/* $Id: vector.s,v 1.13 1994/04/02 08:04:32 mycroft Exp $ */ #include #include #include "vector.h" #define ICU_EOI 0x20 /* XXX - define elsewhere */ #define IRQ_BIT(irq_num) (1 << ((irq_num) % 8)) #define IRQ_BYTE(irq_num) ((irq_num) / 8) #ifndef AUTO_EOI_1 #define ENABLE_ICU1 \ movb $ICU_EOI,%al ; /* as soon as possible send EOI ... */ \ FASTER_NOP ; /* ... ASAP ... */ \ outb %al,$IO_ICU1 /* ... to clear in service bit */ #else /* AUTO_EOI_1 */ #define ENABLE_ICU1 /* we now use auto-EOI to reduce i/o */ #endif #ifndef AUTO_EOI_2 #define ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2 \ movb $ICU_EOI,%al ; /* as above */ \ FASTER_NOP ; \ outb %al,$IO_ICU2 ; /* but do second icu first */ \ FASTER_NOP ; \ outb %al,$IO_ICU1 /* then first icu */ #else /* AUTO_EOI_2 */ #define ENABLE_ICU1_AND_2 /* data sheet says no auto-EOI on slave ... */ /* ... but it sometimes works */ #endif /* * Macros for interrupt interrupt entry, call to handler, and exit. * * XXX - the interrupt frame is set up to look like a trap frame. This is * usually a waste of time. The only interrupt handlers that want a frame * are the clock handler (it wants a clock frame), the npx handler (it's * easier to do right all in assembler). The interrupt return routine * needs a trap frame for rare AST's (it could easily convert the frame). * The direct costs of setting up a trap frame are two pushl's (error * code and trap number), an addl to get rid of these, and pushing and * popping the call-saved regs %esi, %edi and %ebp twice, The indirect * costs are making the driver interface nonuniform so unpending of * interrupts is more complicated and slower (call_driver(unit) would * be easier than ensuring an interrupt frame for all handlers. Finally, * there are some struct copies in the npx handler and maybe in the clock * handler that could be avoided by working more with pointers to frames * instead of frames. * * XXX - should we do a cld on every system entry to avoid the requirement * for scattered cld's? * * Coding notes for *.s: * * If possible, avoid operations that involve an operand size override. * Word-sized operations might be smaller, but the operand size override * makes them slower on on 486's and no faster on 386's unless perhaps * the instruction pipeline is depleted. E.g., * * Use movl to seg regs instead of the equivalent but more descriptive * movw - gas generates an irelevant (slower) operand size override. * * Use movl to ordinary regs in preference to movw and especially * in preference to movz[bw]l. Use unsigned (long) variables with the * top bits clear instead of unsigned short variables to provide more * opportunities for movl. * * If possible, use byte-sized operations. They are smaller and no slower. * * Use (%reg) instead of 0(%reg) - gas generates larger code for the latter. * * If the interrupt frame is made more flexible, INTR can push %eax first * and decide the ipending case with less overhead, e.g., by avoiding * loading segregs. */ #define FAST_INTR(unit, irq_num, id_num, handler, enable_icus) \ pushl %eax ; /* save only call-used registers */ \ pushl %ecx ; \ pushl %edx ; \ pushl %ds ; \ pushl %es ; \ movl $KDSEL,%eax ; \ movl %ax,%ds ; \ movl %ax,%es ; \ pushl $unit ; \ call handler ; /* do the work ASAP */ \ enable_icus ; /* (re)enable ASAP (helps edge trigger?) */ \ addl $4,%esp ; \ incl _cnt+V_INTR ; /* book-keeping can wait */ \ popl %es ; \ popl %ds ; \ popl %edx; \ popl %ecx; \ popl %eax; \ iret #define INTR(unit, irq_num, id_num, mask, handler, icu, enable_icus, reg, stray) \ pushl $0 ; /* dummy error code */ \ pushl $T_ASTFLT ; \ INTRENTRY ; \ movb _imen + IRQ_BYTE(irq_num),%al ; \ orb $IRQ_BIT(irq_num),%al ; \ movb %al,_imen + IRQ_BYTE(irq_num) ; \ FASTER_NOP ; \ outb %al,$icu+1 ; \ enable_icus ; \ incl _cnt+V_INTR ; /* tally interrupts */ \ movl _cpl,%eax ; \ testb $IRQ_BIT(irq_num),%reg ; \ jne 2f ; \ 1: ; \ movl _cpl,%eax ; \ pushl %eax ; \ pushl $unit ; \ orl mask,%eax ; \ movl %eax,_cpl ; \ sti ; \ call handler ; \ movb _imen + IRQ_BYTE(irq_num),%al ; \ andb $~IRQ_BIT(irq_num),%al ; \ movb %al,_imen + IRQ_BYTE(irq_num) ; \ FASTER_NOP ; \ outb %al,$icu+1 ; \ INTREXIT ; \ ; \ ALIGN_TEXT ; \ 2: ; \ movl $1b,%eax ; /* register resume address */ \ /* XXX - someday do it at attach time */ \ movl %eax,Vresume + (irq_num) * 4 ; \ orb $IRQ_BIT(irq_num),_ipending + IRQ_BYTE(irq_num) ; \ INTRFASTEXIT /* * vector.h has defined a macro 'BUILD_VECTORS' containing a big list of info * about vectors, including a submacro 'BUILD_VECTOR' that operates on the * info about each vector. We redefine 'BUILD_VECTOR' to expand the info * in different ways. Here we expand it to a list of interrupt handlers. * This order is of course unimportant. Elsewhere we expand it to inline * linear search code for which the order is a little more important and * concatenating the code with no holes is very important. * * XXX - now there is BUILD_FAST_VECTOR as well as BUILD_VECTOR. * * The info consists of the following items for each vector: * * name (identifier): name of the vector; used to build labels * unit (expression): unit number to call the device driver with * irq_num (number): number of the IRQ to handled (0-15) * id_num (number): uniq numeric id for handler (assigned by config) * mask (blank-ident): priority mask used * handler (blank-ident): interrupt handler to call * icu_num (number): (1 + irq_num / 8) converted for label building * icu_enables (number): 1 for icu_num == 1, 1_AND_2 for icu_num == 2 * reg (blank-ident): al for icu_num == 1, ah for icu_num == 2 * * 'irq_num' is converted in several ways at config time to get around * limitations in cpp. The macros have blanks after commas iff they would * not mess up identifiers and numbers. */ #undef BUILD_FAST_VECTOR #define BUILD_FAST_VECTOR(name, unit, irq_num, id_num, mask, handler, \ icu_num, icu_enables, reg) \ .globl handler ; \ .text ; \ .globl _X/**/name ; \ SUPERALIGN_TEXT ; \ _X/**/name: ; \ FAST_INTR(unit, irq_num, id_num, handler, ENABLE_ICU/**/icu_enables) #undef BUILD_VECTOR #define BUILD_VECTOR(name, unit, irq_num, id_num, mask, handler, \ icu_num, icu_enables, reg) \ .globl handler ; \ .text ; \ .globl _X/**/name ; \ SUPERALIGN_TEXT ; \ _X/**/name: ; \ INTR(unit,irq_num,id_num, mask, handler, IO_ICU/**/icu_num, \ ENABLE_ICU/**/icu_enables, reg,) BUILD_VECTORS /* hardware interrupt catcher (IDT 32 - 47) */ .globl _isa_strayintr #define STRAYINTR(irq_num, icu_num, icu_enables, reg) \ IDTVEC(intr/**/irq_num) ; \ INTR(irq_num,irq_num,irq_num, $-1, _isa_strayintr, \ IO_ICU/**/icu_num, ENABLE_ICU/**/icu_enables, reg,stray) /* * XXX - the mask (1 << 2) == IRQ_SLAVE will be generated for IRQ 2, instead * of the mask IRQ2 (defined as IRQ9 == (1 << 9)). But IRQ 2 "can't happen". * In fact, all stray interrupts "can't happen" except for bugs. The * "stray" IRQ 7 is documented behaviour of the 8259. It happens when there * is a glitch on any of its interrupt inputs. Does it really interrupt when * IRQ 7 is masked? * * XXX - unpend doesn't work for these, it sends them to the real handler. * * XXX - the race bug during initialization may be because I changed the * order of switching from the stray to the real interrupt handler to before * enabling interrupts. The old order looked unsafe but maybe it is OK with * the stray interrupt handler installed. But these handlers only reduce * the window of vulnerability - it is still open at the end of * isa_configure(). * * XXX - many comments are stale. */ STRAYINTR(0,1,1, al) STRAYINTR(1,1,1, al) STRAYINTR(2,1,1, al) STRAYINTR(3,1,1, al) STRAYINTR(4,1,1, al) STRAYINTR(5,1,1, al) STRAYINTR(6,1,1, al) STRAYINTR(8,2,1_AND_2, ah) STRAYINTR(9,2,1_AND_2, ah) STRAYINTR(10,2,1_AND_2, ah) STRAYINTR(11,2,1_AND_2, ah) STRAYINTR(12,2,1_AND_2, ah) STRAYINTR(13,2,1_AND_2, ah) STRAYINTR(14,2,1_AND_2, ah) STRAYINTR(15,2,1_AND_2, ah) IDTVEC(intrdefault) STRAYINTR(7,1,1, al) /* XXX */ #if 0 INTRSTRAY(255, $-1, 255) ; call _isa_strayintr ; INTREXIT2 #endif /* * These are the interrupt counters, I moved them here from icu.s so that * they are with the name table. rgrimes * * There are now lots of counters, this has been redone to work with * Bruce Evans intr-0.1 code, which I modified some more to make it all * work with vmstat. */ .data Vresume: .space 16 * 4 /* where to resume intr handler after unpend */ .globl _intrcnt _intrcnt: /* used by vmstat to calc size of table */ .globl _intrcnt_bad7 _intrcnt_bad7: .space 4 /* glitches on irq 7 */ .globl _intrcnt_bad15 _intrcnt_bad15: .space 4 /* glitches on irq 15 */ .globl _intrcnt_stray _intrcnt_stray: .space 4 /* total count of stray interrupts */ .globl _intrcnt_actv _intrcnt_actv: .space NR_REAL_INT_HANDLERS * 4 /* active interrupts */ .globl _eintrcnt _eintrcnt: /* used by vmstat to calc size of table */ /* * Build the interrupt name table for vmstat */ #undef BUILD_FAST_VECTOR #define BUILD_FAST_VECTOR BUILD_VECTOR #undef BUILD_VECTOR #define BUILD_VECTOR(name, unit, irq_num, id_num, mask, handler, \ icu_num, icu_enables, reg) \ .ascii "name irq" ; \ .asciz "irq_num" /* * XXX - use the STRING and CONCAT macros from to stringize * and concatenate names above and elsewhere. */ .text .globl _intrnames, _eintrnames _intrnames: BUILD_VECTOR(bad,,7,,,,,,) BUILD_VECTOR(bad,,15,,,,,,) BUILD_VECTOR(stray,,,,,,,,) BUILD_VECTORS _eintrnames: