1------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2--                                                                          --
3--                  GNAT RUN-TIME LIBRARY (GNARL) COMPONENTS                --
4--                                                                          --
5--                      I N T E R F A C E S . V X W O R K S                 --
6--                                                                          --
7--                                   S p e c                                --
8--                                                                          --
9--                     Copyright (C) 1999-2013, AdaCore                     --
10--                                                                          --
11-- GNAT is free software;  you can  redistribute it  and/or modify it under --
12-- terms of the  GNU General Public License as published  by the Free Soft- --
13-- ware  Foundation;  either version 3,  or (at your option) any later ver- --
14-- sion.  GNAT is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITH- --
15-- OUT ANY WARRANTY;  without even the  implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY --
16-- or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.                                     --
17--                                                                          --
18-- As a special exception under Section 7 of GPL version 3, you are granted --
19-- additional permissions described in the GCC Runtime Library Exception,   --
20-- version 3.1, as published by the Free Software Foundation.               --
21--                                                                          --
22-- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License and    --
23-- a copy of the GCC Runtime Library Exception along with this program;     --
24-- see the files COPYING3 and COPYING.RUNTIME respectively.  If not, see    --
25-- <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.                                          --
26--                                                                          --
27-- GNARL was developed by the GNARL team at Florida State University.       --
28-- Extensive contributions were provided by Ada Core Technologies, Inc.     --
29--                                                                          --
30------------------------------------------------------------------------------
31
32--  This package provides a limited binding to the VxWorks API
33
34--  In particular, it interfaces with the VxWorks hardware interrupt
35--  facilities, allowing the use of low-latency direct-vectored interrupt
36--  handlers. Note that such handlers have a variety of restrictions regarding
37--  system calls and language constructs. In particular, the use of exception
38--  handlers and functions returning variable-length objects cannot be used.
39--  Less restrictive, but higher-latency handlers can be written using Ada
40--  protected procedures, Ada 83 style interrupt entries, or by signalling
41--  an Ada task from within an interrupt handler using a binary semaphore
42--  as described in the VxWorks Programmer's Manual.
43--
44--  For complete documentation of the operations in this package, please
45--  consult the VxWorks Programmer's Manual and VxWorks Reference Manual.
46
47pragma Warnings (Off, "*foreign convention*");
48pragma Warnings (Off, "*add Convention pragma*");
49--  These are temporary pragmas to suppress warnings about mismatching
50--  conventions, which will be a problem when we get rid of trampolines ???
51
52with System.VxWorks;
53
54package Interfaces.VxWorks is
55   pragma Preelaborate;
56
57   ------------------------------------------------------------------------
58   --  Here is a complete example that shows how to handle the Interrupt 0x14
59   --  with a direct-vectored interrupt handler in Ada using this package:
60
61   --  with Interfaces.VxWorks; use Interfaces.VxWorks;
62   --  with System;
63   --
64   --  package P is
65   --
66   --     Count : Integer;
67   --     pragma Atomic (Count);
68   --
69   --     Level : constant := 1;
70   --     --  Interrupt level used by this example
71   --
72   --     procedure Handler (parameter : System.Address);
73   --
74   --  end P;
75   --
76   --  package body P is
77   --
78   --     procedure Handler (parameter : System.Address) is
79   --        S : STATUS;
80   --     begin
81   --        Count := Count + 1;
82   --        logMsg ("received an interrupt" & ASCII.LF & ASCII.NUL);
83   --
84   --        --  Acknowledge VME interrupt
85   --
86   --        S := sysBusIntAck (intLevel => Level);
87   --     end Handler;
88   --  end P;
89   --
90   --  with Interfaces.VxWorks; use Interfaces.VxWorks;
91   --  with Ada.Text_IO; use Ada.Text_IO;
92   --
93   --  with P; use P;
94   --  procedure Useint is
95   --
96   --     --  Be sure to use a reasonable interrupt number for  board.
97   --     --  This one is the unused VME graphics interrupt on the PPC MV2604
98   --
99   --     Interrupt : constant := 16#14#;
100   --
101   --     task T;
102   --
103   --     S : STATUS;
104   --
105   --     task body T is
106   --     begin
107   --        loop
108   --           Put_Line ("Generating an interrupt...");
109   --           delay 1.0;
110   --
111   --           --  Generate VME interrupt, using interrupt number
112   --
113   --           S := sysBusIntGen (1, Interrupt);
114   --        end loop;
115   --     end T;
116   --
117   --  begin
118   --     S := sysIntEnable (intLevel => Level);
119   --     S := intConnect (INUM_TO_IVEC (Interrupt), handler'Access);
120   --
121   --     loop
122   --        delay 2.0;
123   --        Put_Line ("value of count:" & P.Count'Img);
124   --     end loop;
125   --  end Useint;
126   -------------------------------------
127
128   subtype int is Integer;
129
130   type STATUS is new int;
131   --  Equivalent of the C type STATUS
132
133   OK    : constant STATUS := 0;
134   ERROR : constant STATUS := -1;
135
136   type VOIDFUNCPTR is access procedure (parameter : System.Address);
137   type Interrupt_Vector is new System.Address;
138   type Exception_Vector is new System.Address;
139
140   function intConnect
141     (vector    : Interrupt_Vector;
142      handler   : VOIDFUNCPTR;
143      parameter : System.Address := System.Null_Address) return STATUS;
144   --  Binding to the C routine intConnect. Use this to set up an user handler.
145   --  The routine generates a wrapper around the user handler to save and
146   --  restore context
147
148   function intContext return int;
149   --  Binding to the C routine intContext. This function returns 1 only if the
150   --  current execution state is in interrupt context.
151
152   function intVecGet
153     (Vector : Interrupt_Vector) return VOIDFUNCPTR;
154   --  Binding to the C routine intVecGet. Use this to get the existing handler
155   --  for later restoral
156
157   procedure intVecSet
158     (Vector  : Interrupt_Vector;
159      Handler : VOIDFUNCPTR);
160   --  Binding to the C routine intVecSet. Use this to restore a handler
161   --  obtained using intVecGet
162
163   function INUM_TO_IVEC (intNum : int) return Interrupt_Vector;
164   --  Equivalent to the C macro INUM_TO_IVEC used to convert an interrupt
165   --  number to an interrupt vector
166
167   function sysIntEnable (intLevel : int) return STATUS;
168   --  Binding to the C routine sysIntEnable
169
170   function sysIntDisable (intLevel : int) return STATUS;
171   --  Binding to the C routine sysIntDisable
172
173   function sysBusIntAck (intLevel : int) return STATUS;
174   --  Binding to the C routine sysBusIntAck
175
176   function sysBusIntGen (intLevel : int; Intnum : int) return STATUS;
177   --  Binding to the C routine sysBusIntGen. Note that the T2 documentation
178   --  implies that a vector address is the proper argument - it's not. The
179   --  interrupt number in the range 0 .. 255 (for 68K and PPC) is the correct
180   --  argument.
181
182   procedure logMsg
183     (fmt : String; arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6 : int := 0);
184   --  Binding to the C routine logMsg. Note that it is the caller's
185   --  responsibility to ensure that fmt is a null-terminated string
186   --  (e.g logMsg ("Interrupt" & ASCII.NUL))
187
188   type FP_CONTEXT is private;
189   --  Floating point context save and restore. Handlers using floating point
190   --  must be bracketed with these calls. The pFpContext parameter should be
191   --  an object of type FP_CONTEXT that is declared local to the handler.
192
193   procedure fppRestore (pFpContext : in out FP_CONTEXT);
194   --  Restore floating point context
195
196   procedure fppSave (pFpContext : in out FP_CONTEXT);
197   --  Save floating point context
198
199private
200
201   type FP_CONTEXT is new System.VxWorks.FP_CONTEXT;
202   --  Target-dependent floating point context type
203
204   pragma Import (C, intConnect, "intConnect");
205   pragma Import (C, intContext, "intContext");
206   pragma Import (C, intVecGet, "intVecGet");
207   pragma Import (C, intVecSet, "intVecSet");
208   pragma Import (C, INUM_TO_IVEC, "__gnat_inum_to_ivec");
209   pragma Import (C, sysIntEnable, "sysIntEnable");
210   pragma Import (C, sysIntDisable, "sysIntDisable");
211   pragma Import (C, sysBusIntAck, "sysBusIntAck");
212   pragma Import (C, sysBusIntGen, "sysBusIntGen");
213   pragma Import (C, logMsg, "logMsg");
214   pragma Import (C, fppRestore, "fppRestore");
215   pragma Import (C, fppSave, "fppSave");
216end Interfaces.VxWorks;
217