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/*
* FreeRTOS Kernel <DEVELOPMENT BRANCH>
* Copyright (C) 2015-2019 Cadence Design Systems, Inc.
* Copyright (C) 2021 Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of
* this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in
* the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to
* use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of
* the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so,
* subject to the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
* copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS
* FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR
* COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER
* IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
* CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
*
* https://www.FreeRTOS.org
* https://github.com/FreeRTOS
*
*/
/*
* XTENSA CONTEXT FRAMES AND MACROS FOR RTOS ASSEMBLER SOURCES
*
* This header contains definitions and macros for use primarily by Xtensa
* RTOS assembly coded source files. It includes and uses the Xtensa hardware
* abstraction layer (HAL) to deal with config specifics. It may also be
* included in C source files.
*
* !! Supports only Xtensa Exception Architecture 2 (XEA2). XEA1 not supported. !!
*
* NOTE: The Xtensa architecture requires stack pointer alignment to 16 bytes.
*/
#ifndef XTENSA_CONTEXT_H
#define XTENSA_CONTEXT_H
#ifdef __ASSEMBLER__
#include <xtensa/coreasm.h>
#endif
#include <xtensa/config/tie.h>
#include <xtensa/corebits.h>
#include <xtensa/config/system.h>
/* Align a value up to nearest n-byte boundary, where n is a power of 2. */
#define ALIGNUP(n, val) (((val) + (n)-1) & -(n))
/*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Macros that help define structures for both C and assembler.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#if defined(_ASMLANGUAGE) || defined(__ASSEMBLER__)
#define STRUCT_BEGIN .pushsection .text; .struct 0
#define STRUCT_FIELD(ctype,size,asname,name) asname: .space size
#define STRUCT_AFIELD(ctype,size,asname,name,n) asname: .space (size)*(n)
#define STRUCT_END(sname) sname##Size:; .popsection
#else
#define STRUCT_BEGIN typedef struct {
#define STRUCT_FIELD(ctype,size,asname,name) ctype name;
#define STRUCT_AFIELD(ctype,size,asname,name,n) ctype name[n];
#define STRUCT_END(sname) } sname;
#endif //_ASMLANGUAGE || __ASSEMBLER__
/*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INTERRUPT/EXCEPTION STACK FRAME FOR A THREAD OR NESTED INTERRUPT
A stack frame of this structure is allocated for any interrupt or exception.
It goes on the current stack. If the RTOS has a system stack for handling
interrupts, every thread stack must allow space for just one interrupt stack
frame, then nested interrupt stack frames go on the system stack.
The frame includes basic registers (explicit) and "extra" registers introduced
by user TIE or the use of the MAC16 option in the user's Xtensa config.
The frame size is minimized by omitting regs not applicable to user's config.
For Windowed ABI, this stack frame includes the interruptee's base save area,
another base save area to manage gcc nested functions, and a little temporary
space to help manage the spilling of the register windows.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
STRUCT_BEGIN
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_EXIT, exit) /* exit point for dispatch */
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_PC, pc) /* return PC */
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_PS, ps) /* return PS */
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A0, a0)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A1, a1) /* stack pointer before interrupt */
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A2, a2)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A3, a3)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A4, a4)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A5, a5)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A6, a6)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A7, a7)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A8, a8)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A9, a9)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A10, a10)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A11, a11)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A12, a12)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A13, a13)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A14, a14)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_A15, a15)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_SAR, sar)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_EXCCAUSE, exccause)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_EXCVADDR, excvaddr)
#if XCHAL_HAVE_LOOPS
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_LBEG, lbeg)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_LEND, lend)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_LCOUNT, lcount)
#endif
#ifndef __XTENSA_CALL0_ABI__
/* Temporary space for saving stuff during window spill */
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_TMP0, tmp0)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_TMP1, tmp1)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_TMP2, tmp2)
#endif
#ifdef XT_USE_SWPRI
/* Storage for virtual priority mask */
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_VPRI, vpri)
#endif
#ifdef XT_USE_OVLY
/* Storage for overlay state */
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_STK_OVLY, ovly)
#endif
STRUCT_END(XtExcFrame)
#if defined(_ASMLANGUAGE) || defined(__ASSEMBLER__)
#define XT_STK_NEXT1 XtExcFrameSize
#else
#define XT_STK_NEXT1 sizeof(XtExcFrame)
#endif
/* Allocate extra storage if needed */
#if XCHAL_EXTRA_SA_SIZE != 0
#if XCHAL_EXTRA_SA_ALIGN <= 16
#define XT_STK_EXTRA ALIGNUP(XCHAL_EXTRA_SA_ALIGN, XT_STK_NEXT1)
#else
/* If need more alignment than stack, add space for dynamic alignment */
#define XT_STK_EXTRA (ALIGNUP(XCHAL_EXTRA_SA_ALIGN, XT_STK_NEXT1) + XCHAL_EXTRA_SA_ALIGN)
#endif
#define XT_STK_NEXT2 (XT_STK_EXTRA + XCHAL_EXTRA_SA_SIZE)
#else
#define XT_STK_NEXT2 XT_STK_NEXT1
#endif
/*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This is the frame size. Add space for 4 registers (interruptee's base save
area) and some space for gcc nested functions if any.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#define XT_STK_FRMSZ (ALIGNUP(0x10, XT_STK_NEXT2) + 0x20)
/*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOLICITED STACK FRAME FOR A THREAD
A stack frame of this structure is allocated whenever a thread enters the
RTOS kernel intentionally (and synchronously) to submit to thread scheduling.
It goes on the current thread's stack.
The solicited frame only includes registers that are required to be preserved
by the callee according to the compiler's ABI conventions, some space to save
the return address for returning to the caller, and the caller's PS register.
For Windowed ABI, this stack frame includes the caller's base save area.
Note on XT_SOL_EXIT field:
It is necessary to distinguish a solicited from an interrupt stack frame.
This field corresponds to XT_STK_EXIT in the interrupt stack frame and is
always at the same offset (0). It can be written with a code (usually 0)
to distinguish a solicted frame from an interrupt frame. An RTOS port may
opt to ignore this field if it has another way of distinguishing frames.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
STRUCT_BEGIN
#ifdef __XTENSA_CALL0_ABI__
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_EXIT, exit)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_PC, pc)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_PS, ps)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_NEXT, next)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_A12, a12) /* should be on 16-byte alignment */
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_A13, a13)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_A14, a14)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_A15, a15)
#else
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_EXIT, exit)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_PC, pc)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_PS, ps)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_NEXT, next)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_A0, a0) /* should be on 16-byte alignment */
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_A1, a1)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_A2, a2)
STRUCT_FIELD (long, 4, XT_SOL_A3, a3)
#endif
STRUCT_END(XtSolFrame)
/* Size of solicited stack frame */
#define XT_SOL_FRMSZ ALIGNUP(0x10, XtSolFrameSize)
/*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CO-PROCESSOR STATE SAVE AREA FOR A THREAD
The RTOS must provide an area per thread to save the state of co-processors
when that thread does not have control. Co-processors are context-switched
lazily (on demand) only when a new thread uses a co-processor instruction,
otherwise a thread retains ownership of the co-processor even when it loses
control of the processor. An Xtensa co-processor exception is triggered when
any co-processor instruction is executed by a thread that is not the owner,
and the context switch of that co-processor is then peformed by the handler.
Ownership represents which thread's state is currently in the co-processor.
Co-processors may not be used by interrupt or exception handlers. If an
co-processor instruction is executed by an interrupt or exception handler,
the co-processor exception handler will trigger a kernel panic and freeze.
This restriction is introduced to reduce the overhead of saving and restoring
co-processor state (which can be quite large) and in particular remove that
overhead from interrupt handlers.
The co-processor state save area may be in any convenient per-thread location
such as in the thread control block or above the thread stack area. It need
not be in the interrupt stack frame since interrupts don't use co-processors.
Along with the save area for each co-processor, two bitmasks with flags per
co-processor (laid out as in the CPENABLE reg) help manage context-switching
co-processors as efficiently as possible:
XT_CPENABLE
The contents of a non-running thread's CPENABLE register.
It represents the co-processors owned (and whose state is still needed)
by the thread. When a thread is preempted, its CPENABLE is saved here.
When a thread solicits a context-swtich, its CPENABLE is cleared - the
compiler has saved the (caller-saved) co-proc state if it needs to.
When a non-running thread loses ownership of a CP, its bit is cleared.
When a thread runs, it's XT_CPENABLE is loaded into the CPENABLE reg.
Avoids co-processor exceptions when no change of ownership is needed.
XT_CPSTORED
A bitmask with the same layout as CPENABLE, a bit per co-processor.
Indicates whether the state of each co-processor is saved in the state
save area. When a thread enters the kernel, only the state of co-procs
still enabled in CPENABLE is saved. When the co-processor exception
handler assigns ownership of a co-processor to a thread, it restores
the saved state only if this bit is set, and clears this bit.
XT_CP_CS_ST
A bitmask with the same layout as CPENABLE, a bit per co-processor.
Indicates whether callee-saved state is saved in the state save area.
Callee-saved state is saved by itself on a solicited context switch,
and restored when needed by the coprocessor exception handler.
Unsolicited switches will cause the entire coprocessor to be saved
when necessary.
XT_CP_ASA
Pointer to the aligned save area. Allows it to be aligned more than
the overall save area (which might only be stack-aligned or TCB-aligned).
Especially relevant for Xtensa cores configured with a very large data
path that requires alignment greater than 16 bytes (ABI stack alignment).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#if XCHAL_CP_NUM > 0
/* Offsets of each coprocessor save area within the 'aligned save area': */
#define XT_CP0_SA 0
#define XT_CP1_SA ALIGNUP(XCHAL_CP1_SA_ALIGN, XT_CP0_SA + XCHAL_CP0_SA_SIZE)
#define XT_CP2_SA ALIGNUP(XCHAL_CP2_SA_ALIGN, XT_CP1_SA + XCHAL_CP1_SA_SIZE)
#define XT_CP3_SA ALIGNUP(XCHAL_CP3_SA_ALIGN, XT_CP2_SA + XCHAL_CP2_SA_SIZE)
#define XT_CP4_SA ALIGNUP(XCHAL_CP4_SA_ALIGN, XT_CP3_SA + XCHAL_CP3_SA_SIZE)
#define XT_CP5_SA ALIGNUP(XCHAL_CP5_SA_ALIGN, XT_CP4_SA + XCHAL_CP4_SA_SIZE)
#define XT_CP6_SA ALIGNUP(XCHAL_CP6_SA_ALIGN, XT_CP5_SA + XCHAL_CP5_SA_SIZE)
#define XT_CP7_SA ALIGNUP(XCHAL_CP7_SA_ALIGN, XT_CP6_SA + XCHAL_CP6_SA_SIZE)
#define XT_CP_SA_SIZE ALIGNUP(16, XT_CP7_SA + XCHAL_CP7_SA_SIZE)
/* Offsets within the overall save area: */
#define XT_CPENABLE 0 /* (2 bytes) coprocessors active for this thread */
#define XT_CPSTORED 2 /* (2 bytes) coprocessors saved for this thread */
#define XT_CP_CS_ST 4 /* (2 bytes) coprocessor callee-saved regs stored for this thread */
#define XT_CP_ASA 8 /* (4 bytes) ptr to aligned save area */
/* Overall size allows for dynamic alignment: */
#define XT_CP_SIZE (12 + XT_CP_SA_SIZE + XCHAL_TOTAL_SA_ALIGN)
#else
#define XT_CP_SIZE 0
#endif
/*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MACROS TO HANDLE ABI SPECIFICS OF FUNCTION ENTRY AND RETURN
Convenient where the frame size requirements are the same for both ABIs.
ENTRY(sz), RET(sz) are for framed functions (have locals or make calls).
ENTRY0, RET0 are for frameless functions (no locals, no calls).
where size = size of stack frame in bytes (must be >0 and aligned to 16).
For framed functions the frame is created and the return address saved at
base of frame (Call0 ABI) or as determined by hardware (Windowed ABI).
For frameless functions, there is no frame and return address remains in a0.
Note: Because CPP macros expand to a single line, macros requiring multi-line
expansions are implemented as assembler macros.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifdef __ASSEMBLER__
#ifdef __XTENSA_CALL0_ABI__
/* Call0 */
#define ENTRY(sz) entry1 sz
.macro entry1 size=0x10
addi sp, sp, -\size
s32i a0, sp, 0
.endm
#define ENTRY0
#define RET(sz) ret1 sz
.macro ret1 size=0x10
l32i a0, sp, 0
addi sp, sp, \size
ret
.endm
#define RET0 ret
#else
/* Windowed */
#define ENTRY(sz) entry sp, sz
#define ENTRY0 entry sp, 0x10
#define RET(sz) retw
#define RET0 retw
#endif
#endif
#endif /* XTENSA_CONTEXT_H */