Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | /* $Id: aurora.h,v 1.6 2001/06/05 12:23:38 davem Exp $ |
| 2 | * linux/drivers/sbus/char/aurora.h -- Aurora multiport driver |
| 3 | * |
| 4 | * Copyright (c) 1999 by Oliver Aldulea (oli@bv.ro) |
| 5 | * |
| 6 | * This code is based on the RISCom/8 multiport serial driver written |
| 7 | * by Dmitry Gorodchanin (pgmdsg@ibi.com), based on the Linux serial |
| 8 | * driver, written by Linus Torvalds, Theodore T'so and others. |
| 9 | * The Aurora multiport programming info was obtained mainly from the |
| 10 | * Cirrus Logic CD180 documentation (available on the web), and by |
| 11 | * doing heavy tests on the board. Many thanks to Eddie C. Dost for the |
| 12 | * help on the sbus interface. |
| 13 | * |
| 14 | * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| 15 | * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
| 16 | * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or |
| 17 | * (at your option) any later version. |
| 18 | * |
| 19 | * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| 20 | * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| 21 | * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
| 22 | * GNU General Public License for more details. |
| 23 | * |
| 24 | * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| 25 | * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software |
| 26 | * Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. |
| 27 | * |
| 28 | * Revision 1.0 |
| 29 | * |
| 30 | * This is the first public release. |
| 31 | * |
| 32 | * This version needs a lot of feedback. This is the version that works |
| 33 | * with _my_ board. My board is model 1600se, revision '@(#)1600se.fth |
| 34 | * 1.2 3/28/95 1'. The driver might work with your board, but I do not |
| 35 | * guarantee it. If you have _any_ type of board, I need to know if the |
| 36 | * driver works or not, I need to know exactly your board parameters |
| 37 | * (get them with 'cd /proc/openprom/iommu/sbus/sio16/; ls *; cat *') |
| 38 | * Also, I need your board revision code, which is written on the board. |
| 39 | * Send me the output of my driver too (it outputs through klogd). |
| 40 | * |
| 41 | * If the driver does not work, you can try enabling the debug options |
| 42 | * to see what's wrong or what should be done. |
| 43 | * |
| 44 | * I'm sorry about the alignment of the code. It was written in a |
| 45 | * 128x48 environment. |
| 46 | * |
| 47 | * I must say that I do not like Aurora Technologies' policy. I asked |
| 48 | * them to help me do this driver faster, but they ended by something |
| 49 | * like "don't call us, we'll call you", and I never heard anything |
| 50 | * from them. They told me "knowing the way the board works, I don't |
| 51 | * doubt you and others on the net will make the driver." |
| 52 | * The truth about this board is that it has nothing intelligent on it. |
| 53 | * If you want to say to somebody what kind of board you have, say that |
| 54 | * it uses Cirrus Logic processors (CD180). The power of the board is |
| 55 | * in those two chips. The rest of the board is the interface to the |
| 56 | * sbus and to the peripherals. Still, they did something smart: they |
| 57 | * reversed DTR and RTS to make on-board automatic hardware flow |
| 58 | * control usable. |
| 59 | * Thanks to Aurora Technologies for wasting my time, nerves and money. |
| 60 | */ |
| 61 | |
| 62 | #ifndef __LINUX_AURORA_H |
| 63 | #define __LINUX_AURORA_H |
| 64 | |
| 65 | #include <linux/serial.h> |
| 66 | #include <linux/serialP.h> |
| 67 | |
| 68 | #ifdef __KERNEL__ |
| 69 | |
| 70 | /* This is the number of boards to support. I've only tested this driver with |
| 71 | * one board, so it might not work. |
| 72 | */ |
| 73 | #define AURORA_NBOARD 1 |
| 74 | |
| 75 | /* Useful ? Yes. But you can safely comment the warnings if they annoy you |
| 76 | * (let me say that again: the warnings in the code, not this define). |
| 77 | */ |
| 78 | #define AURORA_PARANOIA_CHECK |
| 79 | |
| 80 | /* Well, after many lost nights, I found that the IRQ for this board is |
| 81 | * selected from four built-in values by writing some bits in the |
| 82 | * configuration register. This causes a little problem to occur: which |
| 83 | * IRQ to select ? Which one is the best for the user ? Well, I finally |
| 84 | * decided for the following algorithm: if the "bintr" value is not acceptable |
| 85 | * (not within type_1_irq[], then test the "intr" value, if that fails too, |
| 86 | * try each value from type_1_irq until succeded. Hope it's ok. |
| 87 | * You can safely reorder the irq's. |
| 88 | */ |
| 89 | #define TYPE_1_IRQS 4 |
| 90 | unsigned char type_1_irq[TYPE_1_IRQS] = { |
| 91 | 3, 5, 9, 13 |
| 92 | }; |
| 93 | /* I know something about another method of interrupt setting, but not enough. |
| 94 | * Also, this is for another type of board, so I first have to learn how to |
| 95 | * detect it. |
| 96 | #define TYPE_2_IRQS 3 |
| 97 | unsigned char type_2_irq[TYPE_2_IRQS] = { |
| 98 | 0, 0, 0 ** could anyone find these for me ? (see AURORA_ALLIRQ below) ** |
| 99 | }; |
| 100 | unsigned char type_2_mask[TYPE_2_IRQS] = { |
| 101 | 32, 64, 128 |
| 102 | }; |
| 103 | */ |
| 104 | |
| 105 | /* The following section should only be modified by those who know what |
| 106 | * they're doing (or don't, but want to help with some feedback). Modifying |
| 107 | * anything raises a _big_ probability for your system to hang, but the |
| 108 | * sacrifice worths. (I sacrificed my ext2fs many, many times...) |
| 109 | */ |
| 110 | |
| 111 | /* This one tries to dump to console the name of almost every function called, |
| 112 | * and many other debugging info. |
| 113 | */ |
| 114 | #undef AURORA_DEBUG |
| 115 | |
| 116 | /* These are the most dangerous and useful defines. They do printk() during |
| 117 | * the interrupt processing routine(s), so if you manage to get "flooded" by |
| 118 | * irq's, start thinking about the "Power off/on" button... |
| 119 | */ |
| 120 | #undef AURORA_INTNORM /* This one enables the "normal" messages, but some |
| 121 | * of them cause flood, so I preffered putting |
| 122 | * them under a define */ |
| 123 | #undef AURORA_INT_DEBUG /* This one is really bad. */ |
| 124 | |
| 125 | /* Here's something helpful: after n irq's, the board will be disabled. This |
| 126 | * prevents irq flooding during debug (no need to think about power |
| 127 | * off/on anymore...) |
| 128 | */ |
| 129 | #define AURORA_FLOODPRO 10 |
| 130 | |
| 131 | /* This one helps finding which irq the board calls, in case of a strange/ |
| 132 | * unsupported board. AURORA_INT_DEBUG should be enabled, because I don't |
| 133 | * think /proc/interrupts or any command will be available in case of an irq |
| 134 | * flood... "allirq" is the list of all free irq's. |
| 135 | */ |
| 136 | /* |
| 137 | #define AURORA_ALLIRQ 6 |
| 138 | int allirq[AURORA_ALLIRQ]={ |
| 139 | 2,3,5,7,9,13 |
| 140 | }; |
| 141 | */ |
| 142 | |
| 143 | /* These must not be modified. These values are assumed during the code for |
| 144 | * performance optimisations. |
| 145 | */ |
| 146 | #define AURORA_NCD180 2 /* two chips per board */ |
| 147 | #define AURORA_NPORT 8 /* 8 ports per chip */ |
| 148 | |
| 149 | /* several utilities */ |
| 150 | #define AURORA_BOARD(line) (((line) >> 4) & 0x01) |
| 151 | #define AURORA_CD180(line) (((line) >> 3) & 0x01) |
| 152 | #define AURORA_PORT(line) ((line) & 15) |
| 153 | |
| 154 | #define AURORA_TNPORTS (AURORA_NBOARD*AURORA_NCD180*AURORA_NPORT) |
| 155 | |
| 156 | /* Ticks per sec. Used for setting receiver timeout and break length */ |
| 157 | #define AURORA_TPS 4000 |
| 158 | |
| 159 | #define AURORA_MAGIC 0x0A18 |
| 160 | |
| 161 | /* Yeah, after heavy testing I decided it must be 6. |
| 162 | * Sure, You can change it if needed. |
| 163 | */ |
| 164 | #define AURORA_RXFIFO 6 /* Max. receiver FIFO size (1-8) */ |
| 165 | |
| 166 | #define AURORA_RXTH 7 |
| 167 | |
| 168 | struct aurora_reg1 { |
| 169 | __volatile__ unsigned char r; |
| 170 | }; |
| 171 | |
| 172 | struct aurora_reg128 { |
| 173 | __volatile__ unsigned char r[128]; |
| 174 | }; |
| 175 | |
| 176 | struct aurora_reg4 { |
| 177 | __volatile__ unsigned char r[4]; |
| 178 | }; |
| 179 | |
| 180 | struct Aurora_board { |
| 181 | unsigned long flags; |
| 182 | struct aurora_reg1 * r0; /* This is the board configuration |
| 183 | * register (write-only). */ |
| 184 | struct aurora_reg128 * r[2]; /* These are the registers for the |
| 185 | * two chips. */ |
| 186 | struct aurora_reg4 * r3; /* These are used for hardware-based |
| 187 | * acknowledge. Software-based ack is |
| 188 | * not supported by CD180. */ |
| 189 | unsigned int oscfreq; /* The on-board oscillator |
| 190 | * frequency, in Hz. */ |
| 191 | unsigned char irq; |
| 192 | #ifdef MODULE |
| 193 | signed char count; /* counts the use of the board */ |
| 194 | #endif |
| 195 | /* Values for the dtr_rts swapped mode. */ |
| 196 | unsigned char DTR; |
| 197 | unsigned char RTS; |
| 198 | unsigned char MSVDTR; |
| 199 | unsigned char MSVRTS; |
| 200 | /* Values for hardware acknowledge. */ |
| 201 | unsigned char ACK_MINT, ACK_TINT, ACK_RINT; |
| 202 | }; |
| 203 | |
| 204 | /* Board configuration register */ |
| 205 | #define AURORA_CFG_ENABLE_IO 8 |
| 206 | #define AURORA_CFG_ENABLE_IRQ 4 |
| 207 | |
| 208 | /* Board flags */ |
| 209 | #define AURORA_BOARD_PRESENT 0x00000001 |
| 210 | #define AURORA_BOARD_ACTIVE 0x00000002 |
| 211 | #define AURORA_BOARD_TYPE_2 0x00000004 /* don't know how to |
| 212 | * detect this yet */ |
| 213 | #define AURORA_BOARD_DTR_FLOW_OK 0x00000008 |
| 214 | |
| 215 | /* The story goes like this: Cirrus programmed the CD-180 chip to do automatic |
| 216 | * hardware flow control, and do it using CTS and DTR. CTS is ok, but, if you |
| 217 | * have a modem and the chip drops DTR, then the modem will drop the carrier |
| 218 | * (ain't that cute...). Luckily, the guys at Aurora decided to swap DTR and |
| 219 | * RTS, which makes the flow control usable. I hope that all the boards made |
| 220 | * by Aurora have these two signals swapped. If your's doesn't but you have a |
| 221 | * breakout box, you can try to reverse them yourself, then set the following |
| 222 | * flag. |
| 223 | */ |
| 224 | #undef AURORA_FORCE_DTR_FLOW |
| 225 | |
| 226 | /* In fact, a few more words have to be said about hardware flow control. |
| 227 | * This driver handles "output" flow control through the on-board facility |
| 228 | * CTS Auto Enable. For the "input" flow control there are two cases when |
| 229 | * the flow should be controlled. The first case is when the kernel is so |
| 230 | * busy that it cannot process IRQ's in time; this flow control can only be |
| 231 | * activated by the on-board chip, and if the board has RTS and DTR swapped, |
| 232 | * this facility is usable. The second case is when the application is so |
| 233 | * busy that it cannot receive bytes from the kernel, and this flow must be |
| 234 | * activated by software. This second case is not yet implemented in this |
| 235 | * driver. Unfortunately, I estimate that the second case is the one that |
| 236 | * occurs the most. |
| 237 | */ |
| 238 | |
| 239 | |
| 240 | struct Aurora_port { |
| 241 | int magic; |
| 242 | int baud_base; |
| 243 | int flags; |
| 244 | struct tty_struct * tty; |
| 245 | int count; |
| 246 | int blocked_open; |
| 247 | long event; |
| 248 | int timeout; |
| 249 | int close_delay; |
| 250 | unsigned char * xmit_buf; |
| 251 | int custom_divisor; |
| 252 | int xmit_head; |
| 253 | int xmit_tail; |
| 254 | int xmit_cnt; |
| 255 | wait_queue_head_t open_wait; |
| 256 | wait_queue_head_t close_wait; |
| 257 | struct tq_struct tqueue; |
| 258 | struct tq_struct tqueue_hangup; |
| 259 | short wakeup_chars; |
| 260 | short break_length; |
| 261 | unsigned short closing_wait; |
| 262 | unsigned char mark_mask; |
| 263 | unsigned char SRER; |
| 264 | unsigned char MSVR; |
| 265 | unsigned char COR2; |
| 266 | #ifdef AURORA_REPORT_OVERRUN |
| 267 | unsigned long overrun; |
| 268 | #endif |
| 269 | #ifdef AURORA_REPORT_FIFO |
| 270 | unsigned long hits[10]; |
| 271 | #endif |
| 272 | }; |
| 273 | |
| 274 | #endif |
| 275 | #endif /*__LINUX_AURORA_H*/ |
| 276 | |