linux-stable-rt/drivers/firewire/nosy.h

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/*
* Chip register definitions for PCILynx chipset. Based on pcilynx.h
firewire: new driver: nosy - IEEE 1394 traffic sniffer This adds the traffic sniffer driver for Texas Instruments PCILynx/ PCILynx2 based cards. The use cases for nosy are analysis of nonstandard protocols and as an aid in development of drivers, applications, or firmwares. Author of the driver is Kristian Høgsberg. Known contributers are Jody McIntyre and Jonathan Woithe. Nosy programs PCILynx chips to operate in promiscuous mode, which is a feature that is not found in OHCI-1394 controllers. Hence, only special hardware as mentioned in the Kconfig help text is suitable for nosy. This is only the kernelspace part of nosy. There is a userspace interface to it, called nosy-dump, proposed to be added into the tools/ subdirectory of the kernel sources in a subsequent change. Kernelspace and userspave component of nosy communicate via a 'misc' character device file called /dev/nosy with a simple ioctl() and read() based protocol, as described by nosy-user.h. The files added here are taken from git://anongit.freedesktop.org/~krh/nosy commit ee29be97 (2009-11-10) with the following changes by Stefan Richter: - Kconfig and Makefile hunks are written from scratch. - Commented out version printk in nosy.c. - Included missing <linux/sched.h>, reported by Stephen Rothwell. "git shortlog nosy{-user.h,.c,.h}" from nosy's git repository: Jonathan Woithe (2): Nosy updates for recent kernels Fix uninitialised memory (needed for 2.6.31 kernel) Kristian Høgsberg (5): Pull over nosy from mercurial repo. Use a misc device instead. Add simple AV/C decoder. Don't break down on big payloads. Set parent device for misc device. As a low-level IEEE 1394 driver, its files are placed into drivers/firewire/ although nosy is not part of the firewire driver stack. I am aware of the following literature from Texas Instruments about PCILynx programming: SCPA020A - PCILynx 1394 to PCI Bus Interface TSB12LV21BPGF Functional Specification SLLA023 - Initialization and Asynchronous Programming of the TSB12LV21A 1394 Device Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
2010-07-27 16:26:33 +08:00
* from the Linux 1394 drivers, but modified a bit so the names here
* match the specification exactly (even though they have weird names,
* like xxx_OVER_FLOW, or arbitrary abbreviations like SNTRJ for "sent
* reject" etc.)
*/
#define PCILYNX_MAX_REGISTER 0xfff
#define PCILYNX_MAX_MEMORY 0xffff
#define PCI_LATENCY_CACHELINE 0x0c
#define MISC_CONTROL 0x40
#define MISC_CONTROL_SWRESET (1<<0)
#define SERIAL_EEPROM_CONTROL 0x44
#define PCI_INT_STATUS 0x48
#define PCI_INT_ENABLE 0x4c
firewire: new driver: nosy - IEEE 1394 traffic sniffer This adds the traffic sniffer driver for Texas Instruments PCILynx/ PCILynx2 based cards. The use cases for nosy are analysis of nonstandard protocols and as an aid in development of drivers, applications, or firmwares. Author of the driver is Kristian Høgsberg. Known contributers are Jody McIntyre and Jonathan Woithe. Nosy programs PCILynx chips to operate in promiscuous mode, which is a feature that is not found in OHCI-1394 controllers. Hence, only special hardware as mentioned in the Kconfig help text is suitable for nosy. This is only the kernelspace part of nosy. There is a userspace interface to it, called nosy-dump, proposed to be added into the tools/ subdirectory of the kernel sources in a subsequent change. Kernelspace and userspave component of nosy communicate via a 'misc' character device file called /dev/nosy with a simple ioctl() and read() based protocol, as described by nosy-user.h. The files added here are taken from git://anongit.freedesktop.org/~krh/nosy commit ee29be97 (2009-11-10) with the following changes by Stefan Richter: - Kconfig and Makefile hunks are written from scratch. - Commented out version printk in nosy.c. - Included missing <linux/sched.h>, reported by Stephen Rothwell. "git shortlog nosy{-user.h,.c,.h}" from nosy's git repository: Jonathan Woithe (2): Nosy updates for recent kernels Fix uninitialised memory (needed for 2.6.31 kernel) Kristian Høgsberg (5): Pull over nosy from mercurial repo. Use a misc device instead. Add simple AV/C decoder. Don't break down on big payloads. Set parent device for misc device. As a low-level IEEE 1394 driver, its files are placed into drivers/firewire/ although nosy is not part of the firewire driver stack. I am aware of the following literature from Texas Instruments about PCILynx programming: SCPA020A - PCILynx 1394 to PCI Bus Interface TSB12LV21BPGF Functional Specification SLLA023 - Initialization and Asynchronous Programming of the TSB12LV21A 1394 Device Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
2010-07-27 16:26:33 +08:00
/* status and enable have identical bit numbers */
#define PCI_INT_INT_PEND (1<<31)
#define PCI_INT_FRC_INT (1<<30)
#define PCI_INT_SLV_ADR_PERR (1<<28)
#define PCI_INT_SLV_DAT_PERR (1<<27)
#define PCI_INT_MST_DAT_PERR (1<<26)
#define PCI_INT_MST_DEV_TO (1<<25)
#define PCI_INT_INT_SLV_TO (1<<23)
#define PCI_INT_AUX_TO (1<<18)
#define PCI_INT_AUX_INT (1<<17)
#define PCI_INT_P1394_INT (1<<16)
#define PCI_INT_DMA4_PCL (1<<9)
#define PCI_INT_DMA4_HLT (1<<8)
#define PCI_INT_DMA3_PCL (1<<7)
#define PCI_INT_DMA3_HLT (1<<6)
#define PCI_INT_DMA2_PCL (1<<5)
#define PCI_INT_DMA2_HLT (1<<4)
#define PCI_INT_DMA1_PCL (1<<3)
#define PCI_INT_DMA1_HLT (1<<2)
#define PCI_INT_DMA0_PCL (1<<1)
#define PCI_INT_DMA0_HLT (1<<0)
/* all DMA interrupts combined: */
#define PCI_INT_DMA_ALL 0x3ff
#define PCI_INT_DMA_HLT(chan) (1 << (chan * 2))
#define PCI_INT_DMA_PCL(chan) (1 << (chan * 2 + 1))
#define LBUS_ADDR 0xb4
#define LBUS_ADDR_SEL_RAM (0x0<<16)
#define LBUS_ADDR_SEL_ROM (0x1<<16)
#define LBUS_ADDR_SEL_AUX (0x2<<16)
#define LBUS_ADDR_SEL_ZV (0x3<<16)
firewire: new driver: nosy - IEEE 1394 traffic sniffer This adds the traffic sniffer driver for Texas Instruments PCILynx/ PCILynx2 based cards. The use cases for nosy are analysis of nonstandard protocols and as an aid in development of drivers, applications, or firmwares. Author of the driver is Kristian Høgsberg. Known contributers are Jody McIntyre and Jonathan Woithe. Nosy programs PCILynx chips to operate in promiscuous mode, which is a feature that is not found in OHCI-1394 controllers. Hence, only special hardware as mentioned in the Kconfig help text is suitable for nosy. This is only the kernelspace part of nosy. There is a userspace interface to it, called nosy-dump, proposed to be added into the tools/ subdirectory of the kernel sources in a subsequent change. Kernelspace and userspave component of nosy communicate via a 'misc' character device file called /dev/nosy with a simple ioctl() and read() based protocol, as described by nosy-user.h. The files added here are taken from git://anongit.freedesktop.org/~krh/nosy commit ee29be97 (2009-11-10) with the following changes by Stefan Richter: - Kconfig and Makefile hunks are written from scratch. - Commented out version printk in nosy.c. - Included missing <linux/sched.h>, reported by Stephen Rothwell. "git shortlog nosy{-user.h,.c,.h}" from nosy's git repository: Jonathan Woithe (2): Nosy updates for recent kernels Fix uninitialised memory (needed for 2.6.31 kernel) Kristian Høgsberg (5): Pull over nosy from mercurial repo. Use a misc device instead. Add simple AV/C decoder. Don't break down on big payloads. Set parent device for misc device. As a low-level IEEE 1394 driver, its files are placed into drivers/firewire/ although nosy is not part of the firewire driver stack. I am aware of the following literature from Texas Instruments about PCILynx programming: SCPA020A - PCILynx 1394 to PCI Bus Interface TSB12LV21BPGF Functional Specification SLLA023 - Initialization and Asynchronous Programming of the TSB12LV21A 1394 Device Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
2010-07-27 16:26:33 +08:00
#define GPIO_CTRL_A 0xb8
#define GPIO_CTRL_B 0xbc
#define GPIO_DATA_BASE 0xc0
#define DMA_BREG(base, chan) (base + chan * 0x20)
#define DMA_SREG(base, chan) (base + chan * 0x10)
#define PCL_NEXT_INVALID (1<<0)
/* transfer commands */
#define PCL_CMD_RCV (0x1<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_RCV_AND_UPDATE (0xa<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_XMT (0x2<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_UNFXMT (0xc<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_PCI_TO_LBUS (0x8<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_LBUS_TO_PCI (0x9<<24)
/* aux commands */
#define PCL_CMD_NOP (0x0<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_LOAD (0x3<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_STOREQ (0x4<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_STORED (0xb<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_STORE0 (0x5<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_STORE1 (0x6<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_COMPARE (0xe<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_SWAP_COMPARE (0xf<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_ADD (0xd<<24)
#define PCL_CMD_BRANCH (0x7<<24)
/* BRANCH condition codes */
#define PCL_COND_DMARDY_SET (0x1<<20)
#define PCL_COND_DMARDY_CLEAR (0x2<<20)
#define PCL_GEN_INTR (1<<19)
#define PCL_LAST_BUFF (1<<18)
#define PCL_LAST_CMD (PCL_LAST_BUFF)
#define PCL_WAITSTAT (1<<17)
#define PCL_BIGENDIAN (1<<16)
#define PCL_ISOMODE (1<<12)
#define DMA0_PREV_PCL 0x100
firewire: new driver: nosy - IEEE 1394 traffic sniffer This adds the traffic sniffer driver for Texas Instruments PCILynx/ PCILynx2 based cards. The use cases for nosy are analysis of nonstandard protocols and as an aid in development of drivers, applications, or firmwares. Author of the driver is Kristian Høgsberg. Known contributers are Jody McIntyre and Jonathan Woithe. Nosy programs PCILynx chips to operate in promiscuous mode, which is a feature that is not found in OHCI-1394 controllers. Hence, only special hardware as mentioned in the Kconfig help text is suitable for nosy. This is only the kernelspace part of nosy. There is a userspace interface to it, called nosy-dump, proposed to be added into the tools/ subdirectory of the kernel sources in a subsequent change. Kernelspace and userspave component of nosy communicate via a 'misc' character device file called /dev/nosy with a simple ioctl() and read() based protocol, as described by nosy-user.h. The files added here are taken from git://anongit.freedesktop.org/~krh/nosy commit ee29be97 (2009-11-10) with the following changes by Stefan Richter: - Kconfig and Makefile hunks are written from scratch. - Commented out version printk in nosy.c. - Included missing <linux/sched.h>, reported by Stephen Rothwell. "git shortlog nosy{-user.h,.c,.h}" from nosy's git repository: Jonathan Woithe (2): Nosy updates for recent kernels Fix uninitialised memory (needed for 2.6.31 kernel) Kristian Høgsberg (5): Pull over nosy from mercurial repo. Use a misc device instead. Add simple AV/C decoder. Don't break down on big payloads. Set parent device for misc device. As a low-level IEEE 1394 driver, its files are placed into drivers/firewire/ although nosy is not part of the firewire driver stack. I am aware of the following literature from Texas Instruments about PCILynx programming: SCPA020A - PCILynx 1394 to PCI Bus Interface TSB12LV21BPGF Functional Specification SLLA023 - Initialization and Asynchronous Programming of the TSB12LV21A 1394 Device Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
2010-07-27 16:26:33 +08:00
#define DMA1_PREV_PCL 0x120
#define DMA2_PREV_PCL 0x140
#define DMA3_PREV_PCL 0x160
#define DMA4_PREV_PCL 0x180
#define DMA_PREV_PCL(chan) (DMA_BREG(DMA0_PREV_PCL, chan))
#define DMA0_CURRENT_PCL 0x104
firewire: new driver: nosy - IEEE 1394 traffic sniffer This adds the traffic sniffer driver for Texas Instruments PCILynx/ PCILynx2 based cards. The use cases for nosy are analysis of nonstandard protocols and as an aid in development of drivers, applications, or firmwares. Author of the driver is Kristian Høgsberg. Known contributers are Jody McIntyre and Jonathan Woithe. Nosy programs PCILynx chips to operate in promiscuous mode, which is a feature that is not found in OHCI-1394 controllers. Hence, only special hardware as mentioned in the Kconfig help text is suitable for nosy. This is only the kernelspace part of nosy. There is a userspace interface to it, called nosy-dump, proposed to be added into the tools/ subdirectory of the kernel sources in a subsequent change. Kernelspace and userspave component of nosy communicate via a 'misc' character device file called /dev/nosy with a simple ioctl() and read() based protocol, as described by nosy-user.h. The files added here are taken from git://anongit.freedesktop.org/~krh/nosy commit ee29be97 (2009-11-10) with the following changes by Stefan Richter: - Kconfig and Makefile hunks are written from scratch. - Commented out version printk in nosy.c. - Included missing <linux/sched.h>, reported by Stephen Rothwell. "git shortlog nosy{-user.h,.c,.h}" from nosy's git repository: Jonathan Woithe (2): Nosy updates for recent kernels Fix uninitialised memory (needed for 2.6.31 kernel) Kristian Høgsberg (5): Pull over nosy from mercurial repo. Use a misc device instead. Add simple AV/C decoder. Don't break down on big payloads. Set parent device for misc device. As a low-level IEEE 1394 driver, its files are placed into drivers/firewire/ although nosy is not part of the firewire driver stack. I am aware of the following literature from Texas Instruments about PCILynx programming: SCPA020A - PCILynx 1394 to PCI Bus Interface TSB12LV21BPGF Functional Specification SLLA023 - Initialization and Asynchronous Programming of the TSB12LV21A 1394 Device Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
2010-07-27 16:26:33 +08:00
#define DMA1_CURRENT_PCL 0x124
#define DMA2_CURRENT_PCL 0x144
#define DMA3_CURRENT_PCL 0x164
#define DMA4_CURRENT_PCL 0x184
#define DMA_CURRENT_PCL(chan) (DMA_BREG(DMA0_CURRENT_PCL, chan))
#define DMA0_CHAN_STAT 0x10c
#define DMA1_CHAN_STAT 0x12c
#define DMA2_CHAN_STAT 0x14c
#define DMA3_CHAN_STAT 0x16c
#define DMA4_CHAN_STAT 0x18c
#define DMA_CHAN_STAT(chan) (DMA_BREG(DMA0_CHAN_STAT, chan))
/* CHAN_STATUS registers share bits */
#define DMA_CHAN_STAT_SELFID (1<<31)
#define DMA_CHAN_STAT_ISOPKT (1<<30)
#define DMA_CHAN_STAT_PCIERR (1<<29)
#define DMA_CHAN_STAT_PKTERR (1<<28)
#define DMA_CHAN_STAT_PKTCMPL (1<<27)
#define DMA_CHAN_STAT_SPECIALACK (1<<14)
#define DMA0_CHAN_CTRL 0x110
firewire: new driver: nosy - IEEE 1394 traffic sniffer This adds the traffic sniffer driver for Texas Instruments PCILynx/ PCILynx2 based cards. The use cases for nosy are analysis of nonstandard protocols and as an aid in development of drivers, applications, or firmwares. Author of the driver is Kristian Høgsberg. Known contributers are Jody McIntyre and Jonathan Woithe. Nosy programs PCILynx chips to operate in promiscuous mode, which is a feature that is not found in OHCI-1394 controllers. Hence, only special hardware as mentioned in the Kconfig help text is suitable for nosy. This is only the kernelspace part of nosy. There is a userspace interface to it, called nosy-dump, proposed to be added into the tools/ subdirectory of the kernel sources in a subsequent change. Kernelspace and userspave component of nosy communicate via a 'misc' character device file called /dev/nosy with a simple ioctl() and read() based protocol, as described by nosy-user.h. The files added here are taken from git://anongit.freedesktop.org/~krh/nosy commit ee29be97 (2009-11-10) with the following changes by Stefan Richter: - Kconfig and Makefile hunks are written from scratch. - Commented out version printk in nosy.c. - Included missing <linux/sched.h>, reported by Stephen Rothwell. "git shortlog nosy{-user.h,.c,.h}" from nosy's git repository: Jonathan Woithe (2): Nosy updates for recent kernels Fix uninitialised memory (needed for 2.6.31 kernel) Kristian Høgsberg (5): Pull over nosy from mercurial repo. Use a misc device instead. Add simple AV/C decoder. Don't break down on big payloads. Set parent device for misc device. As a low-level IEEE 1394 driver, its files are placed into drivers/firewire/ although nosy is not part of the firewire driver stack. I am aware of the following literature from Texas Instruments about PCILynx programming: SCPA020A - PCILynx 1394 to PCI Bus Interface TSB12LV21BPGF Functional Specification SLLA023 - Initialization and Asynchronous Programming of the TSB12LV21A 1394 Device Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
2010-07-27 16:26:33 +08:00
#define DMA1_CHAN_CTRL 0x130
#define DMA2_CHAN_CTRL 0x150
#define DMA3_CHAN_CTRL 0x170
#define DMA4_CHAN_CTRL 0x190
#define DMA_CHAN_CTRL(chan) (DMA_BREG(DMA0_CHAN_CTRL, chan))
/* CHAN_CTRL registers share bits */
#define DMA_CHAN_CTRL_ENABLE (1<<31)
firewire: new driver: nosy - IEEE 1394 traffic sniffer This adds the traffic sniffer driver for Texas Instruments PCILynx/ PCILynx2 based cards. The use cases for nosy are analysis of nonstandard protocols and as an aid in development of drivers, applications, or firmwares. Author of the driver is Kristian Høgsberg. Known contributers are Jody McIntyre and Jonathan Woithe. Nosy programs PCILynx chips to operate in promiscuous mode, which is a feature that is not found in OHCI-1394 controllers. Hence, only special hardware as mentioned in the Kconfig help text is suitable for nosy. This is only the kernelspace part of nosy. There is a userspace interface to it, called nosy-dump, proposed to be added into the tools/ subdirectory of the kernel sources in a subsequent change. Kernelspace and userspave component of nosy communicate via a 'misc' character device file called /dev/nosy with a simple ioctl() and read() based protocol, as described by nosy-user.h. The files added here are taken from git://anongit.freedesktop.org/~krh/nosy commit ee29be97 (2009-11-10) with the following changes by Stefan Richter: - Kconfig and Makefile hunks are written from scratch. - Commented out version printk in nosy.c. - Included missing <linux/sched.h>, reported by Stephen Rothwell. "git shortlog nosy{-user.h,.c,.h}" from nosy's git repository: Jonathan Woithe (2): Nosy updates for recent kernels Fix uninitialised memory (needed for 2.6.31 kernel) Kristian Høgsberg (5): Pull over nosy from mercurial repo. Use a misc device instead. Add simple AV/C decoder. Don't break down on big payloads. Set parent device for misc device. As a low-level IEEE 1394 driver, its files are placed into drivers/firewire/ although nosy is not part of the firewire driver stack. I am aware of the following literature from Texas Instruments about PCILynx programming: SCPA020A - PCILynx 1394 to PCI Bus Interface TSB12LV21BPGF Functional Specification SLLA023 - Initialization and Asynchronous Programming of the TSB12LV21A 1394 Device Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
2010-07-27 16:26:33 +08:00
#define DMA_CHAN_CTRL_BUSY (1<<30)
#define DMA_CHAN_CTRL_LINK (1<<29)
#define DMA0_READY 0x114
#define DMA1_READY 0x134
#define DMA2_READY 0x154
#define DMA3_READY 0x174
#define DMA4_READY 0x194
#define DMA_READY(chan) (DMA_BREG(DMA0_READY, chan))
#define DMA_GLOBAL_REGISTER 0x908
#define FIFO_SIZES 0xa00
#define FIFO_CONTROL 0xa10
#define FIFO_CONTROL_GRF_FLUSH (1<<4)
#define FIFO_CONTROL_ITF_FLUSH (1<<3)
#define FIFO_CONTROL_ATF_FLUSH (1<<2)
#define FIFO_XMIT_THRESHOLD 0xa14
#define DMA0_WORD0_CMP_VALUE 0xb00
#define DMA1_WORD0_CMP_VALUE 0xb10
#define DMA2_WORD0_CMP_VALUE 0xb20
#define DMA3_WORD0_CMP_VALUE 0xb30
#define DMA4_WORD0_CMP_VALUE 0xb40
#define DMA_WORD0_CMP_VALUE(chan) (DMA_SREG(DMA0_WORD0_CMP_VALUE, chan))
firewire: new driver: nosy - IEEE 1394 traffic sniffer This adds the traffic sniffer driver for Texas Instruments PCILynx/ PCILynx2 based cards. The use cases for nosy are analysis of nonstandard protocols and as an aid in development of drivers, applications, or firmwares. Author of the driver is Kristian Høgsberg. Known contributers are Jody McIntyre and Jonathan Woithe. Nosy programs PCILynx chips to operate in promiscuous mode, which is a feature that is not found in OHCI-1394 controllers. Hence, only special hardware as mentioned in the Kconfig help text is suitable for nosy. This is only the kernelspace part of nosy. There is a userspace interface to it, called nosy-dump, proposed to be added into the tools/ subdirectory of the kernel sources in a subsequent change. Kernelspace and userspave component of nosy communicate via a 'misc' character device file called /dev/nosy with a simple ioctl() and read() based protocol, as described by nosy-user.h. The files added here are taken from git://anongit.freedesktop.org/~krh/nosy commit ee29be97 (2009-11-10) with the following changes by Stefan Richter: - Kconfig and Makefile hunks are written from scratch. - Commented out version printk in nosy.c. - Included missing <linux/sched.h>, reported by Stephen Rothwell. "git shortlog nosy{-user.h,.c,.h}" from nosy's git repository: Jonathan Woithe (2): Nosy updates for recent kernels Fix uninitialised memory (needed for 2.6.31 kernel) Kristian Høgsberg (5): Pull over nosy from mercurial repo. Use a misc device instead. Add simple AV/C decoder. Don't break down on big payloads. Set parent device for misc device. As a low-level IEEE 1394 driver, its files are placed into drivers/firewire/ although nosy is not part of the firewire driver stack. I am aware of the following literature from Texas Instruments about PCILynx programming: SCPA020A - PCILynx 1394 to PCI Bus Interface TSB12LV21BPGF Functional Specification SLLA023 - Initialization and Asynchronous Programming of the TSB12LV21A 1394 Device Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
2010-07-27 16:26:33 +08:00
#define DMA0_WORD0_CMP_ENABLE 0xb04
#define DMA1_WORD0_CMP_ENABLE 0xb14
#define DMA2_WORD0_CMP_ENABLE 0xb24
#define DMA3_WORD0_CMP_ENABLE 0xb34
#define DMA4_WORD0_CMP_ENABLE 0xb44
#define DMA_WORD0_CMP_ENABLE(chan) (DMA_SREG(DMA0_WORD0_CMP_ENABLE, chan))
firewire: new driver: nosy - IEEE 1394 traffic sniffer This adds the traffic sniffer driver for Texas Instruments PCILynx/ PCILynx2 based cards. The use cases for nosy are analysis of nonstandard protocols and as an aid in development of drivers, applications, or firmwares. Author of the driver is Kristian Høgsberg. Known contributers are Jody McIntyre and Jonathan Woithe. Nosy programs PCILynx chips to operate in promiscuous mode, which is a feature that is not found in OHCI-1394 controllers. Hence, only special hardware as mentioned in the Kconfig help text is suitable for nosy. This is only the kernelspace part of nosy. There is a userspace interface to it, called nosy-dump, proposed to be added into the tools/ subdirectory of the kernel sources in a subsequent change. Kernelspace and userspave component of nosy communicate via a 'misc' character device file called /dev/nosy with a simple ioctl() and read() based protocol, as described by nosy-user.h. The files added here are taken from git://anongit.freedesktop.org/~krh/nosy commit ee29be97 (2009-11-10) with the following changes by Stefan Richter: - Kconfig and Makefile hunks are written from scratch. - Commented out version printk in nosy.c. - Included missing <linux/sched.h>, reported by Stephen Rothwell. "git shortlog nosy{-user.h,.c,.h}" from nosy's git repository: Jonathan Woithe (2): Nosy updates for recent kernels Fix uninitialised memory (needed for 2.6.31 kernel) Kristian Høgsberg (5): Pull over nosy from mercurial repo. Use a misc device instead. Add simple AV/C decoder. Don't break down on big payloads. Set parent device for misc device. As a low-level IEEE 1394 driver, its files are placed into drivers/firewire/ although nosy is not part of the firewire driver stack. I am aware of the following literature from Texas Instruments about PCILynx programming: SCPA020A - PCILynx 1394 to PCI Bus Interface TSB12LV21BPGF Functional Specification SLLA023 - Initialization and Asynchronous Programming of the TSB12LV21A 1394 Device Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
2010-07-27 16:26:33 +08:00
#define DMA0_WORD1_CMP_VALUE 0xb08
#define DMA1_WORD1_CMP_VALUE 0xb18
#define DMA2_WORD1_CMP_VALUE 0xb28
#define DMA3_WORD1_CMP_VALUE 0xb38
#define DMA4_WORD1_CMP_VALUE 0xb48
#define DMA_WORD1_CMP_VALUE(chan) (DMA_SREG(DMA0_WORD1_CMP_VALUE, chan))
firewire: new driver: nosy - IEEE 1394 traffic sniffer This adds the traffic sniffer driver for Texas Instruments PCILynx/ PCILynx2 based cards. The use cases for nosy are analysis of nonstandard protocols and as an aid in development of drivers, applications, or firmwares. Author of the driver is Kristian Høgsberg. Known contributers are Jody McIntyre and Jonathan Woithe. Nosy programs PCILynx chips to operate in promiscuous mode, which is a feature that is not found in OHCI-1394 controllers. Hence, only special hardware as mentioned in the Kconfig help text is suitable for nosy. This is only the kernelspace part of nosy. There is a userspace interface to it, called nosy-dump, proposed to be added into the tools/ subdirectory of the kernel sources in a subsequent change. Kernelspace and userspave component of nosy communicate via a 'misc' character device file called /dev/nosy with a simple ioctl() and read() based protocol, as described by nosy-user.h. The files added here are taken from git://anongit.freedesktop.org/~krh/nosy commit ee29be97 (2009-11-10) with the following changes by Stefan Richter: - Kconfig and Makefile hunks are written from scratch. - Commented out version printk in nosy.c. - Included missing <linux/sched.h>, reported by Stephen Rothwell. "git shortlog nosy{-user.h,.c,.h}" from nosy's git repository: Jonathan Woithe (2): Nosy updates for recent kernels Fix uninitialised memory (needed for 2.6.31 kernel) Kristian Høgsberg (5): Pull over nosy from mercurial repo. Use a misc device instead. Add simple AV/C decoder. Don't break down on big payloads. Set parent device for misc device. As a low-level IEEE 1394 driver, its files are placed into drivers/firewire/ although nosy is not part of the firewire driver stack. I am aware of the following literature from Texas Instruments about PCILynx programming: SCPA020A - PCILynx 1394 to PCI Bus Interface TSB12LV21BPGF Functional Specification SLLA023 - Initialization and Asynchronous Programming of the TSB12LV21A 1394 Device Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
2010-07-27 16:26:33 +08:00
#define DMA0_WORD1_CMP_ENABLE 0xb0c
#define DMA1_WORD1_CMP_ENABLE 0xb1c
#define DMA2_WORD1_CMP_ENABLE 0xb2c
#define DMA3_WORD1_CMP_ENABLE 0xb3c
#define DMA4_WORD1_CMP_ENABLE 0xb4c
#define DMA_WORD1_CMP_ENABLE(chan) (DMA_SREG(DMA0_WORD1_CMP_ENABLE, chan))
firewire: new driver: nosy - IEEE 1394 traffic sniffer This adds the traffic sniffer driver for Texas Instruments PCILynx/ PCILynx2 based cards. The use cases for nosy are analysis of nonstandard protocols and as an aid in development of drivers, applications, or firmwares. Author of the driver is Kristian Høgsberg. Known contributers are Jody McIntyre and Jonathan Woithe. Nosy programs PCILynx chips to operate in promiscuous mode, which is a feature that is not found in OHCI-1394 controllers. Hence, only special hardware as mentioned in the Kconfig help text is suitable for nosy. This is only the kernelspace part of nosy. There is a userspace interface to it, called nosy-dump, proposed to be added into the tools/ subdirectory of the kernel sources in a subsequent change. Kernelspace and userspave component of nosy communicate via a 'misc' character device file called /dev/nosy with a simple ioctl() and read() based protocol, as described by nosy-user.h. The files added here are taken from git://anongit.freedesktop.org/~krh/nosy commit ee29be97 (2009-11-10) with the following changes by Stefan Richter: - Kconfig and Makefile hunks are written from scratch. - Commented out version printk in nosy.c. - Included missing <linux/sched.h>, reported by Stephen Rothwell. "git shortlog nosy{-user.h,.c,.h}" from nosy's git repository: Jonathan Woithe (2): Nosy updates for recent kernels Fix uninitialised memory (needed for 2.6.31 kernel) Kristian Høgsberg (5): Pull over nosy from mercurial repo. Use a misc device instead. Add simple AV/C decoder. Don't break down on big payloads. Set parent device for misc device. As a low-level IEEE 1394 driver, its files are placed into drivers/firewire/ although nosy is not part of the firewire driver stack. I am aware of the following literature from Texas Instruments about PCILynx programming: SCPA020A - PCILynx 1394 to PCI Bus Interface TSB12LV21BPGF Functional Specification SLLA023 - Initialization and Asynchronous Programming of the TSB12LV21A 1394 Device Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
2010-07-27 16:26:33 +08:00
/* word 1 compare enable flags */
#define DMA_WORD1_CMP_MATCH_OTHERBUS (1<<15)
#define DMA_WORD1_CMP_MATCH_BROADCAST (1<<14)
#define DMA_WORD1_CMP_MATCH_BUS_BCAST (1<<13)
#define DMA_WORD1_CMP_MATCH_LOCAL_NODE (1<<12)
#define DMA_WORD1_CMP_MATCH_EXACT (1<<11)
#define DMA_WORD1_CMP_ENABLE_SELF_ID (1<<10)
#define DMA_WORD1_CMP_ENABLE_MASTER (1<<8)
#define LINK_ID 0xf00
#define LINK_ID_BUS(id) (id<<22)
#define LINK_ID_NODE(id) (id<<16)
#define LINK_CONTROL 0xf04
#define LINK_CONTROL_BUSY (1<<29)
#define LINK_CONTROL_TX_ISO_EN (1<<26)
#define LINK_CONTROL_RX_ISO_EN (1<<25)
#define LINK_CONTROL_TX_ASYNC_EN (1<<24)
#define LINK_CONTROL_RX_ASYNC_EN (1<<23)
#define LINK_CONTROL_RESET_TX (1<<21)
#define LINK_CONTROL_RESET_RX (1<<20)
#define LINK_CONTROL_CYCMASTER (1<<11)
#define LINK_CONTROL_CYCSOURCE (1<<10)
#define LINK_CONTROL_CYCTIMEREN (1<<9)
#define LINK_CONTROL_RCV_CMP_VALID (1<<7)
#define LINK_CONTROL_SNOOP_ENABLE (1<<6)
#define CYCLE_TIMER 0xf08
#define LINK_PHY 0xf0c
#define LINK_PHY_READ (1<<31)
#define LINK_PHY_WRITE (1<<30)
#define LINK_PHY_ADDR(addr) (addr<<24)
#define LINK_PHY_WDATA(data) (data<<16)
#define LINK_PHY_RADDR(addr) (addr<<8)
#define LINK_INT_STATUS 0xf14
#define LINK_INT_ENABLE 0xf18
/* status and enable have identical bit numbers */
#define LINK_INT_LINK_INT (1<<31)
#define LINK_INT_PHY_TIME_OUT (1<<30)
#define LINK_INT_PHY_REG_RCVD (1<<29)
#define LINK_INT_PHY_BUSRESET (1<<28)
#define LINK_INT_TX_RDY (1<<26)
#define LINK_INT_RX_DATA_RDY (1<<25)
#define LINK_INT_IT_STUCK (1<<20)
#define LINK_INT_AT_STUCK (1<<19)
#define LINK_INT_SNTRJ (1<<17)
#define LINK_INT_HDR_ERR (1<<16)
#define LINK_INT_TC_ERR (1<<15)
#define LINK_INT_CYC_SEC (1<<11)
#define LINK_INT_CYC_STRT (1<<10)
#define LINK_INT_CYC_DONE (1<<9)
#define LINK_INT_CYC_PEND (1<<8)
#define LINK_INT_CYC_LOST (1<<7)
#define LINK_INT_CYC_ARB_FAILED (1<<6)
#define LINK_INT_GRF_OVER_FLOW (1<<5)
#define LINK_INT_ITF_UNDER_FLOW (1<<4)
#define LINK_INT_ATF_UNDER_FLOW (1<<3)
#define LINK_INT_IARB_FAILED (1<<0)