1 /* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
2 /* Copyright(c) 2013 - 2018 Intel Corporation. */
3 
4 #ifndef _FM10K_MBX_H_
5 #define _FM10K_MBX_H_
6 
7 /* forward declaration */
8 struct fm10k_mbx_info;
9 
10 #include "fm10k_type.h"
11 #include "fm10k_tlv.h"
12 
13 /* PF Mailbox Registers */
14 #define FM10K_MBMEM(_n)		((_n) + 0x18000)
15 #define FM10K_MBMEM_VF(_n, _m)	(((_n) * 0x10) + (_m) + 0x18000)
16 #define FM10K_MBMEM_SM(_n)	((_n) + 0x18400)
17 #define FM10K_MBMEM_PF(_n)	((_n) + 0x18600)
18 /* XOR provides means of switching from Tx to Rx FIFO */
19 #define FM10K_MBMEM_PF_XOR	(FM10K_MBMEM_SM(0) ^ FM10K_MBMEM_PF(0))
20 #define FM10K_MBX(_n)		((_n) + 0x18800)
21 #define FM10K_MBX_REQ				0x00000002
22 #define FM10K_MBX_ACK				0x00000004
23 #define FM10K_MBX_REQ_INTERRUPT			0x00000008
24 #define FM10K_MBX_ACK_INTERRUPT			0x00000010
25 #define FM10K_MBX_INTERRUPT_ENABLE		0x00000020
26 #define FM10K_MBX_INTERRUPT_DISABLE		0x00000040
27 #define FM10K_MBX_GLOBAL_REQ_INTERRUPT		0x00000200
28 #define FM10K_MBX_GLOBAL_ACK_INTERRUPT		0x00000400
29 #define FM10K_MBICR(_n)		((_n) + 0x18840)
30 #define FM10K_GMBX		0x18842
31 
32 /* VF Mailbox Registers */
33 #define FM10K_VFMBX		0x00010
34 #define FM10K_VFMBMEM(_n)	((_n) + 0x00020)
35 #define FM10K_VFMBMEM_LEN	16
36 #define FM10K_VFMBMEM_VF_XOR	(FM10K_VFMBMEM_LEN / 2)
37 
38 /* Delays/timeouts */
39 #define FM10K_MBX_DISCONNECT_TIMEOUT		500
40 #define FM10K_MBX_POLL_DELAY			19
41 #define FM10K_MBX_INT_DELAY			20
42 
43 /* PF/VF Mailbox state machine
44  *
45  * +----------+	    connect()	+----------+
46  * |  CLOSED  | --------------> |  CONNECT |
47  * +----------+			+----------+
48  *   ^				  ^	 |
49  *   | rcv:	      rcv:	  |	 | rcv:
50  *   |  Connect	       Disconnect |	 |  Connect
51  *   |  Disconnect     Error	  |	 |  Data
52  *   |				  |	 |
53  *   |				  |	 V
54  * +----------+   disconnect()	+----------+
55  * |DISCONNECT| <-------------- |   OPEN   |
56  * +----------+			+----------+
57  *
58  * The diagram above describes the PF/VF mailbox state machine.  There
59  * are four main states to this machine.
60  * Closed: This state represents a mailbox that is in a standby state
61  *	   with interrupts disabled.  In this state the mailbox should not
62  *	   read the mailbox or write any data.  The only means of exiting
63  *	   this state is for the system to make the connect() call for the
64  *	   mailbox, it will then transition to the connect state.
65  * Connect: In this state the mailbox is seeking a connection.  It will
66  *	    post a connect message with no specified destination and will
67  *	    wait for a reply from the other side of the mailbox.  This state
68  *	    is exited when either a connect with the local mailbox as the
69  *	    destination is received or when a data message is received with
70  *	    a valid sequence number.
71  * Open: In this state the mailbox is able to transfer data between the local
72  *       entity and the remote.  It will fall back to connect in the event of
73  *       receiving either an error message, or a disconnect message.  It will
74  *       transition to disconnect on a call to disconnect();
75  * Disconnect: In this state the mailbox is attempting to gracefully terminate
76  *	       the connection.  It will do so at the first point where it knows
77  *	       that the remote endpoint is either done sending, or when the
78  *	       remote endpoint has fallen back into connect.
79  */
80 enum fm10k_mbx_state {
81 	FM10K_STATE_CLOSED,
82 	FM10K_STATE_CONNECT,
83 	FM10K_STATE_OPEN,
84 	FM10K_STATE_DISCONNECT,
85 };
86 
87 /* PF/VF Mailbox header format
88  *    3			  2		      1			  0
89  *  1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
90  * +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
91  * |        Size/Err_no/CRC        | Rsvd0 | Head  | Tail  | Type  |
92  * +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
93  *
94  * The layout above describes the format for the header used in the PF/VF
95  * mailbox.  The header is broken out into the following fields:
96  * Type: There are 4 supported message types
97  *		0x8: Data header - used to transport message data
98  *		0xC: Connect header - used to establish connection
99  *		0xD: Disconnect header - used to tear down a connection
100  *		0xE: Error header - used to address message exceptions
101  * Tail: Tail index for local FIFO
102  *		Tail index actually consists of two parts.  The MSB of
103  *		the head is a loop tracker, it is 0 on an even numbered
104  *		loop through the FIFO, and 1 on the odd numbered loops.
105  *		To get the actual mailbox offset based on the tail it
106  *		is necessary to add bit 3 to bit 0 and clear bit 3.  This
107  *		gives us a valid range of 0x1 - 0xE.
108  * Head: Head index for remote FIFO
109  *		Head index follows the same format as the tail index.
110  * Rsvd0: Reserved 0 portion of the mailbox header
111  * CRC: Running CRC for all data since connect plus current message header
112  * Size: Maximum message size - Applies only to connect headers
113  *		The maximum message size is provided during connect to avoid
114  *		jamming the mailbox with messages that do not fit.
115  * Err_no: Error number - Applies only to error headers
116  *		The error number provides an indication of the type of error
117  *		experienced.
118  */
119 
120 /* macros for retrieving and setting header values */
121 #define FM10K_MSG_HDR_MASK(name) \
122 	((0x1u << FM10K_MSG_##name##_SIZE) - 1)
123 #define FM10K_MSG_HDR_FIELD_SET(value, name) \
124 	(((u32)(value) & FM10K_MSG_HDR_MASK(name)) << FM10K_MSG_##name##_SHIFT)
125 #define FM10K_MSG_HDR_FIELD_GET(value, name) \
126 	((u16)((value) >> FM10K_MSG_##name##_SHIFT) & FM10K_MSG_HDR_MASK(name))
127 
128 /* offsets shared between all headers */
129 #define FM10K_MSG_TYPE_SHIFT			0
130 #define FM10K_MSG_TYPE_SIZE			4
131 #define FM10K_MSG_TAIL_SHIFT			4
132 #define FM10K_MSG_TAIL_SIZE			4
133 #define FM10K_MSG_HEAD_SHIFT			8
134 #define FM10K_MSG_HEAD_SIZE			4
135 #define FM10K_MSG_RSVD0_SHIFT			12
136 #define FM10K_MSG_RSVD0_SIZE			4
137 
138 /* offsets for data/disconnect headers */
139 #define FM10K_MSG_CRC_SHIFT			16
140 #define FM10K_MSG_CRC_SIZE			16
141 
142 /* offsets for connect headers */
143 #define FM10K_MSG_CONNECT_SIZE_SHIFT		16
144 #define FM10K_MSG_CONNECT_SIZE_SIZE		16
145 
146 /* offsets for error headers */
147 #define FM10K_MSG_ERR_NO_SHIFT			16
148 #define FM10K_MSG_ERR_NO_SIZE			16
149 
150 enum fm10k_msg_type {
151 	FM10K_MSG_DATA			= 0x8,
152 	FM10K_MSG_CONNECT		= 0xC,
153 	FM10K_MSG_DISCONNECT		= 0xD,
154 	FM10K_MSG_ERROR			= 0xE,
155 };
156 
157 /* HNI/SM Mailbox FIFO format
158  *    3                   2                   1                   0
159  *  1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
160  * +-------+-----------------------+-------+-----------------------+
161  * | Error |      Remote Head      |Version|      Local Tail       |
162  * +-------+-----------------------+-------+-----------------------+
163  * |                                                               |
164  * .                        Local FIFO Data                        .
165  * .                                                               .
166  * +-------+-----------------------+-------+-----------------------+
167  *
168  * The layout above describes the format for the FIFOs used by the host
169  * network interface and the switch manager to communicate messages back
170  * and forth.  Both the HNI and the switch maintain one such FIFO.  The
171  * layout in memory has the switch manager FIFO followed immediately by
172  * the HNI FIFO.  For this reason I am using just the pointer to the
173  * HNI FIFO in the mailbox ops as the offset between the two is fixed.
174  *
175  * The header for the FIFO is broken out into the following fields:
176  * Local Tail:  Offset into FIFO region for next DWORD to write.
177  * Version:  Version info for mailbox, only values of 0/1 are supported.
178  * Remote Head:  Offset into remote FIFO to indicate how much we have read.
179  * Error: Error indication, values TBD.
180  */
181 
182 /* version number for switch manager mailboxes */
183 #define FM10K_SM_MBX_VERSION		1
184 #define FM10K_SM_MBX_FIFO_LEN		(FM10K_MBMEM_PF_XOR - 1)
185 
186 /* offsets shared between all SM FIFO headers */
187 #define FM10K_MSG_SM_TAIL_SHIFT			0
188 #define FM10K_MSG_SM_TAIL_SIZE			12
189 #define FM10K_MSG_SM_VER_SHIFT			12
190 #define FM10K_MSG_SM_VER_SIZE			4
191 #define FM10K_MSG_SM_HEAD_SHIFT			16
192 #define FM10K_MSG_SM_HEAD_SIZE			12
193 #define FM10K_MSG_SM_ERR_SHIFT			28
194 #define FM10K_MSG_SM_ERR_SIZE			4
195 
196 /* All error messages returned by mailbox functions
197  * The value -511 is 0xFE01 in hex.  The idea is to order the errors
198  * from 0xFE01 - 0xFEFF so error codes are easily visible in the mailbox
199  * messages.  This also helps to avoid error number collisions as Linux
200  * doesn't appear to use error numbers 256 - 511.
201  */
202 #define FM10K_MBX_ERR(_n) ((_n) - 512)
203 #define FM10K_MBX_ERR_NO_MBX		FM10K_MBX_ERR(0x01)
204 #define FM10K_MBX_ERR_NO_SPACE		FM10K_MBX_ERR(0x03)
205 #define FM10K_MBX_ERR_TAIL		FM10K_MBX_ERR(0x05)
206 #define FM10K_MBX_ERR_HEAD		FM10K_MBX_ERR(0x06)
207 #define FM10K_MBX_ERR_SRC		FM10K_MBX_ERR(0x08)
208 #define FM10K_MBX_ERR_TYPE		FM10K_MBX_ERR(0x09)
209 #define FM10K_MBX_ERR_SIZE		FM10K_MBX_ERR(0x0B)
210 #define FM10K_MBX_ERR_BUSY		FM10K_MBX_ERR(0x0C)
211 #define FM10K_MBX_ERR_RSVD0		FM10K_MBX_ERR(0x0E)
212 #define FM10K_MBX_ERR_CRC		FM10K_MBX_ERR(0x0F)
213 
214 #define FM10K_MBX_CRC_SEED		0xFFFF
215 
216 struct fm10k_mbx_ops {
217 	s32 (*connect)(struct fm10k_hw *, struct fm10k_mbx_info *);
218 	void (*disconnect)(struct fm10k_hw *, struct fm10k_mbx_info *);
219 	bool (*rx_ready)(struct fm10k_mbx_info *);
220 	bool (*tx_ready)(struct fm10k_mbx_info *, u16);
221 	bool (*tx_complete)(struct fm10k_mbx_info *);
222 	s32 (*enqueue_tx)(struct fm10k_hw *, struct fm10k_mbx_info *,
223 			  const u32 *);
224 	s32 (*process)(struct fm10k_hw *, struct fm10k_mbx_info *);
225 	s32 (*register_handlers)(struct fm10k_mbx_info *,
226 				 const struct fm10k_msg_data *);
227 };
228 
229 struct fm10k_mbx_fifo {
230 	u32 *buffer;
231 	u16 head;
232 	u16 tail;
233 	u16 size;
234 };
235 
236 /* size of buffer to be stored in mailbox for FIFOs */
237 #define FM10K_MBX_TX_BUFFER_SIZE	512
238 #define FM10K_MBX_RX_BUFFER_SIZE	128
239 #define FM10K_MBX_BUFFER_SIZE \
240 	(FM10K_MBX_TX_BUFFER_SIZE + FM10K_MBX_RX_BUFFER_SIZE)
241 
242 /* minimum and maximum message size in dwords */
243 #define FM10K_MBX_MSG_MAX_SIZE \
244 	((FM10K_MBX_TX_BUFFER_SIZE - 1) & (FM10K_MBX_RX_BUFFER_SIZE - 1))
245 #define FM10K_VFMBX_MSG_MTU	((FM10K_VFMBMEM_LEN / 2) - 1)
246 
247 #define FM10K_MBX_INIT_TIMEOUT	2000 /* number of retries on mailbox */
248 #define FM10K_MBX_INIT_DELAY	500  /* microseconds between retries */
249 
250 struct fm10k_mbx_info {
251 	/* function pointers for mailbox operations */
252 	struct fm10k_mbx_ops ops;
253 	const struct fm10k_msg_data *msg_data;
254 
255 	/* message FIFOs */
256 	struct fm10k_mbx_fifo rx;
257 	struct fm10k_mbx_fifo tx;
258 
259 	/* delay for handling timeouts */
260 	u32 timeout;
261 	u32 udelay;
262 
263 	/* mailbox state info */
264 	u32 mbx_reg, mbmem_reg, mbx_lock, mbx_hdr;
265 	u16 max_size, mbmem_len;
266 	u16 tail, tail_len, pulled;
267 	u16 head, head_len, pushed;
268 	u16 local, remote;
269 	enum fm10k_mbx_state state;
270 
271 	/* result of last mailbox test */
272 	s32 test_result;
273 
274 	/* statistics */
275 	u64 tx_busy;
276 	u64 tx_dropped;
277 	u64 tx_messages;
278 	u64 tx_dwords;
279 	u64 tx_mbmem_pulled;
280 	u64 rx_messages;
281 	u64 rx_dwords;
282 	u64 rx_mbmem_pushed;
283 	u64 rx_parse_err;
284 
285 	/* Buffer to store messages */
286 	u32 buffer[FM10K_MBX_BUFFER_SIZE];
287 };
288 
289 s32 fm10k_pfvf_mbx_init(struct fm10k_hw *, struct fm10k_mbx_info *,
290 			const struct fm10k_msg_data *, u8);
291 s32 fm10k_sm_mbx_init(struct fm10k_hw *, struct fm10k_mbx_info *,
292 		      const struct fm10k_msg_data *);
293 
294 #endif /* _FM10K_MBX_H_ */
295