powerpc/xive: Move definition of ESB bits

From xive.h to xive-regs.h since it's a HW register definition
and it can be used from assembly

Signed-off-by: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
This commit is contained in:
Benjamin Herrenschmidt 2018-01-12 13:39:27 +11:00 committed by Michael Ellerman
parent 191eccb158
commit 12c1f339cd
2 changed files with 35 additions and 35 deletions

View file

@ -9,6 +9,41 @@
#ifndef _ASM_POWERPC_XIVE_REGS_H
#define _ASM_POWERPC_XIVE_REGS_H
/*
* "magic" Event State Buffer (ESB) MMIO offsets.
*
* Each interrupt source has a 2-bit state machine called ESB
* which can be controlled by MMIO. It's made of 2 bits, P and
* Q. P indicates that an interrupt is pending (has been sent
* to a queue and is waiting for an EOI). Q indicates that the
* interrupt has been triggered while pending.
*
* This acts as a coalescing mechanism in order to guarantee
* that a given interrupt only occurs at most once in a queue.
*
* When doing an EOI, the Q bit will indicate if the interrupt
* needs to be re-triggered.
*
* The following offsets into the ESB MMIO allow to read or
* manipulate the PQ bits. They must be used with an 8-bytes
* load instruction. They all return the previous state of the
* interrupt (atomically).
*
* Additionally, some ESB pages support doing an EOI via a
* store at 0 and some ESBs support doing a trigger via a
* separate trigger page.
*/
#define XIVE_ESB_STORE_EOI 0x400 /* Store */
#define XIVE_ESB_LOAD_EOI 0x000 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_GET 0x800 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_00 0xc00 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_01 0xd00 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_10 0xe00 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_11 0xf00 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_VAL_P 0x2
#define XIVE_ESB_VAL_Q 0x1
/*
* Thread Management (aka "TM") registers
*/

View file

@ -72,41 +72,6 @@ struct xive_q {
atomic_t pending_count;
};
/*
* "magic" Event State Buffer (ESB) MMIO offsets.
*
* Each interrupt source has a 2-bit state machine called ESB
* which can be controlled by MMIO. It's made of 2 bits, P and
* Q. P indicates that an interrupt is pending (has been sent
* to a queue and is waiting for an EOI). Q indicates that the
* interrupt has been triggered while pending.
*
* This acts as a coalescing mechanism in order to guarantee
* that a given interrupt only occurs at most once in a queue.
*
* When doing an EOI, the Q bit will indicate if the interrupt
* needs to be re-triggered.
*
* The following offsets into the ESB MMIO allow to read or
* manipulate the PQ bits. They must be used with an 8-bytes
* load instruction. They all return the previous state of the
* interrupt (atomically).
*
* Additionally, some ESB pages support doing an EOI via a
* store at 0 and some ESBs support doing a trigger via a
* separate trigger page.
*/
#define XIVE_ESB_STORE_EOI 0x400 /* Store */
#define XIVE_ESB_LOAD_EOI 0x000 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_GET 0x800 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_00 0xc00 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_01 0xd00 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_10 0xe00 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_11 0xf00 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_VAL_P 0x2
#define XIVE_ESB_VAL_Q 0x1
/* Global enable flags for the XIVE support */
extern bool __xive_enabled;