kernel_samsung_a34x-permissive/arch/parisc/include/asm/pci.h

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/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
#ifndef __ASM_PARISC_PCI_H
#define __ASM_PARISC_PCI_H
#include <linux/scatterlist.h>
/*
** HP PCI platforms generally support multiple bus adapters.
** (workstations 1-~4, servers 2-~32)
**
** Newer platforms number the busses across PCI bus adapters *sparsely*.
** E.g. 0, 8, 16, ...
**
** Under a PCI bus, most HP platforms support PPBs up to two or three
** levels deep. See "Bit3" product line.
*/
#define PCI_MAX_BUSSES 256
/* To be used as: mdelay(pci_post_reset_delay);
*
* post_reset is the time the kernel should stall to prevent anyone from
* accessing the PCI bus once #RESET is de-asserted.
* PCI spec somewhere says 1 second but with multi-PCI bus systems,
* this makes the boot time much longer than necessary.
* 20ms seems to work for all the HP PCI implementations to date.
*/
#define pci_post_reset_delay 50
/*
** pci_hba_data (aka H2P_OBJECT in HP/UX)
**
** This is the "common" or "base" data structure which HBA drivers
** (eg Dino or LBA) are required to place at the top of their own
** platform_data structure. I've heard this called "C inheritance" too.
**
** Data needed by pcibios layer belongs here.
*/
struct pci_hba_data {
void __iomem *base_addr; /* aka Host Physical Address */
const struct parisc_device *dev; /* device from PA bus walk */
struct pci_bus *hba_bus; /* primary PCI bus below HBA */
int hba_num; /* I/O port space access "key" */
struct resource bus_num; /* PCI bus numbers */
struct resource io_space; /* PIOP */
struct resource lmmio_space; /* bus addresses < 4Gb */
struct resource elmmio_space; /* additional bus addresses < 4Gb */
struct resource gmmio_space; /* bus addresses > 4Gb */
/* NOTE: Dino code assumes it can use *all* of the lmmio_space,
* elmmio_space and gmmio_space as a contiguous array of
* resources. This #define represents the array size */
#define DINO_MAX_LMMIO_RESOURCES 3
unsigned long lmmio_space_offset; /* CPU view - PCI view */
void * iommu; /* IOMMU this device is under */
/* REVISIT - spinlock to protect resources? */
#define HBA_NAME_SIZE 16
char io_name[HBA_NAME_SIZE];
char lmmio_name[HBA_NAME_SIZE];
char elmmio_name[HBA_NAME_SIZE];
char gmmio_name[HBA_NAME_SIZE];
};
#define HBA_DATA(d) ((struct pci_hba_data *) (d))
/*
** We support 2^16 I/O ports per HBA. These are set up in the form
** 0xbbxxxx, where bb is the bus number and xxxx is the I/O port
** space address.
*/
#define HBA_PORT_SPACE_BITS 16
#define HBA_PORT_BASE(h) ((h) << HBA_PORT_SPACE_BITS)
#define HBA_PORT_SPACE_SIZE (1UL << HBA_PORT_SPACE_BITS)
#define PCI_PORT_HBA(a) ((a) >> HBA_PORT_SPACE_BITS)
#define PCI_PORT_ADDR(a) ((a) & (HBA_PORT_SPACE_SIZE - 1))
#ifdef CONFIG_64BIT
#define PCI_F_EXTEND 0xffffffff00000000UL
#else /* !CONFIG_64BIT */
#define PCI_F_EXTEND 0UL
#endif /* !CONFIG_64BIT */
/*
** Most PCI devices (eg Tulip, NCR720) also export the same registers
** to both MMIO and I/O port space. Due to poor performance of I/O Port
** access under HP PCI bus adapters, strongly recommend the use of MMIO
** address space.
**
** While I'm at it more PA programming notes:
**
** 1) MMIO stores (writes) are posted operations. This means the processor
** gets an "ACK" before the write actually gets to the device. A read
** to the same device (or typically the bus adapter above it) will
** force in-flight write transaction(s) out to the targeted device
** before the read can complete.
**
** 2) The Programmed I/O (PIO) data may not always be strongly ordered with
** respect to DMA on all platforms. Ie PIO data can reach the processor
** before in-flight DMA reaches memory. Since most SMP PA platforms
** are I/O coherent, it generally doesn't matter...but sometimes
** it does.
**
** I've helped device driver writers debug both types of problems.
*/
struct pci_port_ops {
u8 (*inb) (struct pci_hba_data *hba, u16 port);
u16 (*inw) (struct pci_hba_data *hba, u16 port);
u32 (*inl) (struct pci_hba_data *hba, u16 port);
void (*outb) (struct pci_hba_data *hba, u16 port, u8 data);
void (*outw) (struct pci_hba_data *hba, u16 port, u16 data);
void (*outl) (struct pci_hba_data *hba, u16 port, u32 data);
};
struct pci_bios_ops {
void (*init)(void);
void (*fixup_bus)(struct pci_bus *bus);
};
/*
** Stuff declared in arch/parisc/kernel/pci.c
*/
extern struct pci_port_ops *pci_port;
extern struct pci_bios_ops *pci_bios;
#ifdef CONFIG_PCI
extern void pcibios_register_hba(struct pci_hba_data *);
#else
static inline void pcibios_register_hba(struct pci_hba_data *x)
{
}
#endif
extern void pcibios_init_bridge(struct pci_dev *);
/*
* pcibios_assign_all_busses() is used in drivers/pci/pci.c:pci_do_scan_bus()
* 0 == check if bridge is numbered before re-numbering.
* 1 == pci_do_scan_bus() should automatically number all PCI-PCI bridges.
*
* We *should* set this to zero for "legacy" platforms and one
* for PAT platforms.
*
* But legacy platforms also need to renumber the busses below a Host
* Bus controller. Adding a 4-port Tulip card on the first PCI root
* bus of a C200 resulted in the secondary bus being numbered as 1.
* The second PCI host bus controller's root bus had already been
* assigned bus number 1 by firmware and sysfs complained.
*
* Firmware isn't doing anything wrong here since each controller
* is its own PCI domain. It's simpler and easier for us to renumber
* the busses rather than treat each Dino as a separate PCI domain.
* Eventually, we may want to introduce PCI domains for Superdome or
* rp7420/8420 boxes and then revisit this issue.
*/
#define pcibios_assign_all_busses() (1)
#define PCIBIOS_MIN_IO 0x10
#define PCIBIOS_MIN_MEM 0x1000 /* NBPG - but pci/setup-res.c dies */
static inline int pci_get_legacy_ide_irq(struct pci_dev *dev, int channel)
{
return channel ? 15 : 14;
}
#define HAVE_PCI_MMAP
#define ARCH_GENERIC_PCI_MMAP_RESOURCE
#endif /* __ASM_PARISC_PCI_H */