u-boot/cpu/mpc85xx/commproc.c
Kumar Gala aafeefbdb8 Stop using immap_t for cpm offset on 85xx
In the future the offsets to various blocks may not be in same location.
Move to using CFG_MPC85xx_CPM_ADDR as the base of the CPM registers
instead of getting it via &immap->im_cpm.

Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <galak@kernel.crashing.org>
2007-12-11 22:34:19 -06:00

209 lines
5.1 KiB
C

/*
* Adapted for Motorola MPC8560 chips
* Xianghua Xiao <x.xiao@motorola.com>
*
* This file is based on "arch/ppc/8260_io/commproc.c" - here is it's
* copyright notice:
*
* General Purpose functions for the global management of the
* 8220 Communication Processor Module.
* Copyright (c) 1999 Dan Malek (dmalek@jlc.net)
* Copyright (c) 2000 MontaVista Software, Inc (source@mvista.com)
* 2.3.99 Updates
* Copyright (c) 2003 Motorola,Inc.
*
* In addition to the individual control of the communication
* channels, there are a few functions that globally affect the
* communication processor.
*
* Buffer descriptors must be allocated from the dual ported memory
* space. The allocator for that is here. When the communication
* process is reset, we reclaim the memory available. There is
* currently no deallocator for this memory.
*/
#include <common.h>
#include <asm/cpm_85xx.h>
DECLARE_GLOBAL_DATA_PTR;
#if defined(CONFIG_CPM2)
/*
* because we have stack and init data in dual port ram
* we must reduce the size
*/
#undef CPM_DATAONLY_SIZE
#define CPM_DATAONLY_SIZE ((uint)(8 * 1024) - CPM_DATAONLY_BASE)
void
m8560_cpm_reset(void)
{
volatile ccsr_cpm_t *cpm = (ccsr_cpm_t *)CFG_MPC85xx_CPM_ADDR;
volatile ulong count;
gd = (gd_t *) (CFG_INIT_RAM_ADDR + CFG_GBL_DATA_OFFSET);
/* Reclaim the DP memory for our use.
*/
gd->dp_alloc_base = CPM_DATAONLY_BASE;
gd->dp_alloc_top = gd->dp_alloc_base + CPM_DATAONLY_SIZE;
/*
* Reset CPM
*/
cpm->im_cpm_cp.cpcr = CPM_CR_RST;
count = 0;
do { /* Spin until command processed */
__asm__ __volatile__ ("eieio");
} while ((cpm->im_cpm_cp.cpcr & CPM_CR_FLG) && ++count < 1000000);
}
/* Allocate some memory from the dual ported ram.
* To help protocols with object alignment restrictions, we do that
* if they ask.
*/
uint
m8560_cpm_dpalloc(uint size, uint align)
{
volatile ccsr_cpm_t *cpm = (ccsr_cpm_t *)CFG_MPC85xx_CPM_ADDR;
uint retloc;
uint align_mask, off;
uint savebase;
align_mask = align - 1;
savebase = gd->dp_alloc_base;
if ((off = (gd->dp_alloc_base & align_mask)) != 0)
gd->dp_alloc_base += (align - off);
if ((off = size & align_mask) != 0)
size += align - off;
if ((gd->dp_alloc_base + size) >= gd->dp_alloc_top) {
gd->dp_alloc_base = savebase;
panic("m8560_cpm_dpalloc: ran out of dual port ram!");
}
retloc = gd->dp_alloc_base;
gd->dp_alloc_base += size;
memset((void *)&(cpm->im_dprambase[retloc]), 0, size);
return(retloc);
}
/* We also own one page of host buffer space for the allocation of
* UART "fifos" and the like.
*/
uint
m8560_cpm_hostalloc(uint size, uint align)
{
/* the host might not even have RAM yet - just use dual port RAM */
return (m8560_cpm_dpalloc(size, align));
}
/* Set a baud rate generator. This needs lots of work. There are
* eight BRGs, which can be connected to the CPM channels or output
* as clocks. The BRGs are in two different block of internal
* memory mapped space.
* The baud rate clock is the system clock divided by something.
* It was set up long ago during the initial boot phase and is
* is given to us.
* Baud rate clocks are zero-based in the driver code (as that maps
* to port numbers). Documentation uses 1-based numbering.
*/
#define BRG_INT_CLK gd->brg_clk
#define BRG_UART_CLK ((BRG_INT_CLK + 15) / 16)
/* This function is used by UARTS, or anything else that uses a 16x
* oversampled clock.
*/
void
m8560_cpm_setbrg(uint brg, uint rate)
{
volatile ccsr_cpm_t *cpm = (ccsr_cpm_t *)CFG_MPC85xx_CPM_ADDR;
volatile uint *bp;
/* This is good enough to get SMCs running.....
*/
if (brg < 4) {
bp = (uint *)&(cpm->im_cpm_brg1.brgc1);
}
else {
bp = (uint *)&(cpm->im_cpm_brg2.brgc5);
brg -= 4;
}
bp += brg;
*bp = (((((BRG_UART_CLK+rate-1)/rate)-1)&0xfff)<<1)|CPM_BRG_EN;
}
/* This function is used to set high speed synchronous baud rate
* clocks.
*/
void
m8560_cpm_fastbrg(uint brg, uint rate, int div16)
{
volatile ccsr_cpm_t *cpm = (ccsr_cpm_t *)CFG_MPC85xx_CPM_ADDR;
volatile uint *bp;
/* This is good enough to get SMCs running.....
*/
if (brg < 4) {
bp = (uint *)&(cpm->im_cpm_brg1.brgc1);
}
else {
bp = (uint *)&(cpm->im_cpm_brg2.brgc5);
brg -= 4;
}
bp += brg;
*bp = (((((BRG_INT_CLK+rate-1)/rate)-1)&0xfff)<<1)|CPM_BRG_EN;
if (div16)
*bp |= CPM_BRG_DIV16;
}
/* This function is used to set baud rate generators using an external
* clock source and 16x oversampling.
*/
void
m8560_cpm_extcbrg(uint brg, uint rate, uint extclk, int pinsel)
{
volatile ccsr_cpm_t *cpm = (ccsr_cpm_t *)CFG_MPC85xx_CPM_ADDR;
volatile uint *bp;
if (brg < 4) {
bp = (uint *)&(cpm->im_cpm_brg1.brgc1);
}
else {
bp = (uint *)&(cpm->im_cpm_brg2.brgc5);
brg -= 4;
}
bp += brg;
*bp = ((((((extclk/16)+rate-1)/rate)-1)&0xfff)<<1)|CPM_BRG_EN;
if (pinsel == 0)
*bp |= CPM_BRG_EXTC_CLK3_9;
else
*bp |= CPM_BRG_EXTC_CLK5_15;
}
#ifdef CONFIG_POST
void post_word_store (ulong a)
{
volatile ulong *save_addr =
(volatile ulong *)(CFG_IMMR + CPM_POST_WORD_ADDR);
*save_addr = a;
}
ulong post_word_load (void)
{
volatile ulong *save_addr =
(volatile ulong *)(CFG_IMMR + CPM_POST_WORD_ADDR);
return *save_addr;
}
#endif /* CONFIG_POST */
#endif /* CONFIG_CPM2 */