[1] | 1 | /* |
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| 2 | * dev_ioc.h - IOC (Block Device Controler) generic device API definition. |
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| 3 | * |
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[657] | 4 | * Author Alain Greiner (2016,2017,2018,2019,2020) |
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[1] | 5 | * |
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| 6 | * Copyright (c) UPMC Sorbonne Universites |
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| 7 | * |
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| 8 | * This file is part of ALMOS-MKH |
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| 9 | * |
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| 10 | * ALMOS-MKH is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it |
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| 11 | * under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
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| 12 | * the Free Software Foundation; version 2.0 of the License. |
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| 13 | * |
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| 14 | * ALMOS-MKH is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but |
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| 15 | * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
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| 16 | * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU |
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| 17 | * General Public License for more details. |
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| 18 | * |
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| 19 | * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
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| 20 | * along with ALMOS-kernel; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, |
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| 21 | * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA |
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| 22 | */ |
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| 23 | |
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| 24 | #ifndef _DEV_IOC_H |
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| 25 | #define _DEV_IOC_H |
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| 26 | |
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[14] | 27 | #include <kernel_config.h> |
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[457] | 28 | #include <hal_kernel_types.h> |
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[1] | 29 | |
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| 30 | /**** Forward declarations ****/ |
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| 31 | |
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[3] | 32 | struct chdev_s; |
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[1] | 33 | |
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| 34 | /***************************************************************************************** |
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| 35 | * Generic Block Device Controler definition |
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| 36 | * |
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| 37 | * This device provide access to an external mass storage peripheral such as a |
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| 38 | * magnetic hard disk or a SD card, that can store blocks of data in a linear array |
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| 39 | * of sectors indexed by a simple lba (logic block address). |
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[647] | 40 | * |
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[614] | 41 | * It supports four command types: |
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| 42 | * - READ : move blocks from device to memory, with a descheduling policy. |
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| 43 | * - WRITE : move blocks from memory to device, with a descheduling policy. |
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| 44 | * - SYNC_READ : move blocks from device to memory, with a busy waiting policy. |
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| 45 | * - SYNC_WRITE : move blocks from memory to device, with a busy waiting policy. |
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[23] | 46 | * |
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[657] | 47 | * For the READ or WRITE operations, the client thread is descheduled, and the work |
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[647] | 48 | * is done by the server thread associated to the IOC device: |
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| 49 | * The client thread calls the dev_ioc_move_data() kernel functions that (i) registers |
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| 50 | * the command in the client thread descriptor, (ii) registers the client thread |
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| 51 | * in the IOC device waiting queue, and (iii) blocks on the THREAD_BLOCKED_IO condition |
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| 52 | * and deschedules. |
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| 53 | * The server thread attached to the IOC device descriptor handles the commands |
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| 54 | * registered in the waiting queue, calling the IOC driver function. |
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| 55 | * Most IOC device implementations have a DMA capability, but some implementations, |
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| 56 | * such as the RDK (Ram Disk) implementation does not use DMA. |
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| 57 | * When the server thread completes an I/O operation, it reactivates the client thread. |
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| 58 | * |
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[614] | 59 | * The SYNC_READ and SYNC_WRITE operations are used by the kernel in the initialisation |
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[626] | 60 | * phase, to update the FAT (both the FAT mapper and the FAT on IOC device), or to update |
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| 61 | * a directory on IOC device when a new file is created. |
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[647] | 62 | * These synchronous operations do not not use the IOC device waiting queue, |
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| 63 | * the server thread, and the IOC IRQ. The client thread does not deschedules: |
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| 64 | * it registers the command in the thread descriptor, calls directly the IOC driver, |
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| 65 | * and uses a busy-waiting policy to poll the IOC device status. |
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[1] | 66 | *****************************************************************************************/ |
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| 67 | |
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| 68 | /****************************************************************************************** |
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| 69 | * This defines the (implementation independant) extension for the generic IOC device. |
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| 70 | *****************************************************************************************/ |
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| 71 | |
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| 72 | typedef struct ioc_extend_s |
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| 73 | { |
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| 74 | uint32_t size; /*! number of bytes in a block */ |
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| 75 | uint32_t count; /*! total number of blocks in physical device */ |
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| 76 | } |
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| 77 | ioc_extend_t; |
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| 78 | |
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| 79 | /****************************************************************************************** |
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| 80 | * This enum defines the various implementations of the generic IOC peripheral. |
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| 81 | * It must be kept consistent with the define in arch_info.h file. |
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| 82 | *****************************************************************************************/ |
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| 83 | |
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[614] | 84 | typedef enum |
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[1] | 85 | { |
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| 86 | IMPL_IOC_BDV = 0, |
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| 87 | IMPL_IOC_HBA = 1, |
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| 88 | IMPL_IOC_SDC = 2, |
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| 89 | IMPL_IOC_SPI = 3, |
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| 90 | IMPL_IOC_RDK = 4, |
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| 91 | } |
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| 92 | ioc_impl_t; |
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| 93 | |
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| 94 | /****************************************************************************************** |
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[657] | 95 | * This structure defines the IOC command for all drivers implementing the IOC device. |
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[1] | 96 | *****************************************************************************************/ |
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| 97 | |
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[614] | 98 | typedef enum |
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[23] | 99 | { |
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| 100 | IOC_READ = 0, |
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| 101 | IOC_WRITE = 1, |
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| 102 | IOC_SYNC_READ = 2, |
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[614] | 103 | IOC_SYNC_WRITE = 3, |
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| 104 | } |
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[657] | 105 | ioc_cmd_type_t; |
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[23] | 106 | |
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[1] | 107 | typedef struct ioc_command_s |
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| 108 | { |
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[188] | 109 | xptr_t dev_xp; /*! extended pointer on IOC device descriptor */ |
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[647] | 110 | uint32_t type; /*! command type above */ |
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[1] | 111 | uint32_t lba; /*! first block index */ |
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| 112 | uint32_t count; /*! number of blocks */ |
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[657] | 113 | xptr_t buf_xp; /*! extended pointer on kernel memory buffer */ |
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[1] | 114 | uint32_t error; /*! operation status (0 if success) */ |
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| 115 | } |
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| 116 | ioc_command_t; |
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| 117 | |
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| 118 | /****************************************************************************************** |
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[626] | 119 | * This function returns a printable string for a IOC command type. |
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| 120 | ****************************************************************************************** |
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| 121 | * @ cmd : command type. |
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| 122 | * @ return pointer on string. |
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| 123 | *****************************************************************************************/ |
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[657] | 124 | char * dev_ioc_cmd_str( ioc_cmd_type_t cmd ); |
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[626] | 125 | |
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| 126 | /****************************************************************************************** |
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[3] | 127 | * This function completes the IOC chdev descriptor initialisation, |
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[1] | 128 | * namely the link with the implementation specific driver. |
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[3] | 129 | * The func, impl, channel, is_rx, base fields have been previously initialised. |
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[1] | 130 | * It calls the specific driver initialisation function, to initialise the hardware |
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| 131 | * device and the specific data structures when required. |
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[3] | 132 | * It creates the associated server thread and allocates a WTI from local ICU. |
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| 133 | * It must de executed by a local thread. |
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[1] | 134 | ****************************************************************************************** |
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[3] | 135 | * @ chdev : local pointer on IOC chdev descriptor. |
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[1] | 136 | *****************************************************************************************/ |
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[3] | 137 | void dev_ioc_init( struct chdev_s * chdev ); |
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[1] | 138 | |
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| 139 | /****************************************************************************************** |
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[657] | 140 | * This blocking function register an asynchronous READ request : move <count> contiguous |
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| 141 | * blocks from the block device, starting from block defined by the <lba> argument, to a |
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| 142 | * kernel buffer defined by the <buffer_xp> argument. |
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| 143 | * It register the request in the client thread descriptor, it register the client thread |
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| 144 | * in the IOC device queue, it blocks on the THREAD_BLOCKED_IO condition, and deschedules. |
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| 145 | * It will be reactivated by the DEV server thread when the transfer is completed. |
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| 146 | * It can be executed by a thread running in any cluster. |
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[1] | 147 | ****************************************************************************************** |
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[647] | 148 | * @ buffer_xp : extended pointer on kernel buffer in memory (must be block aligned). |
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[1] | 149 | * @ lba : first block index on device. |
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| 150 | * @ count : number of blocks to transfer. |
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[626] | 151 | * @ returns 0 if success / returns -1 if error. |
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[1] | 152 | *****************************************************************************************/ |
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[657] | 153 | error_t dev_ioc_read( xptr_t buffer_xp, |
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| 154 | uint32_t lba, |
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| 155 | uint32_t count ); |
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| 156 | |
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| 157 | /****************************************************************************************** |
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| 158 | * This blocking function register an asynchronous WRITE request : move <count> contiguous |
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| 159 | * blocks from a kernel buffer defined by the <buffer_xp> argument to the block device, |
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| 160 | * starting from block defined by the <lba> argument. |
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| 161 | * It register the request in the client thread descriptor, it register the client thread |
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| 162 | * in the IOC device queue, it blocks on the THREAD_BLOCKED_IO condition, and deschedules. |
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| 163 | * It will be reactivated by the DEV server thread when the transfer is completed. |
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| 164 | * It can be executed by a thread running in any cluster. |
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| 165 | ****************************************************************************************** |
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| 166 | * @ buffer_xp : extended pointer on kernel buffer in memory (must be block aligned). |
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| 167 | * @ lba : first block index on device. |
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| 168 | * @ count : number of blocks to transfer. |
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| 169 | * @ returns 0 if success / returns -1 if error. |
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| 170 | *****************************************************************************************/ |
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| 171 | error_t dev_ioc_write( xptr_t buffer_xp, |
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| 172 | uint32_t lba, |
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| 173 | uint32_t count ); |
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| 174 | |
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| 175 | /****************************************************************************************** |
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| 176 | * This blocking function executes a synchronous SYNC_READ request : it moves <count> |
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| 177 | * contiguous blocks of data from the block device, starting from block defined by the |
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| 178 | * <lba> argument to a kernel memory buffer, defined by the <buffer_xp> argument. |
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| 179 | * The request is registered in the calling thread descriptor, but the client thread calls |
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| 180 | * directly the driver cmd function, that is also a blocking function returning only |
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| 181 | * when the transfer is completed. |
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| 182 | * It can be executed by a thread running in any cluster. |
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| 183 | ****************************************************************************************** |
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| 184 | * @ buffer_xp : extended pointer on kernel buffer in memory (must be block aligned). |
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| 185 | * @ lba : first block index on device. |
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| 186 | * @ count : number of blocks to transfer. |
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| 187 | * @ returns 0 if success / returns -1 if error. |
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| 188 | *****************************************************************************************/ |
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| 189 | error_t dev_ioc_sync_read( xptr_t buffer_xp, |
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[647] | 190 | uint32_t lba, |
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| 191 | uint32_t count ); |
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[1] | 192 | |
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[657] | 193 | /****************************************************************************************** |
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| 194 | * This blocking function executes a synchronous SYNC_WRITE request : it moves <count> |
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| 195 | * contiguous blocks of data from a kernel memory buffer, defined by the <buffer_xp> |
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| 196 | * argument to the block device, starting from block defined by the <lba> argument. |
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| 197 | * The request is registered in the calling thread descriptor, but the client thread calls |
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| 198 | * directly the driver cmd() function, that is also a blocking function returning only |
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| 199 | * when the transfer is completed. |
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| 200 | * It can be executed by a thread running in any cluster. |
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| 201 | ****************************************************************************************** |
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| 202 | * @ buffer_xp : extended pointer on kernel buffer in memory (must be block aligned). |
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| 203 | * @ lba : first block index on device. |
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| 204 | * @ count : number of blocks to transfer. |
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| 205 | * @ returns 0 if success / returns -1 if error. |
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| 206 | *****************************************************************************************/ |
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| 207 | error_t dev_ioc_sync_write( xptr_t buffer_xp, |
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| 208 | uint32_t lba, |
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| 209 | uint32_t count ); |
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| 210 | |
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[1] | 211 | #endif /* _DEV_IOC_H */ |
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