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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 | /* $Id: dma.h,v 1.1.1.1 1997/06/01 03:17:12 ralf Exp $ * linux/include/asm/dma.h: Defines for using and allocating dma channels. * Written by Hennus Bergman, 1992. * High DMA channel support & info by Hannu Savolainen * and John Boyd, Nov. 1992. * * NOTE: all this is true *only* for ISA/EISA expansions on Mips boards * and can only be used for expansion cards. Onboard DMA controllers, such * as the R4030 on Jazz boards behave totally different! */ #ifndef __ASM_MIPS_DMA_H #define __ASM_MIPS_DMA_H #include <linux/config.h> #include <asm/io.h> /* need byte IO */ #ifdef HAVE_REALLY_SLOW_DMA_CONTROLLER #define dma_outb outb_p #else #define dma_outb outb #endif #define dma_inb inb /* * NOTES about DMA transfers: * * controller 1: channels 0-3, byte operations, ports 00-1F * controller 2: channels 4-7, word operations, ports C0-DF * * - ALL registers are 8 bits only, regardless of transfer size * - channel 4 is not used - cascades 1 into 2. * - channels 0-3 are byte - addresses/counts are for physical bytes * - channels 5-7 are word - addresses/counts are for physical words * - transfers must not cross physical 64K (0-3) or 128K (5-7) boundaries * - transfer count loaded to registers is 1 less than actual count * - controller 2 offsets are all even (2x offsets for controller 1) * - page registers for 5-7 don't use data bit 0, represent 128K pages * - page registers for 0-3 use bit 0, represent 64K pages * * DMA transfers are limited to the lower 16MB of _physical_ memory. * Note that addresses loaded into registers must be _physical_ addresses, * not logical addresses (which may differ if paging is active). * * Address mapping for channels 0-3: * * A23 ... A16 A15 ... A8 A7 ... A0 (Physical addresses) * | ... | | ... | | ... | * | ... | | ... | | ... | * | ... | | ... | | ... | * P7 ... P0 A7 ... A0 A7 ... A0 * | Page | Addr MSB | Addr LSB | (DMA registers) * * Address mapping for channels 5-7: * * A23 ... A17 A16 A15 ... A9 A8 A7 ... A1 A0 (Physical addresses) * | ... | \ \ ... \ \ \ ... \ \ * | ... | \ \ ... \ \ \ ... \ (not used) * | ... | \ \ ... \ \ \ ... \ * P7 ... P1 (0) A7 A6 ... A0 A7 A6 ... A0 * | Page | Addr MSB | Addr LSB | (DMA registers) * * Again, channels 5-7 transfer _physical_ words (16 bits), so addresses * and counts _must_ be word-aligned (the lowest address bit is _ignored_ at * the hardware level, so odd-byte transfers aren't possible). * * Transfer count (_not # bytes_) is limited to 64K, represented as actual * count - 1 : 64K => 0xFFFF, 1 => 0x0000. Thus, count is always 1 or more, * and up to 128K bytes may be transferred on channels 5-7 in one operation. * */ #define MAX_DMA_CHANNELS 8 /* * The maximum address in KSEG0 that we can perform a DMA transfer to on this * platform. This describes only the PC style part of the DMA logic like on * Deskstations or Acer PICA but not the much more versatile DMA logic used * for the local devices on Acer PICA or Magnums. */ #ifndef CONFIG_SGI #define MAX_DMA_ADDRESS (PAGE_OFFSET + 0x01000000) #else #define MAX_DMA_ADDRESS (~0UL) #endif /* 8237 DMA controllers */ #define IO_DMA1_BASE 0x00 /* 8 bit slave DMA, channels 0..3 */ #define IO_DMA2_BASE 0xC0 /* 16 bit master DMA, ch 4(=slave input)..7 */ /* DMA controller registers */ #define DMA1_CMD_REG 0x08 /* command register (w) */ #define DMA1_STAT_REG 0x08 /* status register (r) */ #define DMA1_REQ_REG 0x09 /* request register (w) */ #define DMA1_MASK_REG 0x0A /* single-channel mask (w) */ #define DMA1_MODE_REG 0x0B /* mode register (w) */ #define DMA1_CLEAR_FF_REG 0x0C /* clear pointer flip-flop (w) */ #define DMA1_TEMP_REG 0x0D /* Temporary Register (r) */ #define DMA1_RESET_REG 0x0D /* Master Clear (w) */ #define DMA1_CLR_MASK_REG 0x0E /* Clear Mask */ #define DMA1_MASK_ALL_REG 0x0F /* all-channels mask (w) */ #define DMA2_CMD_REG 0xD0 /* command register (w) */ #define DMA2_STAT_REG 0xD0 /* status register (r) */ #define DMA2_REQ_REG 0xD2 /* request register (w) */ #define DMA2_MASK_REG 0xD4 /* single-channel mask (w) */ #define DMA2_MODE_REG 0xD6 /* mode register (w) */ #define DMA2_CLEAR_FF_REG 0xD8 /* clear pointer flip-flop (w) */ #define DMA2_TEMP_REG 0xDA /* Temporary Register (r) */ #define DMA2_RESET_REG 0xDA /* Master Clear (w) */ #define DMA2_CLR_MASK_REG 0xDC /* Clear Mask */ #define DMA2_MASK_ALL_REG 0xDE /* all-channels mask (w) */ #define DMA_ADDR_0 0x00 /* DMA address registers */ #define DMA_ADDR_1 0x02 #define DMA_ADDR_2 0x04 #define DMA_ADDR_3 0x06 #define DMA_ADDR_4 0xC0 #define DMA_ADDR_5 0xC4 #define DMA_ADDR_6 0xC8 #define DMA_ADDR_7 0xCC #define DMA_CNT_0 0x01 /* DMA count registers */ #define DMA_CNT_1 0x03 #define DMA_CNT_2 0x05 #define DMA_CNT_3 0x07 #define DMA_CNT_4 0xC2 #define DMA_CNT_5 0xC6 #define DMA_CNT_6 0xCA #define DMA_CNT_7 0xCE #define DMA_PAGE_0 0x87 /* DMA page registers */ #define DMA_PAGE_1 0x83 #define DMA_PAGE_2 0x81 #define DMA_PAGE_3 0x82 #define DMA_PAGE_5 0x8B #define DMA_PAGE_6 0x89 #define DMA_PAGE_7 0x8A #define DMA_MODE_READ 0x44 /* I/O to memory, no autoinit, increment, single mode */ #define DMA_MODE_WRITE 0x48 /* memory to I/O, no autoinit, increment, single mode */ #define DMA_MODE_CASCADE 0xC0 /* pass thru DREQ->HRQ, DACK<-HLDA only */ /* enable/disable a specific DMA channel */ static __inline__ void enable_dma(unsigned int dmanr) { if (dmanr<=3) dma_outb(dmanr, DMA1_MASK_REG); else dma_outb(dmanr & 3, DMA2_MASK_REG); } static __inline__ void disable_dma(unsigned int dmanr) { if (dmanr<=3) dma_outb(dmanr | 4, DMA1_MASK_REG); else dma_outb((dmanr & 3) | 4, DMA2_MASK_REG); } /* Clear the 'DMA Pointer Flip Flop'. * Write 0 for LSB/MSB, 1 for MSB/LSB access. * Use this once to initialize the FF to a known state. * After that, keep track of it. :-) * --- In order to do that, the DMA routines below should --- * --- only be used while interrupts are disabled! --- */ static __inline__ void clear_dma_ff(unsigned int dmanr) { if (dmanr<=3) dma_outb(0, DMA1_CLEAR_FF_REG); else dma_outb(0, DMA2_CLEAR_FF_REG); } /* set mode (above) for a specific DMA channel */ static __inline__ void set_dma_mode(unsigned int dmanr, char mode) { if (dmanr<=3) dma_outb(mode | dmanr, DMA1_MODE_REG); else dma_outb(mode | (dmanr&3), DMA2_MODE_REG); } /* Set only the page register bits of the transfer address. * This is used for successive transfers when we know the contents of * the lower 16 bits of the DMA current address register, but a 64k boundary * may have been crossed. */ static __inline__ void set_dma_page(unsigned int dmanr, char pagenr) { switch(dmanr) { case 0: dma_outb(pagenr, DMA_PAGE_0); break; case 1: dma_outb(pagenr, DMA_PAGE_1); break; case 2: dma_outb(pagenr, DMA_PAGE_2); break; case 3: dma_outb(pagenr, DMA_PAGE_3); break; case 5: dma_outb(pagenr & 0xfe, DMA_PAGE_5); break; case 6: dma_outb(pagenr & 0xfe, DMA_PAGE_6); break; case 7: dma_outb(pagenr & 0xfe, DMA_PAGE_7); break; } } /* Set transfer address & page bits for specific DMA channel. * Assumes dma flipflop is clear. */ static __inline__ void set_dma_addr(unsigned int dmanr, unsigned int a) { set_dma_page(dmanr, a>>16); if (dmanr <= 3) { dma_outb( a & 0xff, ((dmanr&3)<<1) + IO_DMA1_BASE ); dma_outb( (a>>8) & 0xff, ((dmanr&3)<<1) + IO_DMA1_BASE ); } else { dma_outb( (a>>1) & 0xff, ((dmanr&3)<<2) + IO_DMA2_BASE ); dma_outb( (a>>9) & 0xff, ((dmanr&3)<<2) + IO_DMA2_BASE ); } } /* Set transfer size (max 64k for DMA1..3, 128k for DMA5..7) for * a specific DMA channel. * You must ensure the parameters are valid. * NOTE: from a manual: "the number of transfers is one more * than the initial word count"! This is taken into account. * Assumes dma flip-flop is clear. * NOTE 2: "count" represents _bytes_ and must be even for channels 5-7. */ static __inline__ void set_dma_count(unsigned int dmanr, unsigned int count) { count--; if (dmanr <= 3) { dma_outb( count & 0xff, ((dmanr&3)<<1) + 1 + IO_DMA1_BASE ); dma_outb( (count>>8) & 0xff, ((dmanr&3)<<1) + 1 + IO_DMA1_BASE ); } else { dma_outb( (count>>1) & 0xff, ((dmanr&3)<<2) + 2 + IO_DMA2_BASE ); dma_outb( (count>>9) & 0xff, ((dmanr&3)<<2) + 2 + IO_DMA2_BASE ); } } /* Get DMA residue count. After a DMA transfer, this * should return zero. Reading this while a DMA transfer is * still in progress will return unpredictable results. * If called before the channel has been used, it may return 1. * Otherwise, it returns the number of _bytes_ left to transfer. * * Assumes DMA flip-flop is clear. */ static __inline__ int get_dma_residue(unsigned int dmanr) { unsigned int io_port = (dmanr<=3)? ((dmanr&3)<<1) + 1 + IO_DMA1_BASE : ((dmanr&3)<<2) + 2 + IO_DMA2_BASE; /* using short to get 16-bit wrap around */ unsigned short count; count = 1 + dma_inb(io_port); count += dma_inb(io_port) << 8; return (dmanr<=3)? count : (count<<1); } /* These are in kernel/dma.c: */ extern int request_dma(unsigned int dmanr, const char * device_id); /* reserve a DMA channel */ extern void free_dma(unsigned int dmanr); /* release it again */ #endif /* __ASM_MIPS_DMA_H */ |