BSD 4_3_Reno development
[unix-history] / .ref-BSD-4_3_Tahoe / usr / src / sys / vaxbi / kdbreg.h
CommitLineData
a196a004 1/*
35962040
KB
2 * Copyright (c) 1988 Regents of the University of California.
3 * All rights reserved.
4 *
5 * This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
6 * Chris Torek.
7 *
8 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted
9 * provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
10 * duplicated in all such forms and that any documentation,
11 * advertising materials, and other materials related to such
12 * distribution and use acknowledge that the software was developed
13 * by the University of California, Berkeley. The name of the
14 * University may not be used to endorse or promote products derived
15 * from this software without specific prior written permission.
16 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR
17 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED
18 * WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
19 *
ca67e7b4 20 * @(#)kdbreg.h 7.2 (Berkeley) 7/9/88
a196a004 21 */
35962040 22
a196a004
MK
23/*
24 * The KDB50 registers are embedded inside the bi interface
25 * general-purpose registers.
26 */
27struct kdb_regs {
28 struct biiregs kdb_bi;
29 short kdb_xxx; /* first half of GPR 0 unused */
30 short kdb_ip; /* initialisation and polling */
31 short kdb_sa; /* status & address (r/o half) */
32 short kdb_sw; /* status & address (w/o half) */
33};
34
35/*
36 * Bits in KDB status register during initialisation
37 */
38#define KDB_ERR 0x8000 /* error */
39#define KDB_STEP4 0x4000 /* step 4 has started */
40#define KDB_STEP3 0x2000 /* step 3 has started */
41#define KDB_STEP2 0x1000 /* step 2 has started */
42#define KDB_STEP1 0x0800 /* step 1 has started */
43#define KDB_DI 0x0100 /* controller implements diagnostics */
44#define KDB_IE 0x0080 /* interrupt enable */
45#define KDB_NCNRMASK 0x003f /* in STEP1, bits 0-2=NCMDL2, 3-5=NRSPL2 */
46#define KDB_IVECMASK 0x007f /* in STEP2, bits 0-6 are interruptvec / 4 */
47
48/* after initialisation: */
49#define KDB_GO 0x0001 /* run */
50
51#define KDBSR_BITS \
52"\20\20ERR\17STEP4\16STEP3\15STEP2\14STEP1\13oldNV\12oldQB\11DI\10IE\1GO"
53
54/*
55 * KDB Communications Area. Note that this structure definition
56 * requires NRSP and NCMD to be defined already.
57 */
58struct kdbca {
59 short ca_xxx1; /* unused */
60 char ca_xxx2; /* unused */
61 char ca_bdp; /* BDP to purge XXX */
62 short ca_cmdint; /* command ring transition flag */
63 short ca_rspint; /* response ring transition flag */
64 long ca_rspdsc[NRSP];/* response descriptors */
65 long ca_cmddsc[NCMD];/* command descriptors */
66};
67
68/*
69 * Simplified routines (crash dump) use one command and one response.
70 */
71struct kdb1ca {
72 long ca_xxx;
73 short ca_cmdint;
74 short ca_rspint;
75 long ca_rspdsc;
76 long ca_cmddsc;
77};
78
79/*
80 * Asserting KDB_MAP in values placed in mscp_seq.seq_buffer tells
81 * the KDB to use mscp_seq.seq_mapbase as a set of PTEs and seq_buffer
82 * as an offset value. Hence we need no mappings; the KDB50 reads
83 * the hardware page tables directly. (Without KDB_MAP, seq_bufer
84 * represents the physical memory address instead, and seq_mapbase is
85 * unused.)
86 */
87#define KDB_MAP 0x80000000
88#define KDB_PHYS 0 /* pseudo flag */
89
90/*
91 * KDB statistics.
92 */
93#define KS_MAXC 32
94
95struct kdbstats {
96 int ks_sys; /* transfers done from Sysmap */
97 int ks_paget; /* transfers done from Usrptmap */
98 int ks_contig; /* transfers done from contiguous user map */
99 int ks_copies; /* transfers done from pte copies */
100 int ks_mapwait; /* number of out-of-map waits */
101 int ks_cmd[KS_MAXC];/* commands started at once */
102 int ks_inval; /* copies due to !PG_V */
103};