xref: /dragonfly/sys/kern/bus_if.m (revision a563ca70)
1#
2# Copyright (c) 1998 Doug Rabson
3# All rights reserved.
4#
5# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
7# are met:
8# 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
9#    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
10# 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
11#    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
12#    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
13#
14# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
15# ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
16# IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
17# ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
18# FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
19# DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
20# OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
21# HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
22# LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
23# OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
24# SUCH DAMAGE.
25#
26# $FreeBSD: src/sys/kern/bus_if.m,v 1.16 1999/10/12 21:35:50 dfr Exp $
27# $DragonFly: src/sys/kern/bus_if.m,v 1.11 2006/10/25 20:56:02 dillon Exp $
28#
29
30#include <sys/bus.h>
31
32INTERFACE bus;
33
34#
35# Default implementations of some methods.
36#
37CODE {
38	static struct resource *
39	null_alloc_resource(device_t dev, device_t child,
40			    int type, int *rid,
41			    u_long start, u_long end,
42			    u_long count, u_int flags, int cpuid)
43	{
44	    return 0;
45	}
46};
47
48#
49# This is called from system code which prints out a description of a
50# device.  It should describe the attachment that the child has with
51# the parent.  See bus_generic_print_child.9 for more information.
52# This method returns the number of characters output.
53#
54METHOD int print_child {
55	device_t dev;
56	device_t child;
57} DEFAULT bus_generic_print_child;
58
59#
60# Called for each child device that
61# did not succeed in probing for a
62# driver.
63#
64METHOD void probe_nomatch {
65        device_t dev;
66        device_t child;
67};
68
69#
70# These two methods manage a bus specific set of instance variables of
71# a child device.  The intention is that each different type of bus
72# defines a set of appropriate instance variables (such as ports and
73# irqs for ISA bus etc.)
74#
75# This information could be given to the child device as a struct but
76# that makes it hard for a bus to add or remove variables without
77# forcing an edit and recompile for all drivers which may not be
78# possible for vendor supplied binary drivers.
79
80#
81# Read an instance variable.  Return 0 on success.
82#
83METHOD int read_ivar {
84	device_t dev;
85	device_t child;
86	int index;
87	uintptr_t *result;
88};
89
90#
91# Write an instance variable.  Return 0 on success.
92#
93METHOD int write_ivar {
94	device_t dev;
95	device_t child;
96	int index;
97	uintptr_t value;
98};
99
100#
101# Called after the child's DEVICE_DETACH method to allow the parent
102# to reclaim any resources allocated on behalf of the child.
103#
104METHOD void child_detached {
105	device_t dev;
106	device_t child;
107};
108
109#
110# Called when a new driver is added to the devclass which owns this
111# bus. The generic implementation of this method attempts to probe and
112# attach any un-matched children of the bus.
113#
114METHOD void driver_added {
115	device_t dev;
116	driver_t *driver;
117} DEFAULT bus_generic_driver_added;
118
119#
120# For busses which use drivers supporting DEVICE_IDENTIFY to
121# enumerate their devices, these methods are used to create new
122# device instances. If place is non-NULL, the new device will be
123# added after the last existing child with the same order.
124#
125# bus is an entity which may iterate up through the bus heirarchy
126# while parent is the parent device under which the child should be
127# added.
128#
129METHOD device_t add_child {
130	device_t bus;
131	device_t parent;
132	int order;
133	const char *name;
134	int unit;
135};
136
137#
138# Allocate a system resource attached to `dev' on behalf of `child'.
139# The types are defined in <sys/bus_resource.h>; the meaning of the
140# resource-ID field varies from bus to bus (but *rid == 0 is always
141# valid if the resource type is).  start and end reflect the allowable
142# range, and should be passed as `0UL' and `~0UL', respectively, if
143# the client has no range restriction.  count is the number of consecutive
144# indices in the resource required.  flags is a set of sharing flags
145# as defined in <sys/rman.h>.
146#
147# Returns a resource or a null pointer on failure.  The caller is
148# responsible for calling rman_activate_resource() when it actually
149# uses the resource.
150#
151METHOD struct resource * alloc_resource {
152	device_t	dev;
153	device_t	child;
154	int		type;
155	int	       *rid;
156	u_long		start;
157	u_long		end;
158	u_long		count;
159	u_int		flags;
160	int		cpuid;
161} DEFAULT null_alloc_resource;
162
163METHOD int activate_resource {
164	device_t	dev;
165	device_t	child;
166	int		type;
167	int		rid;
168	struct resource *r;
169};
170
171METHOD int deactivate_resource {
172	device_t	dev;
173	device_t	child;
174	int		type;
175	int		rid;
176	struct resource *r;
177};
178
179#
180# Free a resource allocated by the preceding method.  The `rid' value
181# must be the same as the one returned by BUS_ALLOC_RESOURCE (which
182# is not necessarily the same as the one the client passed).
183#
184METHOD int release_resource {
185	device_t	dev;
186	device_t	child;
187	int		type;
188	int		rid;
189	struct resource *res;
190};
191
192METHOD int setup_intr {
193	device_t	dev;
194	device_t	child;
195	struct resource *irq;
196	int		flags;
197	driver_intr_t	*intr;
198	void		*arg;
199	void		**cookiep;
200	lwkt_serialize_t serializer;
201};
202
203METHOD int teardown_intr {
204	device_t	dev;
205	device_t	child;
206	struct resource	*irq;
207	void		*cookie;
208};
209
210# Enable or disable an interrupt.  The device is generally expected to do
211# the physical enablement and disablement.  The bus code must flag the
212# condition so it does not call the handler from a scheduled interrupt thread,
213# since the hard interrupt might be disabled after the interrupt thread
214# has been scheduled but before it runs.
215#
216# The disable function returns an indication as to whether the handler
217# is currently running (i.e. the disablement is racing the execution of
218# the interrupt handler).  0 is returned if it isn't, non-zero if it is.
219#
220# The disablement function does NOT interlock against a running handler, it
221# simply prevents future handler calls from being made.
222#
223METHOD void enable_intr {
224	device_t	dev;
225	device_t	child;
226	void		*cookie;
227} DEFAULT bus_generic_enable_intr;
228
229METHOD int disable_intr {
230	device_t	dev;
231	device_t	child;
232	void		*cookie;
233} DEFAULT bus_generic_disable_intr;
234
235#
236# Set the range used for a particular resource. Return EINVAL if
237# the type or rid are out of range.
238#
239METHOD int set_resource {
240	device_t	dev;
241	device_t	child;
242	int		type;
243	int		rid;
244	u_long		start;
245	u_long		count;
246	int		cpuid;
247};
248
249#
250# Get the range for a resource. Return ENOENT if the type or rid are
251# out of range or have not been set.
252#
253METHOD int get_resource {
254	device_t	dev;
255	device_t	child;
256	int		type;
257	int		rid;
258	u_long		*startp;
259	u_long		*countp;
260};
261
262#
263# Delete a resource.
264#
265METHOD void delete_resource {
266	device_t	dev;
267	device_t	child;
268	int		type;
269	int		rid;
270};
271
272#
273# Return a struct resource_list.
274#
275METHOD struct resource_list * get_resource_list {
276	device_t	_dev;
277	device_t	_child;
278} DEFAULT bus_generic_get_resource_list;
279
280#
281# Is the hardware described by _child still attached to the system?
282#
283# This method should return 0 if the device is not present.  It should
284# return -1 if it is present.  Any errors in determining should be
285# returned as a normal errno value.  Client drivers are to assume that
286# the device is present, even if there is an error determining if it is
287# there.  Busses are to try to avoid returning errors, but newcard will return
288# an error if the device fails to implement this method.
289#
290METHOD int child_present {
291	device_t	_dev;
292	device_t	_child;
293} DEFAULT bus_generic_child_present;
294
295#
296# Returns the pnp info for this device.  Return it as a string.  If the
297# string is insufficient for the storage, then return EOVERFLOW.
298#
299METHOD int child_pnpinfo_str {
300	device_t	_dev;
301	device_t	_child;
302	char		*_buf;
303	size_t		_buflen;
304};
305
306#
307# Returns the location for this device.  Return it as a string.  If the
308# string is insufficient for the storage, then return EOVERFLOW.
309#
310METHOD int child_location_str {
311	device_t	_dev;
312	device_t	_child;
313	char		*_buf;
314	size_t		_buflen;
315};
316
317#
318# Allow (bus) drivers to specify the trigger mode and polarity of the
319# specified interrupt.
320#
321METHOD int config_intr {
322        device_t        _dev;
323	device_t	_child;
324        int             _irq;
325        enum intr_trigger _trig;
326        enum intr_polarity _pol;
327} DEFAULT bus_generic_config_intr;
328
329