1 /* 2 * Copyright (C) 2014 Freescale Semiconductor 3 * 4 * SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ 5 */ 6 7 #include "qbman_private.h" 8 #include <fsl-mc/fsl_qbman_portal.h> 9 #include <fsl-mc/fsl_dpaa_fd.h> 10 11 /* All QBMan command and result structures use this "valid bit" encoding */ 12 #define QB_VALID_BIT ((uint32_t)0x80) 13 14 /* Management command result codes */ 15 #define QBMAN_MC_RSLT_OK 0xf0 16 17 /* TBD: as of QBMan 4.1, DQRR will be 8 rather than 4! */ 18 #define QBMAN_DQRR_SIZE 4 19 20 21 /* --------------------- */ 22 /* portal data structure */ 23 /* --------------------- */ 24 25 struct qbman_swp { 26 const struct qbman_swp_desc *desc; 27 /* The qbman_sys (ie. arch/OS-specific) support code can put anything it 28 * needs in here. */ 29 struct qbman_swp_sys sys; 30 /* Management commands */ 31 struct { 32 #ifdef QBMAN_CHECKING 33 enum swp_mc_check { 34 swp_mc_can_start, /* call __qbman_swp_mc_start() */ 35 swp_mc_can_submit, /* call __qbman_swp_mc_submit() */ 36 swp_mc_can_poll, /* call __qbman_swp_mc_result() */ 37 } check; 38 #endif 39 uint32_t valid_bit; /* 0x00 or 0x80 */ 40 } mc; 41 /* Push dequeues */ 42 uint32_t sdq; 43 /* Volatile dequeues */ 44 struct { 45 /* VDQCR supports a "1 deep pipeline", meaning that if you know 46 * the last-submitted command is already executing in the 47 * hardware (as evidenced by at least 1 valid dequeue result), 48 * you can write another dequeue command to the register, the 49 * hardware will start executing it as soon as the 50 * already-executing command terminates. (This minimises latency 51 * and stalls.) With that in mind, this "busy" variable refers 52 * to whether or not a command can be submitted, not whether or 53 * not a previously-submitted command is still executing. In 54 * other words, once proof is seen that the previously-submitted 55 * command is executing, "vdq" is no longer "busy". 56 */ 57 atomic_t busy; 58 uint32_t valid_bit; /* 0x00 or 0x80 */ 59 /* We need to determine when vdq is no longer busy. This depends 60 * on whether the "busy" (last-submitted) dequeue command is 61 * targeting DQRR or main-memory, and detected is based on the 62 * presence of the dequeue command's "token" showing up in 63 * dequeue entries in DQRR or main-memory (respectively). Debug 64 * builds will, when submitting vdq commands, verify that the 65 * dequeue result location is not already equal to the command's 66 * token value. */ 67 struct ldpaa_dq *storage; /* NULL if DQRR */ 68 uint32_t token; 69 } vdq; 70 /* DQRR */ 71 struct { 72 uint32_t next_idx; 73 uint32_t valid_bit; 74 } dqrr; 75 }; 76 77 /* -------------------------- */ 78 /* portal management commands */ 79 /* -------------------------- */ 80 81 /* Different management commands all use this common base layer of code to issue 82 * commands and poll for results. The first function returns a pointer to where 83 * the caller should fill in their MC command (though they should ignore the 84 * verb byte), the second function commits merges in the caller-supplied command 85 * verb (which should not include the valid-bit) and submits the command to 86 * hardware, and the third function checks for a completed response (returns 87 * non-NULL if only if the response is complete). */ 88 void *qbman_swp_mc_start(struct qbman_swp *p); 89 void qbman_swp_mc_submit(struct qbman_swp *p, void *cmd, uint32_t cmd_verb); 90 void *qbman_swp_mc_result(struct qbman_swp *p); 91 92 /* Wraps up submit + poll-for-result */ 93 static inline void *qbman_swp_mc_complete(struct qbman_swp *swp, void *cmd, 94 uint32_t cmd_verb) 95 { 96 int loopvar; 97 98 qbman_swp_mc_submit(swp, cmd, cmd_verb); 99 DBG_POLL_START(loopvar); 100 do { 101 DBG_POLL_CHECK(loopvar); 102 cmd = qbman_swp_mc_result(swp); 103 } while (!cmd); 104 return cmd; 105 } 106 107 /* ------------ */ 108 /* qb_attr_code */ 109 /* ------------ */ 110 111 /* This struct locates a sub-field within a QBMan portal (CENA) cacheline which 112 * is either serving as a configuration command or a query result. The 113 * representation is inherently little-endian, as the indexing of the words is 114 * itself little-endian in nature and layerscape is little endian for anything 115 * that crosses a word boundary too (64-bit fields are the obvious examples). 116 */ 117 struct qb_attr_code { 118 unsigned int word; /* which uint32_t[] array member encodes the field */ 119 unsigned int lsoffset; /* encoding offset from ls-bit */ 120 unsigned int width; /* encoding width. (bool must be 1.) */ 121 }; 122 123 /* Macros to define codes */ 124 #define QB_CODE(a, b, c) { a, b, c} 125 126 /* decode a field from a cacheline */ 127 static inline uint32_t qb_attr_code_decode(const struct qb_attr_code *code, 128 const uint32_t *cacheline) 129 { 130 return d32_uint32_t(code->lsoffset, code->width, cacheline[code->word]); 131 } 132 133 134 /* encode a field to a cacheline */ 135 static inline void qb_attr_code_encode(const struct qb_attr_code *code, 136 uint32_t *cacheline, uint32_t val) 137 { 138 cacheline[code->word] = 139 r32_uint32_t(code->lsoffset, code->width, cacheline[code->word]) 140 | e32_uint32_t(code->lsoffset, code->width, val); 141 } 142 143 static inline void qb_attr_code_encode_64(const struct qb_attr_code *code, 144 uint64_t *cacheline, uint64_t val) 145 { 146 cacheline[code->word / 2] = val; 147 } 148 149 /* ---------------------- */ 150 /* Descriptors/cachelines */ 151 /* ---------------------- */ 152 153 /* To avoid needless dynamic allocation, the driver API often gives the caller 154 * a "descriptor" type that the caller can instantiate however they like. 155 * Ultimately though, it is just a cacheline of binary storage (or something 156 * smaller when it is known that the descriptor doesn't need all 64 bytes) for 157 * holding pre-formatted pieces of hardware commands. The performance-critical 158 * code can then copy these descriptors directly into hardware command 159 * registers more efficiently than trying to construct/format commands 160 * on-the-fly. The API user sees the descriptor as an array of 32-bit words in 161 * order for the compiler to know its size, but the internal details are not 162 * exposed. The following macro is used within the driver for converting *any* 163 * descriptor pointer to a usable array pointer. The use of a macro (instead of 164 * an inline) is necessary to work with different descriptor types and to work 165 * correctly with const and non-const inputs (and similarly-qualified outputs). 166 */ 167 #define qb_cl(d) (&(d)->dont_manipulate_directly[0]) 168