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175 lines
5.3 KiB
Plaintext
175 lines
5.3 KiB
Plaintext
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dwc_read_reg32() and friends now take an additional parameter, a pointer to an
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IO context struct. The IO context struct should live in an os-dependent struct
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in your driver. As an example, the dwc_usb3 driver has an os-dependent struct
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named 'os_dep' embedded in the main device struct. So there these calls look
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like this:
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dwc_read_reg32(&usb3_dev->os_dep.ioctx, &pcd->dev_global_regs->dcfg);
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dwc_write_reg32(&usb3_dev->os_dep.ioctx,
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&pcd->dev_global_regs->dcfg, 0);
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Note that for the existing Linux driver ports, it is not necessary to actually
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define the 'ioctx' member in the os-dependent struct. Since Linux does not
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require an IO context, its macros for dwc_read_reg32() and friends do not
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use the context pointer, so it is optimized away by the compiler. But it is
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necessary to add the pointer parameter to all of the call sites, to be ready
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for any future ports (such as FreeBSD) which do require an IO context.
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Similarly, dwc_alloc(), dwc_alloc_atomic(), dwc_strdup(), and dwc_free() now
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take an additional parameter, a pointer to a memory context. Examples:
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addr = dwc_alloc(&usb3_dev->os_dep.memctx, size);
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dwc_free(&usb3_dev->os_dep.memctx, addr);
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Again, for the Linux ports, it is not necessary to actually define the memctx
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member, but it is necessary to add the pointer parameter to all of the call
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sites.
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Same for dwc_dma_alloc() and dwc_dma_free(). Examples:
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virt_addr = dwc_dma_alloc(&usb3_dev->os_dep.dmactx, size, &phys_addr);
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dwc_dma_free(&usb3_dev->os_dep.dmactx, size, virt_addr, phys_addr);
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Same for dwc_mutex_alloc() and dwc_mutex_free(). Examples:
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mutex = dwc_mutex_alloc(&usb3_dev->os_dep.mtxctx);
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dwc_mutex_free(&usb3_dev->os_dep.mtxctx, mutex);
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Same for dwc_spinlock_alloc() and dwc_spinlock_free(). Examples:
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lock = dwc_spinlock_alloc(&usb3_dev->osdep.splctx);
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dwc_spinlock_free(&usb3_dev->osdep.splctx, lock);
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Same for dwc_timer_alloc(). Example:
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timer = dwc_timer_alloc(&usb3_dev->os_dep.tmrctx, "dwc_usb3_tmr1",
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cb_func, cb_data);
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Same for dwc_waitq_alloc(). Example:
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waitq = dwc_waitq_alloc(&usb3_dev->os_dep.wtqctx);
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Same for dwc_thread_run(). Example:
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thread = dwc_thread_run(&usb3_dev->os_dep.thdctx, func,
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"dwc_usb3_thd1", data);
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Same for dwc_workq_alloc(). Example:
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workq = dwc_workq_alloc(&usb3_dev->osdep.wkqctx, "dwc_usb3_wkq1");
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Same for dwc_task_alloc(). Example:
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task = dwc_task_alloc(&usb3_dev->os_dep.tskctx, "dwc_usb3_tsk1",
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cb_func, cb_data);
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In addition to the context pointer additions, a few core functions have had
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other changes made to their parameters:
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The 'flags' parameter to dwc_spinlock_irqsave() and dwc_spinunlock_irqrestore()
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has been changed from a uint64_t to a dwc_irqflags_t.
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dwc_thread_should_stop() now takes a 'dwc_thread_t *' parameter, because the
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FreeBSD equivalent of that function requires it.
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And, in addition to the context pointer, dwc_task_alloc() also adds a
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'char *name' parameter, to be consistent with dwc_thread_run() and
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dwc_workq_alloc(), and because the FreeBSD equivalent of that function
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requires a unique name.
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Here is a complete list of the core functions that now take a pointer to a
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context as their first parameter:
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dwc_read_reg32
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dwc_read_reg64
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dwc_write_reg32
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dwc_write_reg64
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dwc_modify_reg32
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dwc_modify_reg64
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dwc_alloc
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dwc_alloc_atomic
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dwc_strdup
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dwc_free
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dwc_dma_alloc
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dwc_dma_free
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dwc_mutex_alloc
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dwc_mutex_free
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dwc_spinlock_alloc
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dwc_spinlock_free
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dwc_timer_alloc
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dwc_waitq_alloc
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dwc_thread_run
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dwc_workq_alloc
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dwc_task_alloc Also adds a 'char *name' as its 2nd parameter
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And here are the core functions that have other changes to their parameters:
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dwc_spinlock_irqsave 'flags' param is now a 'dwc_irqflags_t *'
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dwc_spinunlock_irqrestore 'flags' param is now a 'dwc_irqflags_t'
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dwc_thread_should_stop Adds a 'dwc_thread_t *' parameter
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The changes to the core functions also require some of the other library
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functions to change:
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dwc_cc_if_alloc() and dwc_cc_if_free() now take a 'void *memctx'
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(for memory allocation) as the 1st param and a 'void *mtxctx'
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(for mutex allocation) as the 2nd param.
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dwc_cc_clear(), dwc_cc_add(), dwc_cc_change(), dwc_cc_remove(),
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dwc_cc_data_for_save(), and dwc_cc_restore_from_data() now take a
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'void *memctx' as the 1st param.
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dwc_dh_modpow(), dwc_dh_pk(), and dwc_dh_derive_keys() now take a
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'void *memctx' as the 1st param.
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dwc_modpow() now takes a 'void *memctx' as the 1st param.
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dwc_alloc_notification_manager() now takes a 'void *memctx' as the
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1st param and a 'void *wkqctx' (for work queue allocation) as the 2nd
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param, and also now returns an integer value that is non-zero if
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allocation of its data structures or work queue fails.
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dwc_register_notifier() now takes a 'void *memctx' as the 1st param.
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dwc_memory_debug_start() now takes a 'void *mem_ctx' as the first
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param, and also now returns an integer value that is non-zero if
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allocation of its data structures fails.
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Other miscellaneous changes:
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The DEBUG_MEMORY and DEBUG_REGS #define's have been renamed to
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DWC_DEBUG_MEMORY and DWC_DEBUG_REGS.
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The following #define's have been added to allow selectively compiling library
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features:
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DWC_CCLIB
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DWC_CRYPTOLIB
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DWC_NOTIFYLIB
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DWC_UTFLIB
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A DWC_LIBMODULE #define has also been added. If this is not defined, then the
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module code in dwc_common_linux.c is not compiled in. This allows linking the
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library code directly into a driver module, instead of as a standalone module.
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