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📄 cpu.h

📁 RTEMS (Real-Time Executive for Multiprocessor Systems) is a free open source real-time operating sys
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/*  cpu.h * *  This include file contains information pertaining to the PowerPC *  processor. * *  Modified for MPC8260 Andy Dachs <a.dachs@sstl.co.uk> *  Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL), 2001 * *  Author:	Andrew Bray <andy@i-cubed.co.uk> * *  COPYRIGHT (c) 1995 by i-cubed ltd. * *  To anyone who acknowledges that this file is provided "AS IS" *  without any express or implied warranty: *      permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this file *      for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that *      the above copyright notice and this notice appears in all *      copies, and that the name of i-cubed limited not be used in *      advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the *      software without specific, written prior permission. *      i-cubed limited makes no representations about the suitability *      of this software for any purpose. * *  Derived from c/src/exec/cpu/no_cpu/cpu.h: * *  COPYRIGHT (c) 1989-1997. *  On-Line Applications Research Corporation (OAR). * *  The license and distribution terms for this file may be found in *  the file LICENSE in this distribution or at *  http://www.rtems.com/license/LICENSE. * *  $Id: cpu.h,v 1.7.2.2 2003/09/04 18:47:36 joel Exp $ */#ifndef __CPU_h#define __CPU_h#ifndef _rtems_score_cpu_h#error "You should include <rtems/score/cpu.h>"#endif#include <rtems/powerpc/registers.h>#ifdef __cplusplusextern "C" {#endif/* conditional compilation parameters *//* *  Does RTEMS manage a dedicated interrupt stack in software? * *  If TRUE, then a stack is allocated in _ISR_Handler_initialization. *  If FALSE, nothing is done. * *  If the CPU supports a dedicated interrupt stack in hardware, *  then it is generally the responsibility of the BSP to allocate it *  and set it up. * *  If the CPU does not support a dedicated interrupt stack, then *  the porter has two options: (1) execute interrupts on the *  stack of the interrupted task, and (2) have RTEMS manage a dedicated *  interrupt stack. * *  If this is TRUE, CPU_ALLOCATE_INTERRUPT_STACK should also be TRUE. * *  Only one of CPU_HAS_SOFTWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK and *  CPU_HAS_HARDWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK should be set to TRUE.  It is *  possible that both are FALSE for a particular CPU.  Although it *  is unclear what that would imply about the interrupt processing *  procedure on that CPU. */#define CPU_HAS_SOFTWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK TRUE/* *  Does this CPU have hardware support for a dedicated interrupt stack? * *  If TRUE, then it must be installed during initialization. *  If FALSE, then no installation is performed. * *  If this is TRUE, CPU_ALLOCATE_INTERRUPT_STACK should also be TRUE. * *  Only one of CPU_HAS_SOFTWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK and *  CPU_HAS_HARDWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK should be set to TRUE.  It is *  possible that both are FALSE for a particular CPU.  Although it *  is unclear what that would imply about the interrupt processing *  procedure on that CPU. */#define CPU_HAS_HARDWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK FALSE/* *  Does RTEMS allocate a dedicated interrupt stack in the Interrupt Manager? * *  If TRUE, then the memory is allocated during initialization. *  If FALSE, then the memory is allocated during initialization. * *  This should be TRUE is CPU_HAS_SOFTWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK is TRUE *  or CPU_INSTALL_HARDWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK is TRUE. */#define CPU_ALLOCATE_INTERRUPT_STACK FALSE/* *  Does the RTEMS invoke the user's ISR with the vector number and *  a pointer to the saved interrupt frame (1) or just the vector  *  number (0)? */#define CPU_ISR_PASSES_FRAME_POINTER 0/* *  Does the CPU have hardware floating point? * *  If TRUE, then the RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT task attribute is supported. *  If FALSE, then the RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT task attribute is ignored. * *  If there is a FP coprocessor such as the i387 or mc68881, then *  the answer is TRUE. * *  The macro name "PPC_HAS_FPU" should be made CPU specific. *  It indicates whether or not this CPU model has FP support.  For *  example, it would be possible to have an i386_nofp CPU model *  which set this to false to indicate that you have an i386 without *  an i387 and wish to leave floating point support out of RTEMS. */#if ( PPC_HAS_FPU == 1 )#define CPU_HARDWARE_FP     TRUE#else#define CPU_HARDWARE_FP     FALSE#endif/* *  Are all tasks RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT tasks implicitly? * *  If TRUE, then the RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT task attribute is assumed. *  If FALSE, then the RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT task attribute is followed. * *  So far, the only CPU in which this option has been used is the *  HP PA-RISC.  The HP C compiler and gcc both implicitly use the *  floating point registers to perform integer multiplies.  If *  a function which you would not think utilize the FP unit DOES, *  then one can not easily predict which tasks will use the FP hardware. *  In this case, this option should be TRUE. * *  If CPU_HARDWARE_FP is FALSE, then this should be FALSE as well. */#define CPU_ALL_TASKS_ARE_FP     FALSE/* *  Should the IDLE task have a floating point context? * *  If TRUE, then the IDLE task is created as a RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT task *  and it has a floating point context which is switched in and out. *  If FALSE, then the IDLE task does not have a floating point context. * *  Setting this to TRUE negatively impacts the time required to preempt *  the IDLE task from an interrupt because the floating point context *  must be saved as part of the preemption. */#define CPU_IDLE_TASK_IS_FP      FALSE/* *  Should the saving of the floating point registers be deferred *  until a context switch is made to another different floating point *  task? * *  If TRUE, then the floating point context will not be stored until *  necessary.  It will remain in the floating point registers and not *  disturned until another floating point task is switched to. * *  If FALSE, then the floating point context is saved when a floating *  point task is switched out and restored when the next floating point *  task is restored.  The state of the floating point registers between *  those two operations is not specified. * *  If the floating point context does NOT have to be saved as part of *  interrupt dispatching, then it should be safe to set this to TRUE. * *  Setting this flag to TRUE results in using a different algorithm *  for deciding when to save and restore the floating point context. *  The deferred FP switch algorithm minimizes the number of times *  the FP context is saved and restored.  The FP context is not saved *  until a context switch is made to another, different FP task. *  Thus in a system with only one FP task, the FP context will never *  be saved or restored. * *  Note, however that compilers may use floating point registers/ *  instructions for optimization or they may save/restore FP registers *  on the stack. You must not use deferred switching in these cases *  and on the PowerPC attempting to do so will raise a "FP unavailable" *  exception. *//* *  ACB Note:  This could make debugging tricky.. *//* conservative setting (FALSE); probably doesn't affect performance too much */#define CPU_USE_DEFERRED_FP_SWITCH       FALSE/* *  Does this port provide a CPU dependent IDLE task implementation? * *  If TRUE, then the routine _CPU_Thread_Idle_body *  must be provided and is the default IDLE thread body instead of *  _CPU_Thread_Idle_body. * *  If FALSE, then use the generic IDLE thread body if the BSP does *  not provide one. * *  This is intended to allow for supporting processors which have *  a low power or idle mode.  When the IDLE thread is executed, then *  the CPU can be powered down. * *  The order of precedence for selecting the IDLE thread body is: * *    1.  BSP provided *    2.  CPU dependent (if provided) *    3.  generic (if no BSP and no CPU dependent) */#define CPU_PROVIDES_IDLE_THREAD_BODY    FALSE/* *  Does the stack grow up (toward higher addresses) or down *  (toward lower addresses)? * *  If TRUE, then the grows upward. *  If FALSE, then the grows toward smaller addresses. */#define CPU_STACK_GROWS_UP               FALSE/* *  The following is the variable attribute used to force alignment *  of critical RTEMS structures.  On some processors it may make *  sense to have these aligned on tighter boundaries than *  the minimum requirements of the compiler in order to have as *  much of the critical data area as possible in a cache line. * *  The placement of this macro in the declaration of the variables *  is based on the syntactically requirements of the GNU C *  "__attribute__" extension.  For example with GNU C, use *  the following to force a structures to a 32 byte boundary. * *      __attribute__ ((aligned (32))) * *  NOTE:  Currently only the Priority Bit Map table uses this feature. *         To benefit from using this, the data must be heavily *         used so it will stay in the cache and used frequently enough *         in the executive to justify turning this on. */#define CPU_STRUCTURE_ALIGNMENT \  __attribute__ ((aligned (PPC_CACHE_ALIGNMENT)))/* *  Define what is required to specify how the network to host conversion *  routines are handled. */#define CPU_HAS_OWN_HOST_TO_NETWORK_ROUTINES     FALSE#define CPU_BIG_ENDIAN                           TRUE#define CPU_LITTLE_ENDIAN                        FALSE/* *  Processor defined structures * *  Examples structures include the descriptor tables from the i386 *  and the processor control structure on the i960ca. *//* may need to put some structures here.  *//* * Contexts * *  Generally there are 2 types of context to save. *     1. Interrupt registers to save *     2. Task level registers to save * *  This means we have the following 3 context items: *     1. task level context stuff::  Context_Control *     2. floating point task stuff:: Context_Control_fp *     3. special interrupt level context :: Context_Control_interrupt * *  On some processors, it is cost-effective to save only the callee *  preserved registers during a task context switch.  This means *  that the ISR code needs to save those registers which do not *  persist across function calls.  It is not mandatory to make this *  distinctions between the caller/callee saves registers for the *  purpose of minimizing context saved during task switch and on interrupts. *  If the cost of saving extra registers is minimal, simplicity is the *  choice.  Save the same context on interrupt entry as for tasks in *  this case. * *  Additionally, if gdb is to be made aware of RTEMS tasks for this CPU, then *  care should be used in designing the context area. * *  On some CPUs with hardware floating point support, the Context_Control_fp *  structure will not be used or it simply consist of an array of a *  fixed number of bytes.   This is done when the floating point context *  is dumped by a "FP save context" type instruction and the format *  is not really defined by the CPU.  In this case, there is no need *  to figure out the exact format -- only the size.  Of course, although *  this is enough information for RTEMS, it is probably not enough for *  a debugger such as gdb.  But that is another problem. */#ifndef ASMtypedef struct {

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