finite, and (2) some registers are shared
339between adjacent registers windows.
340
341Because the set of register windows is finite, it is possible to execute enough
342save instructions without corresponding restore's to consume all of the
343register windows.  This is easily accomplished in a high level language because
344each subroutine typically performs a save instruction upon entry.  Thus having
345a subroutine call depth greater than the number of register windows will result
346in a window overflow condition.  The window overflow condition generates a trap
347which must be handled in software.  The window overflow trap handler is
348responsible for saving the contents of the oldest register window on the
349program stack.
350
351Similarly, the subroutines will eventually complete and begin to perform
352restore's.  If the restore results in the need for a register window which has
353previously been written to memory as part of an overflow, then a window
354underflow condition results.  Just like the window overflow, the window
355underflow condition must be handled in software by a trap handler.  The window
356underflow trap handler is responsible for reloading the contents of the
357register window requested by the restore instruction from the program stack.
358
359The Window Invalid Mask (wim) and the Current Window Pointer (cwp) field in the
360psr are used in conjunction to manage the finite set of register windows and
361detect the window overflow and underflow conditions.  The cwp contains the
362index of the register window currently in use.  The save instruction decrements
363the cwp modulo the number of register windows.  Similarly, the restore
364instruction increments the cwp modulo the number of register windows.  Each bit
365in the wim represents represents whether a register window contains valid
366information.  The value of 0 indicates the register window is valid and 1
367indicates it is invalid.  When a save instruction causes the cwp to point to a
368register window which is marked as invalid, a window overflow condition
369results.  Conversely, the restore instruction may result in a window underflow
370condition.
371
372Other than the assumption that a register window is always available for trap
373(i.e. interrupt) handlers, the SPARC architecture places no limits on the
374number of register windows simultaneously marked as invalid (i.e. number of
375bits set in the wim).  However, RTEMS assumes that only one register window is
376marked invalid at a time (i.e. only one bit set in the wim).  This makes the
377maximum possible number of register windows available to the user while still
378meeting the requirement that window overflow and underflow conditions can be
379detected.
380
381The window overflow and window underflow trap handlers are a critical part of
382the run-time environment for a SPARC application.  The SPARC architectural
383specification allows for the number of register windows to be any power of two
384less than or equal to 32.  The most common choice for SPARC implementations
385appears to be 8 register windows.  This results in the cwp ranging in value
386from 0 to 7 on most implementations.
387
388The second complicating factor is the sharing of registers between adjacent
389register windows.  While each register window has its own set of local
390registers, the input and output registers are shared between adjacent windows.
391The output registers for register window N are the same as the input registers
392for register window ((N - 1) modulo RW) where RW is the number of register
393windows.  An alternative way to think of this is to remember how parameters are
394passed to a subroutine on the SPARC.  The caller loads values into what are its
395output registers.  Then after the callee executes a save instruction, those
396parameters are available in its input registers.  This is a very efficient way
397to pass parameters as no data is actually moved by the save or restore
398instructions.
399
400Call and Return Mechanism
401-------------------------
402
403The SPARC architecture supports a simple yet effective call and return
404mechanism.  A subroutine is invoked via the call (call) instruction.  This
405instruction places the return address in the caller's output register 7 (o7).
406After the callee executes a save instruction, this value is available in input
407register 7 (i7) until the corresponding restore instruction is executed.
408
409The callee returns to the caller via a jmp to the return address.  There is a
410delay slot following this instruction which is commonly used to execute a
411restore instruction - if a register window was allocated by this subroutine.
412
413It is important to note that the SPARC subroutine call and return mechanism
414does not automatically save and restore any registers.  This is accomplished
415via the save and restore instructions which manage the set of registers
416windows.
417
418In case a floating-point unit is supported, then floating-point return values
419appear in the floating-point registers.  Single-precision values occupy %f0;
420double-precision values occupy %f0 and %f1.  Otherwise, these are scratch
421registers.  Due to this the hardware and software floating-point ABIs are
422incompatible.
423
424Calling Mechanism
425-----------------
426
427All RTEMS directives are invoked using the regular SPARC calling convention via
428the call instruction.
429
430Register Usage
431--------------
432
433As discussed above, the call instruction does not automatically save any
434registers.  The save and restore instructions are used to allocate and
435deallocate register windows.  When a register window is allocated, the new set
436of local registers are available for the exclusive use of the subroutine which
437allocated this register set.
438
439Parameter Passing
440-----------------
441
442RTEMS assumes that arguments are placed in the caller's output registers with
443the first argument in output register 0 (o0), the second argument in output
444register 1 (o1), and so forth.  Until the callee executes a save instruction,
445the parameters are still visible in the output registers.  After the callee
446executes a save instruction, the parameters are visible in the corresponding
447input registers.  The following pseudo-code illustrates the typical sequence
448used to call a RTEMS directive with three (3) arguments:
449
450.. code-block:: c
451
452    load third argument into o2
453    load second argument into o1
454    load first argument into o0
455    invoke directive
456
457User-Provided Routines
458----------------------
459
460All user-provided routines invoked by RTEMS, such as user extensions, device
461drivers, and MPCI routines, must also adhere to these calling conventions.
462
463Memory Model
464============
465
466A processor may support any combination of memory models ranging from pure
467physical addressing to complex demand paged virtual memory systems.  RTEMS
468supports a flat memory model which ranges contiguously over the processor's
469allowable address space.  RTEMS does not support segmentation or virtual memory
470of any kind.  The appropriate memory model for RTEMS provided by the targeted
471processor and related characteristics of that model are described in this
472chapter.
473
474Flat Memory Model
475-----------------
476
477The SPARC architecture supports a flat 32-bit address space with addresses
478ranging from 0x00000000 to 0xFFFFFFFF (4 gigabytes).  Each address is
479represented by a 32-bit value and is byte addressable.  The address may be used
480to reference a single byte, half-word (2-bytes), word (4 bytes), or doubleword
481(8 bytes).  Memory accesses within this address space are performed in big
482endian fashion by the SPARC.  Memory accesses which are not properly aligned
483generate a "memory address not aligned" trap (type number 7).  The following
484table lists the alignment requirements for a variety of data accesses:
485
486    +--------------+-----------------------+
487    |   Data Type  | Alignment Requirement |
488    +--------------+-----------------------+
489    |     byte     |          1            |
490    |   half-word  |          2            |
491    |     word     |          4            |
492    |  doubleword  |          8            |
493    +--------------+-----------------------+
494
495Doubleword load and store operations must use a pair of registers as their
496source or destination.  This pair of registers must be an adjacent pair of
497registers with the first of the pair being even numbered.  For example, a valid
498destination for a doubleword load might be input registers 0 and 1 (i0 and i1).
499The pair i1 and i2 would be invalid.  \[NOTE: Some assemblers for the SPARC do
500not generate an error if an odd numbered register is specified as the beginning
501register of the pair.  In this case, the assembler assumes that what the
502programmer meant was to use the even-odd pair which ends at the specified
503register.  This may or may not have been a correct assumption.]
504
505RTEMS does not support any SPARC Memory Management Units, therefore, virtual
506memory or segmentation systems involving the SPARC are not supported.
507
508Interrupt Processing
509====================
510
511Different types of processors respond to the occurrence of an interrupt in its
512own unique fashion. In addition, each processor type provides a control
513mechanism to allow for the proper handling of an interrupt.  The processor
514dependent response to the interrupt modifies the current execution state and
515results in a change in the execution stream.  Most processors require that an
516interrupt handler utilize some special control mechanisms to return to the
517normal processing stream.  Although RTEMS hides many of the processor dependent
518details of interrupt processing, it is important to understand how the RTEMS
519interrupt manager is mapped onto the processor's unique architecture. Discussed
520in this chapter are the SPARC's interrupt response and control mechanisms as
521they pertain to RTEMS.
522
523RTEMS and associated documentation uses the terms interrupt and vector.  In the
524SPARC architecture, these terms correspond to traps and trap type,
525respectively.  The terms will be used interchangeably in this manual.
526
527Synchronous Versus Asynchronous Traps
528-------------------------------------
529
530The SPARC architecture includes two classes of traps: synchronous and
531asynchronous.  Asynchronous traps occur when an external event interrupts the
532processor.  These traps are not associated with any instruction executed by the
533processor and logically occur between instructions.  The instruction currently
534in the execute stage of the processor is allowed to complete although
535subsequent instructions are annulled.  The return address reported by the
536processor for asynchronous traps is the pair of instructions following the
537current instruction.
538
539Synchronous traps are caused by the actions of an instruction.  The trap
540stimulus in this case either occurs internally to the processor or is from an
541external signal that was provoked by the instruction.  These traps are taken
542immediately and the instruction that caused the trap is aborted before any
543state changes occur in the processor itself.  The return address reported by
544the processor for synchronous traps is the instruction which caused the trap
545and the following instruction.
546
547Vectoring of Interrupt Handler
548------------------------------
549
550Upon receipt of an interrupt the SPARC automatically performs the following
551actions:
552
553- disables traps (sets the ET bit of the psr to 0),
554
555- the S bit of the psr is copied into the Previous Supervisor Mode (PS) bit of
556  the psr,
557
558- the cwp is decremented by one (modulo the number of register windows) to
559  activate a trap window,
560
561- the PC and nPC are loaded into local register 1 and 2 (l0 and l1),
562
563- the trap type (tt) field of the Trap Base Register (TBR) is set to the
564  appropriate value, and
565
566- if the trap is not a reset, then the PC is written with the contents of the
567  TBR and the nPC is written with TBR + 4.  If the trap is a reset, then the PC
568  is set to zero and the nPC is set to 4.
569
570Trap processing on the SPARC has two features which are noticeably different
571than interrupt processing on other architectures.  First, the value of psr
572register in effect immediately before the trap occurred is not explicitly
573saved.  Instead only reversible alterations are made to it.  Second, the
574Processor Interrupt Level (pil) is not set to correspond to that of the
575interrupt being processed.  When a trap occurs, ALL subsequent traps are
576disabled.  In order to safely invoke a subroutine during trap handling, traps
577must be enabled to allow for the possibility of register window overflow and
578underflow traps.
579
580If the interrupt handler was installed as an RTEMS interrupt handler, then upon
581receipt of the interrupt, the processor passes control to the RTEMS interrupt
582handler which performs the following actions:
583
584- saves the state of the interrupted task on it's stack,
585
586- insures that a register window is available for subsequent traps,
587
588- if this is the outermost (i.e. non-nested) interrupt, then the RTEMS
589  interrupt handler switches from the current stack to the interrupt stack,
590
591- enables traps,
592
593- invokes the vectors to a user interrupt service routine (ISR).
594
595Asynchronous interrupts are ignored while traps are disabled.  Synchronous
596traps which occur while traps are disabled result in the CPU being forced into
597an error mode.
598
599A nested interrupt is processed similarly with the exception that the current
600stack need not be switched to the interrupt stack.
601
602Traps and Register Windows
603--------------------------
604
605One of the register windows must be reserved at all times for trap processing.
606This is critical to the proper operation of the trap mechanism in the SPARC
607architecture.  It is the responsibility of the trap handler to insure that
608there is a register window available for a subsequent trap before re-enabling
609traps.  It is likely that any high level language routines invoked by the trap
610handler (such as a user-provided RTEMS interrupt handler) will allocate a new
611register window.  The save operation could result in a window overflow trap.
612This trap cannot be correctly processed unless (1) traps are enabled and (2) a
613register window is reserved for traps.  Thus, the RTEMS interrupt handler
614insures that a register window is available for subsequent traps before
615enabling traps and invoking the user's interrupt handler.
616
617Interrupt Levels
618----------------
619
620Sixteen levels (0-15) of interrupt priorities are supported by the SPARC
621architecture with level fifteen (15) being the highest priority.  Level
622zero (0) indicates that interrupts are fully enabled.  Interrupt requests for
623interrupts with priorities less than or equal to the current interrupt mask
624level are ignored. Level fifteen (15) is a non-maskable interrupt (NMI), which
625makes it unsuitable for standard usage since it can affect the real-time
626behaviour by interrupting critical sections and spinlocks. Disabling traps
627stops also the NMI interrupt from happening. It can however be used for
628power-down or other critical events.
629
630Although RTEMS supports 256 interrupt levels, the SPARC only supports sixteen.
631RTEMS interrupt levels 0 through 15 directly correspond to SPARC processor
632interrupt levels.  All other RTEMS interrupt levels are undefined and their
633behavior is unpredictable.
634
635Many LEON SPARC v7/v8 systems features an extended interrupt controller which
636adds an extra step of interrupt decoding to allow handling of interrupt
63716-31. When such an extended interrupt is generated the CPU traps into a
638specific interrupt trap level 1-14 and software reads out from the interrupt
639controller which extended interrupt source actually caused the interrupt.
640
641Disabling of Interrupts by RTEMS
642--------------------------------
643
644During the execution of directive calls, critical sections of code may be
645executed.  When these sections are encountered, RTEMS disables interrupts to
646level fifteen (15) before the execution of the section and restores them to the
647previous level upon completion of the section.  RTEMS has been optimized to
648ensure that interrupts are disabled for less than RTEMS_MAXIMUM_DISABLE_PERIOD
649microseconds on a RTEMS_MAXIMUM_DISABLE_PERIOD_MHZ Mhz ERC32 with zero wait
650states.  These numbers will vary based the number of wait states and processor
651speed present on the target board.  [NOTE: The maximum period with interrupts
652disabled is hand calculated.  This calculation was last performed for Release
653RTEMS_RELEASE_FOR_MAXIMUM_DISABLE_PERIOD.]
654
655[NOTE: It is thought that the length of time at which the processor interrupt
656level is elevated to fifteen by RTEMS is not anywhere near as long as the
657length of time ALL traps are disabled as part of the "flush all register
658windows" operation.]
659
660Non-maskable interrupts (NMI) cannot be disabled, and ISRs which execute at
661this level MUST NEVER issue RTEMS system calls.  If a directive is invoked,
662unpredictable results may occur due to the inability of RTEMS to protect its
663critical sections.  However, ISRs that make no system calls may safely execute
664as non-maskable interrupts.
665
666Interrupts are disabled or enabled by performing a system call to the Operating
667System reserved software traps 9 (SPARC_SWTRAP_IRQDIS) or 10
668(SPARC_SWTRAP_IRQDIS). The trap is generated by the software trap (Ticc)
669instruction or indirectly by calling sparc_disable_interrupts() or
670sparc_enable_interrupts() functions. Disabling interrupts return the previous
671interrupt level (on trap entry) in register G1 and sets PSR.PIL to 15 to
672disable all maskable interrupts. The interrupt level can be restored by
673trapping into the enable interrupt handler with G1 containing the new interrupt
674level.
675
676Interrupt Stack
677---------------
678
679The SPARC architecture does not provide for a dedicated interrupt stack.  Thus
680by default, trap handlers would execute on the stack of the RTEMS task which
681they interrupted.  This artificially inflates the stack requirements for each
682task since EVERY task stack would have to include enough space to account for
683the worst case interrupt stack requirements in addition to it's own worst case
684usage.  RTEMS addresses this problem on the SPARC by providing a dedicated
685interrupt stack managed by software.
686
687During system initialization, RTEMS allocates the interrupt stack from the
688Workspace Area.  The amount of memory allocated for the interrupt stack is
689determined by the interrupt_stack_size field in the CPU Configuration Table.
690As part of processing a non-nested interrupt, RTEMS will switch to the
691interrupt stack before invoking the installed handler.
692
693Default Fatal Error Processing
694==============================
695
696Upon detection of a fatal error by either the application or RTEMS the fatal
697error manager is invoked.  The fatal error manager will invoke the
698user-supplied fatal error handlers.  If no user-supplied handlers are
699configured, the RTEMS provided default fatal error handler is invoked.  If the
700user-supplied fatal error handlers return to the executive the default fatal
701error handler is then invoked.  This chapter describes the precise operations
702of the default fatal error handler.
703
704Default Fatal Error Handler Operations
705--------------------------------------
706
707The default fatal error handler which is invoked by the fatal_error_occurred
708directive when there is no user handler configured or the user handler returns
709control to RTEMS.
710
711If the BSP has been configured with ``BSP_POWER_DOWN_AT_FATAL_HALT`` set to
712true, the default handler will disable interrupts and enter power down mode. If
713power down mode is not available, it goes into an infinite loop to simulate a
714halt processor instruction.
715
716If ``BSP_POWER_DOWN_AT_FATAL_HALT`` is set to false, the default handler will
717place the value ``1`` in register ``g1``, the error source in register ``g2``,
718and the error code in register``g3``. It will then generate a system error
719which will hand over control to the debugger, simulator, etc.
720
721Symmetric Multiprocessing
722=========================
723
724SMP is supported.  Available platforms are the Cobham Gaisler GR712RC and
725GR740.
726
727Thread-Local Storage
728====================
729
730Thread-local storage is supported.
731
732Board Support Packages
733======================
734
735An RTEMS Board Support Package (BSP) must be designed to support a particular
736processor and target board combination.  This chapter presents a discussion of
737SPARC specific BSP issues.  For more information on developing a BSP, refer to
738the chapter titled Board Support Packages in the RTEMS Applications User's
739Guide.
740
741System Reset
742------------
743
744An RTEMS based application is initiated or re-initiated when the SPARC
745processor is reset.  When the SPARC is reset, the processor performs the
746following actions:
747
748- the enable trap (ET) of the psr is set to 0 to disable traps,
749
750- the supervisor bit (S) of the psr is set to 1 to enter supervisor mode, and
751
752- the PC is set 0 and the nPC is set to 4.
753
754The processor then begins to execute the code at location 0.  It is important
755to note that all fields in the psr are not explicitly set by the above steps
756and all other registers retain their value from the previous execution mode.
757This is true even of the Trap Base Register (TBR) whose contents reflect the
758last trap which occurred before the reset.
759
760Processor Initialization
761------------------------
762
763It is the responsibility of the application's initialization code to initialize
764the TBR and install trap handlers for at least the register window overflow and
765register window underflow conditions.  Traps should be enabled before invoking
766any subroutines to allow for register window management.  However, interrupts
767should be disabled by setting the Processor Interrupt Level (pil) field of the
768psr to 15.  RTEMS installs it's own Trap Table as part of initialization which
769is initialized with the contents of the Trap Table in place when the
770``rtems_initialize_executive`` directive was invoked.  Upon completion of
771executive initialization, interrupts are enabled.
772
773If this SPARC implementation supports on-chip caching and this is to be
774utilized, then it should be enabled during the reset application initialization
775code.
776
777In addition to the requirements described in the Board Support Packages chapter
778of the C Applications Users Manual for the reset code which is executed before
779the call to``rtems_initialize_executive``, the SPARC version has the following
780specific requirements:
781
782- Must leave the S bit of the status register set so that the SPARC remains in
783  the supervisor state.
784
785- Must set stack pointer (sp) such that a minimum stack size of
786  MINIMUM_STACK_SIZE bytes is provided for the``rtems_initialize_executive``
787  directive.
788
789- Must disable all external interrupts (i.e. set the pil to 15).
790
791- Must enable traps so window overflow and underflow conditions can be properly
792  handled.
793
794- Must initialize the SPARC's initial trap table with at least trap handlers
795  for register window overflow and register window underflow.
Note: See TracBrowser for help on using the repository browser.