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bsd_openprom.h revision 1.1.1.1.14.1
      1  1.1.1.1.14.1  bouyer /*	$NetBSD: bsd_openprom.h,v 1.1.1.1.14.1 2000/11/20 20:26:46 bouyer Exp $ */
      2           1.1     eeh 
      3           1.1     eeh /*
      4           1.1     eeh  * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993
      5           1.1     eeh  *	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
      6           1.1     eeh  *
      7           1.1     eeh  * This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
      8           1.1     eeh  * Jan-Simon Pendry.
      9           1.1     eeh  *
     10           1.1     eeh  * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
     11           1.1     eeh  * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
     12           1.1     eeh  * are met:
     13           1.1     eeh  * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
     14           1.1     eeh  *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
     15           1.1     eeh  * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
     16           1.1     eeh  *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
     17           1.1     eeh  *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
     18           1.1     eeh  * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
     19           1.1     eeh  *    must display the following acknowledgement:
     20           1.1     eeh  *	This product includes software developed by the University of
     21           1.1     eeh  *	California, Berkeley and its contributors.
     22           1.1     eeh  * 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
     23           1.1     eeh  *    may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
     24           1.1     eeh  *    without specific prior written permission.
     25           1.1     eeh  *
     26           1.1     eeh  * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
     27           1.1     eeh  * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
     28           1.1     eeh  * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
     29           1.1     eeh  * ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
     30           1.1     eeh  * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
     31           1.1     eeh  * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
     32           1.1     eeh  * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
     33           1.1     eeh  * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
     34           1.1     eeh  * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
     35           1.1     eeh  * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
     36           1.1     eeh  * SUCH DAMAGE.
     37           1.1     eeh  *
     38           1.1     eeh  *	@(#)bsd_openprom.h	8.1 (Berkeley) 6/11/93
     39           1.1     eeh  */
     40           1.1     eeh 
     41           1.1     eeh /*
     42           1.1     eeh  * Sun4m support by Aaron Brown, Harvard University.
     43           1.1     eeh  * Changes Copyright (c) 1995 The President and Fellows of Harvard College.
     44           1.1     eeh  * All rights reserved.
     45           1.1     eeh  */
     46           1.1     eeh 
     47           1.1     eeh /*
     48           1.1     eeh  * This file defines the interface between the kernel and the Openboot PROM.
     49           1.1     eeh  * N.B.: this has been tested only on interface versions 0 and 2 (we have
     50           1.1     eeh  * never seen interface version 1).
     51           1.1     eeh  */
     52           1.1     eeh 
     53           1.1     eeh /*
     54           1.1     eeh  * The v0 interface tells us what virtual memory to scan to avoid PMEG
     55           1.1     eeh  * conflicts, but the v2 interface fails to do so, and we must `magically'
     56           1.1     eeh  * know where the OPENPROM lives in virtual space.
     57           1.1     eeh  */
     58           1.1     eeh #define	OPENPROM_STARTVADDR	0xffd00000
     59           1.1     eeh #define	OPENPROM_ENDVADDR	0xfff00000
     60           1.1     eeh 
     61           1.1     eeh #define	OPENPROM_MAGIC 0x10010407
     62           1.1     eeh 
     63           1.1     eeh /*
     64           1.1     eeh  * Version 0 PROM vector device operations (collected here to emphasise that
     65           1.1     eeh  * they are deprecated).  Open and close are obvious.  Read and write are
     66           1.1     eeh  * segregated according to the device type (block, network, or character);
     67           1.1     eeh  * this is unnecessary and was eliminated from the v2 device operations, but
     68           1.1     eeh  * we are stuck with it.
     69           1.1     eeh  *
     70           1.1     eeh  * Seek is probably only useful on tape devices, since the only character
     71           1.1     eeh  * devices are the serial ports.
     72           1.1     eeh  *
     73           1.1     eeh  * Note that a v0 device name is always exactly two characters ("sd", "le",
     74           1.1     eeh  * and so forth).
     75           1.1     eeh  */
     76           1.1     eeh struct v0devops {
     77           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v0_open) __P((char *dev));
     78           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v0_close) __P((int d));
     79           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v0_rbdev) __P((int d, int nblks, int blkno, void *addr));
     80           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v0_wbdev) __P((int d, int nblks, int blkno, void *addr));
     81           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v0_wnet) __P((int d, int nbytes, void *addr));
     82           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v0_rnet) __P((int d, int nbytes, void *addr));
     83           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v0_rcdev) __P((int d, int nbytes, int, void *addr));
     84           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v0_wcdev) __P((int d, int nbytes, int, void *addr));
     85           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v0_seek) __P((int d, long offset, int whence));
     86           1.1     eeh };
     87           1.1     eeh 
     88           1.1     eeh /*
     89           1.1     eeh  * Version 2 device operations.  Open takes a device `path' such as
     90           1.1     eeh  * /sbus/le@0,c00000,0 or /sbus/esp@.../sd@0,0, which means it can open
     91           1.1     eeh  * anything anywhere, without any magic translation.
     92           1.1     eeh  *
     93           1.1     eeh  * The memory allocator and map functions are included here even though
     94           1.1     eeh  * they relate only indirectly to devices (e.g., mmap is good for mapping
     95           1.1     eeh  * device memory, and drivers need to allocate space in which to record
     96           1.1     eeh  * the device state).
     97           1.1     eeh  */
     98           1.1     eeh struct v2devops {
     99           1.1     eeh 	/*
    100           1.1     eeh 	 * Convert an `instance handle' (acquired through v2_open()) to
    101           1.1     eeh 	 * a `package handle', a.k.a. a `node'.
    102           1.1     eeh 	 */
    103           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v2_fd_phandle) __P((int d));
    104           1.1     eeh 
    105           1.1     eeh 	/* Memory allocation and release. */
    106           1.1     eeh 	void	*(*v2_malloc) __P((caddr_t va, u_int sz));
    107           1.1     eeh 	void	(*v2_free) __P((caddr_t va, u_int sz));
    108           1.1     eeh 
    109           1.1     eeh 	/* Device memory mapper. */
    110           1.1     eeh 	caddr_t	(*v2_mmap) __P((caddr_t va, int asi, u_int pa, u_int sz));
    111           1.1     eeh 	void	(*v2_munmap) __P((caddr_t va, u_int sz));
    112           1.1     eeh 
    113           1.1     eeh 	/* Device open, close, etc. */
    114           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v2_open) __P((char *devpath));
    115           1.1     eeh 	void	(*v2_close) __P((int d));
    116           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v2_read) __P((int d, void *buf, int nbytes));
    117           1.1     eeh 	int	(*v2_write) __P((int d, void *buf, int nbytes));
    118           1.1     eeh 	void	(*v2_seek) __P((int d, int hi, int lo));
    119           1.1     eeh 
    120           1.1     eeh 	void	(*v2_chain) __P((void));	/* ??? */
    121           1.1     eeh 	void	(*v2_release) __P((void));	/* ??? */
    122           1.1     eeh };
    123           1.1     eeh 
    124           1.1     eeh /*
    125           1.1     eeh  * The v0 interface describes memory regions with these linked lists.
    126           1.1     eeh  * (The !$&@#+ v2 interface reformats these as properties, so that we
    127           1.1     eeh  * have to extract them into local temporary memory and reinterpret them.)
    128           1.1     eeh  */
    129           1.1     eeh struct v0mlist {
    130           1.1     eeh 	struct	v0mlist *next;
    131           1.1     eeh 	caddr_t	addr;
    132           1.1     eeh 	u_int	nbytes;
    133           1.1     eeh };
    134           1.1     eeh 
    135           1.1     eeh /*
    136           1.1     eeh  * V0 gives us three memory lists:  Total physical memory, VM reserved to
    137           1.1     eeh  * the PROM, and available physical memory (which, presumably, is just the
    138           1.1     eeh  * total minus any pages mapped in the PROM's VM region).  We can find the
    139           1.1     eeh  * reserved PMEGs by scanning the taken VM.  Unfortunately, the V2 prom
    140           1.1     eeh  * forgot to provide taken VM, and we are stuck with scanning ``magic''
    141           1.1     eeh  * addresses.
    142           1.1     eeh  */
    143           1.1     eeh struct v0mem {
    144           1.1     eeh 	struct	v0mlist **v0_phystot;	/* physical memory */
    145           1.1     eeh 	struct	v0mlist **v0_vmprom;	/* VM used by PROM */
    146           1.1     eeh 	struct	v0mlist **v0_physavail;	/* available physical memory */
    147           1.1     eeh };
    148           1.1     eeh 
    149           1.1     eeh /*
    150           1.1     eeh  * The version 0 PROM breaks up the string given to the boot command and
    151           1.1     eeh  * leaves the decoded version behind.
    152           1.1     eeh  */
    153           1.1     eeh struct v0bootargs {
    154           1.1     eeh 	char	*ba_argv[8];		/* argv format for boot string */
    155           1.1     eeh 	char	ba_args[100];		/* string space */
    156           1.1     eeh 	char	ba_bootdev[2];		/* e.g., "sd" for `b sd(...' */
    157           1.1     eeh 	int	ba_ctlr;		/* controller # */
    158           1.1     eeh 	int	ba_unit;		/* unit # */
    159           1.1     eeh 	int	ba_part;		/* partition # */
    160           1.1     eeh 	char	*ba_kernel;		/* kernel to boot, e.g., "vmunix" */
    161           1.1     eeh 	void	*ba_spare0;		/* not decoded here	XXX */
    162           1.1     eeh };
    163           1.1     eeh 
    164           1.1     eeh /*
    165           1.1     eeh  * The version 2 PROM interface uses the more general, if less convenient,
    166           1.1     eeh  * approach of passing the boot strings unchanged.  We also get open file
    167           1.1     eeh  * numbers for stdin and stdout (keyboard and screen, or whatever), for use
    168           1.1     eeh  * with the v2 device ops.
    169           1.1     eeh  */
    170           1.1     eeh struct v2bootargs {
    171           1.1     eeh 	char	**v2_bootpath;		/* V2: Path to boot device */
    172           1.1     eeh 	char	**v2_bootargs;		/* V2: Boot args */
    173           1.1     eeh 	int	*v2_fd0;		/* V2: Stdin descriptor */
    174           1.1     eeh 	int	*v2_fd1;		/* V2: Stdout descriptor */
    175           1.1     eeh };
    176           1.1     eeh 
    177           1.1     eeh /*
    178           1.1     eeh  * The following structure defines the primary PROM vector interface.
    179           1.1     eeh  * The Boot PROM hands the kernel a pointer to this structure in %o0.
    180           1.1     eeh  * There are numerous substructures defined below.
    181           1.1     eeh  */
    182           1.1     eeh struct promvec {
    183           1.1     eeh 	/* Version numbers. */
    184           1.1     eeh 	u_int	pv_magic;		/* Magic number */
    185           1.1     eeh 	u_int	pv_romvec_vers;		/* interface version (0, 2) */
    186           1.1     eeh 	u_int	pv_plugin_vers;		/* ??? */
    187           1.1     eeh 	u_int	pv_printrev;		/* PROM rev # (* 10, e.g 1.9 = 19) */
    188           1.1     eeh 
    189           1.1     eeh 	/* Version 0 memory descriptors (see below). */
    190           1.1     eeh 	struct	v0mem pv_v0mem;		/* V0: Memory description lists. */
    191           1.1     eeh 
    192           1.1     eeh 	/* Node operations (see below). */
    193           1.1     eeh 	struct	nodeops *pv_nodeops;	/* node functions */
    194           1.1     eeh 
    195           1.1     eeh 	char	**pv_bootstr;		/* Boot command, eg sd(0,0,0)vmunix */
    196           1.1     eeh 
    197           1.1     eeh 	struct	v0devops pv_v0devops;	/* V0: device ops */
    198           1.1     eeh 
    199           1.1     eeh 	/*
    200           1.1     eeh 	 * PROMDEV_* cookies.  I fear these may vanish in lieu of fd0/fd1
    201           1.1     eeh 	 * (see below) in future PROMs, but for now they work fine.
    202           1.1     eeh 	 */
    203           1.1     eeh 	char	*pv_stdin;		/* stdin cookie */
    204           1.1     eeh 	char	*pv_stdout;		/* stdout cookie */
    205           1.1     eeh #define	PROMDEV_KBD	0		/* input from keyboard */
    206           1.1     eeh #define	PROMDEV_SCREEN	0		/* output to screen */
    207           1.1     eeh #define	PROMDEV_TTYA	1		/* in/out to ttya */
    208           1.1     eeh #define	PROMDEV_TTYB	2		/* in/out to ttyb */
    209           1.1     eeh 
    210           1.1     eeh 	/* Blocking getchar/putchar.  NOT REENTRANT! (grr) */
    211           1.1     eeh 	int	(*pv_getchar) __P((void));
    212           1.1     eeh 	void	(*pv_putchar) __P((int ch));
    213           1.1     eeh 
    214           1.1     eeh 	/* Non-blocking variants that return -1 on error. */
    215           1.1     eeh 	int	(*pv_nbgetchar) __P((void));
    216           1.1     eeh 	int	(*pv_nbputchar) __P((int ch));
    217           1.1     eeh 
    218           1.1     eeh 	/* Put counted string (can be very slow). */
    219           1.1     eeh 	void	(*pv_putstr) __P((char *str, int len));
    220           1.1     eeh 
    221           1.1     eeh 	/* Miscellany. */
    222           1.1     eeh 	void	(*pv_reboot) __P((char *bootstr));
    223           1.1     eeh 	void	(*pv_printf) __P((const char *fmt, ...));
    224           1.1     eeh 	void	(*pv_abort) __P((void));	/* L1-A abort */
    225           1.1     eeh 	int	*pv_ticks;		/* Ticks since last reset */
    226           1.1     eeh 	__dead void (*pv_halt) __P((void)) __attribute__((noreturn));/* Halt! */
    227           1.1     eeh 	void	(**pv_synchook) __P((void));	/* "sync" command hook */
    228           1.1     eeh 
    229           1.1     eeh 	/*
    230           1.1     eeh 	 * This eval's a FORTH string.  Unfortunately, its interface
    231           1.1     eeh 	 * changed between V0 and V2, which gave us much pain.
    232           1.1     eeh 	 */
    233           1.1     eeh 	union {
    234           1.1     eeh 		void	(*v0_eval) __P((int len, char *str));
    235           1.1     eeh 		void	(*v2_eval) __P((char *str));
    236           1.1     eeh 	} pv_fortheval;
    237           1.1     eeh 
    238           1.1     eeh 	struct	v0bootargs **pv_v0bootargs;	/* V0: Boot args */
    239           1.1     eeh 
    240           1.1     eeh 	/* Extract Ethernet address from network device. */
    241           1.1     eeh 	u_int	(*pv_enaddr) __P((int d, char *enaddr));
    242           1.1     eeh 
    243           1.1     eeh 	struct	v2bootargs pv_v2bootargs;	/* V2: Boot args + std in/out */
    244           1.1     eeh 	struct	v2devops pv_v2devops;	/* V2: device operations */
    245           1.1     eeh 
    246           1.1     eeh 	int	pv_spare[15];
    247           1.1     eeh 
    248           1.1     eeh 	/*
    249           1.1     eeh 	 * The following is machine-dependent.
    250           1.1     eeh 	 *
    251           1.1     eeh 	 * The sun4c needs a PROM function to set a PMEG for another
    252           1.1     eeh 	 * context, so that the kernel can map itself in all contexts.
    253           1.1     eeh 	 * It is not possible simply to set the context register, because
    254           1.1     eeh 	 * contexts 1 through N may have invalid translations for the
    255           1.1     eeh 	 * current program counter.  The hardware has a mode in which
    256           1.1     eeh 	 * all memory references go to the PROM, so the PROM can do it
    257           1.1     eeh 	 * easily.
    258           1.1     eeh 	 */
    259           1.1     eeh 	void	(*pv_setctxt) __P((int ctxt, caddr_t va, int pmeg));
    260           1.1     eeh #if defined(SUN4M) && defined(notyet)
    261           1.1     eeh 	/*
    262           1.1     eeh 	 * The following are V3 ROM functions to handle MP machines in the
    263           1.1     eeh 	 * Sun4m series. They have undefined results when run on a uniprocessor!
    264           1.1     eeh 	 */
    265           1.1     eeh 	int	(*pv_v3cpustart) __P((u_int module, u_int ctxtbl,
    266           1.1     eeh 				      int context, caddr_t pc));
    267           1.1     eeh 	int 	(*pv_v3cpustop) __P((u_int module));
    268           1.1     eeh 	int	(*pv_v3cpuidle) __P((u_int module));
    269           1.1     eeh 	int 	(*pv_v3cpuresume) __P((u_int module));
    270           1.1     eeh #endif
    271           1.1     eeh };
    272           1.1     eeh 
    273           1.1     eeh /*
    274           1.1     eeh  * In addition to the global stuff defined in the PROM vectors above,
    275           1.1     eeh  * the PROM has quite a collection of `nodes'.  A node is described by
    276           1.1     eeh  * an integer---these seem to be internal pointers, actually---and the
    277           1.1     eeh  * nodes are arranged into an N-ary tree.  Each node implements a fixed
    278           1.1     eeh  * set of functions, as described below.  The first two deal with the tree
    279           1.1     eeh  * structure, allowing traversals in either breadth- or depth-first fashion.
    280           1.1     eeh  * The rest deal with `properties'.
    281           1.1     eeh  *
    282           1.1     eeh  * A node property is simply a name/value pair.  The names are C strings
    283           1.1     eeh  * (NUL-terminated); the values are arbitrary byte strings (counted strings).
    284           1.1     eeh  * Many values are really just C strings.  Sometimes these are NUL-terminated,
    285  1.1.1.1.14.1  bouyer  * sometimes not, depending on the interface version; v0 seems to terminate
    286  1.1.1.1.14.1  bouyer  * and v2 not.  Many others are simply integers stored as four bytes in
    287  1.1.1.1.14.1  bouyer  * machine order: you just get them and go.  The third popular format is
    288  1.1.1.1.14.1  bouyer  * an `address', which is made up of one or more sets of three integers
    289  1.1.1.1.14.1  bouyer  * as defined below.
    290           1.1     eeh  *
    291           1.1     eeh  * N.B.: for the `next' functions, next(0) = first, and next(last) = 0.
    292           1.1     eeh  * Whoever designed this part had good taste.  On the other hand, these
    293           1.1     eeh  * operation vectors are global, rather than per-node, yet the pointers
    294           1.1     eeh  * are not in the openprom vectors but rather found by indirection from
    295           1.1     eeh  * there.  So the taste balances out.
    296           1.1     eeh  */
    297           1.1     eeh struct openprom_addr {
    298           1.1     eeh 	int	oa_space;		/* address space (may be relative) */
    299           1.1     eeh 	u_int	oa_base;		/* address within space */
    300           1.1     eeh 	u_int	oa_size;		/* extent (number of bytes) */
    301           1.1     eeh };
    302           1.1     eeh 
    303           1.1     eeh struct nodeops {
    304           1.1     eeh 	/*
    305           1.1     eeh 	 * Tree traversal.
    306           1.1     eeh 	 */
    307           1.1     eeh 	int	(*no_nextnode) __P((int node));	/* next(node) */
    308           1.1     eeh 	int	(*no_child) __P((int node));	/* first child */
    309           1.1     eeh 
    310           1.1     eeh 	/*
    311           1.1     eeh 	 * Property functions.  Proper use of getprop requires calling
    312           1.1     eeh 	 * proplen first to make sure it fits.  Kind of a pain, but no
    313           1.1     eeh 	 * doubt more convenient for the PROM coder.
    314           1.1     eeh 	 */
    315           1.1     eeh 	int	(*no_proplen) __P((int node, caddr_t name));
    316           1.1     eeh 	int	(*no_getprop) __P((int node, caddr_t name, caddr_t val));
    317           1.1     eeh 	int	(*no_setprop) __P((int node, caddr_t name, caddr_t val,
    318           1.1     eeh 				   int len));
    319           1.1     eeh 	caddr_t	(*no_nextprop) __P((int node, caddr_t name));
    320           1.1     eeh };
    321           1.1     eeh 
    322           1.1     eeh void	romhalt __P((void))
    323           1.1     eeh     __attribute__((__noreturn__));
    324           1.1     eeh void	romboot __P((char *))
    325           1.1     eeh     __attribute__((__noreturn__));
    326           1.1     eeh 
    327           1.1     eeh extern struct promvec *promvec;
    328