isa_shark_machdep.c revision 1.8 1 /* $NetBSD: isa_shark_machdep.c,v 1.8 2007/03/08 20:48:39 matt Exp $ */
2
3 /*
4 * Copyright 1997
5 * Digital Equipment Corporation. All rights reserved.
6 *
7 * This software is furnished under license and may be used and
8 * copied only in accordance with the following terms and conditions.
9 * Subject to these conditions, you may download, copy, install,
10 * use, modify and distribute this software in source and/or binary
11 * form. No title or ownership is transferred hereby.
12 *
13 * 1) Any source code used, modified or distributed must reproduce
14 * and retain this copyright notice and list of conditions as
15 * they appear in the source file.
16 *
17 * 2) No right is granted to use any trade name, trademark, or logo of
18 * Digital Equipment Corporation. Neither the "Digital Equipment
19 * Corporation" name nor any trademark or logo of Digital Equipment
20 * Corporation may be used to endorse or promote products derived
21 * from this software without the prior written permission of
22 * Digital Equipment Corporation.
23 *
24 * 3) This software is provided "AS-IS" and any express or implied
25 * warranties, including but not limited to, any implied warranties
26 * of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, or
27 * non-infringement are disclaimed. In no event shall DIGITAL be
28 * liable for any damages whatsoever, and in particular, DIGITAL
29 * shall not be liable for special, indirect, consequential, or
30 * incidental damages or damages for lost profits, loss of
31 * revenue or loss of use, whether such damages arise in contract,
32 * negligence, tort, under statute, in equity, at law or otherwise,
33 * even if advised of the possibility of such damage.
34 */
35
36 #include <sys/cdefs.h>
37 __KERNEL_RCSID(0, "$NetBSD: isa_shark_machdep.c,v 1.8 2007/03/08 20:48:39 matt Exp $");
38
39 #include <sys/param.h>
40 #include <sys/systm.h>
41 #include <sys/kernel.h>
42 #include <sys/syslog.h>
43 #include <sys/device.h>
44 #include <sys/malloc.h>
45
46 #include <machine/intr.h>
47 #include <machine/irqhandler.h>
48 #include <machine/pio.h>
49
50 #include <dev/isa/isareg.h>
51 #include <dev/isa/isavar.h>
52 #include <dev/isa/isadmavar.h>
53 #include <shark/isa/icu.h>
54
55 #include <machine/ofw.h>
56
57 struct arm32_isa_chipset isa_chipset_tag;
58
59 unsigned i8259_mask;
60
61 void isa_init8259s(void);
62
63 /* Notes on the interaction of StrongARM and ISA. A lot of the nastiness
64 is caused by consciously prostituting shark to a low bill of materials.
65
66 It takes on the order of 700ns (about 150 instruction cycles at
67 233 MHz) to access the ISA bus, so it is important to minimize the number
68 of ISA accesses, in particular to the 8259 interrupt controllers.
69
70 To reduce the number of accesses, the 8259's are NOT run in the
71 same mode as on a typical Intel (IBM AT) system, which requires
72 an interrupt acknowledge sequence (INTA) for every interrupt.
73 Instead, the 8259's are used as big OR gates with interrupt masks
74 on the front. The code in irq.S takes particular care to cache
75 the state of the interrupt masks and only update them when absolutely
76 necessary.
77
78 Unfortunately, resetting the 8259 edge detectors without a real
79 INTA sequence is problematic at best. To complicate matters further,
80 (unlike EISA components) the 8259s on the Sequoia core logic do
81 not allow configuration of edge vs. level on an IRQ-by-IRQ basis.
82 Thus, all interrupts must be either edge-triggered or level-triggered.
83 To preserve the sanity of the system, this code chooses the
84 level-triggered configuration.
85
86 None of the possible operation modes of the 8254 interval timers can
87 be used to generate a periodic, level-triggered, clearable clock
88 interrupt. This restriction means that TIMER0 -- hardwired to IRQ0 --
89 may not be used as the heartbeat timer, as it is on Intel-based PCs.
90 Instead, the real-time clock (RTC) interrupt -- connected to
91 IRQ8 -- has the right properties and is used for the heartbeat interrupt.
92 TIMER0 may still be used to implement a microsecond timer.
93 See clock.c for details.
94
95 As on most PC systems, 8254 TIMER1 is used for the ISA refresh signal.
96
97 Unlike most PC systems, 8254 TIMER2 is not used for cheap tone
98 generation. Instead, it is used to create a high-availability interrupt
99 for bit-bashing functions (e.g. for SmartCard access). TIMER2 output,
100 called "SPKR" on Sequoia 2, is routed back into the SWTCH input on
101 Sequoia 1. This input eventually reemerges from Sequoia 1 on the SMI pin,
102 which is then converted into the StrongARM FIQ (fast interrupt request).
103 To clear this interrupt, the StrongARM clears the SMI.
104 See .../shark/fiq.S for details.
105
106 One more complication: ISA devices can be rather nasty with respect
107 to ISA bus usage. For example, the CS8900 ethernet chip will occupy
108 the bus for very long DMA streams. It is possible to configure the
109 chip so it relinquishes the ISA bus every 28 usec or so
110 (about every 6500 instructions). This causes problems when trying
111 to run the TIMER2/SMI/FIQ at 50 kHz, which is required to detect the
112 baud rate of the SmartCard. A modification to .../dev/isa/isadma.c
113 allows the processor to freeze DMA during critial periods of time.
114 This is a working -- but not very satisfactory -- solution to the problem.
115 */
116
117 /*
118 * Initialize the interrupt controllers.
119 */
120 void
121 isa_init8259s(void)
122 {
123 /* initialize 8259's */
124 outb(IO_ICU1, 0x19); /* reset; four bytes, level triggered */
125 outb(IO_ICU1+1, ICU_OFFSET); /* int base: not used */
126 outb(IO_ICU1+1, 1 << IRQ_SLAVE); /* slave on line 2 */
127 outb(IO_ICU1+1, 2 | 1); /* auto EOI, 8086 mode */
128 outb(IO_ICU1+1, 0xff); /* disable all interrupts */
129 outb(IO_ICU1, 0x68); /* special mask mode (if available) */
130 outb(IO_ICU1, 0x0a); /* Read IRR, not ISR */
131
132 outb(IO_ICU2, 0x19); /* reset; four bytes, level triggered */
133 outb(IO_ICU2+1, ICU_OFFSET+8); /* int base + offset for master: not used */
134 outb(IO_ICU2+1, IRQ_SLAVE); /* who ami i? */
135 outb(IO_ICU2+1, 2 | 1); /* auto EOI, 8086 mode */
136 outb(IO_ICU2+1, 0xff); /* disable all interrupts */
137 outb(IO_ICU2, 0x68); /* special mask mode (if available) */
138 outb(IO_ICU2, 0x0a); /* Read IRR by default. */
139
140 i8259_mask = 0x0000ffff; /* everything disabled */
141 }
142
143 #define LEGAL_IRQ(x) ((x) >= 0 && (x) < ICU_LEN && (x) != 2)
144
145 const struct evcnt *
146 isa_intr_evcnt(isa_chipset_tag_t ic, int irq)
147 {
148 if (irqhandlers[irq] != NULL)
149 return &irqhandlers[irq]->ih_ev;
150
151 /* XXX for now, no evcnt parent reported */
152 return NULL;
153 }
154
155 /*
156 * Set up an interrupt handler to start being called.
157 */
158 static const char * const isa_intr_names[16] = {
159 "irq 0", "irq 1", "irq 2", "irq 3",
160 "irq 4", "irq 5", "irq 6", "irq 7",
161 "irq 8", "irq 9", "irq 10", "irq 11",
162 "irq 12", "irq 13", "irq 14", "irq 15"
163 };
164
165 void *
166 isa_intr_establish(ic, irq, type, level, ih_fun, ih_arg)
167 isa_chipset_tag_t ic;
168 int irq;
169 int type;
170 int level;
171 int (*ih_fun) __P((void *));
172 void *ih_arg;
173 {
174 irqhandler_t *ih;
175
176 /* no point in sleeping unless someone can free memory. */
177 ih = malloc(sizeof *ih, M_DEVBUF, M_ZERO | (cold ? M_NOWAIT : M_WAITOK));
178 if (ih == NULL)
179 panic("isa_intr_establish: can't malloc handler info");
180
181 if (!LEGAL_IRQ(irq) || type == IST_NONE)
182 panic("intr_establish: bogus irq or type");
183
184 /* Note: sequoia doesn't allow configuration of edge vs. level
185 on an IRQ-by-IRQ basis. */
186 if (type != IST_LEVEL)
187 printf("WARNING: irq %d not level triggered\n", irq);
188
189 ih->ih_func = ih_fun;
190 ih->ih_arg = ih_arg;
191 ih->ih_level = level;
192 KASSERT(irq >= 0 && irq < __arraycount(isa_intr_names));
193
194 if (irq_claim(irq, ih, "isa", isa_intr_names[irq]) == -1)
195 panic("isa_intr_establish: can't install handler");
196
197 return (ih);
198 }
199
200
201 /*
202 * Deregister an interrupt handler.
203 */
204 void
205 isa_intr_disestablish(ic, arg)
206 isa_chipset_tag_t ic;
207 void *arg;
208 {
209 panic("isa_intr_disestablish");
210 }
211
212 /* isa_init() might eventually become the ISA attach routine */
213 void
214 isa_init(vaddr_t isa_io_addr, vaddr_t isa_mem_addr)
215 {
216 /* initialize the bus space functions */
217 isa_io_init(isa_io_addr, isa_mem_addr);
218
219 /* Clear the IRQ/FIQ masks */
220 isa_init8259s();
221
222 /* Initialize the ISA interrupt handling code */
223 irq_init();
224 }
225
226 void
227 isa_attach_hook(parent, self, iba)
228 struct device *parent, *self;
229 struct isabus_attach_args *iba;
230 {
231
232 /*
233 * Since we can only have one ISA bus, we just use a single
234 * statically allocated ISA chipset structure. Pass it up
235 * now.
236 */
237 iba->iba_ic = &isa_chipset_tag;
238 }
239