The part of the interface most used by drivers is reading and writing memory-mapped registers on the device. Linux provides interfaces to read and write 8-bit, 16-bit, 32-bit and 64-bit quantities. Due to a historical accident, these are named byte, word, long and quad accesses. Both read and write accesses are supported; there is no prefetch support at this time.
The functions are named readb
,
readw
, readl
,
readq
, readb_relaxed
,
readw_relaxed
, readl_relaxed
,
readq_relaxed
, writeb
,
writew
, writel
and
writeq
.
Some devices (such as framebuffers) would like to use larger
transfers than 8 bytes at a time. For these devices, the
memcpy_toio
, memcpy_fromio
and memset_io
functions are provided.
Do not use memset or memcpy on IO addresses; they
are not guaranteed to copy data in order.
The read and write functions are defined to be ordered. That is the
compiler is not permitted to reorder the I/O sequence. When the
ordering can be compiler optimised, you can use
__readb
and friends to indicate the relaxed ordering. Use
this with care.
While the basic functions are defined to be synchronous with respect to each other and ordered with respect to each other the busses the devices sit on may themselves have asynchronicity. In particular many authors are burned by the fact that PCI bus writes are posted asynchronously. A driver author must issue a read from the same device to ensure that writes have occurred in the specific cases the author cares. This kind of property cannot be hidden from driver writers in the API. In some cases, the read used to flush the device may be expected to fail (if the card is resetting, for example). In that case, the read should be done from config space, which is guaranteed to soft-fail if the card doesn't respond.
The following is an example of flushing a write to a device when the driver would like to ensure the write's effects are visible prior to continuing execution.
static inline void qla1280_disable_intrs(struct scsi_qla_host *ha) { struct device_reg *reg; reg = ha->iobase; /* disable risc and host interrupts */ WRT_REG_WORD(®->ictrl, 0); /* * The following read will ensure that the above write * has been received by the device before we return from this * function. */ RD_REG_WORD(®->ictrl); ha->flags.ints_enabled = 0; }
In addition to write posting, on some large multiprocessing systems
(e.g. SGI Challenge, Origin and Altix machines) posted writes won't
be strongly ordered coming from different CPUs. Thus it's important
to properly protect parts of your driver that do memory-mapped writes
with locks and use the mmiowb
to make sure they
arrive in the order intended. Issuing a regular readX
will also ensure write ordering, but should only be used
when the driver has to be sure that the write has actually arrived
at the device (not that it's simply ordered with respect to other
writes), since a full readX
is a relatively
expensive operation.
Generally, one should use mmiowb
prior to
releasing a spinlock that protects regions using writeb
or similar functions that aren't surrounded by
readb
calls, which will ensure ordering and flushing. The
following pseudocode illustrates what might occur if write ordering
isn't guaranteed via mmiowb
or one of the
readX
functions.
CPU A: spin_lock_irqsave(&dev_lock, flags) CPU A: ... CPU A: writel(newval, ring_ptr); CPU A: spin_unlock_irqrestore(&dev_lock, flags) ... CPU B: spin_lock_irqsave(&dev_lock, flags) CPU B: writel(newval2, ring_ptr); CPU B: ... CPU B: spin_unlock_irqrestore(&dev_lock, flags)
In the case above, newval2 could be written to ring_ptr before newval. Fixing it is easy though:
CPU A: spin_lock_irqsave(&dev_lock, flags) CPU A: ... CPU A: writel(newval, ring_ptr); CPU A: mmiowb(); /* ensure no other writes beat us to the device */ CPU A: spin_unlock_irqrestore(&dev_lock, flags) ... CPU B: spin_lock_irqsave(&dev_lock, flags) CPU B: writel(newval2, ring_ptr); CPU B: ... CPU B: mmiowb(); CPU B: spin_unlock_irqrestore(&dev_lock, flags)
See tg3.c for a real world example of how to use mmiowb
PCI ordering rules also guarantee that PIO read responses arrive
after any outstanding DMA writes from that bus, since for some devices
the result of a readb
call may signal to the
driver that a DMA transaction is complete. In many cases, however,
the driver may want to indicate that the next
readb
call has no relation to any previous DMA
writes performed by the device. The driver can use
readb_relaxed
for these cases, although only
some platforms will honor the relaxed semantics. Using the relaxed
read functions will provide significant performance benefits on
platforms that support it. The qla2xxx driver provides examples
of how to use readX_relaxed
. In many cases,
a majority of the driver's readX
calls can
safely be converted to readX_relaxed
calls, since
only a few will indicate or depend on DMA completion.