URL
https://opencores.org/ocsvn/openrisc/openrisc/trunk
Subversion Repositories openrisc
[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [rtos/] [ecos-2.0/] [packages/] [hal/] [synth/] [arch/] [v2_0/] [src/] [synth_intr.c] - Rev 308
Go to most recent revision | Compare with Previous | Blame | View Log
//============================================================================= // // synth_intr.c // // Interrupt and clock code for the Linux synthetic target. // //============================================================================= //####ECOSGPLCOPYRIGHTBEGIN#### // ------------------------------------------- // This file is part of eCos, the Embedded Configurable Operating System. // Copyright (C) 2002 Bart Veer // Copyright (C) 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 Red Hat, Inc. // // eCos is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under // the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free // Software Foundation; either version 2 or (at your option) any later version. // // eCos is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY // WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or // FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License // for more details. // // You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along // with eCos; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., // 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA. // // As a special exception, if other files instantiate templates or use macros // or inline functions from this file, or you compile this file and link it // with other works to produce a work based on this file, this file does not // by itself cause the resulting work to be covered by the GNU General Public // License. However the source code for this file must still be made available // in accordance with section (3) of the GNU General Public License. // // This exception does not invalidate any other reasons why a work based on // this file might be covered by the GNU General Public License. // // Alternative licenses for eCos may be arranged by contacting Red Hat, Inc. // at http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/ecos-license/ // ------------------------------------------- //####ECOSGPLCOPYRIGHTEND#### //============================================================================= //#####DESCRIPTIONBEGIN#### // // Author(s): bartv // Contributors: bartv, asl // Date: 2001-03-30 // Purpose: Implement the interrupt subsystem for the synthetic target //####DESCRIPTIONEND#### //============================================================================= // sigprocmask handling. // // In the synthetic target interrupts and exceptions are based around // POSIX sighandlers. When the clock ticks a SIGALRM signal is raised. // When the I/O auxiliary wants to raise some other interrupt, it // sends a SIGIO signal. When an exception occurs this results in // signals like SIGILL and SIGSEGV. This implies an implementation // where the VSR is the signal handler. Disabling interrupts would // then mean using sigprocmask() to block certain signals, and // enabling interrupts means unblocking those signals. // // However there are a few problems. One of these is performance: some // bits of the system such as buffered tracing make very extensive use // of enabling and disabling interrupts, so making a sigprocmask // system call each time adds a lot of overhead. More seriously, there // is a subtle discrepancy between POSIX signal handling and hardware // interrupts. Signal handlers are expected to return, and then the // system automatically passes control back to the foreground thread. // In the process, the sigprocmask is manipulated before invoking the // signal handler and restored afterwards. Interrupt handlers are // different: it is quite likely that an interrupt results in another // eCos thread being activated, so the signal handler does not // actually return until the interrupted thread gets another chance to // run. // // The second problem can be addressed by making the sigprocmask part // of the thread state, saving and restoring it as part of a context // switch (c.f. siglongjmp()). This matches quite nicely onto typical // real hardware, where there might be a flag inside some control // register that controls whether or not interrupts are enabled. // However this adds more system calls to context switch overhead. // // The alternative approach is to implement interrupt enabling and // disabling in software. The sigprocmask is manipulated only once, // during initialization, such that certain signals are allowed // through and others are blocked. When a signal is raised the signal // handler will always be invoked, but it will decide in software // whether or not the signal should be processed immediately. This // alternative approach does not correspond particularly well with // real hardware: effectively the VSR is always allowed to run. // However for typical applications this will not really matter, and // the performance gains outweigh the discrepancy. // // Nested interrupts and interrupt priorities can be implemented in // software, specifically by manipulating the current mask of blocked // interrupts. This is not currently implemented. // // At first glance it might seem that an interrupt stack could be // implemented trivially using sigaltstack. This does not quite work: // signal handlers do not always return immediately, so the system // does not get a chance to clean up the signal handling stack. A // separate interrupt stack is possible but would have to be // implemented here, in software, e.g. by having the signal handler // invoke the VSR on that stack. Unfortunately the system may have // pushed quite a lot of state on to the current stack already when // raising the signal, so things could get messy. // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- #include <pkgconf/hal.h> #include <pkgconf/hal_synth.h> // There are various dependencies on the kernel, e.g. how exceptions // should be handled. #include <pkgconf/system.h> #ifdef CYGPKG_KERNEL # include <pkgconf/kernel.h> #endif #include <cyg/infra/cyg_type.h> // base types #include <cyg/infra/diag.h> #include <cyg/hal/hal_arch.h> #include <cyg/hal/hal_intr.h> #include <cyg/hal/hal_io.h> #include <cyg/infra/cyg_ass.h> // Assertions are safe in the synthetic target #include "synth_protocol.h" // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Statics. // Are interrupts currently enabled? volatile cyg_bool_t hal_interrupts_enabled = false; // These flags are updated by the signal handler when a signal comes in // and interrupts are disabled. static volatile cyg_bool_t synth_sigio_pending = false; static volatile cyg_bool_t synth_sigalrm_pending = false; // The current VSR, to be invoked by the signal handler. This allows // application code to install an alternative VSR, without that VSR // having to check for interrupts being disabled and updating the // pending flags. Effectively, the VSR is only invoked when interrupts // are enabled. static void (*synth_VSR)(void) = (void (*)(void)) 0; // The current ISR status and mask registers, or rather software // emulations thereof. These are not static since application-specific // VSRs may want to examine/manipulate these. They are also not // exported in any header file, forcing people writing such VSRs to // know what they are doing. volatile cyg_uint32 synth_pending_isrs = 0; volatile cyg_uint32 synth_masked_isrs = 0xFFFFFFFF; // The vector of interrupt handlers. typedef struct synth_isr_handler { cyg_ISR_t* isr; CYG_ADDRWORD data; CYG_ADDRESS obj; cyg_priority_t pri; } synth_isr_handler; static synth_isr_handler synth_isr_handlers[CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_COUNT]; static void synth_alrm_sighandler(int); static void synth_io_sighandler(int); // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Basic ISR and VSR handling. // The default ISR handler. The system should never receive an interrupt it // does not know how to handle. static cyg_uint32 synth_default_isr(cyg_vector_t vector, cyg_addrword_t data) { CYG_UNUSED_PARAM(cyg_vector_t, vector); CYG_UNUSED_PARAM(cyg_addrword_t, data); CYG_FAIL("Default isr handler should never get invoked"); return CYG_ISR_HANDLED; } // The VSR is invoked // 1) directly by a SIGALRM or SIGIO signal handler, if interrupts // were enabled. // 2) indirectly by hal_enable_interrupts(), if a signal happened // while interrupts were disabled. hal_enable_interrupts() // will have re-invoked the signal handler. // // On entry interrupts are disabled, and there should be one or more // pending ISRs which are not masked off. // // The implementation is as per the HAL specification, where // applicable. static void synth_default_vsr(void) { int isr_vector; cyg_uint32 isr_result; CYG_ASSERT(!hal_interrupts_enabled, "VSRs should only be invoked when interrupts are disabled"); CYG_ASSERT(0 != (synth_pending_isrs & ~synth_masked_isrs), "VSRs should only be invoked when an interrupt is pending"); // No need to save the cpu state. Either we are in a signal // handler and the system has done that for us, or we are called // synchronously via enable_interrupts. // Increment the kernel scheduler lock, if the kernel is present. // This prevents context switching while interrupt handling is in // progress. #ifdef CYGFUN_HAL_COMMON_KERNEL_SUPPORT cyg_scheduler_lock(); #endif // Do not switch to an interrupt stack - functionality is not // implemented // Do not allow nested interrupts - functionality is not // implemented. // Decode the actual external interrupt being delivered. This is // determined from the pending and masked variables. Only one isr // source can be handled here, since interrupt_end must be invoked // with details of that interrupt. Multiple pending interrupts // will be handled by a recursive call HAL_LSBIT_INDEX(isr_vector, (synth_pending_isrs & ~synth_masked_isrs)); CYG_ASSERT((CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MIN <= isr_vector) && (isr_vector <= CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MAX), "ISR vector must be valid"); isr_result = (*synth_isr_handlers[isr_vector].isr)(isr_vector, synth_isr_handlers[isr_vector].data); // Do not switch back from the interrupt stack, there isn't one. // Interrupts were not enabled before, so they must be enabled // now. This may result in a recursive invocation if other IRQs // are still pending. The ISR should have either acknowledged or // masked the current interrupt source, to prevent a recursive // call for the current interrupt. hal_enable_interrupts(); // Now call interrupt_end() with the result of the isr and the // ISR's object This may return straightaway, or it may result in // a context switch to another thread. In the latter case, when // the current thread is reactivated we end up back here. The // third argument should be a pointer to the saved state, but that // is only relevant for thread-aware debugging which is not yet // supported by the synthetic target. { extern void interrupt_end(cyg_uint32, CYG_ADDRESS, HAL_SavedRegisters*); interrupt_end(isr_result, synth_isr_handlers[isr_vector].obj, (HAL_SavedRegisters*) 0); } // Restore machine state and return to the interrupted thread. // That requires no effort here. } // Enabling interrupts. If a SIGALRM or SIGIO arrived at an inconvenient // time, e.g. when already interacting with the auxiliary, then these // will have been left pending and must be serviced now. Next, enabling // interrupts means checking the interrupt pending and mask registers // and seeing if the VSR should be invoked. void hal_enable_interrupts(void) { hal_interrupts_enabled = true; if (synth_sigalrm_pending) { synth_sigalrm_pending = false; synth_alrm_sighandler(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGALRM); } if (synth_sigio_pending) { synth_sigio_pending = false; synth_io_sighandler(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGIO); } // The interrupt mask "register" may have been modified while // interrupts were disabled. If there are pending interrupts, // invoke the VSR. The VSR must be invoked with interrupts // disabled, and will return with interrupts enabled. // An alternative implementation that might be more accurate // is to raise a signal, e.g. SIGUSR1. That way all interrupts // come in via the system's signal handling mechanism, and // it might be possible to do something useful with saved contexts // etc., facilitating thread-aware debugging. if (0 != (synth_pending_isrs & ~synth_masked_isrs)) { hal_interrupts_enabled = false; (*synth_VSR)(); CYG_ASSERT( hal_interrupts_enabled, "Interrupts should still be enabled on return from the VSR"); } } // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Other interrupt-related routines. Mostly these just involve // updating some of the statics, but they may be called while // interrupts are still enabled so care has to be taken. cyg_bool_t hal_interrupt_in_use(cyg_vector_t vec) { CYG_ASSERT( (CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MIN <= vec) && (vec <= CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MAX), "Can only attach to valid ISR vectors"); return synth_default_isr != synth_isr_handlers[vec].isr; } void hal_interrupt_attach(cyg_vector_t vec, cyg_ISR_t* isr, CYG_ADDRWORD data, CYG_ADDRESS obj) { CYG_ASSERT( (CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MIN <= vec) && (vec <= CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MAX), "Can only attach to valid ISR vectors"); CYG_CHECK_FUNC_PTR( isr, "A valid ISR must be supplied"); // The object cannot be validated, it may be NULL if chained // interrupts are enabled. CYG_ASSERT( synth_isr_handlers[vec].isr == &synth_default_isr, "Only one ISR can be attached to a vector at the HAL level"); CYG_ASSERT( (false == hal_interrupts_enabled) || (0 != (synth_masked_isrs & (0x01 << vec))), "ISRs should only be attached when it is safe"); // The priority will have been installed shortly before this call. synth_isr_handlers[vec].isr = isr; synth_isr_handlers[vec].data = data; synth_isr_handlers[vec].obj = obj; } void hal_interrupt_detach(cyg_vector_t vec, cyg_ISR_t* isr) { CYG_ASSERT( (CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MIN <= vec) && (vec <= CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MAX), "Can only detach from valid ISR vectors"); CYG_CHECK_FUNC_PTR( isr, "A valid ISR must be supplied"); CYG_ASSERT( isr != &synth_default_isr, "An ISR must be attached before it can be detached"); CYG_ASSERT( (false == hal_interrupts_enabled) || (0 != (synth_masked_isrs & (0x01 << vec))), "ISRs should only be detached when it is safe"); // The Cyg_Interrupt destructor does an unconditional detach, even if the // isr is not currently attached. if (isr == synth_isr_handlers[vec].isr) { synth_isr_handlers[vec].isr = &synth_default_isr; synth_isr_handlers[vec].data = (CYG_ADDRWORD) 0; synth_isr_handlers[vec].obj = (CYG_ADDRESS) 0; } // The priority is not updated here. This should be ok, if another // isr is attached then the appropriate priority will be installed // first. } void (*hal_vsr_get(cyg_vector_t vec))(void) { CYG_ASSERT( (CYGNUM_HAL_VSR_MIN <= vec) && (vec <= CYGNUM_HAL_VSR_MAX), "Can only get valid VSR vectors"); return synth_VSR; } void hal_vsr_set(cyg_vector_t vec, void (*new_vsr)(void), void (**old_vsrp)(void)) { cyg_bool_t old; CYG_ASSERT( (CYGNUM_HAL_VSR_MIN <= vec) && (vec <= CYGNUM_HAL_VSR_MAX), "Can only get valid VSR vectors"); CYG_CHECK_FUNC_PTR( new_vsr, "A valid VSR must be supplied"); // There is a theoretical possibility of two hal_vsr_set calls at // the same time. The old and new VSRs must be kept in synch. HAL_DISABLE_INTERRUPTS(old); if (0 != old_vsrp) { *old_vsrp = synth_VSR; } synth_VSR = new_vsr; HAL_RESTORE_INTERRUPTS(old); } void hal_interrupt_mask(cyg_vector_t which) { CYG_PRECONDITION( !hal_interrupts_enabled, "Interrupts should be disabled on entry to hal_interrupt_mask"); CYG_ASSERT((CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MIN <= which) && (which <= CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MAX), "A valid ISR vector must be supplied"); synth_masked_isrs |= (0x01 << which); } void hal_interrupt_unmask(cyg_vector_t which) { CYG_PRECONDITION( !hal_interrupts_enabled, "Interrupts should be disabled on entry to hal_interrupt_unmask"); CYG_ASSERT((CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MIN <= which) && (which <= CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MAX), "A valid ISR vector must be supplied"); synth_masked_isrs &= ~(0x01 << which); } void hal_interrupt_acknowledge(cyg_vector_t which) { cyg_bool_t old; CYG_ASSERT((CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MIN <= which) && (which <= CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MAX), "A valid ISR vector must be supplied"); // Acknowledging an interrupt means clearing the bit in the // interrupt pending "register". // NOTE: does the auxiliary need to keep track of this? Probably // not, the auxiliary can just raise SIGIO whenever a device wants // attention. There may be a trade off here between additional // communication and unnecessary SIGIOs. HAL_DISABLE_INTERRUPTS(old); synth_pending_isrs &= ~(0x01 << which); HAL_RESTORE_INTERRUPTS(old); } void hal_interrupt_configure(cyg_vector_t which, cyg_bool_t level, cyg_bool_t up) { CYG_ASSERT((CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MIN <= which) && (which <= CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MAX), "A valid ISR vector must be supplied"); // The synthetic target does not currently distinguish between // level and edge interrupts. Possibly this information will have // to be passed on to the auxiliary in future. CYG_UNUSED_PARAM(cyg_vector_t, which); CYG_UNUSED_PARAM(cyg_bool_t, level); CYG_UNUSED_PARAM(cyg_bool_t, up); } void hal_interrupt_set_level(cyg_vector_t which, cyg_priority_t level) { CYG_ASSERT((CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MIN <= which) && (which <= CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_MAX), "A valid ISR vector must be supplied"); // The legal values for priorities are not defined at this time. // Manipulating the interrupt priority level currently has no // effect. The information is stored anyway, for future use. synth_isr_handlers[which].pri = level; } // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Exception handling. Typically this involves calling into the kernel, // translating the POSIX signal number into a HAL exception number. In // practice these signals will generally be caught in the debugger and // will not have to be handled by eCos itself. static void synth_exception_sighandler(int sig) { CYG_WORD ecos_exception_number = 0; cyg_bool_t old; // There is no need to save state, that will have been done by the // system as part of the signal delivery process. // Disable interrupts. Performing e.g. an interaction with the // auxiliary after a SIGSEGV is dubious. HAL_DISABLE_INTERRUPTS(old); // Now decode the signal and turn it into an eCos exception. switch(sig) { case CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGILL: ecos_exception_number = CYGNUM_HAL_EXCEPTION_ILLEGAL_INSTRUCTION; break; case CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGBUS: case CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGSEGV: ecos_exception_number = CYGNUM_HAL_EXCEPTION_DATA_ACCESS; break; case CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGFPE: ecos_exception_number = CYGNUM_HAL_EXCEPTION_FPU; break; default: CYG_FAIL("Unknown signal"); break; } #ifdef CYGPKG_KERNEL_EXCEPTIONS // Deliver the signal, usually to the kernel, possibly to the // common HAL. The second argument should be the current // savestate, but that is not readily accessible. cyg_hal_deliver_exception(ecos_exception_number, (CYG_ADDRWORD) 0); // It is now necessary to restore the machine state, including // interrupts. In theory higher level code may have manipulated // the machine state to prevent any recurrence of the exception. // In practice the machine state is not readily accessible. HAL_RESTORE_INTERRUPTS(old); #else CYG_FAIL("Exception!!!"); for (;;); #endif } // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- // The clock support. This can be implemented using the setitimer() // and getitimer() calls. The kernel will install a suitable interrupt // handler for CYGNUM_HAL_INTERRUPT_RTC, but it depends on the HAL // for low-level manipulation of the clock hardware. // // There is a problem with HAL_CLOCK_READ(). The obvious // implementation would use getitimer(), but that has the wrong // behaviour: it is intended for fairly coarse intervals and works in // terms of system clock ticks, as opposed to a fine-grained // implementation that actually examines the system clock. Instead use // gettimeofday(). static struct cyg_hal_sys_timeval synth_clock = { 0, 0 }; void hal_clock_initialize(cyg_uint32 period) { struct cyg_hal_sys_itimerval timer; // Needed for hal_clock_read(), if HAL_CLOCK_READ() is used before // the first clock interrupt. cyg_hal_sys_gettimeofday(&synth_clock, (struct cyg_hal_sys_timezone*) 0); // The synthetic target clock resolution is in microseconds. A typical // value for the period will be 10000, corresponding to one timer // interrupt every 10ms. Set up a timer to interrupt in period us, // and again every period us after that. CYG_ASSERT( period < 1000000, "Clock interrupts should happen at least once per second"); timer.hal_it_interval.hal_tv_sec = 0; timer.hal_it_interval.hal_tv_usec = period; timer.hal_it_value.hal_tv_sec = 0; timer.hal_it_value.hal_tv_usec = period; if (0 != cyg_hal_sys_setitimer(CYG_HAL_SYS_ITIMER_REAL, &timer, (struct cyg_hal_sys_itimerval*) 0)) { CYG_FAIL("Failed to initialize the clock itimer"); } } static void synth_alrm_sighandler(int sig) { CYG_PRECONDITION((CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGALRM == sig), "Only SIGALRM should be handled here"); if (!hal_interrupts_enabled) { synth_sigalrm_pending = true; return; } // Interrupts were enabled, but must be blocked before any further processing. hal_interrupts_enabled = false; // Update the cached value of the clock for hal_clock_read() cyg_hal_sys_gettimeofday(&synth_clock, (struct cyg_hal_sys_timezone*) 0); // Update the interrupt status "register" to match pending interrupts // A timer signal means that IRQ 0 needs attention. synth_pending_isrs |= 0x01; // If any of the pending interrupts are not masked, invoke the // VSR. That will reenable interrupts. if (0 != (synth_pending_isrs & ~synth_masked_isrs)) { (*synth_VSR)(); } else { hal_interrupts_enabled = true; } // The VSR will have invoked interrupt_end() with interrupts // enabled, and they should still be enabled. CYG_ASSERT( hal_interrupts_enabled, "Interrupts should still be enabled on return from the VSR"); } // Implementing hal_clock_read(). gettimeofday() in conjunction with // synth_clock gives the time since the last clock tick in // microseconds, the correct unit for the synthetic target. cyg_uint32 hal_clock_read(void) { int elapsed; struct cyg_hal_sys_timeval now; cyg_hal_sys_gettimeofday(&now, (struct cyg_hal_sys_timezone*) 0); elapsed = (1000000 * (now.hal_tv_sec - synth_clock.hal_tv_sec)) + (now.hal_tv_usec - synth_clock.hal_tv_usec); return elapsed; } // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- // The signal handler for SIGIO. This can also be invoked by // hal_enable_interrupts() to catch up with any signals that arrived // while interrupts were disabled. SIGIO is raised by the auxiliary // when it requires attention, i.e. when one or more of the devices // want to raise an interrupt. Finding out exactly which interrupt(s) // are currently pending in the auxiliary requires communication with // the auxiliary. // // If interrupts are currently disabled then the signal cannot be // handled immediately. In particular SIGIO cannot be handled because // there may already be ongoing communication with the auxiliary. // Instead some volatile flags are used to keep track of which signals // were raised while interrupts were disabled. // // It might be better to perform the interaction with the auxiliary // as soon as possible, i.e. either in the SIGIO handler or when the // current communication completes. That way the mask of pending // interrupts would remain up to date even when interrupts are // disabled, thus allowing applications to run in polled mode. // A little utility called when the auxiliary has been asked to exit, // implicitly affecting this application as well. The sole purpose // of this function is to put a suitably-named function on the stack // to make it more obvious from inside gdb what is happening. static void synth_io_handle_shutdown_request_from_auxiliary(void) { cyg_hal_sys_exit(0); } static void synth_io_sighandler(int sig) { CYG_PRECONDITION((CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGIO == sig), "Only SIGIO should be handled here"); if (!hal_interrupts_enabled) { synth_sigio_pending = true; return; } // Interrupts were enabled, but must be blocked before any further processing. hal_interrupts_enabled = false; // Update the interrupt status "register" to match pending interrupts // Contact the auxiliary to find out what interrupts are currently pending there. // If there is no auxiliary at present, e.g. because it has just terminated // and things are generally somewhat messy, ignore it. // // This code also deals with the case where the user has requested program // termination. It would be wrong for the auxiliary to just exit, since the // application could not distinguish that case from a crash. Instead the // auxiliary can optionally return an additional byte of data, and if that // byte actually gets sent then that indicates pending termination. if (synth_auxiliary_running) { int result; int actual_len; unsigned char dummy[1]; synth_auxiliary_xchgmsg(SYNTH_DEV_AUXILIARY, SYNTH_AUXREQ_GET_IRQPENDING, 0, 0, (const unsigned char*) 0, 0, // The auxiliary does not need any additional data &result, dummy, &actual_len, 1); synth_pending_isrs |= result; if (actual_len) { // The auxiliary has been asked to terminate by the user. This // request has now been passed on to the eCos application. synth_io_handle_shutdown_request_from_auxiliary(); } } // If any of the pending interrupts are not masked, invoke the VSR if (0 != (synth_pending_isrs & ~synth_masked_isrs)) { (*synth_VSR)(); } else { hal_interrupts_enabled = true; } // The VSR will have invoked interrupt_end() with interrupts // enabled, and they should still be enabled. CYG_ASSERT( hal_interrupts_enabled, "Interrupts should still be enabled on return from the VSR"); } // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Here we define an action to do in the idle thread. For the // synthetic target it makes no sense to spin eating processor time // that other processes could make use of. Instead we call select. The // itimer will still go off and kick the scheduler back into life, // giving us an escape path from the select. There is one problem: in // some configurations, e.g. when preemption is disabled, the idle // thread must yield continuously rather than blocking. void hal_idle_thread_action(cyg_uint32 loop_count) { #ifndef CYGIMP_HAL_IDLE_THREAD_SPIN cyg_hal_sys__newselect(0, (struct cyg_hal_sys_fd_set*) 0, (struct cyg_hal_sys_fd_set*) 0, (struct cyg_hal_sys_fd_set*) 0, (struct cyg_hal_sys_timeval*) 0); #endif CYG_UNUSED_PARAM(cyg_uint32, loop_count); } // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- // The I/O auxiliary. // // I/O happens via an auxiliary process. During startup this code attempts // to locate and execute a program ecosynth which should be installed in // ../libexec/ecosynth relative to some directory on the search path. // Subsequent I/O operations involve interacting with this auxiliary. #define MAKESTRING1(a) #a #define MAKESTRING2(a) MAKESTRING1(a) #define AUXILIARY "../libexec/ecos/hal/synth/arch/" MAKESTRING2(CYGPKG_HAL_SYNTH) "/ecosynth" // Is the auxiliary up and running? cyg_bool synth_auxiliary_running = false; // The pipes to and from the auxiliary. static int to_aux = -1; static int from_aux = -1; // Attempt to start up the auxiliary. Note that this happens early on // during system initialization so it is "known" that the world is // still simple, e.g. that no other files have been opened. static void synth_start_auxiliary(void) { #define BUFSIZE 256 char filename[BUFSIZE]; const char* path = 0; int i, j; cyg_bool found = false; int to_aux_pipe[2]; int from_aux_pipe[2]; int child; int aux_version; #if 1 // Check for a command line argument -io. Only run the auxiliary if this // argument is provided, i.e. default to traditional behaviour. for (i = 1; i < cyg_hal_sys_argc; i++) { const char* tmp = cyg_hal_sys_argv[i]; if ('-' == *tmp) { // Arguments beyond -- are reserved for use by the application, // and should not be interpreted by the HAL itself or by ecosynth. if (('-' == tmp[1]) && ('\0' == tmp[2])) { break; } tmp++; if ('-' == *tmp) { // Do not distinguish between -io and --io tmp++; } if (('i' == tmp[0]) && ('o' == tmp[1]) && ('\0' == tmp[2])) { found = 1; break; } } } if (!found) { return; } #else // Check for a command line argument -ni or -nio. Always run the // auxiliary unless this argument is given, i.e. default to full // I/O support. for (i = 1; i < cyg_hal_sys_argc; i++) { const char* tmp = cyg_hal_sys_argv[i]; if ('-' == *tmp) { if (('-' == tmp[1]) && ('\0' == tmp[2])) { break; } tmp++; if ('-' == *tmp) { tmp++; } if ('n' == *tmp) { tmp++; if ('i' == *tmp) { tmp++; if ('\0' == *tmp) { found = 1; // -ni or --ni break; } if (('o' == *tmp) && ('\0' == tmp[1])) { found = 1; // -nio or --nio break; } } } } } if (found) { return; } #endif // The auxiliary must be found relative to the current search path, // so look for a PATH= environment variable. for (i = 0; (0 == path) && (0 != cyg_hal_sys_environ[i]); i++) { const char *var = cyg_hal_sys_environ[i]; if (('P' == var[0]) && ('A' == var[1]) && ('T' == var[2]) && ('H' == var[3]) && ('=' == var[4])) { path = var + 5; } } if (0 == path) { // Very unlikely, but just in case. path = ".:/bin:/usr/bin"; } found = 0; while (!found && ('\0' != *path)) { // for every entry in the path char *tmp = AUXILIARY; j = 0; // As a special case, an empty string in the path corresponds to the // current directory. if (':' == *path) { filename[j++] = '.'; path++; } else { while ((j < BUFSIZE) && ('\0' != *path) && (':' != *path)) { filename[j++] = *path++; } // If not at the end of the search path, move on to the next entry. if ('\0' != *path) { while ((':' != *path) && ('\0' != *path)) { path++; } if (':' == *path) { path++; } } } // Now append a directory separator, and then the name of the executable. if (j < BUFSIZE) { filename[j++] = '/'; } while ((j < BUFSIZE) && ('\0' != *tmp)) { filename[j++] = *tmp++; } // If there has been a buffer overflow, skip this entry. if (j == BUFSIZE) { filename[BUFSIZE-1] = '\0'; diag_printf("Warning: buffer limit reached while searching PATH for the I/O auxiliary.\n"); diag_printf(" : skipping current entry.\n"); } else { // filename now contains a possible match for the auxiliary. filename[j++] = '\0'; if (0 == cyg_hal_sys_access(filename, CYG_HAL_SYS_X_OK)) { found = true; } } } #undef BUFSIZE if (!found) { diag_printf("Error: unable to find the I/O auxiliary program on the current search PATH\n"); diag_printf(" : please install the appropriate host-side tools.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } // An apparently valid executable exists (or at the very least it existed...), // so create the pipes that will be used for communication. if ((0 != cyg_hal_sys_pipe(to_aux_pipe)) || (0 != cyg_hal_sys_pipe(from_aux_pipe))) { diag_printf("Error: unable to set up pipes for communicating with the I/O auxiliary.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } // Time to fork(). child = cyg_hal_sys_fork(); if (child < 0) { diag_printf("Error: failed to fork() process for the I/O auxiliary.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } else if (child == 0) { cyg_bool found_dotdot; // There should not be any problems rearranging the file descriptors as desired... cyg_bool unexpected_error = 0; // In the child process. Close unwanted file descriptors, then some dup2'ing, // and execve() the I/O auxiliary. The auxiliary will inherit stdin, // stdout and stderr from the eCos application, so that functions like // printf() work as expected. In addition fd 3 will be the pipe from // the eCos application and fd 4 the pipe to the application. It is possible // that the eCos application was run from some process other than a shell // and hence that file descriptors 3 and 4 are already in use, but that is not // supported. One possible workaround would be to close all file descriptors // >= 3, another would be to munge the argument vector passing the file // descriptors actually being used. unexpected_error |= (0 != cyg_hal_sys_close(to_aux_pipe[1])); unexpected_error |= (0 != cyg_hal_sys_close(from_aux_pipe[0])); if (3 != to_aux_pipe[0]) { if (3 == from_aux_pipe[1]) { // Because to_aux_pipe[] was set up first it should have received file descriptors 3 and 4. diag_printf("Internal error: file descriptors have been allocated in an unusual order.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } else { unexpected_error |= (3 != cyg_hal_sys_dup2(to_aux_pipe[0], 3)); unexpected_error |= (0 != cyg_hal_sys_close(to_aux_pipe[0])); } } if (4 != from_aux_pipe[1]) { unexpected_error |= (4 != cyg_hal_sys_dup2(from_aux_pipe[1], 4)); unexpected_error |= (0 != cyg_hal_sys_close(from_aux_pipe[1])); } if (unexpected_error) { diag_printf("Error: internal error in auxiliary process, failed to manipulate pipes.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } // The arguments passed to the auxiliary are mostly those for // the synthetic target application, except for argv[0] which // is replaced with the auxiliary's pathname. The latter // currently holds at least one ../, and cleaning this up is // useful. // // If the argument vector contains -- then that and subsequent // arguments are not passed to the auxiliary. Instead such // arguments are reserved for use by the application. do { int len; for (len = 0; '\0' != filename[len]; len++) ; found_dotdot = false; for (i = 0; i < (len - 4); i++) { if (('/' == filename[i]) && ('.' == filename[i+1]) && ('.' == filename[i+2]) && ('/' == filename[i+3])) { j = i + 3; for ( --i; (i >= 0) && ('/' != filename[i]); i--) { CYG_EMPTY_STATEMENT; } if (i >= 0) { found_dotdot = true; do { i++; j++; filename[i] = filename[j]; } while ('\0' != filename[i]); } } } } while(found_dotdot); cyg_hal_sys_argv[0] = filename; for (i = 1; i < cyg_hal_sys_argc; i++) { const char* tmp = cyg_hal_sys_argv[i]; if (('-' == tmp[0]) && ('-' == tmp[1]) && ('\0' == tmp[2])) { cyg_hal_sys_argv[i] = (const char*) 0; break; } } cyg_hal_sys_execve(filename, cyg_hal_sys_argv, cyg_hal_sys_environ); // An execute error has occurred. Report this here, then exit. The // parent will detect a close on the pipe without having received // any data, and it will assume that a suitable diagnostic will have // been displayed already. diag_printf("Error: failed to execute the I/O auxiliary.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } else { int rc; char buf[1]; // Still executing the eCos application. // Do some cleaning-up. to_aux = to_aux_pipe[1]; from_aux = from_aux_pipe[0]; if ((0 != cyg_hal_sys_close(to_aux_pipe[0])) || (0 != cyg_hal_sys_close(from_aux_pipe[1]))) { diag_printf("Error: internal error in main process, failed to manipulate pipes.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } // It is now a good idea to block until the auxiliary is // ready, i.e. give it a chance to read in its configuration // files, load appropriate scripts, pop up windows, ... This // may take a couple of seconds or so. Once the auxiliary is // ready it will write a single byte down the pipe. This is // the only time that the auxiliary will write other than when // responding to a request. do { rc = cyg_hal_sys_read(from_aux, buf, 1); } while (-CYG_HAL_SYS_EINTR == rc); if (1 != rc) { // The auxiliary has not started up successfully, so exit // immediately. It should have generated appropriate // diagnostics. cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } } // At this point the auxiliary is up and running. It should not // generate any interrupts just yet since none of the devices have // been initialized. Remember that the auxiliary is now running, // so that the initialization routines for those devices can // figure out that they should interact with the auxiliary rather // than attempt anything manually. synth_auxiliary_running = true; // Make sure that the auxiliary is the right version. synth_auxiliary_xchgmsg(SYNTH_DEV_AUXILIARY, SYNTH_AUXREQ_GET_VERSION, 0, 0, (const unsigned char*) 0, 0, &aux_version, (unsigned char*) 0, (int*) 0, 0); if (SYNTH_AUXILIARY_PROTOCOL_VERSION != aux_version) { synth_auxiliary_running = false; diag_printf("Error: an incorrect version of the I/O auxiliary is installed\n" " Expected version %d, actual version %d\n" " Installed binary is %s\n", SYNTH_AUXILIARY_PROTOCOL_VERSION, aux_version, filename); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } } // Write a request to the I/O auxiliary, and optionally get back a // reply. The dev_id is 0 for messages intended for the auxiliary // itself, for example a device instantiation or a request for the // current interrupt sate. Otherwise it identifies a specific device. // The request code is specific to the device, and the two optional // arguments are specific to the request. void synth_auxiliary_xchgmsg(int devid, int reqcode, int arg1, int arg2, const unsigned char* txdata, int txlen, int* result, unsigned char* rxdata, int* actual_rxlen, int rxlen) { unsigned char request[SYNTH_REQUEST_LENGTH]; unsigned char reply[SYNTH_REPLY_LENGTH]; int rc; int reply_rxlen; cyg_bool_t old_isrstate; CYG_ASSERT(devid >= 0, "A valid device id should be supplied"); CYG_ASSERT((0 == txlen) || ((const unsigned char*)0 != txdata), "Data transmits require a transmit buffer"); CYG_ASSERT((0 == rxlen) || ((unsigned char*)0 != rxdata), "Data receives require a receive buffer"); CYG_ASSERT((0 == rxlen) || ((int*)0 != result), "If a reply is expected then space must be allocated"); // I/O interactions with the auxiliary must be atomic: a context switch in // between sending the header and the actual data would be bad. HAL_DISABLE_INTERRUPTS(old_isrstate); // The auxiliary should be running for the duration of this // exchange. However the auxiliary can disappear asynchronously, // so it is not possible for higher-level code to be sure that the // auxiliary is still running. // // If the auxiliary disappears during this call then usually this // will cause a SIGCHILD or SIGPIPE, both of which result in // termination. The exception is when the auxiliary decides to // shut down stdout for some reason without exiting - that has to // be detected in the read loop. if (synth_auxiliary_running) { request[SYNTH_REQUEST_DEVID_OFFSET + 0] = (devid >> 0) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_DEVID_OFFSET + 1] = (devid >> 8) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_DEVID_OFFSET + 2] = (devid >> 16) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_DEVID_OFFSET + 3] = (devid >> 24) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_REQUEST_OFFSET + 0] = (reqcode >> 0) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_REQUEST_OFFSET + 1] = (reqcode >> 8) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_REQUEST_OFFSET + 2] = (reqcode >> 16) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_REQUEST_OFFSET + 3] = (reqcode >> 24) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_ARG1_OFFSET + 0] = (arg1 >> 0) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_ARG1_OFFSET + 1] = (arg1 >> 8) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_ARG1_OFFSET + 2] = (arg1 >> 16) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_ARG1_OFFSET + 3] = (arg1 >> 24) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_ARG2_OFFSET + 0] = (arg2 >> 0) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_ARG2_OFFSET + 1] = (arg2 >> 8) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_ARG2_OFFSET + 2] = (arg2 >> 16) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_ARG2_OFFSET + 3] = (arg2 >> 24) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_TXLEN_OFFSET + 0] = (txlen >> 0) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_TXLEN_OFFSET + 1] = (txlen >> 8) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_TXLEN_OFFSET + 2] = (txlen >> 16) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_TXLEN_OFFSET + 3] = (txlen >> 24) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_RXLEN_OFFSET + 0] = (rxlen >> 0) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_RXLEN_OFFSET + 1] = (rxlen >> 8) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_RXLEN_OFFSET + 2] = (rxlen >> 16) & 0x0FF; request[SYNTH_REQUEST_RXLEN_OFFSET + 3] = ((rxlen >> 24) & 0x0FF) | (((int*)0 != result) ? 0x080 : 0); // sizeof(synth_auxiliary_request) < PIPE_BUF (4096) so a single write should be atomic, // subject only to incoming clock or SIGIO or child-related signals. do { rc = cyg_hal_sys_write(to_aux, (const void*) &request, SYNTH_REQUEST_LENGTH); } while (-CYG_HAL_SYS_EINTR == rc); // Is there any more data to be sent? if (0 < txlen) { int sent = 0; CYG_LOOP_INVARIANT(synth_auxiliary_running, "The auxiliary cannot just disappear"); while (sent < txlen) { rc = cyg_hal_sys_write(to_aux, (const void*) &(txdata[sent]), txlen - sent); if (-CYG_HAL_SYS_EINTR == rc) { continue; } else if (rc < 0) { diag_printf("Internal error: unexpected result %d when sending buffer to auxiliary.\n", rc); diag_printf(" : this application is exiting immediately.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } else { sent += rc; } } CYG_ASSERT(sent <= txlen, "Amount of data sent should not exceed requested size"); } // The auxiliary can now process this entire request. Is a reply expected? if ((int*)0 != result) { // The basic reply is also only a small number of bytes, so should be atomic. do { rc = cyg_hal_sys_read(from_aux, (void*) &reply, SYNTH_REPLY_LENGTH); } while (-CYG_HAL_SYS_EINTR == rc); if (rc <= 0) { if (rc < 0) { diag_printf("Internal error: unexpected result %d when receiving data from auxiliary.\n", rc); } else { diag_printf("Internal error: EOF detected on pipe from auxiliary.\n"); } diag_printf(" : this application is exiting immediately.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } CYG_ASSERT(SYNTH_REPLY_LENGTH == rc, "The correct amount of data should have been read"); // Replies are packed in Tcl and assumed to be two 32-bit // little-endian integers. *result = (reply[SYNTH_REPLY_RESULT_OFFSET + 3] << 24) | (reply[SYNTH_REPLY_RESULT_OFFSET + 2] << 16) | (reply[SYNTH_REPLY_RESULT_OFFSET + 1] << 8) | (reply[SYNTH_REPLY_RESULT_OFFSET + 0] << 0); reply_rxlen = (reply[SYNTH_REPLY_RXLEN_OFFSET + 3] << 24) | (reply[SYNTH_REPLY_RXLEN_OFFSET + 2] << 16) | (reply[SYNTH_REPLY_RXLEN_OFFSET + 1] << 8) | (reply[SYNTH_REPLY_RXLEN_OFFSET + 0] << 0); CYG_ASSERT(reply_rxlen <= rxlen, "The auxiliary should not be sending more data than was requested."); if ((int*)0 != actual_rxlen) { *actual_rxlen = reply_rxlen; } if (reply_rxlen) { int received = 0; while (received < reply_rxlen) { rc = cyg_hal_sys_read(from_aux, (void*) &(rxdata[received]), reply_rxlen - received); if (-CYG_HAL_SYS_EINTR == rc) { continue; } else if (rc <= 0) { if (rc < 0) { diag_printf("Internal error: unexpected result %d when receiving data from auxiliary.\n", rc); } else { diag_printf("Internal error: EOF detected on pipe from auxiliary.\n"); } diag_printf(" : this application is exiting immediately.\n"); } else { received += rc; } } CYG_ASSERT(received == reply_rxlen, "Amount received should be exact"); } } } HAL_RESTORE_INTERRUPTS(old_isrstate); } // Instantiate a device. This takes arguments such as // devs/eth/synth/ecosynth, current, ethernet, eth0, and 200x100 If // the package and version are NULL strings then the device being // initialized is application-specific and does not belong to any // particular package. int synth_auxiliary_instantiate(const char* pkg, const char* version, const char* devtype, const char* devinst, const char* devdata) { int result = -1; char buf[512 + 1]; const char* str; int index; CYG_ASSERT((const char*)0 != devtype, "Device instantiations must specify a valid device type"); CYG_ASSERT((((const char*)0 != pkg) && ((const char*)0 != version)) || \ (((const char*)0 == pkg) && ((const char*)0 == version)), "If a package is specified then the version must be supplied as well"); index = 0; str = pkg; if ((const char*)0 == str) { str = ""; } while ( (index < 512) && ('\0' != *str) ) { buf[index++] = *str++; } if (index < 512) buf[index++] = '\0'; str = version; if ((const char*)0 == str) { str = ""; } while ((index < 512) && ('\0' != *str) ) { buf[index++] = *str++; } if (index < 512) buf[index++] = '\0'; for (str = devtype; (index < 512) && ('\0' != *str); ) { buf[index++] = *str++; } if (index < 512) buf[index++] = '\0'; if ((const char*)0 != devinst) { for (str = devinst; (index < 512) && ('\0' != *str); ) { buf[index++] = *str++; } } if (index < 512) buf[index++] = '\0'; if ((const char*)0 != devdata) { for (str = devdata; (index < 512) && ('\0' != *str); ) { buf[index++] = *str++; } } if (index < 512) { buf[index++] = '\0'; } else { diag_printf("Internal error: buffer overflow constructing instantiate request for auxiliary.\n"); diag_printf(" : this application is exiting immediately.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } if (synth_auxiliary_running) { synth_auxiliary_xchgmsg(SYNTH_DEV_AUXILIARY, SYNTH_AUXREQ_INSTANTIATE, 0, 0, buf, index, &result, (unsigned char*) 0, (int *) 0, 0); } return result; } // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- // SIGPIPE and SIGCHLD are special, related to the auxiliary process. // // A SIGPIPE can only happen when the application is writing to the // auxiliary, which only happens inside synth_auxiliary_xchgmsg() (this // assumes that no other code is writing down a pipe, e.g. to interact // with a process other than the standard I/O auxiliary). Either the // auxiliary has explicitly closed the pipe, which it is not supposed // to do, or more likely it has exited. Either way, there is little // point in continuing - unless we already know that the system is // shutting down. static void synth_pipe_sighandler(int sig) { CYG_ASSERT(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGPIPE == sig, "The right signal handler should be invoked"); if (synth_auxiliary_running) { synth_auxiliary_running = false; diag_printf("Internal error: communication with the I/O auxiliary has been lost.\n"); diag_printf(" : this application is exiting immediately.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } } // Similarly it is assumed that there will be no child processes other than // the auxiliary. Therefore a SIGCHLD indicates that the auxiliary has // terminated unexpectedly. This is bad: normal termination involves // the application exiting and the auxiliary terminating in response, // not the other way around. // // As a special case, if it is known that the auxiliary is not currently // usable then the signal is ignored. This copes with the situation where // the auxiliary has just been fork()'d but has failed to initialize, or // alternatively where the whole system is in the process of shutting down // cleanly and it happens that the auxiliary got there first. static void synth_chld_sighandler(int sig) { CYG_ASSERT(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGCHLD == sig, "The right signal handler should be invoked"); if (synth_auxiliary_running) { synth_auxiliary_running = false; diag_printf("Internal error: the I/O auxiliary has terminated unexpectedly.\n"); diag_printf(" : this application is exiting immediately.\n"); cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } } // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Initialization void synth_hardware_init(void) { struct cyg_hal_sys_sigaction action; struct cyg_hal_sys_sigset_t blocked; int i; // Set up a sigprocmask to block all signals except the ones we // particularly want to handle. However do not block the tty // signals - the ability to ctrl-C a program is important. CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGFILLSET(&blocked); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGILL); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGBUS); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGFPE); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGSEGV); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGPIPE); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGCHLD); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGALRM); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGIO); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGHUP); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGINT); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGQUIT); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGTERM); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGCONT); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGSTOP); CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGDELSET(&blocked, CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGTSTP); if (0 != cyg_hal_sys_sigprocmask(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIG_SETMASK, &blocked, (cyg_hal_sys_sigset_t*) 0)) { CYG_FAIL("Failed to initialize sigprocmask"); } // Now set up the VSR and ISR statics synth_VSR = &synth_default_vsr; for (i = 0; i < CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_COUNT; i++) { synth_isr_handlers[i].isr = &synth_default_isr; synth_isr_handlers[i].data = (CYG_ADDRWORD) 0; synth_isr_handlers[i].obj = (CYG_ADDRESS) 0; synth_isr_handlers[i].pri = CYGNUM_HAL_ISR_COUNT; } // Install signal handlers for SIGIO and SIGALRM, the two signals // that may cause the VSR to run. SA_NODEFER is important: it // means that the current signal will not be blocked while the // signal handler is running. Combined with a mask of 0, it means // that the sigprocmask does not change when a signal handler is // invoked, giving eCos the flexibility to switch to other threads // instead of having the signal handler return immediately. action.hal_mask = 0; action.hal_flags = CYG_HAL_SYS_SA_NODEFER; action.hal_bogus = (void (*)(int)) 0; action.hal_handler = &synth_alrm_sighandler; if (0 != cyg_hal_sys_sigaction(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGALRM, &action, (struct cyg_hal_sys_sigaction*) 0)) { CYG_FAIL("Failed to install signal handler for SIGALRM"); } action.hal_handler = &synth_io_sighandler; if (0 != cyg_hal_sys_sigaction(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGIO, &action, (struct cyg_hal_sys_sigaction*) 0)) { CYG_FAIL("Failed to install signal handler for SIGIO"); } // Install handlers for the various exceptions. For now these also // operate with unchanged sigprocmasks, allowing nested // exceptions. It is not clear that this is entirely a good idea, // but in practice these exceptions will usually be handled by gdb // anyway. action.hal_handler = &synth_exception_sighandler; if (0 != cyg_hal_sys_sigaction(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGILL, &action, (struct cyg_hal_sys_sigaction*) 0)) { CYG_FAIL("Failed to install signal handler for SIGILL"); } if (0 != cyg_hal_sys_sigaction(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGBUS, &action, (struct cyg_hal_sys_sigaction*) 0)) { CYG_FAIL("Failed to install signal handler for SIGBUS"); } if (0 != cyg_hal_sys_sigaction(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGFPE, &action, (struct cyg_hal_sys_sigaction*) 0)) { CYG_FAIL("Failed to install signal handler for SIGFPE"); } if (0 != cyg_hal_sys_sigaction(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGSEGV, &action, (struct cyg_hal_sys_sigaction*) 0)) { CYG_FAIL("Failed to install signal handler for SIGSEGV"); } // Also cope with SIGCHLD and SIGPIPE. SIGCHLD indicates that the // auxiliary has terminated, which is a bad thing. SIGPIPE // indicates that a write to the auxiliary has terminated, but // the error condition was caught at a different stage. action.hal_handler = &synth_pipe_sighandler; if (0 != cyg_hal_sys_sigaction(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGPIPE, &action, (struct cyg_hal_sys_sigaction*) 0)) { CYG_FAIL("Failed to install signal handler for SIGPIPE"); } action.hal_handler = &synth_chld_sighandler; action.hal_flags |= CYG_HAL_SYS_SA_NOCLDSTOP | CYG_HAL_SYS_SA_NOCLDWAIT; if (0 != cyg_hal_sys_sigaction(CYG_HAL_SYS_SIGCHLD, &action, (struct cyg_hal_sys_sigaction*) 0)) { CYG_FAIL("Failed to install signal handler for SIGCHLD"); } // Start up the auxiliary process. synth_start_auxiliary(); // All done. At this stage interrupts are still disabled, no ISRs // have been installed, and the clock is not yet ticking. // Exceptions can come in and will be processed normally. SIGIO // and SIGALRM could come in, but nothing has yet been done // to make that happen. } // Second-stage hardware init. This is called after all C++ static // constructors have been run, which should mean that all device // drivers have been initialized and will have performed appropriate // interactions with the I/O auxiliary. There should now be a // message exchange with the auxiliary to let it know that there will // not be any more devices, allowing it to remove unwanted frames, // run the user's mainrc.tcl script, and so on. Also this is the // time that the various toplevels get mapped on to the display. // // This request blocks until the auxiliary is ready. The return value // indicates whether or not any errors occurred on the auxiliary side, // and that those errors have not been suppressed using --keep-going void synth_hardware_init2(void) { if (synth_auxiliary_running) { int result; synth_auxiliary_xchgmsg(SYNTH_DEV_AUXILIARY, SYNTH_AUXREQ_CONSTRUCTORS_DONE, 0, 0, (const unsigned char*) 0, 0, &result, (unsigned char*) 0, (int*) 0, 0); if ( !result ) { cyg_hal_sys_exit(1); } } }
Go to most recent revision | Compare with Previous | Blame | View Log