diff options
author | Roland McGrath <roland@gnu.org> | 2000-02-04 03:21:18 +0000 |
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committer | Roland McGrath <roland@gnu.org> | 2000-02-04 03:21:18 +0000 |
commit | 9fd51e9b0ad33a89a83fdbbb66bd20d85f7893fb (patch) | |
tree | 8845b79f170028cb4380045c50277bbf075b5b7d /pfinet/linux-src/include/linux/mca.h |
Import of Linux 2.2.12 subset (ipv4 stack and related)
Diffstat (limited to 'pfinet/linux-src/include/linux/mca.h')
-rw-r--r-- | pfinet/linux-src/include/linux/mca.h | 100 |
1 files changed, 100 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/pfinet/linux-src/include/linux/mca.h b/pfinet/linux-src/include/linux/mca.h new file mode 100644 index 00000000..5b6a6ebf --- /dev/null +++ b/pfinet/linux-src/include/linux/mca.h @@ -0,0 +1,100 @@ +/* + * Header for Microchannel Architecture Bus + * Written by Martin Kolinek, February 1996 +*/ + +#ifndef _LINUX_MCA_H +#define _LINUX_MCA_H + +/* The detection of MCA bus is done in the real mode (using BIOS). + * The information is exported to the protected code, where this + * variable is set to one in case MCA bus was detected. +*/ +extern int MCA_bus; + +/* maximal number of MCA slots - actually, some machines have less, but +they all have sufficient number of POS registers to cover 8. */ +#define MCA_MAX_SLOT_NR 8 + +/* MCA_NOTFOUND is an error condition. The other two indicate + motherboard POS registers contain the adapter. They might be + returned by the mca_find_adapter() function, and can be used as + arguments to mca_read_stored_pos(). I'm not going to allow direct + access to the motherboard registers until we run across an adapter + that requires it. We don't know enough about them to know if it's + safe. + + See Documentation/mca.txt or one of the existing drivers for + more information. +*/ +#define MCA_NOTFOUND (-1) +#define MCA_INTEGSCSI (MCA_MAX_SLOT_NR) +#define MCA_INTEGVIDEO (MCA_MAX_SLOT_NR+1) + +/* max number of adapters, including both slots and various integrated +things. */ +#define MCA_NUMADAPTERS (MCA_MAX_SLOT_NR+2) + +/* returns the slot of the first enabled adapter matching id. User can +specify a starting slot beyond zero, to deal with detecting multiple +devices. Returns MCA_NOTFOUND if id not found. Also checks the +integrated adapters. */ +extern int mca_find_adapter(int id, int start); +extern int mca_find_unused_adapter(int id, int start); + +/* adapter state info - returns 0 if no */ +extern int mca_isadapter(int slot); +extern int mca_isenabled(int slot); + +extern int mca_is_adapter_used(int slot); +extern int mca_mark_as_used(int slot); +extern void mca_mark_as_unused(int slot); + +/* gets a byte out of POS register (stored in memory) */ +extern unsigned char mca_read_stored_pos(int slot, int reg); + +/* + This can be expanded later. Right now, it gives us a way of + getting meaningful information into the MCA_info structure, + so we can have a more interesting /proc/mca. +*/ +extern void mca_set_adapter_name(int slot, char* name); +extern char* mca_get_adapter_name(int slot); + +/* + This sets up an information callback for /proc/mca/slot?. The + function is called with the buffer, slot, and device pointer (or + some equally informative context information, or nothing, if you + prefer), and is expected to put useful information into the + buffer. The adapter name, id, and POS registers get printed + before this is called though, so don't do it again. + + This should be called with a NULL procfn when a module + unregisters, thus preventing kernel crashes and other such + nastiness. +*/ +typedef int (*MCA_ProcFn)(char* buf, int slot, void* dev); +extern void mca_set_adapter_procfn(int slot, MCA_ProcFn, void* dev); + +/* These routines actually mess with the hardware POS registers. They +temporarily disable the device (and interrupts), so make sure you know +what you're doing if you use them. Furthermore, writing to a POS may +result in two devices trying to share a resource, which in turn can +result in multiple devices sharing memory spaces, IRQs, or even trashing +hardware. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED. + +You can only access slots with this. Motherboard registers are off +limits. +*/ + +/* read a byte from the specified POS register. */ +extern unsigned char mca_read_pos(int slot, int reg); + +/* write a byte to the specified POS register. */ +extern void mca_write_pos(int slot, int reg, unsigned char byte); + +/* Should only be called by the NMI interrupt handler, this will do some +fancy stuff to figure out what might have generated a NMI. */ +extern void mca_handle_nmi(void); + +#endif /* _LINUX_MCA_H */ |