freebsd-nq/sys/arm/at91/at91_mci.c
Ian Lepore 750e48d766 Fix the handling of the "PDC write transfer length" erratum for at91. The
problem affects revision 1xx hardware as well as later versions.  Also, the
recommended workaround is to set the PDC count register for a 12-byte
transfer when the actual size is less than that, but there is no need to
extend or zero-out the data buffer, because the blklen register contains
the real transfer size and only that many bytes will be transferred.

Also add a sysctl to turn debugging printfs on or off on the fly.
2016-01-14 19:33:13 +00:00

1415 lines
41 KiB
C

/*-
* Copyright (c) 2006 Bernd Walter. All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2006 M. Warner Losh. All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2010 Greg Ansley. All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include "opt_platform.h"
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/bio.h>
#include <sys/bus.h>
#include <sys/conf.h>
#include <sys/endian.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/kthread.h>
#include <sys/lock.h>
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/module.h>
#include <sys/mutex.h>
#include <sys/queue.h>
#include <sys/resource.h>
#include <sys/rman.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <sys/timetc.h>
#include <sys/watchdog.h>
#include <machine/bus.h>
#include <machine/cpu.h>
#include <machine/cpufunc.h>
#include <machine/resource.h>
#include <machine/intr.h>
#include <arm/at91/at91var.h>
#include <arm/at91/at91_mcireg.h>
#include <arm/at91/at91_pdcreg.h>
#include <dev/mmc/bridge.h>
#include <dev/mmc/mmcreg.h>
#include <dev/mmc/mmcbrvar.h>
#ifdef FDT
#include <dev/fdt/fdt_common.h>
#include <dev/ofw/ofw_bus.h>
#include <dev/ofw/ofw_bus_subr.h>
#endif
#include "mmcbr_if.h"
#include "opt_at91.h"
/*
* About running the MCI bus above 25MHz
*
* Historically, the MCI bus has been run at 30MHz on systems with a 60MHz
* master clock, in part due to a bug in dev/mmc.c making always request
* 30MHz, and in part over clocking the bus because 15MHz was too slow.
* Fixing that bug causes the mmc driver to request a 25MHz clock (as it
* should) and the logic in at91_mci_update_ios() picks the highest speed that
* doesn't exceed that limit. With a 60MHz MCK that would be 15MHz, and
* that's a real performance buzzkill when you've been getting away with 30MHz
* all along.
*
* By defining AT91_MCI_ALLOW_OVERCLOCK (or setting the allow_overclock=1
* device hint or sysctl) you can enable logic in at91_mci_update_ios() to
* overlcock the SD bus a little by running it at MCK / 2 when the requested
* speed is 25MHz and the next highest speed is 15MHz or less. This appears
* to work on virtually all SD cards, since it is what this driver has been
* doing prior to the introduction of this option, where the overclocking vs
* underclocking decision was automaticly "overclock". Modern SD cards can
* run at 45mhz/1-bit in standard mode (high speed mode enable commands not
* sent) without problems.
*
* Speaking of high-speed mode, the rm9200 manual says the MCI device supports
* the SD v1.0 specification and can run up to 50MHz. This is interesting in
* that the SD v1.0 spec caps the speed at 25MHz; high speed mode was added in
* the v1.10 spec. Furthermore, high speed mode doesn't just crank up the
* clock, it alters the signal timing. The rm9200 MCI device doesn't support
* these altered timings. So while speeds over 25MHz may work, they only work
* in what the SD spec calls "default" speed mode, and it amounts to violating
* the spec by overclocking the bus.
*
* If you also enable 4-wire mode it's possible transfers faster than 25MHz
* will fail. On the AT91RM9200, due to bugs in the bus contention logic, if
* you have the USB host device and OHCI driver enabled will fail. Even
* underclocking to 15MHz, intermittant overrun and underrun errors occur.
* Note that you don't even need to have usb devices attached to the system,
* the errors begin to occur as soon as the OHCI driver sets the register bit
* to enable periodic transfers. It appears (based on brief investigation)
* that the usb host controller uses so much ASB bandwidth that sometimes the
* DMA for MCI transfers doesn't get a bus grant in time and data gets
* dropped. Adding even a modicum of network activity changes the symptom
* from intermittant to very frequent. Members of the AT91SAM9 family have
* corrected this problem, or are at least better about their use of the bus.
*/
#ifndef AT91_MCI_ALLOW_OVERCLOCK
#define AT91_MCI_ALLOW_OVERCLOCK 1
#endif
/*
* Allocate 2 bounce buffers we'll use to endian-swap the data due to the rm9200
* erratum. We use a pair of buffers because when reading that lets us begin
* endian-swapping the data in the first buffer while the DMA is reading into
* the second buffer. (We can't use the same trick for writing because we might
* not get all the data in the 2nd buffer swapped before the hardware needs it;
* dealing with that would add complexity to the driver.)
*
* The buffers are sized at 16K each due to the way the busdma cache sync
* operations work on arm. A dcache_inv_range() operation on a range larger
* than 16K gets turned into a dcache_wbinv_all(). That needlessly flushes the
* entire data cache, impacting overall system performance.
*/
#define BBCOUNT 2
#define BBSIZE (16*1024)
#define MAX_BLOCKS ((BBSIZE*BBCOUNT)/512)
static int mci_debug;
struct at91_mci_softc {
void *intrhand; /* Interrupt handle */
device_t dev;
int sc_cap;
#define CAP_HAS_4WIRE 1 /* Has 4 wire bus */
#define CAP_NEEDS_BYTESWAP 2 /* broken hardware needing bounce */
#define CAP_MCI1_REV2XX 4 /* MCI 1 rev 2.x */
int flags;
#define PENDING_CMD 0x01
#define PENDING_STOP 0x02
#define CMD_MULTIREAD 0x10
#define CMD_MULTIWRITE 0x20
int has_4wire;
int allow_overclock;
struct resource *irq_res; /* IRQ resource */
struct resource *mem_res; /* Memory resource */
struct mtx sc_mtx;
bus_dma_tag_t dmatag;
struct mmc_host host;
int bus_busy;
struct mmc_request *req;
struct mmc_command *curcmd;
bus_dmamap_t bbuf_map[BBCOUNT];
char * bbuf_vaddr[BBCOUNT]; /* bounce bufs in KVA space */
uint32_t bbuf_len[BBCOUNT]; /* len currently queued for bounce buf */
uint32_t bbuf_curidx; /* which bbuf is the active DMA buffer */
uint32_t xfer_offset; /* offset so far into caller's buf */
};
/* bus entry points */
static int at91_mci_probe(device_t dev);
static int at91_mci_attach(device_t dev);
static int at91_mci_detach(device_t dev);
static void at91_mci_intr(void *);
/* helper routines */
static int at91_mci_activate(device_t dev);
static void at91_mci_deactivate(device_t dev);
static int at91_mci_is_mci1rev2xx(void);
#define AT91_MCI_LOCK(_sc) mtx_lock(&(_sc)->sc_mtx)
#define AT91_MCI_UNLOCK(_sc) mtx_unlock(&(_sc)->sc_mtx)
#define AT91_MCI_LOCK_INIT(_sc) \
mtx_init(&_sc->sc_mtx, device_get_nameunit(_sc->dev), \
"mci", MTX_DEF)
#define AT91_MCI_LOCK_DESTROY(_sc) mtx_destroy(&_sc->sc_mtx);
#define AT91_MCI_ASSERT_LOCKED(_sc) mtx_assert(&_sc->sc_mtx, MA_OWNED);
#define AT91_MCI_ASSERT_UNLOCKED(_sc) mtx_assert(&_sc->sc_mtx, MA_NOTOWNED);
static inline uint32_t
RD4(struct at91_mci_softc *sc, bus_size_t off)
{
return (bus_read_4(sc->mem_res, off));
}
static inline void
WR4(struct at91_mci_softc *sc, bus_size_t off, uint32_t val)
{
bus_write_4(sc->mem_res, off, val);
}
static void
at91_bswap_buf(struct at91_mci_softc *sc, void * dptr, void * sptr, uint32_t memsize)
{
uint32_t * dst = (uint32_t *)dptr;
uint32_t * src = (uint32_t *)sptr;
uint32_t i;
/*
* If the hardware doesn't need byte-swapping, let bcopy() do the
* work. Use bounce buffer even if we don't need byteswap, since
* buffer may straddle a page boundry, and we don't handle
* multi-segment transfers in hardware. Seen from 'bsdlabel -w' which
* uses raw geom access to the volume. Greg Ansley (gja (at)
* ansley.com)
*/
if (!(sc->sc_cap & CAP_NEEDS_BYTESWAP)) {
memcpy(dptr, sptr, memsize);
return;
}
/*
* Nice performance boost for slightly unrolling this loop.
* (But very little extra boost for further unrolling it.)
*/
for (i = 0; i < memsize; i += 16) {
*dst++ = bswap32(*src++);
*dst++ = bswap32(*src++);
*dst++ = bswap32(*src++);
*dst++ = bswap32(*src++);
}
/* Mop up the last 1-3 words, if any. */
for (i = 0; i < (memsize & 0x0F); i += 4) {
*dst++ = bswap32(*src++);
}
}
static void
at91_mci_getaddr(void *arg, bus_dma_segment_t *segs, int nsegs, int error)
{
if (error != 0)
return;
*(bus_addr_t *)arg = segs[0].ds_addr;
}
static void
at91_mci_pdc_disable(struct at91_mci_softc *sc)
{
WR4(sc, PDC_PTCR, PDC_PTCR_TXTDIS | PDC_PTCR_RXTDIS);
WR4(sc, PDC_RPR, 0);
WR4(sc, PDC_RCR, 0);
WR4(sc, PDC_RNPR, 0);
WR4(sc, PDC_RNCR, 0);
WR4(sc, PDC_TPR, 0);
WR4(sc, PDC_TCR, 0);
WR4(sc, PDC_TNPR, 0);
WR4(sc, PDC_TNCR, 0);
}
/*
* Reset the controller, then restore most of the current state.
*
* This is called after detecting an error. It's also called after stopping a
* multi-block write, to un-wedge the device so that it will handle the NOTBUSY
* signal correctly. See comments in at91_mci_stop_done() for more details.
*/
static void at91_mci_reset(struct at91_mci_softc *sc)
{
uint32_t mr;
uint32_t sdcr;
uint32_t dtor;
uint32_t imr;
at91_mci_pdc_disable(sc);
/* save current state */
imr = RD4(sc, MCI_IMR);
mr = RD4(sc, MCI_MR) & 0x7fff;
sdcr = RD4(sc, MCI_SDCR);
dtor = RD4(sc, MCI_DTOR);
/* reset the controller */
WR4(sc, MCI_IDR, 0xffffffff);
WR4(sc, MCI_CR, MCI_CR_MCIDIS | MCI_CR_SWRST);
/* restore state */
WR4(sc, MCI_CR, MCI_CR_MCIEN|MCI_CR_PWSEN);
WR4(sc, MCI_MR, mr);
WR4(sc, MCI_SDCR, sdcr);
WR4(sc, MCI_DTOR, dtor);
WR4(sc, MCI_IER, imr);
/*
* Make sure sdio interrupts will fire. Not sure why reading
* SR ensures that, but this is in the linux driver.
*/
RD4(sc, MCI_SR);
}
static void
at91_mci_init(device_t dev)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc = device_get_softc(dev);
uint32_t val;
WR4(sc, MCI_CR, MCI_CR_MCIDIS | MCI_CR_SWRST); /* device into reset */
WR4(sc, MCI_IDR, 0xffffffff); /* Turn off interrupts */
WR4(sc, MCI_DTOR, MCI_DTOR_DTOMUL_1M | 1);
val = MCI_MR_PDCMODE;
val |= 0x34a; /* PWSDIV = 3; CLKDIV = 74 */
// if (sc->sc_cap & CAP_MCI1_REV2XX)
// val |= MCI_MR_RDPROOF | MCI_MR_WRPROOF;
WR4(sc, MCI_MR, val);
#ifndef AT91_MCI_SLOT_B
WR4(sc, MCI_SDCR, 0); /* SLOT A, 1 bit bus */
#else
/*
* XXX Really should add second "unit" but nobody using using
* a two slot card that we know of. XXX
*/
WR4(sc, MCI_SDCR, 1); /* SLOT B, 1 bit bus */
#endif
/*
* Enable controller, including power-save. The slower clock
* of the power-save mode is only in effect when there is no
* transfer in progress, so it can be left in this mode all
* the time.
*/
WR4(sc, MCI_CR, MCI_CR_MCIEN|MCI_CR_PWSEN);
}
static void
at91_mci_fini(device_t dev)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc = device_get_softc(dev);
WR4(sc, MCI_IDR, 0xffffffff); /* Turn off interrupts */
at91_mci_pdc_disable(sc);
WR4(sc, MCI_CR, MCI_CR_MCIDIS | MCI_CR_SWRST); /* device into reset */
}
static int
at91_mci_probe(device_t dev)
{
#ifdef FDT
if (!ofw_bus_is_compatible(dev, "atmel,hsmci"))
return (ENXIO);
#endif
device_set_desc(dev, "MCI mmc/sd host bridge");
return (0);
}
static int
at91_mci_attach(device_t dev)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc = device_get_softc(dev);
struct sysctl_ctx_list *sctx;
struct sysctl_oid *soid;
device_t child;
int err, i;
sctx = device_get_sysctl_ctx(dev);
soid = device_get_sysctl_tree(dev);
sc->dev = dev;
sc->sc_cap = 0;
if (at91_is_rm92())
sc->sc_cap |= CAP_NEEDS_BYTESWAP;
/*
* MCI1 Rev 2 controllers need some workarounds, flag if so.
*/
if (at91_mci_is_mci1rev2xx())
sc->sc_cap |= CAP_MCI1_REV2XX;
err = at91_mci_activate(dev);
if (err)
goto out;
AT91_MCI_LOCK_INIT(sc);
at91_mci_fini(dev);
at91_mci_init(dev);
/*
* Allocate DMA tags and maps and bounce buffers.
*
* The parms in the tag_create call cause the dmamem_alloc call to
* create each bounce buffer as a single contiguous buffer of BBSIZE
* bytes aligned to a 4096 byte boundary.
*
* Do not use DMA_COHERENT for these buffers because that maps the
* memory as non-cachable, which prevents cache line burst fills/writes,
* which is something we need since we're trying to overlap the
* byte-swapping with the DMA operations.
*/
err = bus_dma_tag_create(bus_get_dma_tag(dev), 4096, 0,
BUS_SPACE_MAXADDR_32BIT, BUS_SPACE_MAXADDR, NULL, NULL,
BBSIZE, 1, BBSIZE, 0, NULL, NULL, &sc->dmatag);
if (err != 0)
goto out;
for (i = 0; i < BBCOUNT; ++i) {
err = bus_dmamem_alloc(sc->dmatag, (void **)&sc->bbuf_vaddr[i],
BUS_DMA_NOWAIT, &sc->bbuf_map[i]);
if (err != 0)
goto out;
}
/*
* Activate the interrupt
*/
err = bus_setup_intr(dev, sc->irq_res, INTR_TYPE_MISC | INTR_MPSAFE,
NULL, at91_mci_intr, sc, &sc->intrhand);
if (err) {
AT91_MCI_LOCK_DESTROY(sc);
goto out;
}
/*
* Allow 4-wire to be initially set via #define.
* Allow a device hint to override that.
* Allow a sysctl to override that.
*/
#if defined(AT91_MCI_HAS_4WIRE) && AT91_MCI_HAS_4WIRE != 0
sc->has_4wire = 1;
#endif
resource_int_value(device_get_name(dev), device_get_unit(dev),
"4wire", &sc->has_4wire);
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(sctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(soid), OID_AUTO, "4wire",
CTLFLAG_RW, &sc->has_4wire, 0, "has 4 wire SD Card bus");
if (sc->has_4wire)
sc->sc_cap |= CAP_HAS_4WIRE;
sc->allow_overclock = AT91_MCI_ALLOW_OVERCLOCK;
resource_int_value(device_get_name(dev), device_get_unit(dev),
"allow_overclock", &sc->allow_overclock);
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(sctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(soid), OID_AUTO, "allow_overclock",
CTLFLAG_RW, &sc->allow_overclock, 0,
"Allow up to 30MHz clock for 25MHz request when next highest speed 15MHz or less.");
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(sctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(soid), OID_AUTO, "debug",
CTLFLAG_RWTUN, &mci_debug, 0, "enable debug output");
/*
* Our real min freq is master_clock/512, but upper driver layers are
* going to set the min speed during card discovery, and the right speed
* for that is 400kHz, so advertise a safe value just under that.
*
* For max speed, while the rm9200 manual says the max is 50mhz, it also
* says it supports only the SD v1.0 spec, which means the real limit is
* 25mhz. On the other hand, historical use has been to slightly violate
* the standard by running the bus at 30MHz. For more information on
* that, see the comments at the top of this file.
*/
sc->host.f_min = 375000;
sc->host.f_max = at91_master_clock / 2;
if (sc->host.f_max > 25000000)
sc->host.f_max = 25000000;
sc->host.host_ocr = MMC_OCR_320_330 | MMC_OCR_330_340;
sc->host.caps = 0;
if (sc->sc_cap & CAP_HAS_4WIRE)
sc->host.caps |= MMC_CAP_4_BIT_DATA;
child = device_add_child(dev, "mmc", 0);
device_set_ivars(dev, &sc->host);
err = bus_generic_attach(dev);
out:
if (err)
at91_mci_deactivate(dev);
return (err);
}
static int
at91_mci_detach(device_t dev)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc = device_get_softc(dev);
at91_mci_fini(dev);
at91_mci_deactivate(dev);
bus_dmamem_free(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_vaddr[0], sc->bbuf_map[0]);
bus_dmamem_free(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_vaddr[1], sc->bbuf_map[1]);
bus_dma_tag_destroy(sc->dmatag);
return (EBUSY); /* XXX */
}
static int
at91_mci_activate(device_t dev)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc;
int rid;
sc = device_get_softc(dev);
rid = 0;
sc->mem_res = bus_alloc_resource_any(dev, SYS_RES_MEMORY, &rid,
RF_ACTIVE);
if (sc->mem_res == NULL)
goto errout;
rid = 0;
sc->irq_res = bus_alloc_resource_any(dev, SYS_RES_IRQ, &rid,
RF_ACTIVE);
if (sc->irq_res == NULL)
goto errout;
return (0);
errout:
at91_mci_deactivate(dev);
return (ENOMEM);
}
static void
at91_mci_deactivate(device_t dev)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc;
sc = device_get_softc(dev);
if (sc->intrhand)
bus_teardown_intr(dev, sc->irq_res, sc->intrhand);
sc->intrhand = 0;
bus_generic_detach(sc->dev);
if (sc->mem_res)
bus_release_resource(dev, SYS_RES_MEMORY,
rman_get_rid(sc->mem_res), sc->mem_res);
sc->mem_res = 0;
if (sc->irq_res)
bus_release_resource(dev, SYS_RES_IRQ,
rman_get_rid(sc->irq_res), sc->irq_res);
sc->irq_res = 0;
return;
}
static int
at91_mci_is_mci1rev2xx(void)
{
switch (soc_info.type) {
case AT91_T_SAM9260:
case AT91_T_SAM9263:
case AT91_T_CAP9:
case AT91_T_SAM9G10:
case AT91_T_SAM9G20:
case AT91_T_SAM9RL:
return(1);
default:
return (0);
}
}
static int
at91_mci_update_ios(device_t brdev, device_t reqdev)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc;
struct mmc_ios *ios;
uint32_t clkdiv;
uint32_t freq;
sc = device_get_softc(brdev);
ios = &sc->host.ios;
/*
* Calculate our closest available clock speed that doesn't exceed the
* requested speed.
*
* When overclocking is allowed, the requested clock is 25MHz, the
* computed frequency is 15MHz or smaller and clockdiv is 1, use
* clockdiv of 0 to double that. If less than 12.5MHz, double
* regardless of the overclocking setting.
*
* Whatever we come up with, store it back into ios->clock so that the
* upper layer drivers can report the actual speed of the bus.
*/
if (ios->clock == 0) {
WR4(sc, MCI_CR, MCI_CR_MCIDIS);
clkdiv = 0;
} else {
WR4(sc, MCI_CR, MCI_CR_MCIEN|MCI_CR_PWSEN);
if ((at91_master_clock % (ios->clock * 2)) == 0)
clkdiv = ((at91_master_clock / ios->clock) / 2) - 1;
else
clkdiv = (at91_master_clock / ios->clock) / 2;
freq = at91_master_clock / ((clkdiv+1) * 2);
if (clkdiv == 1 && ios->clock == 25000000 && freq <= 15000000) {
if (sc->allow_overclock || freq <= 12500000) {
clkdiv = 0;
freq = at91_master_clock / ((clkdiv+1) * 2);
}
}
ios->clock = freq;
}
if (ios->bus_width == bus_width_4)
WR4(sc, MCI_SDCR, RD4(sc, MCI_SDCR) | MCI_SDCR_SDCBUS);
else
WR4(sc, MCI_SDCR, RD4(sc, MCI_SDCR) & ~MCI_SDCR_SDCBUS);
WR4(sc, MCI_MR, (RD4(sc, MCI_MR) & ~MCI_MR_CLKDIV) | clkdiv);
/* Do we need a settle time here? */
/* XXX We need to turn the device on/off here with a GPIO pin */
return (0);
}
static void
at91_mci_start_cmd(struct at91_mci_softc *sc, struct mmc_command *cmd)
{
uint32_t cmdr, mr;
struct mmc_data *data;
sc->curcmd = cmd;
data = cmd->data;
/* XXX Upper layers don't always set this */
cmd->mrq = sc->req;
/* Begin setting up command register. */
cmdr = cmd->opcode;
if (sc->host.ios.bus_mode == opendrain)
cmdr |= MCI_CMDR_OPDCMD;
/* Set up response handling. Allow max timeout for responses. */
if (MMC_RSP(cmd->flags) == MMC_RSP_NONE)
cmdr |= MCI_CMDR_RSPTYP_NO;
else {
cmdr |= MCI_CMDR_MAXLAT;
if (cmd->flags & MMC_RSP_136)
cmdr |= MCI_CMDR_RSPTYP_136;
else
cmdr |= MCI_CMDR_RSPTYP_48;
}
/*
* If there is no data transfer, just set up the right interrupt mask
* and start the command.
*
* The interrupt mask needs to be CMDRDY plus all non-data-transfer
* errors. It's important to leave the transfer-related errors out, to
* avoid spurious timeout or crc errors on a STOP command following a
* multiblock read. When a multiblock read is in progress, sending a
* STOP in the middle of a block occasionally triggers such errors, but
* we're totally disinterested in them because we've already gotten all
* the data we wanted without error before sending the STOP command.
*/
if (data == NULL) {
uint32_t ier = MCI_SR_CMDRDY |
MCI_SR_RTOE | MCI_SR_RENDE |
MCI_SR_RCRCE | MCI_SR_RDIRE | MCI_SR_RINDE;
at91_mci_pdc_disable(sc);
if (cmd->opcode == MMC_STOP_TRANSMISSION)
cmdr |= MCI_CMDR_TRCMD_STOP;
/* Ignore response CRC on CMD2 and ACMD41, per standard. */
if (cmd->opcode == MMC_SEND_OP_COND ||
cmd->opcode == ACMD_SD_SEND_OP_COND)
ier &= ~MCI_SR_RCRCE;
if (mci_debug)
printf("CMDR %x (opcode %d) ARGR %x no data\n",
cmdr, cmd->opcode, cmd->arg);
WR4(sc, MCI_ARGR, cmd->arg);
WR4(sc, MCI_CMDR, cmdr);
WR4(sc, MCI_IDR, 0xffffffff);
WR4(sc, MCI_IER, ier);
return;
}
/* There is data, set up the transfer-related parts of the command. */
if (data->flags & MMC_DATA_READ)
cmdr |= MCI_CMDR_TRDIR;
if (data->flags & (MMC_DATA_READ | MMC_DATA_WRITE))
cmdr |= MCI_CMDR_TRCMD_START;
if (data->flags & MMC_DATA_STREAM)
cmdr |= MCI_CMDR_TRTYP_STREAM;
else if (data->flags & MMC_DATA_MULTI) {
cmdr |= MCI_CMDR_TRTYP_MULTIPLE;
sc->flags |= (data->flags & MMC_DATA_READ) ?
CMD_MULTIREAD : CMD_MULTIWRITE;
}
/*
* Disable PDC until we're ready.
*
* Set block size and turn on PDC mode for dma xfer.
* Note that the block size is the smaller of the amount of data to be
* transferred, or 512 bytes. The 512 size is fixed by the standard;
* smaller blocks are possible, but never larger.
*/
WR4(sc, PDC_PTCR, PDC_PTCR_RXTDIS | PDC_PTCR_TXTDIS);
mr = RD4(sc,MCI_MR) & ~MCI_MR_BLKLEN;
mr |= min(data->len, 512) << 16;
WR4(sc, MCI_MR, mr | MCI_MR_PDCMODE|MCI_MR_PDCPADV);
/*
* Set up DMA.
*
* Use bounce buffers even if we don't need to byteswap, because doing
* multi-block IO with large DMA buffers is way fast (compared to
* single-block IO), even after incurring the overhead of also copying
* from/to the caller's buffers (which may be in non-contiguous physical
* pages).
*
* In an ideal non-byteswap world we could create a dma tag that allows
* for discontiguous segments and do the IO directly from/to the
* caller's buffer(s), using ENDRX/ENDTX interrupts to chain the
* discontiguous buffers through the PDC. Someday.
*
* If a read is bigger than 2k, split it in half so that we can start
* byte-swapping the first half while the second half is on the wire.
* It would be best if we could split it into 8k chunks, but we can't
* always keep up with the byte-swapping due to other system activity,
* and if an RXBUFF interrupt happens while we're still handling the
* byte-swap from the prior buffer (IE, we haven't returned from
* handling the prior interrupt yet), then data will get dropped on the
* floor and we can't easily recover from that. The right fix for that
* would be to have the interrupt handling only keep the DMA flowing and
* enqueue filled buffers to be byte-swapped in a non-interrupt context.
* Even that won't work on the write side of things though; in that
* context we have to have all the data ready to go before starting the
* dma.
*
* XXX what about stream transfers?
*/
sc->xfer_offset = 0;
sc->bbuf_curidx = 0;
if (data->flags & (MMC_DATA_READ | MMC_DATA_WRITE)) {
uint32_t len;
uint32_t remaining = data->len;
bus_addr_t paddr;
int err;
if (remaining > (BBCOUNT*BBSIZE))
panic("IO read size exceeds MAXDATA\n");
if (data->flags & MMC_DATA_READ) {
if (remaining > 2048) // XXX
len = remaining / 2;
else
len = remaining;
err = bus_dmamap_load(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[0],
sc->bbuf_vaddr[0], len, at91_mci_getaddr,
&paddr, BUS_DMA_NOWAIT);
if (err != 0)
panic("IO read dmamap_load failed\n");
bus_dmamap_sync(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[0],
BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD);
WR4(sc, PDC_RPR, paddr);
WR4(sc, PDC_RCR, len / 4);
sc->bbuf_len[0] = len;
remaining -= len;
if (remaining == 0) {
sc->bbuf_len[1] = 0;
} else {
len = remaining;
err = bus_dmamap_load(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[1],
sc->bbuf_vaddr[1], len, at91_mci_getaddr,
&paddr, BUS_DMA_NOWAIT);
if (err != 0)
panic("IO read dmamap_load failed\n");
bus_dmamap_sync(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[1],
BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD);
WR4(sc, PDC_RNPR, paddr);
WR4(sc, PDC_RNCR, len / 4);
sc->bbuf_len[1] = len;
remaining -= len;
}
WR4(sc, PDC_PTCR, PDC_PTCR_RXTEN);
} else {
len = min(BBSIZE, remaining);
at91_bswap_buf(sc, sc->bbuf_vaddr[0], data->data, len);
err = bus_dmamap_load(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[0],
sc->bbuf_vaddr[0], len, at91_mci_getaddr,
&paddr, BUS_DMA_NOWAIT);
if (err != 0)
panic("IO write dmamap_load failed\n");
bus_dmamap_sync(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[0],
BUS_DMASYNC_PREWRITE);
/*
* Erratum workaround: PDC transfer length on a write
* must not be smaller than 12 bytes (3 words); only
* blklen bytes (set above) are actually transferred.
*/
WR4(sc, PDC_TPR,paddr);
WR4(sc, PDC_TCR, (len < 12) ? 3 : len / 4);
sc->bbuf_len[0] = len;
remaining -= len;
if (remaining == 0) {
sc->bbuf_len[1] = 0;
} else {
len = remaining;
at91_bswap_buf(sc, sc->bbuf_vaddr[1],
((char *)data->data)+BBSIZE, len);
err = bus_dmamap_load(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[1],
sc->bbuf_vaddr[1], len, at91_mci_getaddr,
&paddr, BUS_DMA_NOWAIT);
if (err != 0)
panic("IO write dmamap_load failed\n");
bus_dmamap_sync(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[1],
BUS_DMASYNC_PREWRITE);
WR4(sc, PDC_TNPR, paddr);
WR4(sc, PDC_TNCR, (len < 12) ? 3 : len / 4);
sc->bbuf_len[1] = len;
remaining -= len;
}
/* do not enable PDC xfer until CMDRDY asserted */
}
data->xfer_len = 0; /* XXX what's this? appears to be unused. */
}
if (mci_debug)
printf("CMDR %x (opcode %d) ARGR %x with data len %d\n",
cmdr, cmd->opcode, cmd->arg, cmd->data->len);
WR4(sc, MCI_ARGR, cmd->arg);
WR4(sc, MCI_CMDR, cmdr);
WR4(sc, MCI_IER, MCI_SR_ERROR | MCI_SR_CMDRDY);
}
static void
at91_mci_next_operation(struct at91_mci_softc *sc)
{
struct mmc_request *req;
req = sc->req;
if (req == NULL)
return;
if (sc->flags & PENDING_CMD) {
sc->flags &= ~PENDING_CMD;
at91_mci_start_cmd(sc, req->cmd);
return;
} else if (sc->flags & PENDING_STOP) {
sc->flags &= ~PENDING_STOP;
at91_mci_start_cmd(sc, req->stop);
return;
}
WR4(sc, MCI_IDR, 0xffffffff);
sc->req = NULL;
sc->curcmd = NULL;
//printf("req done\n");
req->done(req);
}
static int
at91_mci_request(device_t brdev, device_t reqdev, struct mmc_request *req)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc = device_get_softc(brdev);
AT91_MCI_LOCK(sc);
if (sc->req != NULL) {
AT91_MCI_UNLOCK(sc);
return (EBUSY);
}
//printf("new req\n");
sc->req = req;
sc->flags = PENDING_CMD;
if (sc->req->stop)
sc->flags |= PENDING_STOP;
at91_mci_next_operation(sc);
AT91_MCI_UNLOCK(sc);
return (0);
}
static int
at91_mci_get_ro(device_t brdev, device_t reqdev)
{
return (0);
}
static int
at91_mci_acquire_host(device_t brdev, device_t reqdev)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc = device_get_softc(brdev);
int err = 0;
AT91_MCI_LOCK(sc);
while (sc->bus_busy)
msleep(sc, &sc->sc_mtx, PZERO, "mciah", hz / 5);
sc->bus_busy++;
AT91_MCI_UNLOCK(sc);
return (err);
}
static int
at91_mci_release_host(device_t brdev, device_t reqdev)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc = device_get_softc(brdev);
AT91_MCI_LOCK(sc);
sc->bus_busy--;
wakeup(sc);
AT91_MCI_UNLOCK(sc);
return (0);
}
static void
at91_mci_read_done(struct at91_mci_softc *sc, uint32_t sr)
{
struct mmc_command *cmd = sc->curcmd;
char * dataptr = (char *)cmd->data->data;
uint32_t curidx = sc->bbuf_curidx;
uint32_t len = sc->bbuf_len[curidx];
/*
* We arrive here when a DMA transfer for a read is done, whether it's
* a single or multi-block read.
*
* We byte-swap the buffer that just completed, and if that is the
* last buffer that's part of this read then we move on to the next
* operation, otherwise we wait for another ENDRX for the next bufer.
*/
bus_dmamap_sync(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[curidx], BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD);
bus_dmamap_unload(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[curidx]);
at91_bswap_buf(sc, dataptr + sc->xfer_offset, sc->bbuf_vaddr[curidx], len);
if (mci_debug) {
printf("read done sr %x curidx %d len %d xfer_offset %d\n",
sr, curidx, len, sc->xfer_offset);
}
sc->xfer_offset += len;
sc->bbuf_curidx = !curidx; /* swap buffers */
/*
* If we've transferred all the data, move on to the next operation.
*
* If we're still transferring the last buffer, RNCR is already zero but
* we have to write a zero anyway to clear the ENDRX status so we don't
* re-interrupt until the last buffer is done.
*/
if (sc->xfer_offset == cmd->data->len) {
WR4(sc, PDC_PTCR, PDC_PTCR_RXTDIS | PDC_PTCR_TXTDIS);
cmd->error = MMC_ERR_NONE;
at91_mci_next_operation(sc);
} else {
WR4(sc, PDC_RNCR, 0);
WR4(sc, MCI_IER, MCI_SR_ERROR | MCI_SR_ENDRX);
}
}
static void
at91_mci_write_done(struct at91_mci_softc *sc, uint32_t sr)
{
struct mmc_command *cmd = sc->curcmd;
/*
* We arrive here when the entire DMA transfer for a write is done,
* whether it's a single or multi-block write. If it's multi-block we
* have to immediately move on to the next operation which is to send
* the stop command. If it's a single-block transfer we need to wait
* for NOTBUSY, but if that's already asserted we can avoid another
* interrupt and just move on to completing the request right away.
*/
WR4(sc, PDC_PTCR, PDC_PTCR_RXTDIS | PDC_PTCR_TXTDIS);
bus_dmamap_sync(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[sc->bbuf_curidx],
BUS_DMASYNC_POSTWRITE);
bus_dmamap_unload(sc->dmatag, sc->bbuf_map[sc->bbuf_curidx]);
if ((cmd->data->flags & MMC_DATA_MULTI) || (sr & MCI_SR_NOTBUSY)) {
cmd->error = MMC_ERR_NONE;
at91_mci_next_operation(sc);
} else {
WR4(sc, MCI_IER, MCI_SR_ERROR | MCI_SR_NOTBUSY);
}
}
static void
at91_mci_notbusy(struct at91_mci_softc *sc)
{
struct mmc_command *cmd = sc->curcmd;
/*
* We arrive here by either completion of a single-block write, or
* completion of the stop command that ended a multi-block write (and,
* I suppose, after a card-select or erase, but I haven't tested
* those). Anyway, we're done and it's time to move on to the next
* command.
*/
cmd->error = MMC_ERR_NONE;
at91_mci_next_operation(sc);
}
static void
at91_mci_stop_done(struct at91_mci_softc *sc, uint32_t sr)
{
struct mmc_command *cmd = sc->curcmd;
/*
* We arrive here after receiving CMDRDY for a MMC_STOP_TRANSMISSION
* command. Depending on the operation being stopped, we may have to
* do some unusual things to work around hardware bugs.
*/
/*
* This is known to be true of at91rm9200 hardware; it may or may not
* apply to more recent chips:
*
* After stopping a multi-block write, the NOTBUSY bit in MCI_SR does
* not properly reflect the actual busy state of the card as signaled
* on the DAT0 line; it always claims the card is not-busy. If we
* believe that and let operations continue, following commands will
* fail with response timeouts (except of course MMC_SEND_STATUS -- it
* indicates the card is busy in the PRG state, which was the smoking
* gun that showed MCI_SR NOTBUSY was not tracking DAT0 correctly).
*
* The atmel docs are emphatic: "This flag [NOTBUSY] must be used only
* for Write Operations." I guess technically since we sent a stop
* it's not a write operation anymore. But then just what did they
* think it meant for the stop command to have "...an optional busy
* signal transmitted on the data line" according to the SD spec?
*
* I tried a variety of things to un-wedge the MCI and get the status
* register to reflect NOTBUSY correctly again, but the only thing
* that worked was a full device reset. It feels like an awfully big
* hammer, but doing a full reset after every multiblock write is
* still faster than doing single-block IO (by almost two orders of
* magnitude: 20KB/sec improves to about 1.8MB/sec best case).
*
* After doing the reset, wait for a NOTBUSY interrupt before
* continuing with the next operation.
*
* This workaround breaks multiwrite on the rev2xx parts, but some other
* workaround is needed.
*/
if ((sc->flags & CMD_MULTIWRITE) && (sc->sc_cap & CAP_NEEDS_BYTESWAP)) {
at91_mci_reset(sc);
WR4(sc, MCI_IER, MCI_SR_ERROR | MCI_SR_NOTBUSY);
return;
}
/*
* This is known to be true of at91rm9200 hardware; it may or may not
* apply to more recent chips:
*
* After stopping a multi-block read, loop to read and discard any
* data that coasts in after we sent the stop command. The docs don't
* say anything about it, but empirical testing shows that 1-3
* additional words of data get buffered up in some unmentioned
* internal fifo and if we don't read and discard them here they end
* up on the front of the next read DMA transfer we do.
*
* This appears to be unnecessary for rev2xx parts.
*/
if ((sc->flags & CMD_MULTIREAD) && (sc->sc_cap & CAP_NEEDS_BYTESWAP)) {
uint32_t sr;
int count = 0;
do {
sr = RD4(sc, MCI_SR);
if (sr & MCI_SR_RXRDY) {
RD4(sc, MCI_RDR);
++count;
}
} while (sr & MCI_SR_RXRDY);
at91_mci_reset(sc);
}
cmd->error = MMC_ERR_NONE;
at91_mci_next_operation(sc);
}
static void
at91_mci_cmdrdy(struct at91_mci_softc *sc, uint32_t sr)
{
struct mmc_command *cmd = sc->curcmd;
int i;
if (cmd == NULL)
return;
/*
* We get here at the end of EVERY command. We retrieve the command
* response (if any) then decide what to do next based on the command.
*/
if (cmd->flags & MMC_RSP_PRESENT) {
for (i = 0; i < ((cmd->flags & MMC_RSP_136) ? 4 : 1); i++) {
cmd->resp[i] = RD4(sc, MCI_RSPR + i * 4);
if (mci_debug)
printf("RSPR[%d] = %x sr=%x\n", i, cmd->resp[i], sr);
}
}
/*
* If this was a stop command, go handle the various special
* conditions (read: bugs) that have to be dealt with following a stop.
*/
if (cmd->opcode == MMC_STOP_TRANSMISSION) {
at91_mci_stop_done(sc, sr);
return;
}
/*
* If this command can continue to assert BUSY beyond the response then
* we need to wait for NOTBUSY before the command is really done.
*
* Note that this may not work properly on the at91rm9200. It certainly
* doesn't work for the STOP command that follows a multi-block write,
* so post-stop CMDRDY is handled separately; see the special handling
* in at91_mci_stop_done().
*
* Beside STOP, there are other R1B-type commands that use the busy
* signal after CMDRDY: CMD7 (card select), CMD28-29 (write protect),
* CMD38 (erase). I haven't tested any of them, but I rather expect
* them all to have the same sort of problem with MCI_SR not actually
* reflecting the state of the DAT0-line busy indicator. So this code
* may need to grow some sort of special handling for them too. (This
* just in: CMD7 isn't a problem right now because dev/mmc.c incorrectly
* sets the response flags to R1 rather than R1B.) XXX
*/
if ((cmd->flags & MMC_RSP_BUSY)) {
WR4(sc, MCI_IER, MCI_SR_ERROR | MCI_SR_NOTBUSY);
return;
}
/*
* If there is a data transfer with this command, then...
* - If it's a read, we need to wait for ENDRX.
* - If it's a write, now is the time to enable the PDC, and we need
* to wait for a BLKE that follows a TXBUFE, because if we're doing
* a split transfer we get a BLKE after the first half (when TPR/TCR
* get loaded from TNPR/TNCR). So first we wait for the TXBUFE, and
* the handling for that interrupt will then invoke the wait for the
* subsequent BLKE which indicates actual completion.
*/
if (cmd->data) {
uint32_t ier;
if (cmd->data->flags & MMC_DATA_READ) {
ier = MCI_SR_ENDRX;
} else {
ier = MCI_SR_TXBUFE;
WR4(sc, PDC_PTCR, PDC_PTCR_TXTEN);
}
WR4(sc, MCI_IER, MCI_SR_ERROR | ier);
return;
}
/*
* If we made it to here, we don't need to wait for anything more for
* the current command, move on to the next command (will complete the
* request if there is no next command).
*/
cmd->error = MMC_ERR_NONE;
at91_mci_next_operation(sc);
}
static void
at91_mci_intr(void *arg)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc = (struct at91_mci_softc*)arg;
struct mmc_command *cmd = sc->curcmd;
uint32_t sr, isr;
AT91_MCI_LOCK(sc);
sr = RD4(sc, MCI_SR);
isr = sr & RD4(sc, MCI_IMR);
if (mci_debug)
printf("i 0x%x sr 0x%x\n", isr, sr);
/*
* All interrupts are one-shot; disable it now.
* The next operation will re-enable whatever interrupts it wants.
*/
WR4(sc, MCI_IDR, isr);
if (isr & MCI_SR_ERROR) {
if (isr & (MCI_SR_RTOE | MCI_SR_DTOE))
cmd->error = MMC_ERR_TIMEOUT;
else if (isr & (MCI_SR_RCRCE | MCI_SR_DCRCE))
cmd->error = MMC_ERR_BADCRC;
else if (isr & (MCI_SR_OVRE | MCI_SR_UNRE))
cmd->error = MMC_ERR_FIFO;
else
cmd->error = MMC_ERR_FAILED;
/*
* CMD8 is used to probe for SDHC cards, a standard SD card
* will get a response timeout; don't report it because it's a
* normal and expected condition. One might argue that all
* error reporting should be left to higher levels, but when
* they report at all it's always EIO, which isn't very
* helpful. XXX bootverbose?
*/
if (cmd->opcode != 8) {
device_printf(sc->dev,
"IO error; status MCI_SR = 0x%b cmd opcode = %d%s\n",
sr, MCI_SR_BITSTRING, cmd->opcode,
(cmd->opcode != 12) ? "" :
(sc->flags & CMD_MULTIREAD) ? " after read" : " after write");
/* XXX not sure RTOE needs a full reset, just a retry */
at91_mci_reset(sc);
}
at91_mci_next_operation(sc);
} else {
if (isr & MCI_SR_TXBUFE) {
// printf("TXBUFE\n");
/*
* We need to wait for a BLKE that follows TXBUFE
* (intermediate BLKEs might happen after ENDTXes if
* we're chaining multiple buffers). If BLKE is also
* asserted at the time we get TXBUFE, we can avoid
* another interrupt and process it right away, below.
*/
if (sr & MCI_SR_BLKE)
isr |= MCI_SR_BLKE;
else
WR4(sc, MCI_IER, MCI_SR_BLKE);
}
if (isr & MCI_SR_RXBUFF) {
// printf("RXBUFF\n");
}
if (isr & MCI_SR_ENDTX) {
// printf("ENDTX\n");
}
if (isr & MCI_SR_ENDRX) {
// printf("ENDRX\n");
at91_mci_read_done(sc, sr);
}
if (isr & MCI_SR_NOTBUSY) {
// printf("NOTBUSY\n");
at91_mci_notbusy(sc);
}
if (isr & MCI_SR_DTIP) {
// printf("Data transfer in progress\n");
}
if (isr & MCI_SR_BLKE) {
// printf("Block transfer end\n");
at91_mci_write_done(sc, sr);
}
if (isr & MCI_SR_TXRDY) {
// printf("Ready to transmit\n");
}
if (isr & MCI_SR_RXRDY) {
// printf("Ready to receive\n");
}
if (isr & MCI_SR_CMDRDY) {
// printf("Command ready\n");
at91_mci_cmdrdy(sc, sr);
}
}
AT91_MCI_UNLOCK(sc);
}
static int
at91_mci_read_ivar(device_t bus, device_t child, int which, uintptr_t *result)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc = device_get_softc(bus);
switch (which) {
default:
return (EINVAL);
case MMCBR_IVAR_BUS_MODE:
*(int *)result = sc->host.ios.bus_mode;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_BUS_WIDTH:
*(int *)result = sc->host.ios.bus_width;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_CHIP_SELECT:
*(int *)result = sc->host.ios.chip_select;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_CLOCK:
*(int *)result = sc->host.ios.clock;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_F_MIN:
*(int *)result = sc->host.f_min;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_F_MAX:
*(int *)result = sc->host.f_max;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_HOST_OCR:
*(int *)result = sc->host.host_ocr;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_MODE:
*(int *)result = sc->host.mode;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_OCR:
*(int *)result = sc->host.ocr;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_POWER_MODE:
*(int *)result = sc->host.ios.power_mode;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_VDD:
*(int *)result = sc->host.ios.vdd;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_CAPS:
if (sc->has_4wire) {
sc->sc_cap |= CAP_HAS_4WIRE;
sc->host.caps |= MMC_CAP_4_BIT_DATA;
} else {
sc->sc_cap &= ~CAP_HAS_4WIRE;
sc->host.caps &= ~MMC_CAP_4_BIT_DATA;
}
*(int *)result = sc->host.caps;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_MAX_DATA:
/*
* Something is wrong with the 2x parts and multiblock, so
* just do 1 block at a time for now, which really kills
* performance.
*/
if (sc->sc_cap & CAP_MCI1_REV2XX)
*(int *)result = 1;
else
*(int *)result = MAX_BLOCKS;
break;
}
return (0);
}
static int
at91_mci_write_ivar(device_t bus, device_t child, int which, uintptr_t value)
{
struct at91_mci_softc *sc = device_get_softc(bus);
switch (which) {
default:
return (EINVAL);
case MMCBR_IVAR_BUS_MODE:
sc->host.ios.bus_mode = value;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_BUS_WIDTH:
sc->host.ios.bus_width = value;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_CHIP_SELECT:
sc->host.ios.chip_select = value;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_CLOCK:
sc->host.ios.clock = value;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_MODE:
sc->host.mode = value;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_OCR:
sc->host.ocr = value;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_POWER_MODE:
sc->host.ios.power_mode = value;
break;
case MMCBR_IVAR_VDD:
sc->host.ios.vdd = value;
break;
/* These are read-only */
case MMCBR_IVAR_CAPS:
case MMCBR_IVAR_HOST_OCR:
case MMCBR_IVAR_F_MIN:
case MMCBR_IVAR_F_MAX:
case MMCBR_IVAR_MAX_DATA:
return (EINVAL);
}
return (0);
}
static device_method_t at91_mci_methods[] = {
/* device_if */
DEVMETHOD(device_probe, at91_mci_probe),
DEVMETHOD(device_attach, at91_mci_attach),
DEVMETHOD(device_detach, at91_mci_detach),
/* Bus interface */
DEVMETHOD(bus_read_ivar, at91_mci_read_ivar),
DEVMETHOD(bus_write_ivar, at91_mci_write_ivar),
/* mmcbr_if */
DEVMETHOD(mmcbr_update_ios, at91_mci_update_ios),
DEVMETHOD(mmcbr_request, at91_mci_request),
DEVMETHOD(mmcbr_get_ro, at91_mci_get_ro),
DEVMETHOD(mmcbr_acquire_host, at91_mci_acquire_host),
DEVMETHOD(mmcbr_release_host, at91_mci_release_host),
DEVMETHOD_END
};
static driver_t at91_mci_driver = {
"at91_mci",
at91_mci_methods,
sizeof(struct at91_mci_softc),
};
static devclass_t at91_mci_devclass;
#ifdef FDT
DRIVER_MODULE(at91_mci, simplebus, at91_mci_driver, at91_mci_devclass, NULL,
NULL);
#else
DRIVER_MODULE(at91_mci, atmelarm, at91_mci_driver, at91_mci_devclass, NULL,
NULL);
#endif
DRIVER_MODULE(mmc, at91_mci, mmc_driver, mmc_devclass, NULL, NULL);