sun4m_irq.c 14 KB

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  1. /*
  2. * sun4m irq support
  3. *
  4. * djhr: Hacked out of irq.c into a CPU dependent version.
  5. *
  6. * Copyright (C) 1995 David S. Miller (davem@caip.rutgers.edu)
  7. * Copyright (C) 1995 Miguel de Icaza (miguel@nuclecu.unam.mx)
  8. * Copyright (C) 1995 Pete A. Zaitcev (zaitcev@yahoo.com)
  9. * Copyright (C) 1996 Dave Redman (djhr@tadpole.co.uk)
  10. */
  11. #include <asm/timer.h>
  12. #include <asm/traps.h>
  13. #include <asm/pgalloc.h>
  14. #include <asm/pgtable.h>
  15. #include <asm/irq.h>
  16. #include <asm/io.h>
  17. #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
  18. #include "irq.h"
  19. #include "kernel.h"
  20. /* Sample sun4m IRQ layout:
  21. *
  22. * 0x22 - Power
  23. * 0x24 - ESP SCSI
  24. * 0x26 - Lance ethernet
  25. * 0x2b - Floppy
  26. * 0x2c - Zilog uart
  27. * 0x32 - SBUS level 0
  28. * 0x33 - Parallel port, SBUS level 1
  29. * 0x35 - SBUS level 2
  30. * 0x37 - SBUS level 3
  31. * 0x39 - Audio, Graphics card, SBUS level 4
  32. * 0x3b - SBUS level 5
  33. * 0x3d - SBUS level 6
  34. *
  35. * Each interrupt source has a mask bit in the interrupt registers.
  36. * When the mask bit is set, this blocks interrupt deliver. So you
  37. * clear the bit to enable the interrupt.
  38. *
  39. * Interrupts numbered less than 0x10 are software triggered interrupts
  40. * and unused by Linux.
  41. *
  42. * Interrupt level assignment on sun4m:
  43. *
  44. * level source
  45. * ------------------------------------------------------------
  46. * 1 softint-1
  47. * 2 softint-2, VME/SBUS level 1
  48. * 3 softint-3, VME/SBUS level 2
  49. * 4 softint-4, onboard SCSI
  50. * 5 softint-5, VME/SBUS level 3
  51. * 6 softint-6, onboard ETHERNET
  52. * 7 softint-7, VME/SBUS level 4
  53. * 8 softint-8, onboard VIDEO
  54. * 9 softint-9, VME/SBUS level 5, Module Interrupt
  55. * 10 softint-10, system counter/timer
  56. * 11 softint-11, VME/SBUS level 6, Floppy
  57. * 12 softint-12, Keyboard/Mouse, Serial
  58. * 13 softint-13, VME/SBUS level 7, ISDN Audio
  59. * 14 softint-14, per-processor counter/timer
  60. * 15 softint-15, Asynchronous Errors (broadcast)
  61. *
  62. * Each interrupt source is masked distinctly in the sun4m interrupt
  63. * registers. The PIL level alone is therefore ambiguous, since multiple
  64. * interrupt sources map to a single PIL.
  65. *
  66. * This ambiguity is resolved in the 'intr' property for device nodes
  67. * in the OF device tree. Each 'intr' property entry is composed of
  68. * two 32-bit words. The first word is the IRQ priority value, which
  69. * is what we're intersted in. The second word is the IRQ vector, which
  70. * is unused.
  71. *
  72. * The low 4 bits of the IRQ priority indicate the PIL, and the upper
  73. * 4 bits indicate onboard vs. SBUS leveled vs. VME leveled. 0x20
  74. * means onboard, 0x30 means SBUS leveled, and 0x40 means VME leveled.
  75. *
  76. * For example, an 'intr' IRQ priority value of 0x24 is onboard SCSI
  77. * whereas a value of 0x33 is SBUS level 2. Here are some sample
  78. * 'intr' property IRQ priority values from ss4, ss5, ss10, ss20, and
  79. * Tadpole S3 GX systems.
  80. *
  81. * esp: 0x24 onboard ESP SCSI
  82. * le: 0x26 onboard Lance ETHERNET
  83. * p9100: 0x32 SBUS level 1 P9100 video
  84. * bpp: 0x33 SBUS level 2 BPP parallel port device
  85. * DBRI: 0x39 SBUS level 5 DBRI ISDN audio
  86. * SUNW,leo: 0x39 SBUS level 5 LEO video
  87. * pcmcia: 0x3b SBUS level 6 PCMCIA controller
  88. * uctrl: 0x3b SBUS level 6 UCTRL device
  89. * modem: 0x3d SBUS level 7 MODEM
  90. * zs: 0x2c onboard keyboard/mouse/serial
  91. * floppy: 0x2b onboard Floppy
  92. * power: 0x22 onboard power device (XXX unknown mask bit XXX)
  93. */
  94. /* Code in entry.S needs to get at these register mappings. */
  95. struct sun4m_irq_percpu __iomem *sun4m_irq_percpu[SUN4M_NCPUS];
  96. struct sun4m_irq_global __iomem *sun4m_irq_global;
  97. /* Dave Redman (djhr@tadpole.co.uk)
  98. * The sun4m interrupt registers.
  99. */
  100. #define SUN4M_INT_ENABLE 0x80000000
  101. #define SUN4M_INT_E14 0x00000080
  102. #define SUN4M_INT_E10 0x00080000
  103. #define SUN4M_HARD_INT(x) (0x000000001 << (x))
  104. #define SUN4M_SOFT_INT(x) (0x000010000 << (x))
  105. #define SUN4M_INT_MASKALL 0x80000000 /* mask all interrupts */
  106. #define SUN4M_INT_MODULE_ERR 0x40000000 /* module error */
  107. #define SUN4M_INT_M2S_WRITE_ERR 0x20000000 /* write buffer error */
  108. #define SUN4M_INT_ECC_ERR 0x10000000 /* ecc memory error */
  109. #define SUN4M_INT_VME_ERR 0x08000000 /* vme async error */
  110. #define SUN4M_INT_FLOPPY 0x00400000 /* floppy disk */
  111. #define SUN4M_INT_MODULE 0x00200000 /* module interrupt */
  112. #define SUN4M_INT_VIDEO 0x00100000 /* onboard video */
  113. #define SUN4M_INT_REALTIME 0x00080000 /* system timer */
  114. #define SUN4M_INT_SCSI 0x00040000 /* onboard scsi */
  115. #define SUN4M_INT_AUDIO 0x00020000 /* audio/isdn */
  116. #define SUN4M_INT_ETHERNET 0x00010000 /* onboard ethernet */
  117. #define SUN4M_INT_SERIAL 0x00008000 /* serial ports */
  118. #define SUN4M_INT_KBDMS 0x00004000 /* keyboard/mouse */
  119. #define SUN4M_INT_SBUSBITS 0x00003F80 /* sbus int bits */
  120. #define SUN4M_INT_VMEBITS 0x0000007F /* vme int bits */
  121. #define SUN4M_INT_ERROR (SUN4M_INT_MODULE_ERR | \
  122. SUN4M_INT_M2S_WRITE_ERR | \
  123. SUN4M_INT_ECC_ERR | \
  124. SUN4M_INT_VME_ERR)
  125. #define SUN4M_INT_SBUS(x) (1 << (x+7))
  126. #define SUN4M_INT_VME(x) (1 << (x))
  127. /* Interrupt levels used by OBP */
  128. #define OBP_INT_LEVEL_SOFT 0x10
  129. #define OBP_INT_LEVEL_ONBOARD 0x20
  130. #define OBP_INT_LEVEL_SBUS 0x30
  131. #define OBP_INT_LEVEL_VME 0x40
  132. #define SUN4M_TIMER_IRQ (OBP_INT_LEVEL_ONBOARD | 10)
  133. #define SUM4M_PROFILE_IRQ (OBP_INT_LEVEL_ONBOARD | 14)
  134. static unsigned long irq_mask[0x50] = {
  135. /* 0x00 - SMP */
  136. 0, SUN4M_SOFT_INT(1),
  137. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(2), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(3),
  138. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(4), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(5),
  139. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(6), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(7),
  140. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(8), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(9),
  141. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(10), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(11),
  142. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(12), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(13),
  143. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(14), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(15),
  144. /* 0x10 - soft */
  145. 0, SUN4M_SOFT_INT(1),
  146. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(2), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(3),
  147. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(4), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(5),
  148. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(6), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(7),
  149. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(8), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(9),
  150. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(10), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(11),
  151. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(12), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(13),
  152. SUN4M_SOFT_INT(14), SUN4M_SOFT_INT(15),
  153. /* 0x20 - onboard */
  154. 0, 0, 0, 0,
  155. SUN4M_INT_SCSI, 0, SUN4M_INT_ETHERNET, 0,
  156. SUN4M_INT_VIDEO, SUN4M_INT_MODULE,
  157. SUN4M_INT_REALTIME, SUN4M_INT_FLOPPY,
  158. (SUN4M_INT_SERIAL | SUN4M_INT_KBDMS),
  159. SUN4M_INT_AUDIO, 0, SUN4M_INT_MODULE_ERR,
  160. /* 0x30 - sbus */
  161. 0, 0, SUN4M_INT_SBUS(0), SUN4M_INT_SBUS(1),
  162. 0, SUN4M_INT_SBUS(2), 0, SUN4M_INT_SBUS(3),
  163. 0, SUN4M_INT_SBUS(4), 0, SUN4M_INT_SBUS(5),
  164. 0, SUN4M_INT_SBUS(6), 0, 0,
  165. /* 0x40 - vme */
  166. 0, 0, SUN4M_INT_VME(0), SUN4M_INT_VME(1),
  167. 0, SUN4M_INT_VME(2), 0, SUN4M_INT_VME(3),
  168. 0, SUN4M_INT_VME(4), 0, SUN4M_INT_VME(5),
  169. 0, SUN4M_INT_VME(6), 0, 0
  170. };
  171. static unsigned long sun4m_get_irqmask(unsigned int irq)
  172. {
  173. unsigned long mask;
  174. if (irq < 0x50)
  175. mask = irq_mask[irq];
  176. else
  177. mask = 0;
  178. if (!mask)
  179. printk(KERN_ERR "sun4m_get_irqmask: IRQ%d has no valid mask!\n",
  180. irq);
  181. return mask;
  182. }
  183. static void sun4m_disable_irq(unsigned int irq_nr)
  184. {
  185. unsigned long mask, flags;
  186. int cpu = smp_processor_id();
  187. mask = sun4m_get_irqmask(irq_nr);
  188. local_irq_save(flags);
  189. if (irq_nr > 15)
  190. sbus_writel(mask, &sun4m_irq_global->mask_set);
  191. else
  192. sbus_writel(mask, &sun4m_irq_percpu[cpu]->set);
  193. local_irq_restore(flags);
  194. }
  195. static void sun4m_enable_irq(unsigned int irq_nr)
  196. {
  197. unsigned long mask, flags;
  198. int cpu = smp_processor_id();
  199. /* Dreadful floppy hack. When we use 0x2b instead of
  200. * 0x0b the system blows (it starts to whistle!).
  201. * So we continue to use 0x0b. Fixme ASAP. --P3
  202. */
  203. if (irq_nr != 0x0b) {
  204. mask = sun4m_get_irqmask(irq_nr);
  205. local_irq_save(flags);
  206. if (irq_nr > 15)
  207. sbus_writel(mask, &sun4m_irq_global->mask_clear);
  208. else
  209. sbus_writel(mask, &sun4m_irq_percpu[cpu]->clear);
  210. local_irq_restore(flags);
  211. } else {
  212. local_irq_save(flags);
  213. sbus_writel(SUN4M_INT_FLOPPY, &sun4m_irq_global->mask_clear);
  214. local_irq_restore(flags);
  215. }
  216. }
  217. static unsigned long cpu_pil_to_imask[16] = {
  218. /*0*/ 0x00000000,
  219. /*1*/ 0x00000000,
  220. /*2*/ SUN4M_INT_SBUS(0) | SUN4M_INT_VME(0),
  221. /*3*/ SUN4M_INT_SBUS(1) | SUN4M_INT_VME(1),
  222. /*4*/ SUN4M_INT_SCSI,
  223. /*5*/ SUN4M_INT_SBUS(2) | SUN4M_INT_VME(2),
  224. /*6*/ SUN4M_INT_ETHERNET,
  225. /*7*/ SUN4M_INT_SBUS(3) | SUN4M_INT_VME(3),
  226. /*8*/ SUN4M_INT_VIDEO,
  227. /*9*/ SUN4M_INT_SBUS(4) | SUN4M_INT_VME(4) | SUN4M_INT_MODULE_ERR,
  228. /*10*/ SUN4M_INT_REALTIME,
  229. /*11*/ SUN4M_INT_SBUS(5) | SUN4M_INT_VME(5) | SUN4M_INT_FLOPPY,
  230. /*12*/ SUN4M_INT_SERIAL | SUN4M_INT_KBDMS,
  231. /*13*/ SUN4M_INT_SBUS(6) | SUN4M_INT_VME(6) | SUN4M_INT_AUDIO,
  232. /*14*/ SUN4M_INT_E14,
  233. /*15*/ SUN4M_INT_ERROR,
  234. };
  235. /* We assume the caller has disabled local interrupts when these are called,
  236. * or else very bizarre behavior will result.
  237. */
  238. static void sun4m_disable_pil_irq(unsigned int pil)
  239. {
  240. sbus_writel(cpu_pil_to_imask[pil], &sun4m_irq_global->mask_set);
  241. }
  242. static void sun4m_enable_pil_irq(unsigned int pil)
  243. {
  244. sbus_writel(cpu_pil_to_imask[pil], &sun4m_irq_global->mask_clear);
  245. }
  246. #ifdef CONFIG_SMP
  247. static void sun4m_send_ipi(int cpu, int level)
  248. {
  249. unsigned long mask = sun4m_get_irqmask(level);
  250. sbus_writel(mask, &sun4m_irq_percpu[cpu]->set);
  251. }
  252. static void sun4m_clear_ipi(int cpu, int level)
  253. {
  254. unsigned long mask = sun4m_get_irqmask(level);
  255. sbus_writel(mask, &sun4m_irq_percpu[cpu]->clear);
  256. }
  257. static void sun4m_set_udt(int cpu)
  258. {
  259. sbus_writel(cpu, &sun4m_irq_global->interrupt_target);
  260. }
  261. #endif
  262. struct sun4m_timer_percpu {
  263. u32 l14_limit;
  264. u32 l14_count;
  265. u32 l14_limit_noclear;
  266. u32 user_timer_start_stop;
  267. };
  268. static struct sun4m_timer_percpu __iomem *timers_percpu[SUN4M_NCPUS];
  269. struct sun4m_timer_global {
  270. u32 l10_limit;
  271. u32 l10_count;
  272. u32 l10_limit_noclear;
  273. u32 reserved;
  274. u32 timer_config;
  275. };
  276. static struct sun4m_timer_global __iomem *timers_global;
  277. unsigned int lvl14_resolution = (((1000000/HZ) + 1) << 10);
  278. static void sun4m_clear_clock_irq(void)
  279. {
  280. sbus_readl(&timers_global->l10_limit);
  281. }
  282. void sun4m_nmi(struct pt_regs *regs)
  283. {
  284. unsigned long afsr, afar, si;
  285. printk(KERN_ERR "Aieee: sun4m NMI received!\n");
  286. /* XXX HyperSparc hack XXX */
  287. __asm__ __volatile__("mov 0x500, %%g1\n\t"
  288. "lda [%%g1] 0x4, %0\n\t"
  289. "mov 0x600, %%g1\n\t"
  290. "lda [%%g1] 0x4, %1\n\t" :
  291. "=r" (afsr), "=r" (afar));
  292. printk(KERN_ERR "afsr=%08lx afar=%08lx\n", afsr, afar);
  293. si = sbus_readl(&sun4m_irq_global->pending);
  294. printk(KERN_ERR "si=%08lx\n", si);
  295. if (si & SUN4M_INT_MODULE_ERR)
  296. printk(KERN_ERR "Module async error\n");
  297. if (si & SUN4M_INT_M2S_WRITE_ERR)
  298. printk(KERN_ERR "MBus/SBus async error\n");
  299. if (si & SUN4M_INT_ECC_ERR)
  300. printk(KERN_ERR "ECC memory error\n");
  301. if (si & SUN4M_INT_VME_ERR)
  302. printk(KERN_ERR "VME async error\n");
  303. printk(KERN_ERR "you lose buddy boy...\n");
  304. show_regs(regs);
  305. prom_halt();
  306. }
  307. /* Exported for sun4m_smp.c */
  308. void sun4m_clear_profile_irq(int cpu)
  309. {
  310. sbus_readl(&timers_percpu[cpu]->l14_limit);
  311. }
  312. static void sun4m_load_profile_irq(int cpu, unsigned int limit)
  313. {
  314. sbus_writel(limit, &timers_percpu[cpu]->l14_limit);
  315. }
  316. static void __init sun4m_init_timers(irq_handler_t counter_fn)
  317. {
  318. struct device_node *dp = of_find_node_by_name(NULL, "counter");
  319. int i, err, len, num_cpu_timers;
  320. const u32 *addr;
  321. if (!dp) {
  322. printk(KERN_ERR "sun4m_init_timers: No 'counter' node.\n");
  323. return;
  324. }
  325. addr = of_get_property(dp, "address", &len);
  326. of_node_put(dp);
  327. if (!addr) {
  328. printk(KERN_ERR "sun4m_init_timers: No 'address' prop.\n");
  329. return;
  330. }
  331. num_cpu_timers = (len / sizeof(u32)) - 1;
  332. for (i = 0; i < num_cpu_timers; i++) {
  333. timers_percpu[i] = (void __iomem *)
  334. (unsigned long) addr[i];
  335. }
  336. timers_global = (void __iomem *)
  337. (unsigned long) addr[num_cpu_timers];
  338. sbus_writel((((1000000/HZ) + 1) << 10), &timers_global->l10_limit);
  339. master_l10_counter = &timers_global->l10_count;
  340. err = request_irq(SUN4M_TIMER_IRQ, counter_fn,
  341. (IRQF_DISABLED | SA_STATIC_ALLOC), "timer", NULL);
  342. if (err) {
  343. printk(KERN_ERR "sun4m_init_timers: Register IRQ error %d.\n",
  344. err);
  345. return;
  346. }
  347. for (i = 0; i < num_cpu_timers; i++)
  348. sbus_writel(0, &timers_percpu[i]->l14_limit);
  349. if (num_cpu_timers == 4)
  350. sbus_writel(SUN4M_INT_E14, &sun4m_irq_global->mask_set);
  351. #ifdef CONFIG_SMP
  352. {
  353. unsigned long flags;
  354. struct tt_entry *trap_table = &sparc_ttable[SP_TRAP_IRQ1 + (14 - 1)];
  355. /* For SMP we use the level 14 ticker, however the bootup code
  356. * has copied the firmware's level 14 vector into the boot cpu's
  357. * trap table, we must fix this now or we get squashed.
  358. */
  359. local_irq_save(flags);
  360. trap_table->inst_one = lvl14_save[0];
  361. trap_table->inst_two = lvl14_save[1];
  362. trap_table->inst_three = lvl14_save[2];
  363. trap_table->inst_four = lvl14_save[3];
  364. local_flush_cache_all();
  365. local_irq_restore(flags);
  366. }
  367. #endif
  368. }
  369. void __init sun4m_init_IRQ(void)
  370. {
  371. struct device_node *dp = of_find_node_by_name(NULL, "interrupt");
  372. int len, i, mid, num_cpu_iregs;
  373. const u32 *addr;
  374. if (!dp) {
  375. printk(KERN_ERR "sun4m_init_IRQ: No 'interrupt' node.\n");
  376. return;
  377. }
  378. addr = of_get_property(dp, "address", &len);
  379. of_node_put(dp);
  380. if (!addr) {
  381. printk(KERN_ERR "sun4m_init_IRQ: No 'address' prop.\n");
  382. return;
  383. }
  384. num_cpu_iregs = (len / sizeof(u32)) - 1;
  385. for (i = 0; i < num_cpu_iregs; i++) {
  386. sun4m_irq_percpu[i] = (void __iomem *)
  387. (unsigned long) addr[i];
  388. }
  389. sun4m_irq_global = (void __iomem *)
  390. (unsigned long) addr[num_cpu_iregs];
  391. local_irq_disable();
  392. sbus_writel(~SUN4M_INT_MASKALL, &sun4m_irq_global->mask_set);
  393. for (i = 0; !cpu_find_by_instance(i, NULL, &mid); i++)
  394. sbus_writel(~0x17fff, &sun4m_irq_percpu[mid]->clear);
  395. if (num_cpu_iregs == 4)
  396. sbus_writel(0, &sun4m_irq_global->interrupt_target);
  397. BTFIXUPSET_CALL(enable_irq, sun4m_enable_irq, BTFIXUPCALL_NORM);
  398. BTFIXUPSET_CALL(disable_irq, sun4m_disable_irq, BTFIXUPCALL_NORM);
  399. BTFIXUPSET_CALL(enable_pil_irq, sun4m_enable_pil_irq, BTFIXUPCALL_NORM);
  400. BTFIXUPSET_CALL(disable_pil_irq, sun4m_disable_pil_irq, BTFIXUPCALL_NORM);
  401. BTFIXUPSET_CALL(clear_clock_irq, sun4m_clear_clock_irq, BTFIXUPCALL_NORM);
  402. BTFIXUPSET_CALL(load_profile_irq, sun4m_load_profile_irq, BTFIXUPCALL_NORM);
  403. sparc_irq_config.init_timers = sun4m_init_timers;
  404. #ifdef CONFIG_SMP
  405. BTFIXUPSET_CALL(set_cpu_int, sun4m_send_ipi, BTFIXUPCALL_NORM);
  406. BTFIXUPSET_CALL(clear_cpu_int, sun4m_clear_ipi, BTFIXUPCALL_NORM);
  407. BTFIXUPSET_CALL(set_irq_udt, sun4m_set_udt, BTFIXUPCALL_NORM);
  408. #endif
  409. /* Cannot enable interrupts until OBP ticker is disabled. */
  410. }