freebsd-dev/sys/i386/isa/vector.s
David Greenman 8912c0ed61 Bruce Evans' dynamic interrupt support.
/usr/src/sys/i386/isa/clock.c:
	o Garrett's statclock changes.
	o Wire xxxintr, not Vclk.
	o Wire using register_intr(), not setidt().

/usr/src/sys/i386/isa/icu.s:
	o Garrett's statclock changes.
	o Removed unused variable high_imask.
	o Fake int 8 for rtc as well as int 0 for clk.  Required for kernel
	  profiling with statclock, harmless otherwise.

/usr/src/sys/i386/isa/isa.c:
	o Allow isdp->id_irq and other things in *isdp to be changed by
	  probes.  Changing interrupts later requires direct calls to
	  register_intr() and unregister_intr() and more care.
	  ALLOW_CONFLICT_* is brought over from 1.1.5, except
	  ALLOW_CONFLICT_IRQ is not supported.  IRQ conflict checking is
	  delayed until after probing so that drivers can change the IRQ
	  to a free one; real conflicts require more cooperation between
	  drivers to handle.
	o Too many details to list.
	o This file requires splitting and a lot more work.

/usr/src/sys/i386/isa/isa_device.h:
	o Declare more things more completely.

/usr/src/sys/i386/isa/sio.c:
	o Prepare to register interrupt handlers as fast.

/usr/src/sys/i386/isa/vector.s:
	o Generate entry code for 16 fast interrupt handlers and 16 normal
	  interrupt handlers.  Changed some constants to variables:
	  # $unit is now intr_unit[intr].  Type is int.  Someday it should
	    be a cookie suitable for the handler (e.g., a struct com_s for
	    sio).
	  # $handler is now intr_handler[intr].
	  # intrcnt_actv[id_num] is now *intr_countp[intr].  The indirection
	    is required to get a contiguous range of counters for vmstat
	    and so that the drivers depend more in the driver than on the
	    interrupt number (drivers could take turns using an interrupt
	    and the counts would remain correct).  There is a separate
	    counter for each device and for each stray interrupt.  In
	    1.1.5, stray interrupt 7 clobbers the count for device 7 or
	    something worse if there is no device 7 :-(.
	  # mask is now intr_mask[intr] (was already indirect).
	 o Entry points are now _XintrI and _XfastintrI (I = intr = 0-15),
	   not _VdevU (U = unit).
	 o Removed BUILD_VECTORS stuff.  There's a trace of it left for
	   the string table for vmstat but config now generates the
	   string in one piece because nothing more is required.
	 o Removed old handling of stray interrupts and older comments
	   about it.

Submitted by:	 Bruce Evans
1994-08-18 05:09:36 +00:00

291 lines
9.0 KiB
ArmAsm

/*
* from: vector.s, 386BSD 0.1 unknown origin
* $Id: vector.s,v 1.7 1994/04/02 07:00:50 davidg Exp $
*/
#include "i386/isa/icu.h"
#include "i386/isa/isa.h"
#include "vector.h"
#define ICU_EOI 0x20 /* XXX - define elsewhere */
#define IRQ_BIT(irq_num) (1 << ((irq_num) % 8))
#define IRQ_BYTE(irq_num) ((irq_num) / 8)
#ifdef AUTO_EOI_1
#define ENABLE_ICU1 /* use auto-EOI to reduce i/o */
#else
#define ENABLE_ICU1 \
movb $ICU_EOI,%al ; /* as soon as possible send EOI ... */ \
FASTER_NOP ; /* ... ASAP ... */ \
outb %al,$IO_ICU1 /* ... to clear in service bit */
#endif
#ifdef AUTO_EOI_2
/*
* The data sheet says no auto-EOI on slave, but it sometimes works.
*/
#define ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2 ENABLE_ICU1
#else
#define ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2 \
movb $ICU_EOI,%al ; /* as above */ \
FASTER_NOP ; \
outb %al,$IO_ICU2 ; /* but do second icu first */ \
FASTER_NOP ; \
outb %al,$IO_ICU1 /* then first icu */
#endif
#ifdef FAST_INTR_HANDLER_USES_ES
#define ACTUALLY_PUSHED 1
#define MAYBE_MOVW_AX_ES movl %ax,%es
#define MAYBE_POPL_ES popl %es
#define MAYBE_PUSHL_ES pushl %es
#else
/*
* We can usually skip loading %es for fastintr handlers. %es should
* only be used for string instructions, and fastintr handlers shouldn't
* do anything slow enough to justify using a string instruction.
*/
#define ACTUALLY_PUSHED 0
#define MAYBE_MOVW_AX_ES
#define MAYBE_POPL_ES
#define MAYBE_PUSHL_ES
#endif
/*
* Macros for interrupt interrupt entry, call to handler, and exit.
*
* XXX - the interrupt frame is set up to look like a trap frame. This is
* usually a waste of time. The only interrupt handlers that want a frame
* are the clock handler (it wants a clock frame), the npx handler (it's
* easier to do right all in assembler). The interrupt return routine
* needs a trap frame for rare AST's (it could easily convert the frame).
* The direct costs of setting up a trap frame are two pushl's (error
* code and trap number), an addl to get rid of these, and pushing and
* popping the call-saved regs %esi, %edi and %ebp twice, The indirect
* costs are making the driver interface nonuniform so unpending of
* interrupts is more complicated and slower (call_driver(unit) would
* be easier than ensuring an interrupt frame for all handlers. Finally,
* there are some struct copies in the npx handler and maybe in the clock
* handler that could be avoided by working more with pointers to frames
* instead of frames.
*
* XXX - should we do a cld on every system entry to avoid the requirement
* for scattered cld's?
*
* Coding notes for *.s:
*
* If possible, avoid operations that involve an operand size override.
* Word-sized operations might be smaller, but the operand size override
* makes them slower on on 486's and no faster on 386's unless perhaps
* the instruction pipeline is depleted. E.g.,
*
* Use movl to seg regs instead of the equivalent but more descriptive
* movw - gas generates an irelevant (slower) operand size override.
*
* Use movl to ordinary regs in preference to movw and especially
* in preference to movz[bw]l. Use unsigned (long) variables with the
* top bits clear instead of unsigned short variables to provide more
* opportunities for movl.
*
* If possible, use byte-sized operations. They are smaller and no slower.
*
* Use (%reg) instead of 0(%reg) - gas generates larger code for the latter.
*
* If the interrupt frame is made more flexible, INTR can push %eax first
* and decide the ipending case with less overhead, e.g., by avoiding
* loading segregs.
*/
#define FAST_INTR(irq_num, enable_icus) \
.text ; \
SUPERALIGN_TEXT ; \
IDTVEC(fastintr/**/irq_num) ; \
pushl %eax ; /* save only call-used registers */ \
pushl %ecx ; \
pushl %edx ; \
pushl %ds ; \
MAYBE_PUSHL_ES ; \
movl $KDSEL,%eax ; \
movl %ax,%ds ; \
MAYBE_MOVW_AX_ES ; \
FAKE_MCOUNT((4+ACTUALLY_PUSHED)*4(%esp)) ; \
pushl _intr_unit + (irq_num) * 4 ; \
call *_intr_handler + (irq_num) * 4 ; /* do the work ASAP */ \
enable_icus ; /* (re)enable ASAP (helps edge trigger?) */ \
addl $4,%esp ; \
incl _cnt+V_INTR ; /* book-keeping can wait */ \
movl _intr_countp + (irq_num) * 4,%eax ; \
incl (%eax) ; \
movl _cpl,%eax ; /* are we unmasking pending HWIs or SWIs? */ \
notl %eax ; \
andl _ipending,%eax ; \
jne 1f ; /* yes, handle them */ \
MEXITCOUNT ; \
MAYBE_POPL_ES ; \
popl %ds ; \
popl %edx ; \
popl %ecx ; \
popl %eax ; \
iret ; \
; \
ALIGN_TEXT ; \
1: ; \
movl _cpl,%eax ; \
movl $HWI_MASK|SWI_MASK,_cpl ; /* limit nesting ... */ \
sti ; /* ... to do this as early as possible */ \
MAYBE_POPL_ES ; /* discard most of thin frame ... */ \
popl %ecx ; /* ... original %ds ... */ \
popl %edx ; \
xchgl %eax,(1+ACTUALLY_PUSHED)*4(%esp) ; /* orig %eax; save cpl */ \
pushal ; /* build fat frame (grrr) ... */ \
pushl %ecx ; /* ... actually %ds ... */ \
pushl %es ; \
movl $KDSEL,%eax ; \
movl %ax,%es ; \
movl (2+8+0)*4(%esp),%ecx ; /* ... %ecx from thin frame ... */ \
movl %ecx,(2+6)*4(%esp) ; /* ... to fat frame ... */ \
movl (2+8+1)*4(%esp),%eax ; /* ... cpl from thin frame */ \
pushl %eax ; \
subl $4,%esp ; /* junk for unit number */ \
MEXITCOUNT ; \
jmp _doreti
#define INTR(irq_num, icu, enable_icus, reg) \
.text ; \
SUPERALIGN_TEXT ; \
IDTVEC(intr/**/irq_num) ; \
pushl $0 ; /* dumby error code */ \
pushl $0 ; /* dumby trap type */ \
pushal ; \
pushl %ds ; /* save our data and extra segments ... */ \
pushl %es ; \
movl $KDSEL,%eax ; /* ... and reload with kernel's own ... */ \
movl %ax,%ds ; /* ... early for obsolete reasons */ \
movl %ax,%es ; \
movb _imen + IRQ_BYTE(irq_num),%al ; \
orb $IRQ_BIT(irq_num),%al ; \
movb %al,_imen + IRQ_BYTE(irq_num) ; \
FASTER_NOP ; \
outb %al,$icu+1 ; \
enable_icus ; \
incl _cnt+V_INTR ; /* tally interrupts */ \
movl _cpl,%eax ; \
testb $IRQ_BIT(irq_num),%reg ; \
jne 2f ; \
1: ; \
Xresume/**/irq_num: ; \
FAKE_MCOUNT(12*4(%esp)) ; /* XXX late to avoid double count */ \
movl _intr_countp + (irq_num) * 4,%eax ; \
incl (%eax) ; \
movl _cpl,%eax ; \
pushl %eax ; \
pushl _intr_unit + (irq_num) * 4 ; \
orl _intr_mask + (irq_num) * 4,%eax ; \
movl %eax,_cpl ; \
sti ; \
call *_intr_handler + (irq_num) * 4 ; \
movb _imen + IRQ_BYTE(irq_num),%al ; \
andb $~IRQ_BIT(irq_num),%al ; \
movb %al,_imen + IRQ_BYTE(irq_num) ; \
FASTER_NOP ; \
outb %al,$icu+1 ; \
MEXITCOUNT ; \
/* We could usually avoid the following jmp by inlining some of */ \
/* _doreti, but it's probably better to use less cache. */ \
jmp _doreti ; \
; \
ALIGN_TEXT ; \
2: ; \
/* XXX skip mcounting here to avoid double count */ \
orb $IRQ_BIT(irq_num),_ipending + IRQ_BYTE(irq_num) ; \
popl %es ; \
popl %ds ; \
popal ; \
addl $4+4,%esp ; \
iret
MCOUNT_LABEL(bintr)
FAST_INTR(0, ENABLE_ICU1)
FAST_INTR(1, ENABLE_ICU1)
FAST_INTR(2, ENABLE_ICU1)
FAST_INTR(3, ENABLE_ICU1)
FAST_INTR(4, ENABLE_ICU1)
FAST_INTR(5, ENABLE_ICU1)
FAST_INTR(6, ENABLE_ICU1)
FAST_INTR(7, ENABLE_ICU1)
FAST_INTR(8, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2)
FAST_INTR(9, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2)
FAST_INTR(10, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2)
FAST_INTR(11, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2)
FAST_INTR(12, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2)
FAST_INTR(13, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2)
FAST_INTR(14, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2)
FAST_INTR(15, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2)
INTR(0, IO_ICU1, ENABLE_ICU1, al)
INTR(1, IO_ICU1, ENABLE_ICU1, al)
INTR(2, IO_ICU1, ENABLE_ICU1, al)
INTR(3, IO_ICU1, ENABLE_ICU1, al)
INTR(4, IO_ICU1, ENABLE_ICU1, al)
INTR(5, IO_ICU1, ENABLE_ICU1, al)
INTR(6, IO_ICU1, ENABLE_ICU1, al)
INTR(7, IO_ICU1, ENABLE_ICU1, al)
INTR(8, IO_ICU2, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2, ah)
INTR(9, IO_ICU2, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2, ah)
INTR(10, IO_ICU2, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2, ah)
INTR(11, IO_ICU2, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2, ah)
INTR(12, IO_ICU2, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2, ah)
INTR(13, IO_ICU2, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2, ah)
INTR(14, IO_ICU2, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2, ah)
INTR(15, IO_ICU2, ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2, ah)
MCOUNT_LABEL(eintr)
.data
ihandlers: /* addresses of interrupt handlers */
/* actually resumption addresses for HWI's */
.long Xresume0, Xresume1, Xresume2, Xresume3
.long Xresume4, Xresume5, Xresume6, Xresume7
.long Xresume8, Xresume9, Xresume10, Xresume11
.long Xresume12, Xresume13, Xresume14, Xresume15
.long swi_tty, swi_net, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0
.long 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, swi_clock, swi_ast
imasks: /* masks for interrupt handlers */
.space NHWI*4 /* padding; HWI masks are elsewhere */
.long SWI_TTY_MASK, SWI_NET_MASK, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0
.long 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, SWI_CLOCK_MASK, SWI_AST_MASK
/*
* Interrupt counters and names. The format of these and the label names
* must agree with what vmstat expects. The tables are indexed by device
* ids so that we don't have to move the names around as devices are
* attached.
*/
#include "vector.h"
.globl _intrcnt, _eintrcnt
_intrcnt:
.space (NR_DEVICES + ICU_LEN) * 4
_eintrcnt:
.globl _intrnames, _eintrnames
_intrnames:
.ascii DEVICE_NAMES
.asciz "stray irq0"
.asciz "stray irq1"
.asciz "stray irq2"
.asciz "stray irq3"
.asciz "stray irq4"
.asciz "stray irq5"
.asciz "stray irq6"
.asciz "stray irq7"
.asciz "stray irq8"
.asciz "stray irq9"
.asciz "stray irq10"
.asciz "stray irq11"
.asciz "stray irq12"
.asciz "stray irq13"
.asciz "stray irq14"
.asciz "stray irq15"
_eintrnames:
.text