From 57f0f512b273f60d52568b8c6b77e17f5636edc0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: André Fabian Silva Delgado Date: Wed, 5 Aug 2015 17:04:01 -0300 Subject: Initial import --- arch/powerpc/include/asm/pmac_pfunc.h | 252 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 252 insertions(+) create mode 100644 arch/powerpc/include/asm/pmac_pfunc.h (limited to 'arch/powerpc/include/asm/pmac_pfunc.h') diff --git a/arch/powerpc/include/asm/pmac_pfunc.h b/arch/powerpc/include/asm/pmac_pfunc.h new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1330d6a58 --- /dev/null +++ b/arch/powerpc/include/asm/pmac_pfunc.h @@ -0,0 +1,252 @@ +#ifndef __PMAC_PFUNC_H__ +#define __PMAC_PFUNC_H__ + +#include +#include + +/* Flags in command lists */ +#define PMF_FLAGS_ON_INIT 0x80000000u +#define PMF_FLGAS_ON_TERM 0x40000000u +#define PMF_FLAGS_ON_SLEEP 0x20000000u +#define PMF_FLAGS_ON_WAKE 0x10000000u +#define PMF_FLAGS_ON_DEMAND 0x08000000u +#define PMF_FLAGS_INT_GEN 0x04000000u +#define PMF_FLAGS_HIGH_SPEED 0x02000000u +#define PMF_FLAGS_LOW_SPEED 0x01000000u +#define PMF_FLAGS_SIDE_EFFECTS 0x00800000u + +/* + * Arguments to a platform function call. + * + * NOTE: By convention, pointer arguments point to an u32 + */ +struct pmf_args { + union { + u32 v; + u32 *p; + } u[4]; + unsigned int count; +}; + +/* + * A driver capable of interpreting commands provides a handlers + * structure filled with whatever handlers are implemented by this + * driver. Non implemented handlers are left NULL. + * + * PMF_STD_ARGS are the same arguments that are passed to the parser + * and that gets passed back to the various handlers. + * + * Interpreting a given function always start with a begin() call which + * returns an instance data to be passed around subsequent calls, and + * ends with an end() call. This allows the low level driver to implement + * locking policy or per-function instance data. + * + * For interrupt capable functions, irq_enable() is called when a client + * registers, and irq_disable() is called when the last client unregisters + * Note that irq_enable & irq_disable are called within a semaphore held + * by the core, thus you should not try to register yourself to some other + * pmf interrupt during those calls. + */ + +#define PMF_STD_ARGS struct pmf_function *func, void *instdata, \ + struct pmf_args *args + +struct pmf_function; + +struct pmf_handlers { + void * (*begin)(struct pmf_function *func, struct pmf_args *args); + void (*end)(struct pmf_function *func, void *instdata); + + int (*irq_enable)(struct pmf_function *func); + int (*irq_disable)(struct pmf_function *func); + + int (*write_gpio)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u8 value, u8 mask); + int (*read_gpio)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u8 mask, int rshift, u8 xor); + + int (*write_reg32)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u32 value, u32 mask); + int (*read_reg32)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset); + int (*write_reg16)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u16 value, u16 mask); + int (*read_reg16)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset); + int (*write_reg8)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u8 value, u8 mask); + int (*read_reg8)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset); + + int (*delay)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 duration); + + int (*wait_reg32)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u32 value, u32 mask); + int (*wait_reg16)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u16 value, u16 mask); + int (*wait_reg8)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u8 value, u8 mask); + + int (*read_i2c)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 len); + int (*write_i2c)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 len, const u8 *data); + int (*rmw_i2c)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 masklen, u32 valuelen, u32 totallen, + const u8 *maskdata, const u8 *valuedata); + + int (*read_cfg)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u32 len); + int (*write_cfg)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u32 len, const u8 *data); + int (*rmw_cfg)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u32 masklen, u32 valuelen, + u32 totallen, const u8 *maskdata, const u8 *valuedata); + + int (*read_i2c_sub)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u8 subaddr, u32 len); + int (*write_i2c_sub)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u8 subaddr, u32 len, const u8 *data); + int (*set_i2c_mode)(PMF_STD_ARGS, int mode); + int (*rmw_i2c_sub)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u8 subaddr, u32 masklen, u32 valuelen, + u32 totallen, const u8 *maskdata, + const u8 *valuedata); + + int (*read_reg32_msrx)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u32 mask, u32 shift, + u32 xor); + int (*read_reg16_msrx)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u32 mask, u32 shift, + u32 xor); + int (*read_reg8_msrx)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u32 mask, u32 shift, + u32 xor); + + int (*write_reg32_slm)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u32 shift, u32 mask); + int (*write_reg16_slm)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u32 shift, u32 mask); + int (*write_reg8_slm)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 offset, u32 shift, u32 mask); + + int (*mask_and_compare)(PMF_STD_ARGS, u32 len, const u8 *maskdata, + const u8 *valuedata); + + struct module *owner; +}; + + +/* + * Drivers who expose platform functions register at init time, this + * causes the platform functions for that device node to be parsed in + * advance and associated with the device. The data structures are + * partially public so a driver can walk the list of platform functions + * and eventually inspect the flags + */ +struct pmf_device; + +struct pmf_function { + /* All functions for a given driver are linked */ + struct list_head link; + + /* Function node & driver data */ + struct device_node *node; + void *driver_data; + + /* For internal use by core */ + struct pmf_device *dev; + + /* The name is the "xxx" in "platform-do-xxx", this is how + * platform functions are identified by this code. Some functions + * only operate for a given target, in which case the phandle is + * here (or 0 if the filter doesn't apply) + */ + const char *name; + u32 phandle; + + /* The flags for that function. You can have several functions + * with the same name and different flag + */ + u32 flags; + + /* The actual tokenized function blob */ + const void *data; + unsigned int length; + + /* Interrupt clients */ + struct list_head irq_clients; + + /* Refcounting */ + struct kref ref; +}; + +/* + * For platform functions that are interrupts, one can register + * irq_client structures. You canNOT use the same structure twice + * as it contains a link member. Also, the callback is called with + * a spinlock held, you must not call back into any of the pmf_* functions + * from within that callback + */ +struct pmf_irq_client { + void (*handler)(void *data); + void *data; + struct module *owner; + struct list_head link; + struct pmf_function *func; +}; + + +/* + * Register/Unregister a function-capable driver and its handlers + */ +extern int pmf_register_driver(struct device_node *np, + struct pmf_handlers *handlers, + void *driverdata); + +extern void pmf_unregister_driver(struct device_node *np); + + +/* + * Register/Unregister interrupt clients + */ +extern int pmf_register_irq_client(struct device_node *np, + const char *name, + struct pmf_irq_client *client); + +extern void pmf_unregister_irq_client(struct pmf_irq_client *client); + +/* + * Called by the handlers when an irq happens + */ +extern void pmf_do_irq(struct pmf_function *func); + + +/* + * Low level call to platform functions. + * + * The phandle can filter on the target object for functions that have + * multiple targets, the flags allow you to restrict the call to a given + * combination of flags. + * + * The args array contains as many arguments as is required by the function, + * this is dependent on the function you are calling, unfortunately Apple + * mechanism provides no way to encode that so you have to get it right at + * the call site. Some functions require no args, in which case, you can + * pass NULL. + * + * You can also pass NULL to the name. This will match any function that has + * the appropriate combination of flags & phandle or you can pass 0 to the + * phandle to match any + */ +extern int pmf_do_functions(struct device_node *np, const char *name, + u32 phandle, u32 flags, struct pmf_args *args); + + + +/* + * High level call to a platform function. + * + * This one looks for the platform-xxx first so you should call it to the + * actual target if any. It will fallback to platform-do-xxx if it can't + * find one. It will also exclusively target functions that have + * the "OnDemand" flag. + */ + +extern int pmf_call_function(struct device_node *target, const char *name, + struct pmf_args *args); + + +/* + * For low latency interrupt usage, you can lookup for on-demand functions + * using the functions below + */ + +extern struct pmf_function *pmf_find_function(struct device_node *target, + const char *name); + +extern struct pmf_function * pmf_get_function(struct pmf_function *func); +extern void pmf_put_function(struct pmf_function *func); + +extern int pmf_call_one(struct pmf_function *func, struct pmf_args *args); + + +/* Suspend/resume code called by via-pmu directly for now */ +extern void pmac_pfunc_base_suspend(void); +extern void pmac_pfunc_base_resume(void); + +#endif /* __PMAC_PFUNC_H__ */ -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf