source: rtems/c/src/exec/score/cpu/hppa1.1/cpu.h @ 11290355

4.104.114.84.95
Last change on this file since 11290355 was 11290355, checked in by Joel Sherrill <joel.sherrill@…>, on 09/29/95 at 17:19:16

all targets compile .. tony's patches in place

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1/*  cpu.h
2 *
3 *  This include file contains information pertaining to the HP
4 *  PA-RISC processor (Level 1.1).
5 *
6 *  COPYRIGHT (c) 1994 by Division Incorporated
7 *
8 *  To anyone who acknowledges that this file is provided "AS IS"
9 *  without any express or implied warranty:
10 *      permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this file
11 *      for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that
12 *      the above copyright notice and this notice appears in all
13 *      copies, and that the name of Division Incorporated not be
14 *      used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution
15 *      of the software without specific, written prior permission.
16 *      Division Incorporated makes no representations about the
17 *      suitability of this software for any purpose.
18 *
19 *
20 * Note:
21 *      This file is included by both C and assembler code ( -DASM )
22 *
23 *  cpu.h,v 1.5 1995/09/11 19:24:10 joel Exp
24 */
25
26#ifndef __CPU_h
27#define __CPU_h
28
29#ifdef __cplusplus
30extern "C" {
31#endif
32
33#include <rtems/core/hppa.h>              /* pick up machine definitions */
34#ifndef ASM
35#include <rtems/core/hppatypes.h>
36#endif
37
38/* conditional compilation parameters */
39
40#define CPU_INLINE_ENABLE_DISPATCH       FALSE
41#define CPU_UNROLL_ENQUEUE_PRIORITY      TRUE
42
43/*
44 *  RTEMS manages an interrupt stack in software for the HPPA.
45 */
46
47#define CPU_HAS_SOFTWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK TRUE
48#define CPU_HAS_HARDWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK FALSE
49#define CPU_ALLOCATE_INTERRUPT_STACK     TRUE
50
51/*
52 *  HPPA has hardware FP, it is assumed to exist by GCC so all tasks
53 *  may implicitly use it (especially for integer multiplies).  Because
54 *  the FP context is technically part of the basic integer context
55 *  on this CPU, we cannot use the deferred FP context switch algorithm.
56 */
57
58#define CPU_HARDWARE_FP                  TRUE
59#define CPU_ALL_TASKS_ARE_FP             TRUE
60#define CPU_IDLE_TASK_IS_FP              FALSE
61#define CPU_USE_DEFERRED_FP_SWITCH       FALSE
62
63#define CPU_PROVIDES_IDLE_THREAD_BODY    FALSE
64#define CPU_STACK_GROWS_UP               TRUE
65#define CPU_STRUCTURE_ALIGNMENT          __attribute__ ((__aligned__ (32)))
66
67/* constants */
68
69#define CPU_MODES_INTERRUPT_LEVEL  0x00000001 /* interrupt level in mode */
70#define CPU_MODES_INTERRUPT_MASK   0x00000001 /* interrupt level in mode */
71
72/*
73 * PSW contstants
74 */
75
76#define CPU_PSW_BASE (HPPA_PSW_C | HPPA_PSW_Q | HPPA_PSW_P | HPPA_PSW_D)
77#define CPU_PSW_INTERRUPTS_ON    (CPU_PSW_BASE | HPPA_PSW_I)
78#define CPU_PSW_INTERRUPTS_OFF   (CPU_PSW_BASE)
79
80#define CPU_PSW_DEFAULT     CPU_PSW_BASE
81
82
83#ifndef ASM
84
85/*
86 * Contexts
87 *
88 *  This means we have the following context items:
89 *    1. task level context stuff::  Context_Control
90 *    2. floating point task stuff:: Context_Control_fp
91 *
92 *  The PA-RISC is very fast so the expense of saving an extra register
93 *  or two is not of great concern at the present.  So we are not making
94 *  a distinction between what is saved during a task switch and what is
95 *  saved at each interrupt.  Plus saving the entire context should make
96 *  it easier to make gdb aware of RTEMS tasks.
97 */
98
99typedef struct {
100    unsigned32 flags;      /* whatever */
101    unsigned32 gr1;        /* scratch -- caller saves */
102    unsigned32 gr2;        /* RP -- return pointer */
103    unsigned32 gr3;        /* scratch -- callee saves */
104    unsigned32 gr4;        /* scratch -- callee saves */
105    unsigned32 gr5;        /* scratch -- callee saves */
106    unsigned32 gr6;        /* scratch -- callee saves */
107    unsigned32 gr7;        /* scratch -- callee saves */
108    unsigned32 gr8;        /* scratch -- callee saves */
109    unsigned32 gr9;        /* scratch -- callee saves */
110    unsigned32 gr10;       /* scratch -- callee saves */
111    unsigned32 gr11;       /* scratch -- callee saves */
112    unsigned32 gr12;       /* scratch -- callee saves */
113    unsigned32 gr13;       /* scratch -- callee saves */
114    unsigned32 gr14;       /* scratch -- callee saves */
115    unsigned32 gr15;       /* scratch -- callee saves */
116    unsigned32 gr16;       /* scratch -- callee saves */
117    unsigned32 gr17;       /* scratch -- callee saves */
118    unsigned32 gr18;       /* scratch -- callee saves */
119    unsigned32 gr19;       /* scratch -- caller saves */
120    unsigned32 gr20;       /* scratch -- caller saves */
121    unsigned32 gr21;       /* scratch -- caller saves */
122    unsigned32 gr22;       /* scratch -- caller saves */
123    unsigned32 gr23;       /* argument 3 */
124    unsigned32 gr24;       /* argument 2 */
125    unsigned32 gr25;       /* argument 1 */
126    unsigned32 gr26;       /* argument 0 */
127    unsigned32 gr27;       /* DP -- global data pointer */
128    unsigned32 gr28;       /* return values -- caller saves */
129    unsigned32 gr29;       /* return values -- caller saves */
130    unsigned32 sp;         /* gr30 */
131    unsigned32 gr31;
132
133    /* Various control registers */
134
135    unsigned32 sar;         /* cr11 */
136    unsigned32 ipsw;        /* cr22; full 32 bits of psw */
137    unsigned32 iir;         /* cr19; interrupt instruction register */
138    unsigned32 ior;         /* cr21; interrupt offset register */
139    unsigned32 isr;         /* cr20; interrupt space register (not used) */
140    unsigned32 pcoqfront;   /* cr18; front que offset */
141    unsigned32 pcoqback;    /* cr18; back que offset */
142    unsigned32 pcsqfront;   /* cr17; front que space (not used) */
143    unsigned32 pcsqback;    /* cr17; back que space (not used) */
144    unsigned32 itimer;      /* cr16; itimer value */
145
146} Context_Control;
147
148
149/* Must be double word aligned.
150 * This will be ok since our allocator returns 8 byte aligned chunks
151 */
152
153typedef struct {
154    double      fr0;        /* status */
155    double      fr1;        /* exception information */
156    double      fr2;        /* exception information */
157    double      fr3;        /* exception information */
158    double      fr4;        /* argument */
159    double      fr5;        /* argument */
160    double      fr6;        /* argument */
161    double      fr7;        /* argument */
162    double      fr8;        /* scratch -- caller saves */
163    double      fr9;        /* scratch -- caller saves */
164    double      fr10;       /* scratch -- caller saves */
165    double      fr11;       /* scratch -- caller saves */
166    double      fr12;       /* callee saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
167    double      fr13;       /* callee saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
168    double      fr14;       /* callee saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
169    double      fr15;       /* callee saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
170    double      fr16;       /* callee saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
171    double      fr17;       /* callee saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
172    double      fr18;       /* callee saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
173    double      fr19;       /* callee saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
174    double      fr20;       /* callee saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
175    double      fr21;       /* callee saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
176    double      fr22;       /* caller saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
177    double      fr23;       /* caller saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
178    double      fr24;       /* caller saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
179    double      fr25;       /* caller saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
180    double      fr26;       /* caller saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
181    double      fr27;       /* caller saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
182    double      fr28;       /* caller saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
183    double      fr29;       /* caller saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
184    double      fr30;       /* caller saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
185    double      fr31;       /* caller saves -- (PA-RISC 1.1 CPUs) */
186} Context_Control_fp;
187
188/*
189 *  The following structure defines the set of information saved
190 *  on the current stack by RTEMS upon receipt of each interrupt.
191 */
192
193typedef struct {
194  Context_Control             Integer;
195  Context_Control_fp          Floating_Point;
196} CPU_Interrupt_frame;
197
198/*
199 * The following table contains the information required to configure
200 * the HPPA specific parameters.
201 */
202
203typedef struct {
204  void       (*pretasking_hook)( void );
205  void       (*predriver_hook)( void );
206  void       (*postdriver_hook)( void );
207  void       (*idle_task)( void );
208
209                 /* HPPA simulator is slow enough; don't waste time
210                  * zeroing memory that is already zero
211                  */
212  boolean      do_zero_of_workspace;
213
214  unsigned32   interrupt_stack_size;
215  unsigned32   extra_system_initialization_stack;
216
217  /*
218   * Control of external interrupts.
219   * We keep a table of external vector numbers (0 - 31)
220   * The table is sorted by priority, that is: the first entry
221   * in the table indicates the vector that is highest priorty.
222   * The handler function is stored in _ISR_Vector_Table[] and
223   * is set by rtems_interrupt_catch()
224   */
225
226  unsigned32   external_interrupts;   /* # of external interrupts we use */
227  unsigned32   external_interrupt[HPPA_EXTERNAL_INTERRUPTS];
228
229  void       (*spurious_handler)( unsigned32 mask, CPU_Interrupt_frame *);
230
231  unsigned32   itimer_clicks_per_microsecond; /* for use by Clock driver */
232}   rtems_cpu_table;
233
234/* variables */
235
236EXTERN Context_Control_fp  _CPU_Null_fp_context;
237EXTERN unsigned32          _CPU_Default_gr27;
238EXTERN void               *_CPU_Interrupt_stack_low;
239EXTERN void               *_CPU_Interrupt_stack_high;
240
241#endif          /* ! ASM */
242
243/*
244 *  context size area for floating point
245 */
246
247#ifndef ASM
248#define CPU_CONTEXT_FP_SIZE sizeof( Context_Control_fp )
249#endif
250
251/*
252 *  size of a frame on the stack
253 */
254
255#define CPU_FRAME_SIZE (16 * 4)
256
257/*
258 * (Optional) # of bytes for libmisc/stackchk to check
259 * If not specifed, then it defaults to something reasonable
260 * for most architectures.
261 */
262
263#define CPU_STACK_CHECK_SIZE    (CPU_FRAME_SIZE * 2)
264
265/*
266 *  extra stack required by system initialization thread
267 */
268
269#define CPU_SYSTEM_INITIALIZATION_THREAD_EXTRA_STACK 0
270
271/*
272 * HPPA has 32 interrupts, then 32 external interrupts
273 * Rtems (_ISR_Vector_Table) is aware of the first 64
274 * A BSP may reserve more.
275 *
276 * External interrupts all come thru the same vector (4)
277 * The external handler is the only person aware of the other
278 * interrupts (genie, rhino, etc)
279 */
280
281#define CPU_INTERRUPT_NUMBER_OF_VECTORS  (HPPA_INTERRUPT_MAX)
282
283/*
284 * Don't be chintzy here; we don't want to debug these problems
285 * Some of the tests eat almost 4k.
286 * Plus, the HPPA always allocates chunks of 64 bytes for stack
287 *       growth.
288 */
289
290#define CPU_STACK_MINIMUM_SIZE          (8 * 1024)
291
292/*
293 * HPPA double's must be on 8 byte boundary
294 */
295
296#define CPU_ALIGNMENT              8
297
298/*
299 * just follow the basic HPPA alignment for the heap and partition
300 */
301
302#define CPU_HEAP_ALIGNMENT         CPU_ALIGNMENT
303#define CPU_PARTITION_ALIGNMENT    CPU_ALIGNMENT
304
305/*
306 * HPPA stack is best when 64 byte aligned.
307 */
308
309#define CPU_STACK_ALIGNMENT        64
310
311#ifndef ASM
312
313/* macros */
314
315/*
316 *  ISR handler macros
317 *
318 *  These macros perform the following functions:
319 *     + disable all maskable CPU interrupts
320 *     + restore previous interrupt level (enable)
321 *     + temporarily restore interrupts (flash)
322 *     + set a particular level
323 */
324
325/* Disable interrupts; returning previous level in _level */
326#define _CPU_ISR_Disable( _isr_cookie ) \
327  do { \
328         HPPA_ASM_RSM(HPPA_PSW_I, _isr_cookie);   \
329  } while(0)
330
331/* Enable interrupts to previous level from _CPU_ISR_Disable
332 * does not change 'level' */
333#define _CPU_ISR_Enable( _isr_cookie )  \
334  { \
335        HPPA_ASM_MTSM( _isr_cookie ); \
336  }
337
338/* restore, then disable interrupts; does not change level */
339#define _CPU_ISR_Flash( _isr_cookie ) \
340  { \
341        register int _ignore;  \
342        _CPU_ISR_Enable( _isr_cookie ); \
343        _CPU_ISR_Disable( _ignore ); \
344  }
345
346/*
347 * Interrupt task levels
348 *
349 * Future scheme proposal
350 *      level will be an index into a array.
351 *      Each entry of array will be the interrupt bits
352 *        enabled for that level.  There will be 32 bits of external
353 *        interrupts (to be placed in EIEM) and some (optional) bsp
354 *        specific bits
355 *
356 * For pixel flow this *may* mean something like:
357 *      level 0:   all interrupts enabled (external + rhino)
358 *      level 1:   rhino disabled
359 *      level 2:   all io interrupts disabled (timer still enabled)
360 *      level 7:   *ALL* disabled (timer disabled)
361 */
362
363/* set interrupts on or off; does not return new level */
364#define _CPU_ISR_Set_level( new_level ) \
365  { \
366        volatile int ignore; \
367        if ( new_level )  HPPA_ASM_RSM(HPPA_PSW_I, ignore); \
368        else              HPPA_ASM_SSM(HPPA_PSW_I, ignore); \
369  }
370
371/* return current level */
372unsigned32 _CPU_ISR_Get_level( void );
373
374/* end of ISR handler macros */
375
376/*
377 *  Context handler macros
378 *
379 *  These macros perform the following functions:
380 *     + initialize a context area
381 *     + restart the current thread
382 *     + calculate the initial pointer into a FP context area
383 *     + initialize an FP context area
384 *
385 *  HPPA port adds two macros which hide the "indirectness" of the
386 *  pointer passed the save/restore FP context assembly routines.
387 */
388
389#define _CPU_Context_Initialize( _the_context, _stack_base, _size, \
390                                  _new_level, _entry_point ) \
391  do { \
392    unsigned32 _stack; \
393    \
394    (_the_context)->flags = 0xfeedf00d; \
395    (_the_context)->pcoqfront = (unsigned32)(_entry_point); \
396    (_the_context)->pcoqback  = (unsigned32)(_entry_point) + 4; \
397    (_the_context)->pcsqfront = 0; \
398    (_the_context)->pcsqback  = 0; \
399    if ( (_new_level) ) \
400        (_the_context)->ipsw = CPU_PSW_INTERRUPTS_OFF; \
401    else \
402        (_the_context)->ipsw = CPU_PSW_INTERRUPTS_ON; \
403    \
404    _stack = ((unsigned32)(_stack_base) + (CPU_STACK_ALIGNMENT - 1)); \
405    _stack &= ~(CPU_STACK_ALIGNMENT - 1); \
406    if ((_stack - (unsigned32) (_stack_base)) < CPU_FRAME_SIZE) \
407       _stack += CPU_FRAME_SIZE; \
408    \
409    (_the_context)->sp = (_stack); \
410    (_the_context)->gr27 = _CPU_Default_gr27; \
411  } while (0)
412
413#define _CPU_Context_Restart_self( _the_context ) \
414    do { \
415         _CPU_Context_restore( (_the_context) ); \
416    } while (0)
417
418#define _CPU_Context_Fp_start( _base, _offset ) \
419   ( (void *) (_base) + (_offset) )
420
421#define _CPU_Context_Initialize_fp( _destination ) \
422  do { \
423    *((Context_Control_fp *) *((void **) _destination)) = _CPU_Null_fp_context;\
424  } while(0)
425
426#define _CPU_Context_save_fp( _fp_context ) \
427   _CPU_Save_float_context( *(Context_Control_fp **)(_fp_context) )
428
429#define _CPU_Context_restore_fp( _fp_context ) \
430   _CPU_Restore_float_context( *(Context_Control_fp **)(_fp_context) )
431
432/* end of Context handler macros */
433
434/*
435 *  Fatal Error manager macros
436 *
437 *  These macros perform the following functions:
438 *    + disable interrupts and halt the CPU
439 */
440
441void    hppa_cpu_halt(unsigned32 type_of_halt, unsigned32 the_error);
442#define _CPU_Fatal_halt( _error ) \
443    hppa_cpu_halt(0, _error)
444
445/* end of Fatal Error manager macros */
446
447/*
448 *  Bitfield handler macros
449 *
450 *  These macros perform the following functions:
451 *     + scan for the highest numbered (MSB) set in a 16 bit bitfield
452 *
453 *  NOTE:
454 *
455 *  The HPPA does not have a scan instruction.  This functionality
456 *  is implemented in software.
457 */
458
459int hppa_rtems_ffs(unsigned int value);
460#define _CPU_Bitfield_Find_first_bit( _value, _output ) \
461    _output = hppa_rtems_ffs(_value)
462
463/* end of Bitfield handler macros */
464
465/*
466 *  Priority handler macros
467 *
468 *  These macros perform the following functions:
469 *    + return a mask with the bit for this major/minor portion of
470 *      of thread priority set.
471 *    + translate the bit number returned by "Bitfield_find_first_bit"
472 *      into an index into the thread ready chain bit maps
473 *
474 *  Note: 255 is the lowest priority
475 */
476
477#define _CPU_Priority_Mask( _bit_number ) \
478  ( 1 << (_bit_number) )
479
480#define _CPU_Priority_Bits_index( _priority ) \
481  (_priority)
482
483/* end of Priority handler macros */
484
485/* functions */
486
487/*
488 *  _CPU_Initialize
489 *
490 *  This routine performs CPU dependent initialization.
491 */
492
493void _CPU_Initialize(
494  rtems_cpu_table  *cpu_table,
495  void      (*thread_dispatch)
496);
497
498/*
499 *  _CPU_ISR_install_raw_handler
500 *
501 *  This routine installs a "raw" interrupt handler directly into the
502 *  processor's vector table.
503 */
504 
505void _CPU_ISR_install_raw_handler(
506  unsigned32  vector,
507  proc_ptr    new_handler,
508  proc_ptr   *old_handler
509);
510
511/*
512 *  _CPU_ISR_install_vector
513 *
514 *  This routine installs an interrupt vector.
515 */
516
517void _CPU_ISR_install_vector(
518  unsigned32  vector,
519  proc_ptr    new_handler,
520  proc_ptr   *old_handler
521);
522
523/*
524 *  _CPU_Context_switch
525 *
526 *  This routine switches from the run context to the heir context.
527 */
528
529void _CPU_Context_switch(
530  Context_Control  *run,
531  Context_Control  *heir
532);
533
534/*
535 *  _CPU_Context_restore
536 *
537 *  This routine is generally used only to restart self in an
538 *  efficient manner and avoid stack conflicts.
539 */
540
541void _CPU_Context_restore(
542  Context_Control *new_context
543);
544
545/*
546 *  _CPU_Save_float_context
547 *
548 *  This routine saves the floating point context passed to it.
549 *
550 *  NOTE:  _CPU_Context_save_fp is implemented as a macro on the HPPA
551 *         which dereferences the pointer before calling this.
552 */
553
554void _CPU_Save_float_context(
555  Context_Control_fp *fp_context
556);
557
558/*
559 *  _CPU_Restore_float_context
560 *
561 *  This routine restores the floating point context passed to it.
562 *
563 *  NOTE:  _CPU_Context_save_fp is implemented as a macro on the HPPA
564 *         which dereferences the pointer before calling this.
565 */
566
567void _CPU_Restore_float_context(
568  Context_Control_fp *fp_context
569);
570
571
572/*  The following routine swaps the endian format of an unsigned int.
573 *  It must be static so it can be referenced indirectly.
574 */
575
576static inline unsigned int
577CPU_swap_u32(unsigned32 value)
578{
579  unsigned32 swapped;
580
581  HPPA_ASM_SWAPBYTES(value, swapped);
582
583  return( swapped );
584}
585
586/*
587 * Unused; I think it should go away
588 */
589
590#if 0
591#define enable_tracing()
592#endif
593
594#endif   /* ! ASM */
595
596#ifdef __cplusplus
597}
598#endif
599
600#endif   /* ! __CPU_h */
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