/* $Id: ioport.c,v 1.24 1997/04/10 03:02:32 davem Exp $ * ioport.c: Simple io mapping allocator. * * Copyright (C) 1995 David S. Miller (davem@caip.rutgers.edu) * Copyright (C) 1995 Miguel de Icaza (miguel@nuclecu.unam.mx) * * The routines in this file should be changed for a memory allocator * that would be setup just like NetBSD does : you create regions that * are administered by a general purpose allocator, and then you call * that allocator with your handle and the block size instead of this * weak stuff. */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include /* This points to the next to use virtual memory for io mappings */ static unsigned long dvma_next_free = DVMA_VADDR; unsigned long sparc_iobase_vaddr = IOBASE_VADDR; /* * sparc_alloc_io: * Map and allocates an obio device. * Implements a simple linear allocator, you can force the function * to use your own mapping, but in practice this should not be used. * * Input: * address: the obio address to map * virtual: if non zero, specifies a fixed virtual address where * the mapping should take place. * len: the length of the mapping * bus_type: The bus on which this io area sits. * * Returns: * The virtual address where the mapping actually took place. */ void *sparc_alloc_io (u32 address, void *virtual, int len, char *name, u32 bus_type, int rdonly) { unsigned long vaddr, base_address; unsigned long addr = (unsigned long) address; unsigned long offset = (addr & (~PAGE_MASK)); if (virtual) { vaddr = (unsigned long) virtual; len += offset; if(((unsigned long) virtual + len) > (IOBASE_VADDR + IOBASE_LEN)) { prom_printf("alloc_io: Mapping outside IOBASE area\n"); prom_halt(); } if(check_region ((vaddr | offset), len)) { prom_printf("alloc_io: 0x%lx is already in use\n", vaddr); prom_halt(); } /* Tell Linux resource manager about the mapping */ request_region ((vaddr | offset), len, name); } else { vaddr = occupy_region(sparc_iobase_vaddr, IOBASE_END, (offset + len + PAGE_SIZE-1) & PAGE_MASK, PAGE_SIZE, name); if (vaddr == 0) { /* Usually we cannot see printks in this case. */ prom_printf("alloc_io: cannot occupy %d region\n", len); prom_halt(); } } base_address = vaddr; /* Do the actual mapping */ for (; len > 0; len -= PAGE_SIZE) { mapioaddr(addr, vaddr, bus_type, rdonly); vaddr += PAGE_SIZE; addr += PAGE_SIZE; } return (void *) (base_address | offset); } void sparc_free_io (void *virtual, int len) { unsigned long vaddr = (unsigned long) virtual & PAGE_MASK; unsigned long plen = (((unsigned long)virtual & ~PAGE_MASK) + len + PAGE_SIZE-1) & PAGE_MASK; release_region(vaddr, plen); for (; plen != 0;) { plen -= PAGE_SIZE; unmapioaddr(vaddr + plen); } } /* Does DVMA allocations with PAGE_SIZE granularity. How this basically * works is that the ESP chip can do DVMA transfers at ANY address with * certain size and boundary restrictions. But other devices that are * attached to it and would like to do DVMA have to set things up in * a special way, if the DVMA sees a device attached to it transfer data * at addresses above DVMA_VADDR it will grab them, this way it does not * now have to know the peculiarities of where to read the Lance data * from. (for example) */ void *_sparc_dvma_malloc (int len, char *name) { unsigned long vaddr, base_address; vaddr = dvma_next_free; if(check_region (vaddr, len)) { prom_printf("alloc_dma: 0x%lx is already in use\n", vaddr); prom_halt(); } if(vaddr + len > (DVMA_VADDR + DVMA_LEN)) { prom_printf("alloc_dvma: out of dvma memory\n"); prom_halt(); } /* Basically these can be mapped just like any old * IO pages, cacheable bit off, etc. The physical * pages are now mapped dynamically to save space. */ base_address = vaddr; mmu_map_dma_area(base_address, len); /* Assign the memory area. */ dvma_next_free = PAGE_ALIGN(dvma_next_free+len); request_region(base_address, len, name); return (void *) base_address; }