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-rw-r--r--arch/cris/arch-v10/kernel/irq.c204
1 files changed, 204 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/arch/cris/arch-v10/kernel/irq.c b/arch/cris/arch-v10/kernel/irq.c
new file mode 100644
index 00000000000..b2f16d6fc87
--- /dev/null
+++ b/arch/cris/arch-v10/kernel/irq.c
@@ -0,0 +1,204 @@
+/* $Id: irq.c,v 1.2 2004/06/09 05:30:27 starvik Exp $
+ *
+ * linux/arch/cris/kernel/irq.c
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2000-2002 Axis Communications AB
+ *
+ * Authors: Bjorn Wesen (bjornw@axis.com)
+ *
+ * This file contains the interrupt vectors and some
+ * helper functions
+ *
+ */
+
+#include <asm/irq.h>
+#include <linux/kernel.h>
+#include <linux/init.h>
+#include <linux/config.h>
+
+irqvectptr irq_shortcuts[NR_IRQS]; /* vector of shortcut jumps after the irq prologue */
+
+/* don't use set_int_vector, it bypasses the linux interrupt handlers. it is
+ * global just so that the kernel gdb can use it.
+ */
+
+void
+set_int_vector(int n, irqvectptr addr)
+{
+ etrax_irv->v[n + 0x20] = (irqvectptr)addr;
+}
+
+/* the breakpoint vector is obviously not made just like the normal irq handlers
+ * but needs to contain _code_ to jump to addr.
+ *
+ * the BREAK n instruction jumps to IBR + n * 8
+ */
+
+void
+set_break_vector(int n, irqvectptr addr)
+{
+ unsigned short *jinstr = (unsigned short *)&etrax_irv->v[n*2];
+ unsigned long *jaddr = (unsigned long *)(jinstr + 1);
+
+ /* if you don't know what this does, do not touch it! */
+
+ *jinstr = 0x0d3f;
+ *jaddr = (unsigned long)addr;
+
+ /* 00000026 <clrlop+1a> 3f0d82000000 jump 0x82 */
+}
+
+/*
+ * This builds up the IRQ handler stubs using some ugly macros in irq.h
+ *
+ * These macros create the low-level assembly IRQ routines that do all
+ * the operations that are needed. They are also written to be fast - and to
+ * disable interrupts as little as humanly possible.
+ *
+ */
+
+/* IRQ0 and 1 are special traps */
+void hwbreakpoint(void);
+void IRQ1_interrupt(void);
+BUILD_TIMER_IRQ(2, 0x04) /* the timer interrupt is somewhat special */
+BUILD_IRQ(3, 0x08)
+BUILD_IRQ(4, 0x10)
+BUILD_IRQ(5, 0x20)
+BUILD_IRQ(6, 0x40)
+BUILD_IRQ(7, 0x80)
+BUILD_IRQ(8, 0x100)
+BUILD_IRQ(9, 0x200)
+BUILD_IRQ(10, 0x400)
+BUILD_IRQ(11, 0x800)
+BUILD_IRQ(12, 0x1000)
+BUILD_IRQ(13, 0x2000)
+void mmu_bus_fault(void); /* IRQ 14 is the bus fault interrupt */
+void multiple_interrupt(void); /* IRQ 15 is the multiple IRQ interrupt */
+BUILD_IRQ(16, 0x10000)
+BUILD_IRQ(17, 0x20000)
+BUILD_IRQ(18, 0x40000)
+BUILD_IRQ(19, 0x80000)
+BUILD_IRQ(20, 0x100000)
+BUILD_IRQ(21, 0x200000)
+BUILD_IRQ(22, 0x400000)
+BUILD_IRQ(23, 0x800000)
+BUILD_IRQ(24, 0x1000000)
+BUILD_IRQ(25, 0x2000000)
+/* IRQ 26-30 are reserved */
+BUILD_IRQ(31, 0x80000000)
+
+/*
+ * Pointers to the low-level handlers
+ */
+
+static void (*interrupt[NR_IRQS])(void) = {
+ NULL, NULL, IRQ2_interrupt, IRQ3_interrupt,
+ IRQ4_interrupt, IRQ5_interrupt, IRQ6_interrupt, IRQ7_interrupt,
+ IRQ8_interrupt, IRQ9_interrupt, IRQ10_interrupt, IRQ11_interrupt,
+ IRQ12_interrupt, IRQ13_interrupt, NULL, NULL,
+ IRQ16_interrupt, IRQ17_interrupt, IRQ18_interrupt, IRQ19_interrupt,
+ IRQ20_interrupt, IRQ21_interrupt, IRQ22_interrupt, IRQ23_interrupt,
+ IRQ24_interrupt, IRQ25_interrupt, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL,
+ IRQ31_interrupt
+};
+
+static void (*bad_interrupt[NR_IRQS])(void) = {
+ NULL, NULL,
+ NULL, bad_IRQ3_interrupt,
+ bad_IRQ4_interrupt, bad_IRQ5_interrupt,
+ bad_IRQ6_interrupt, bad_IRQ7_interrupt,
+ bad_IRQ8_interrupt, bad_IRQ9_interrupt,
+ bad_IRQ10_interrupt, bad_IRQ11_interrupt,
+ bad_IRQ12_interrupt, bad_IRQ13_interrupt,
+ NULL, NULL,
+ bad_IRQ16_interrupt, bad_IRQ17_interrupt,
+ bad_IRQ18_interrupt, bad_IRQ19_interrupt,
+ bad_IRQ20_interrupt, bad_IRQ21_interrupt,
+ bad_IRQ22_interrupt, bad_IRQ23_interrupt,
+ bad_IRQ24_interrupt, bad_IRQ25_interrupt,
+ NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL,
+ bad_IRQ31_interrupt
+};
+
+void arch_setup_irq(int irq)
+{
+ set_int_vector(irq, interrupt[irq]);
+}
+
+void arch_free_irq(int irq)
+{
+ set_int_vector(irq, bad_interrupt[irq]);
+}
+
+void weird_irq(void);
+void system_call(void); /* from entry.S */
+void do_sigtrap(void); /* from entry.S */
+void gdb_handle_breakpoint(void); /* from entry.S */
+
+/* init_IRQ() is called by start_kernel and is responsible for fixing IRQ masks and
+ setting the irq vector table to point to bad_interrupt ptrs.
+*/
+
+void __init
+init_IRQ(void)
+{
+ int i;
+
+ /* clear all interrupt masks */
+
+#ifndef CONFIG_SVINTO_SIM
+ *R_IRQ_MASK0_CLR = 0xffffffff;
+ *R_IRQ_MASK1_CLR = 0xffffffff;
+ *R_IRQ_MASK2_CLR = 0xffffffff;
+#endif
+
+ *R_VECT_MASK_CLR = 0xffffffff;
+
+ /* clear the shortcut entry points */
+
+ for(i = 0; i < NR_IRQS; i++)
+ irq_shortcuts[i] = NULL;
+
+ for (i = 0; i < 256; i++)
+ etrax_irv->v[i] = weird_irq;
+
+ /* the entries in the break vector contain actual code to be
+ executed by the associated break handler, rather than just a jump
+ address. therefore we need to setup a default breakpoint handler
+ for all breakpoints */
+
+ for (i = 0; i < 16; i++)
+ set_break_vector(i, do_sigtrap);
+
+ /* set all etrax irq's to the bad handlers */
+ for (i = 2; i < NR_IRQS; i++)
+ set_int_vector(i, bad_interrupt[i]);
+
+ /* except IRQ 15 which is the multiple-IRQ handler on Etrax100 */
+
+ set_int_vector(15, multiple_interrupt);
+
+ /* 0 and 1 which are special breakpoint/NMI traps */
+
+ set_int_vector(0, hwbreakpoint);
+ set_int_vector(1, IRQ1_interrupt);
+
+ /* and irq 14 which is the mmu bus fault handler */
+
+ set_int_vector(14, mmu_bus_fault);
+
+ /* setup the system-call trap, which is reached by BREAK 13 */
+
+ set_break_vector(13, system_call);
+
+ /* setup a breakpoint handler for debugging used for both user and
+ kernel mode debugging (which is why it is not inside an ifdef
+ CONFIG_ETRAX_KGDB) */
+ set_break_vector(8, gdb_handle_breakpoint);
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_ETRAX_KGDB
+ /* setup kgdb if its enabled, and break into the debugger */
+ kgdb_init();
+ breakpoint();
+#endif
+}