dvma.c revision 1.13 1 /* $NetBSD: dvma.c,v 1.13 1999/07/08 18:11:01 thorpej Exp $ */
2
3 /*-
4 * Copyright (c) 1996 The NetBSD Foundation, Inc.
5 * All rights reserved.
6 *
7 * This code is derived from software contributed to The NetBSD Foundation
8 * by Gordon W. Ross and Jeremy Cooper.
9 *
10 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
11 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
12 * are met:
13 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
14 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
15 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
16 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
17 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
18 * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
19 * must display the following acknowledgement:
20 * This product includes software developed by the NetBSD
21 * Foundation, Inc. and its contributors.
22 * 4. Neither the name of The NetBSD Foundation nor the names of its
23 * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
24 * from this software without specific prior written permission.
25 *
26 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE NETBSD FOUNDATION, INC. AND CONTRIBUTORS
27 * ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
28 * TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
29 * PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE FOUNDATION OR CONTRIBUTORS
30 * BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
31 * CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
32 * SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
33 * INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
34 * CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
35 * ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
36 * POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
37 */
38
39 /*
40 * DVMA (Direct Virtual Memory Access - like DMA)
41 *
42 * In the Sun3 architecture, memory cycles initiated by secondary bus
43 * masters (DVMA devices) passed through the same MMU that governed CPU
44 * accesses. All DVMA devices were wired in such a way so that an offset
45 * was added to the addresses they issued, causing them to access virtual
46 * memory starting at address 0x0FF00000 - the offset. The task of
47 * enabling a DVMA device to access main memory only involved creating
48 * valid mapping in the MMU that translated these high addresses into the
49 * appropriate physical addresses.
50 *
51 * The Sun3x presents a challenge to programming DVMA because the MMU is no
52 * longer shared by both secondary bus masters and the CPU. The MC68030's
53 * built-in MMU serves only to manage virtual memory accesses initiated by
54 * the CPU. Secondary bus master bus accesses pass through a different MMU,
55 * aptly named the 'I/O Mapper'. To enable every device driver that uses
56 * DVMA to understand that these two address spaces are disconnected would
57 * require a tremendous amount of code re-writing. To avoid this, we will
58 * ensure that the I/O Mapper and the MC68030 MMU are programmed together,
59 * so that DVMA mappings are consistent in both the CPU virtual address
60 * space and secondary bus master address space - creating an environment
61 * just like the Sun3 system.
62 *
63 * The maximum address space that any DVMA device in the Sun3x architecture
64 * is capable of addressing is 24 bits wide (16 Megabytes.) We can alias
65 * all of the mappings that exist in the I/O mapper by duplicating them in
66 * a specially reserved section of the CPU's virtual address space, 16
67 * Megabytes in size. Whenever a DVMA buffer is allocated, the allocation
68 * code will enter in a mapping both in the MC68030 MMU page tables and the
69 * I/O mapper.
70 *
71 * The address returned by the allocation routine is a virtual address that
72 * the requesting driver must use to access the buffer. It is up to the
73 * device driver to convert this virtual address into the appropriate slave
74 * address that its device should issue to access the buffer. (There will be
75 * routines that assist the driver in doing so.)
76 */
77
78 #include <sys/param.h>
79 #include <sys/systm.h>
80 #include <sys/device.h>
81 #include <sys/proc.h>
82 #include <sys/malloc.h>
83 #include <sys/map.h>
84 #include <sys/buf.h>
85 #include <sys/vnode.h>
86 #include <sys/user.h>
87 #include <sys/core.h>
88 #include <sys/exec.h>
89
90 #include <vm/vm.h>
91 #include <vm/vm_kern.h>
92 #include <vm/vm_map.h>
93
94 #include <uvm/uvm_extern.h>
95
96 #include <machine/autoconf.h>
97 #include <machine/cpu.h>
98 #include <machine/dvma.h>
99 #include <machine/pmap.h>
100
101 #include <sun3/sun3/machdep.h>
102
103 #include <sun3/sun3x/enable.h>
104 #include <sun3/sun3x/iommu.h>
105
106 /*
107 * Use a resource map to manage DVMA scratch-memory pages.
108 * Note: SunOS says last three pages are reserved (PROM?)
109 * Note: need a separate map (sub-map?) for last 1MB for
110 * use by VME slave interface.
111 */
112
113 /* Number of slots in dvmamap. */
114 int dvma_max_segs = btoc(DVMA_MAP_SIZE);
115 struct map *dvmamap;
116
117 void
118 dvma_init()
119 {
120
121 /*
122 * Create the resource map for DVMA pages.
123 */
124 dvmamap = malloc((sizeof(struct map) * dvma_max_segs),
125 M_DEVBUF, M_WAITOK);
126
127 rminit(dvmamap, btoc(DVMA_MAP_AVAIL), btoc(DVMA_MAP_BASE),
128 "dvmamap", dvma_max_segs);
129
130 /*
131 * Enable DVMA in the System Enable register.
132 * Note: This is only necessary for VME slave accesses.
133 * On-board devices are always capable of DVMA.
134 */
135 *enable_reg |= ENA_SDVMA;
136 }
137
138
139 /*
140 * Given a DVMA address, return the physical address that
141 * would be used by some OTHER bus-master besides the CPU.
142 * (Examples: on-board ie/le, VME xy board).
143 */
144 u_long
145 dvma_kvtopa(kva, bustype)
146 void * kva;
147 int bustype;
148 {
149 u_long addr, mask;
150
151 addr = (u_long)kva;
152 if ((addr & DVMA_MAP_BASE) != DVMA_MAP_BASE)
153 panic("dvma_kvtopa: bad dmva addr=0x%x\n", addr);
154
155 switch (bustype) {
156 case BUS_OBIO:
157 case BUS_OBMEM:
158 mask = DVMA_OBIO_SLAVE_MASK;
159 break;
160 default: /* VME bus device. */
161 mask = DVMA_VME_SLAVE_MASK;
162 break;
163 }
164
165 return(addr & mask);
166 }
167
168
169 /*
170 * Map a range [va, va+len] of wired virtual addresses in the given map
171 * to a kernel address in DVMA space.
172 */
173 void *
174 dvma_mapin(kmem_va, len, canwait)
175 void * kmem_va;
176 int len, canwait;
177 {
178 void * dvma_addr;
179 vm_offset_t kva, tva;
180 register int npf, s;
181 paddr_t pa;
182 long off, pn;
183 boolean_t rv;
184
185 kva = (u_long)kmem_va;
186 #ifdef DIAGNOSTIC
187 /*
188 * Addresses below VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS are not part of the kernel
189 * map and should not participate in DVMA.
190 */
191 if (kva < VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS)
192 panic("dvma_mapin: bad kva");
193 #endif
194
195 /*
196 * Calculate the offset of the data buffer from a page boundary.
197 */
198 off = (int)kva & PGOFSET;
199 kva -= off; /* Truncate starting address to nearest page. */
200 len = round_page(len + off); /* Round the buffer length to pages. */
201 npf = btoc(len); /* Determine the number of pages to be mapped. */
202
203 s = splimp();
204 for (;;) {
205 /*
206 * Try to allocate DVMA space of the appropriate size
207 * in which to do a transfer.
208 */
209 pn = rmalloc(dvmamap, npf);
210
211 if (pn != 0)
212 break;
213 if (canwait) {
214 (void)tsleep(dvmamap, PRIBIO+1, "physio", 0);
215 continue;
216 }
217 splx(s);
218 return NULL;
219 }
220 splx(s);
221
222
223 /*
224 * Tva is the starting page to which the data buffer will be double
225 * mapped. Dvma_addr is the starting address of the buffer within
226 * that page and is the return value of the function.
227 */
228 tva = ctob(pn);
229 dvma_addr = (void *) (tva + off);
230
231 for (;npf--; kva += NBPG, tva += NBPG) {
232 /*
233 * Retrieve the physical address of each page in the buffer
234 * and enter mappings into the I/O MMU so they may be seen
235 * by external bus masters and into the special DVMA space
236 * in the MC68030 MMU so they may be seen by the CPU.
237 */
238 rv = pmap_extract(pmap_kernel(), kva, &pa);
239 #ifdef DEBUG
240 if (rv == FALSE)
241 panic("dvma_mapin: null page frame");
242 #endif DEBUG
243
244 iommu_enter((tva & IOMMU_VA_MASK), pa);
245 pmap_enter(pmap_kernel(), tva, pa | PMAP_NC,
246 VM_PROT_READ|VM_PROT_WRITE, 1, 0);
247 }
248
249 return (dvma_addr);
250 }
251
252 /*
253 * Remove double map of `va' in DVMA space at `kva'.
254 *
255 * TODO - This function might be the perfect place to handle the
256 * synchronization between the DVMA cache and central RAM
257 * on the 3/470.
258 */
259 void
260 dvma_mapout(dvma_addr, len)
261 void * dvma_addr;
262 int len;
263 {
264 u_long kva;
265 int s, off;
266
267 kva = (u_long)dvma_addr;
268 off = (int)kva & PGOFSET;
269 kva -= off;
270 len = round_page(len + off);
271
272 iommu_remove((kva & IOMMU_VA_MASK), len);
273
274 /*
275 * XXX - don't call pmap_remove() with DVMA space yet.
276 * XXX It cannot (currently) handle the removal
277 * XXX of address ranges which do not participate in the
278 * XXX PV system by virtue of their _virtual_ addresses.
279 * XXX DVMA is one of these special address spaces.
280 */
281 #ifdef DVMA_ON_PVLIST
282 pmap_remove(pmap_kernel(), kva, kva + len);
283 #endif /* DVMA_ON_PVLIST */
284
285 s = splimp();
286 rmfree(dvmamap, btoc(len), btoc(kva));
287 wakeup(dvmamap);
288 splx(s);
289 }
290
291 /*
292 * Allocate actual memory pages in DVMA space.
293 * (For sun3 compatibility - the ie driver.)
294 */
295 void *
296 dvma_malloc(bytes)
297 size_t bytes;
298 {
299 void *new_mem, *dvma_mem;
300 vm_size_t new_size;
301
302 if (!bytes)
303 return NULL;
304 new_size = m68k_round_page(bytes);
305 new_mem = (void*)uvm_km_alloc(kernel_map, new_size);
306 if (!new_mem)
307 return NULL;
308 dvma_mem = dvma_mapin(new_mem, new_size, 1);
309 return (dvma_mem);
310 }
311
312 /*
313 * Free pages from dvma_malloc()
314 */
315 void
316 dvma_free(addr, size)
317 void *addr;
318 size_t size;
319 {
320 vm_size_t sz = m68k_round_page(size);
321
322 dvma_mapout(addr, sz);
323 /* XXX: need kmem address to free it...
324 Oh well, we never call this anyway. */
325 }
326