1 /* 2 * Copyright (c) 2001, 2003 Maciej W. Rozycki 3 * 4 * DEC MS02-NV (54-20948-01) battery backed-up NVRAM module for 5 * DECstation/DECsystem 5000/2x0 and DECsystem 5900 and 5900/260 6 * systems. 7 * 8 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or 9 * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License 10 * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 11 * 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. 12 */ 13 14 #include <linux/ioport.h> 15 #include <linux/mtd/mtd.h> 16 17 /* 18 * Addresses are decoded as follows: 19 * 20 * 0x000000 - 0x3fffff SRAM 21 * 0x400000 - 0x7fffff CSR 22 * 23 * Within the SRAM area the following ranges are forced by the system 24 * firmware: 25 * 26 * 0x000000 - 0x0003ff diagnostic area, destroyed upon a reboot 27 * 0x000400 - ENDofRAM storage area, available to operating systems 28 * 29 * but we can't really use the available area right from 0x000400 as 30 * the first word is used by the firmware as a status flag passed 31 * from an operating system. If anything but the valid data magic 32 * ID value is found, the firmware considers the SRAM clean, i.e. 33 * containing no valid data, and disables the battery resulting in 34 * data being erased as soon as power is switched off. So the choice 35 * for the start address of the user-available is 0x001000 which is 36 * nicely page aligned. The area between 0x000404 and 0x000fff may 37 * be used by the driver for own needs. 38 * 39 * The diagnostic area defines two status words to be read by an 40 * operating system, a magic ID to distinguish a MS02-NV board from 41 * anything else and a status information providing results of tests 42 * as well as the size of SRAM available, which can be 1MiB or 2MiB 43 * (that's what the firmware handles; no idea if 2MiB modules ever 44 * existed). 45 * 46 * The firmware only handles the MS02-NV board if installed in the 47 * last (15th) slot, so for any other location the status information 48 * stored in the SRAM cannot be relied upon. But from the hardware 49 * point of view there is no problem using up to 14 such boards in a 50 * system -- only the 1st slot needs to be filled with a DRAM module. 51 * The MS02-NV board is ECC-protected, like other MS02 memory boards. 52 * 53 * The state of the battery as provided by the CSR is reflected on 54 * the two onboard LEDs. When facing the battery side of the board, 55 * with the LEDs at the top left and the battery at the bottom right 56 * (i.e. looking from the back side of the system box), their meaning 57 * is as follows (the system has to be powered on): 58 * 59 * left LED battery disable status: lit = enabled 60 * right LED battery condition status: lit = OK 61 */ 62 63 /* MS02-NV iomem register offsets. */ 64 #define MS02NV_CSR 0x400000 /* control & status register */ 65 66 /* MS02-NV CSR status bits. */ 67 #define MS02NV_CSR_BATT_OK 0x01 /* battery OK */ 68 #define MS02NV_CSR_BATT_OFF 0x02 /* battery disabled */ 69 70 71 /* MS02-NV memory offsets. */ 72 #define MS02NV_DIAG 0x0003f8 /* diagnostic status */ 73 #define MS02NV_MAGIC 0x0003fc /* MS02-NV magic ID */ 74 #define MS02NV_VALID 0x000400 /* valid data magic ID */ 75 #define MS02NV_RAM 0x001000 /* user-exposed RAM start */ 76 77 /* MS02-NV diagnostic status bits. */ 78 #define MS02NV_DIAG_TEST 0x01 /* SRAM test done (?) */ 79 #define MS02NV_DIAG_RO 0x02 /* SRAM r/o test done */ 80 #define MS02NV_DIAG_RW 0x04 /* SRAM r/w test done */ 81 #define MS02NV_DIAG_FAIL 0x08 /* SRAM test failed */ 82 #define MS02NV_DIAG_SIZE_MASK 0xf0 /* SRAM size mask */ 83 #define MS02NV_DIAG_SIZE_SHIFT 0x10 /* SRAM size shift (left) */ 84 85 /* MS02-NV general constants. */ 86 #define MS02NV_ID 0x03021966 /* MS02-NV magic ID value */ 87 #define MS02NV_VALID_ID 0xbd100248 /* valid data magic ID value */ 88 #define MS02NV_SLOT_SIZE 0x800000 /* size of the address space 89 decoded by the module */ 90 91 92 typedef volatile u32 ms02nv_uint; 93 94 struct ms02nv_private { 95 struct mtd_info *next; 96 struct { 97 struct resource *module; 98 struct resource *diag_ram; 99 struct resource *user_ram; 100 struct resource *csr; 101 } resource; 102 u_char *addr; 103 size_t size; 104 u_char *uaddr; 105 }; 106