qemu/docs/specs/edu.txt

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EDU device
==========
Copyright (c) 2014-2015 Jiri Slaby
This document is licensed under the GPLv2 (or later).
This is an educational device for writing (kernel) drivers. Its original
intention was to support the Linux kernel lectures taught at the Masaryk
University. Students are given this virtual device and are expected to write a
driver with I/Os, IRQs, DMAs and such.
The devices behaves very similar to the PCI bridge present in the COMBO6 cards
developed under the Liberouter wings. Both PCI device ID and PCI space is
inherited from that device.
Command line switches:
-device edu[,dma_mask=mask]
dma_mask makes the virtual device work with DMA addresses with the given
mask. For educational purposes, the device supports only 28 bits (256 MiB)
by default. Students shall set dma_mask for the device in the OS driver
properly.
PCI specs
---------
PCI ID: 1234:11e8
PCI Region 0:
I/O memory, 1 MB in size. Users are supposed to communicate with the card
through this memory.
MMIO area spec
--------------
Only size == 4 accesses are allowed for addresses < 0x80. size == 4 or
size == 8 for the rest.
0x00 (RO) : identification (0xRRrr00edu)
RR -- major version
rr -- minor version
0x04 (RW) : card liveness check
It is a simple value inversion (~ C operator).
0x08 (RW) : factorial computation
The stored value is taken and factorial of it is put back here.
This happens only after factorial bit in the status register (0x20
below) is cleared.
0x20 (RW) : status register, bitwise OR
0x01 -- computing factorial (RO)
0x80 -- raise interrupt after finishing factorial computation
0x24 (RO) : interrupt status register
It contains values which raised the interrupt (see interrupt raise
register below).
0x60 (WO) : interrupt raise register
Raise an interrupt. The value will be put to the interrupt status
register (using bitwise OR).
0x64 (WO) : interrupt acknowledge register
Clear an interrupt. The value will be cleared from the interrupt
status register. This needs to be done from the ISR to stop
generating interrupts.
0x80 (RW) : DMA source address
Where to perform the DMA from.
0x88 (RW) : DMA destination address
Where to perform the DMA to.
0x90 (RW) : DMA transfer count
The size of the area to perform the DMA on.
0x98 (RW) : DMA command register, bitwise OR
0x01 -- start transfer
0x02 -- direction (0: from RAM to EDU, 1: from EDU to RAM)
0x04 -- raise interrupt 0x100 after finishing the DMA
IRQ controller
--------------
An IRQ is generated when written to the interrupt raise register. The value
appears in interrupt status register when the interrupt is raised and has to
be written to the interrupt acknowledge register to lower it.
The device supports both INTx and MSI interrupt. By default, INTx is
used. Even if the driver disabled INTx and only uses MSI, it still
needs to update the acknowledge register at the end of the IRQ handler
routine.
DMA controller
--------------
One has to specify, source, destination, size, and start the transfer. One
4096 bytes long buffer at offset 0x40000 is available in the EDU device. I.e.
one can perform DMA to/from this space when programmed properly.
Example of transferring a 100 byte block to and from the buffer using a given
PCI address 'addr':
addr -> DMA source address
0x40000 -> DMA destination address
100 -> DMA transfer count
1 -> DMA command register
while (DMA command register & 1)
;
0x40000 -> DMA source address
addr+100 -> DMA destination address
100 -> DMA transfer count
3 -> DMA command register
while (DMA command register & 1)
;