| /* |
| * Copyright (c) 2010-2014 Wind River Systems, Inc. |
| * |
| * SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * @file |
| * @brief IA-32 specific kernel interface header |
| * This header contains the IA-32 specific kernel interface. It is included |
| * by the generic kernel interface header (include/arch/cpu.h) |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef _ARCH_IFACE_H |
| #define _ARCH_IFACE_H |
| |
| #include <irq.h> |
| #include <arch/x86/irq_controller.h> |
| #include <kernel_arch_thread.h> |
| #include <generated_dts_board.h> |
| #include <mmustructs.h> |
| |
| #ifndef _ASMLANGUAGE |
| #include <arch/x86/asm_inline.h> |
| #include <arch/x86/addr_types.h> |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| extern "C" { |
| #endif |
| |
| /* APIs need to support non-byte addressable architectures */ |
| |
| #define OCTET_TO_SIZEOFUNIT(X) (X) |
| #define SIZEOFUNIT_TO_OCTET(X) (X) |
| |
| /** |
| * Macro used internally by NANO_CPU_INT_REGISTER and NANO_CPU_INT_REGISTER_ASM. |
| * Not meant to be used explicitly by platform, driver or application code. |
| */ |
| #define MK_ISR_NAME(x) __isr__##x |
| |
| #ifndef _ASMLANGUAGE |
| |
| #ifdef CONFIG_INT_LATENCY_BENCHMARK |
| void _int_latency_start(void); |
| void _int_latency_stop(void); |
| #else |
| #define _int_latency_start() do { } while (0) |
| #define _int_latency_stop() do { } while (0) |
| #endif |
| |
| /* interrupt/exception/error related definitions */ |
| |
| /* |
| * The TCS must be aligned to the same boundary as that used by the floating |
| * point register set. This applies even for threads that don't initially |
| * use floating point, since it is possible to enable floating point support |
| * later on. |
| */ |
| |
| #define STACK_ALIGN FP_REG_SET_ALIGN |
| |
| typedef struct s_isrList { |
| /** Address of ISR/stub */ |
| void *fnc; |
| /** IRQ associated with the ISR/stub, or -1 if this is not |
| * associated with a real interrupt; in this case vec must |
| * not be -1 |
| */ |
| unsigned int irq; |
| /** Priority associated with the IRQ. Ignored if vec is not -1 */ |
| unsigned int priority; |
| /** Vector number associated with ISR/stub, or -1 to assign based |
| * on priority |
| */ |
| unsigned int vec; |
| /** Privilege level associated with ISR/stub */ |
| unsigned int dpl; |
| |
| /** If nonzero, specifies a TSS segment selector. Will configure |
| * a task gate instead of an interrupt gate. fnc parameter will be |
| * ignored |
| */ |
| unsigned int tss; |
| } ISR_LIST; |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief Connect a routine to an interrupt vector |
| * |
| * This macro "connects" the specified routine, @a r, to the specified interrupt |
| * vector, @a v using the descriptor privilege level @a d. On the IA-32 |
| * architecture, an interrupt vector is a value from 0 to 255. This macro |
| * populates the special intList section with the address of the routine, the |
| * vector number and the descriptor privilege level. The genIdt tool then picks |
| * up this information and generates an actual IDT entry with this information |
| * properly encoded. |
| * |
| * The @a d argument specifies the privilege level for the interrupt-gate |
| * descriptor; (hardware) interrupts and exceptions should specify a level of 0, |
| * whereas handlers for user-mode software generated interrupts should specify 3. |
| * @param r Routine to be connected |
| * @param n IRQ number |
| * @param p IRQ priority |
| * @param v Interrupt Vector |
| * @param d Descriptor Privilege Level |
| * |
| * @return N/A |
| * |
| */ |
| |
| #define NANO_CPU_INT_REGISTER(r, n, p, v, d) \ |
| static ISR_LIST __attribute__((section(".intList"))) \ |
| __attribute__((used)) MK_ISR_NAME(r) = \ |
| { \ |
| .fnc = &(r), \ |
| .irq = (n), \ |
| .priority = (p), \ |
| .vec = (v), \ |
| .dpl = (d), \ |
| .tss = 0 \ |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief Connect an IA hardware task to an interrupt vector |
| * |
| * This is very similar to NANO_CPU_INT_REGISTER but instead of connecting |
| * a handler function, the interrupt will induce an IA hardware task |
| * switch to another hardware task instead. |
| * |
| * @param tss_p GDT/LDT segment selector for the TSS representing the task |
| * @param irq_p IRQ number |
| * @param priority_p IRQ priority |
| * @param vec_p Interrupt vector |
| * @param dpl_p Descriptor privilege level |
| */ |
| #define _X86_IDT_TSS_REGISTER(tss_p, irq_p, priority_p, vec_p, dpl_p) \ |
| static ISR_LIST __attribute__((section(".intList"))) \ |
| __attribute__((used)) MK_ISR_NAME(r) = \ |
| { \ |
| .fnc = NULL, \ |
| .irq = (irq_p), \ |
| .priority = (priority_p), \ |
| .vec = (vec_p), \ |
| .dpl = (dpl_p), \ |
| .tss = (tss_p) \ |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * Code snippets for populating the vector ID and priority into the intList |
| * |
| * The 'magic' of static interrupts is accomplished by building up an array |
| * 'intList' at compile time, and the gen_idt tool uses this to create the |
| * actual IDT data structure. |
| * |
| * For controllers like APIC, the vectors in the IDT are not normally assigned |
| * at build time; instead the sentinel value -1 is saved, and gen_idt figures |
| * out the right vector to use based on our priority scheme. Groups of 16 |
| * vectors starting at 32 correspond to each priority level. |
| * |
| * On MVIC, the mapping is fixed; the vector to use is just the irq line |
| * number plus 0x20. The priority argument supplied by the user is discarded. |
| * |
| * These macros are only intended to be used by IRQ_CONNECT() macro. |
| */ |
| #if CONFIG_X86_FIXED_IRQ_MAPPING |
| #define _VECTOR_ARG(irq_p) _IRQ_CONTROLLER_VECTOR_MAPPING(irq_p) |
| #else |
| #define _VECTOR_ARG(irq_p) (-1) |
| #endif /* CONFIG_X86_FIXED_IRQ_MAPPING */ |
| |
| /** |
| * Configure a static interrupt. |
| * |
| * All arguments must be computable by the compiler at build time. |
| * |
| * Internally this function does a few things: |
| * |
| * 1. There is a declaration of the interrupt parameters in the .intList |
| * section, used by gen_idt to create the IDT. This does the same thing |
| * as the NANO_CPU_INT_REGISTER() macro, but is done in assembly as we |
| * need to populate the .fnc member with the address of the assembly |
| * IRQ stub that we generate immediately afterwards. |
| * |
| * 2. The IRQ stub itself is declared. The code will go in its own named |
| * section .text.irqstubs section (which eventually gets linked into 'text') |
| * and the stub shall be named (isr_name)_irq(irq_line)_stub |
| * |
| * 3. The IRQ stub pushes the ISR routine and its argument onto the stack |
| * and then jumps to the common interrupt handling code in _interrupt_enter(). |
| * |
| * 4. _irq_controller_irq_config() is called at runtime to set the mapping |
| * between the vector and the IRQ line as well as triggering flags |
| * |
| * @param irq_p IRQ line number |
| * @param priority_p Interrupt priority |
| * @param isr_p Interrupt service routine |
| * @param isr_param_p ISR parameter |
| * @param flags_p IRQ triggering options, as defined in irq_controller.h |
| * |
| * @return The vector assigned to this interrupt |
| */ |
| #define _ARCH_IRQ_CONNECT(irq_p, priority_p, isr_p, isr_param_p, flags_p) \ |
| ({ \ |
| __asm__ __volatile__( \ |
| ".pushsection .intList\n\t" \ |
| ".long %c[isr]_irq%c[irq]_stub\n\t" /* ISR_LIST.fnc */ \ |
| ".long %c[irq]\n\t" /* ISR_LIST.irq */ \ |
| ".long %c[priority]\n\t" /* ISR_LIST.priority */ \ |
| ".long %c[vector]\n\t" /* ISR_LIST.vec */ \ |
| ".long 0\n\t" /* ISR_LIST.dpl */ \ |
| ".long 0\n\t" /* ISR_LIST.tss */ \ |
| ".popsection\n\t" \ |
| ".pushsection .text.irqstubs\n\t" \ |
| ".global %c[isr]_irq%c[irq]_stub\n\t" \ |
| "%c[isr]_irq%c[irq]_stub:\n\t" \ |
| "pushl %[isr_param]\n\t" \ |
| "pushl %[isr]\n\t" \ |
| "jmp _interrupt_enter\n\t" \ |
| ".popsection\n\t" \ |
| : \ |
| : [isr] "i" (isr_p), \ |
| [isr_param] "i" (isr_param_p), \ |
| [priority] "i" (priority_p), \ |
| [vector] "i" _VECTOR_ARG(irq_p), \ |
| [irq] "i" (irq_p)); \ |
| _irq_controller_irq_config(_IRQ_TO_INTERRUPT_VECTOR(irq_p), (irq_p), \ |
| (flags_p)); \ |
| _IRQ_TO_INTERRUPT_VECTOR(irq_p); \ |
| }) |
| |
| /** Configure a 'direct' static interrupt |
| * |
| * All arguments must be computable by the compiler at build time |
| * |
| */ |
| #define _ARCH_IRQ_DIRECT_CONNECT(irq_p, priority_p, isr_p, flags_p) \ |
| ({ \ |
| NANO_CPU_INT_REGISTER(isr_p, irq_p, priority_p, -1, 0); \ |
| _irq_controller_irq_config(_IRQ_TO_INTERRUPT_VECTOR(irq_p), (irq_p), \ |
| (flags_p)); \ |
| _IRQ_TO_INTERRUPT_VECTOR(irq_p); \ |
| }) |
| |
| |
| #ifdef CONFIG_X86_FIXED_IRQ_MAPPING |
| /* Fixed vector-to-irq association mapping. |
| * No need for the table at all. |
| */ |
| #define _IRQ_TO_INTERRUPT_VECTOR(irq) _IRQ_CONTROLLER_VECTOR_MAPPING(irq) |
| #else |
| /** |
| * @brief Convert a statically connected IRQ to its interrupt vector number |
| * |
| * @param irq IRQ number |
| */ |
| extern unsigned char _irq_to_interrupt_vector[]; |
| #define _IRQ_TO_INTERRUPT_VECTOR(irq) \ |
| ((unsigned int) _irq_to_interrupt_vector[irq]) |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifdef CONFIG_SYS_POWER_MANAGEMENT |
| extern void _arch_irq_direct_pm(void); |
| #define _ARCH_ISR_DIRECT_PM() _arch_irq_direct_pm() |
| #else |
| #define _ARCH_ISR_DIRECT_PM() do { } while (0) |
| #endif |
| |
| #define _ARCH_ISR_DIRECT_HEADER() _arch_isr_direct_header() |
| #define _ARCH_ISR_DIRECT_FOOTER(swap) _arch_isr_direct_footer(swap) |
| |
| /* FIXME prefer these inline, but see ZEP-1595 */ |
| extern void _arch_isr_direct_header(void); |
| extern void _arch_isr_direct_footer(int maybe_swap); |
| |
| #define _ARCH_ISR_DIRECT_DECLARE(name) \ |
| static inline int name##_body(void); \ |
| __attribute__ ((interrupt)) void name(void *stack_frame) \ |
| { \ |
| ARG_UNUSED(stack_frame); \ |
| int check_reschedule; \ |
| ISR_DIRECT_HEADER(); \ |
| check_reschedule = name##_body(); \ |
| ISR_DIRECT_FOOTER(check_reschedule); \ |
| } \ |
| static inline int name##_body(void) |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief Exception Stack Frame |
| * |
| * A pointer to an "exception stack frame" (ESF) is passed as an argument |
| * to exception handlers registered via nanoCpuExcConnect(). As the system |
| * always operates at ring 0, only the EIP, CS and EFLAGS registers are pushed |
| * onto the stack when an exception occurs. |
| * |
| * The exception stack frame includes the volatile registers (EAX, ECX, and |
| * EDX) as well as the 5 non-volatile registers (EDI, ESI, EBX, EBP and ESP). |
| * Those registers are pushed onto the stack by _ExcEnt(). |
| */ |
| |
| typedef struct nanoEsf { |
| unsigned int esp; |
| unsigned int ebp; |
| unsigned int ebx; |
| unsigned int esi; |
| unsigned int edi; |
| unsigned int edx; |
| unsigned int eax; |
| unsigned int ecx; |
| unsigned int errorCode; |
| unsigned int eip; |
| unsigned int cs; |
| unsigned int eflags; |
| } NANO_ESF; |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief "interrupt stack frame" (ISF) |
| * |
| * An "interrupt stack frame" (ISF) as constructed by the processor and the |
| * interrupt wrapper function _interrupt_enter(). As the system always |
| * operates at ring 0, only the EIP, CS and EFLAGS registers are pushed onto |
| * the stack when an interrupt occurs. |
| * |
| * The interrupt stack frame includes the volatile registers EAX, ECX, and EDX |
| * plus nonvolatile EDI pushed on the stack by _interrupt_enter(). |
| * |
| * Only target-based debug tools such as GDB require the other non-volatile |
| * registers (ESI, EBX, EBP and ESP) to be preserved during an interrupt. |
| */ |
| |
| typedef struct nanoIsf { |
| #ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO |
| unsigned int esp; |
| unsigned int ebp; |
| unsigned int ebx; |
| unsigned int esi; |
| #endif /* CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO */ |
| unsigned int edi; |
| unsigned int ecx; |
| unsigned int edx; |
| unsigned int eax; |
| unsigned int eip; |
| unsigned int cs; |
| unsigned int eflags; |
| } NANO_ISF; |
| |
| #endif /* !_ASMLANGUAGE */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Reason codes passed to both _NanoFatalErrorHandler() |
| * and _SysFatalErrorHandler(). |
| */ |
| |
| /** Unhandled exception/interrupt */ |
| #define _NANO_ERR_SPURIOUS_INT (0) |
| /** Page fault */ |
| #define _NANO_ERR_PAGE_FAULT (1) |
| /** General protection fault */ |
| #define _NANO_ERR_GEN_PROT_FAULT (2) |
| /** Invalid task exit */ |
| #define _NANO_ERR_INVALID_TASK_EXIT (3) |
| /** Stack corruption detected */ |
| #define _NANO_ERR_STACK_CHK_FAIL (4) |
| /** Kernel Allocation Failure */ |
| #define _NANO_ERR_ALLOCATION_FAIL (5) |
| /** Unhandled exception */ |
| #define _NANO_ERR_CPU_EXCEPTION (6) |
| /** Kernel oops (fatal to thread) */ |
| #define _NANO_ERR_KERNEL_OOPS (7) |
| /** Kernel panic (fatal to system) */ |
| #define _NANO_ERR_KERNEL_PANIC (8) |
| |
| #ifndef _ASMLANGUAGE |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief Disable all interrupts on the CPU (inline) |
| * |
| * This routine disables interrupts. It can be called from either interrupt, |
| * task or fiber level. This routine returns an architecture-dependent |
| * lock-out key representing the "interrupt disable state" prior to the call; |
| * this key can be passed to irq_unlock() to re-enable interrupts. |
| * |
| * The lock-out key should only be used as the argument to the irq_unlock() |
| * API. It should never be used to manually re-enable interrupts or to inspect |
| * or manipulate the contents of the source register. |
| * |
| * This function can be called recursively: it will return a key to return the |
| * state of interrupt locking to the previous level. |
| * |
| * WARNINGS |
| * Invoking a kernel routine with interrupts locked may result in |
| * interrupts being re-enabled for an unspecified period of time. If the |
| * called routine blocks, interrupts will be re-enabled while another |
| * thread executes, or while the system is idle. |
| * |
| * The "interrupt disable state" is an attribute of a thread. Thus, if a |
| * fiber or task disables interrupts and subsequently invokes a kernel |
| * routine that causes the calling thread to block, the interrupt |
| * disable state will be restored when the thread is later rescheduled |
| * for execution. |
| * |
| * @return An architecture-dependent lock-out key representing the |
| * "interrupt disable state" prior to the call. |
| * |
| */ |
| |
| static ALWAYS_INLINE unsigned int _arch_irq_lock(void) |
| { |
| unsigned int key = _do_irq_lock(); |
| |
| _int_latency_start(); |
| |
| return key; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * |
| * @brief Enable all interrupts on the CPU (inline) |
| * |
| * This routine re-enables interrupts on the CPU. The @a key parameter |
| * is an architecture-dependent lock-out key that is returned by a previous |
| * invocation of irq_lock(). |
| * |
| * This routine can be called from either interrupt, task or fiber level. |
| * |
| * @return N/A |
| * |
| */ |
| |
| static ALWAYS_INLINE void _arch_irq_unlock(unsigned int key) |
| { |
| if (!(key & 0x200)) { |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| _int_latency_stop(); |
| |
| _do_irq_unlock(); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * The NANO_SOFT_IRQ macro must be used as the value for the @a irq parameter |
| * to NANO_CPU_INT_REGISTER when connecting to an interrupt that does not |
| * correspond to any IRQ line (such as spurious vector or SW IRQ) |
| */ |
| #define NANO_SOFT_IRQ ((unsigned int) (-1)) |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief Enable a specific IRQ |
| * @param irq IRQ |
| */ |
| extern void _arch_irq_enable(unsigned int irq); |
| /** |
| * @brief Disable a specific IRQ |
| * @param irq IRQ |
| */ |
| extern void _arch_irq_disable(unsigned int irq); |
| |
| /** |
| * @defgroup float_apis Floating Point APIs |
| * @ingroup kernel_apis |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief Enable preservation of floating point context information. |
| * |
| * This routine informs the kernel that the specified thread (which may be |
| * the current thread) will be using the floating point registers. |
| * The @a options parameter indicates which floating point register sets |
| * will be used by the specified thread: |
| * |
| * a) K_FP_REGS indicates x87 FPU and MMX registers only |
| * b) K_SSE_REGS indicates SSE registers (and also x87 FPU and MMX registers) |
| * |
| * Invoking this routine initializes the thread's floating point context info |
| * to that of an FPU that has been reset. The next time the thread is scheduled |
| * by _Swap() it will either inherit an FPU that is guaranteed to be in a "sane" |
| * state (if the most recent user of the FPU was cooperatively swapped out) |
| * or the thread's own floating point context will be loaded (if the most |
| * recent user of the FPU was preempted, or if this thread is the first user |
| * of the FPU). Thereafter, the kernel will protect the thread's FP context |
| * so that it is not altered during a preemptive context switch. |
| * |
| * @warning |
| * This routine should only be used to enable floating point support for a |
| * thread that does not currently have such support enabled already. |
| * |
| * @param thread ID of thread. |
| * @param options Registers to be preserved (K_FP_REGS or K_SSE_REGS). |
| * |
| * @return N/A |
| */ |
| extern void k_float_enable(k_tid_t thread, unsigned int options); |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief Disable preservation of floating point context information. |
| * |
| * This routine informs the kernel that the specified thread (which may be |
| * the current thread) will no longer be using the floating point registers. |
| * |
| * @warning |
| * This routine should only be used to disable floating point support for |
| * a thread that currently has such support enabled. |
| * |
| * @param thread ID of thread. |
| * |
| * @return N/A |
| */ |
| extern void k_float_disable(k_tid_t thread); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| #include <stddef.h> /* for size_t */ |
| |
| extern void k_cpu_idle(void); |
| |
| extern u32_t _timer_cycle_get_32(void); |
| #define _arch_k_cycle_get_32() _timer_cycle_get_32() |
| |
| /** kernel provided routine to report any detected fatal error. */ |
| extern FUNC_NORETURN void _NanoFatalErrorHandler(unsigned int reason, |
| const NANO_ESF * pEsf); |
| |
| /** User provided routine to handle any detected fatal error post reporting. */ |
| extern FUNC_NORETURN void _SysFatalErrorHandler(unsigned int reason, |
| const NANO_ESF * pEsf); |
| |
| |
| #ifdef CONFIG_X86_STACK_PROTECTION |
| #define _STACK_GUARD_SIZE MMU_PAGE_SIZE |
| #define _STACK_BASE_ALIGN MMU_PAGE_SIZE |
| #else |
| #define _STACK_GUARD_SIZE 0 |
| #define _STACK_BASE_ALIGN STACK_ALIGN |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| |
| /* All thread stacks, regardless of whether owned by application or kernel, |
| * go in the .stacks input section, which will end up in the kernel's |
| * noinit. |
| */ |
| |
| #define _ARCH_THREAD_STACK_DEFINE(sym, size) \ |
| struct _k_thread_stack_element _GENERIC_SECTION(.stacks) \ |
| __aligned(_STACK_BASE_ALIGN) \ |
| sym[(size) + _STACK_GUARD_SIZE] |
| |
| #define _ARCH_THREAD_STACK_ARRAY_DEFINE(sym, nmemb, size) \ |
| struct _k_thread_stack_element _GENERIC_SECTION(.stacks) \ |
| __aligned(_STACK_BASE_ALIGN) \ |
| sym[nmemb][ROUND_UP(size, _STACK_BASE_ALIGN) + \ |
| _STACK_GUARD_SIZE] |
| |
| #define _ARCH_THREAD_STACK_MEMBER(sym, size) \ |
| struct _k_thread_stack_element __aligned(_STACK_BASE_ALIGN) \ |
| sym[(size) + _STACK_GUARD_SIZE] |
| |
| #define _ARCH_THREAD_STACK_SIZEOF(sym) \ |
| (sizeof(sym) - _STACK_GUARD_SIZE) |
| |
| #define _ARCH_THREAD_STACK_BUFFER(sym) \ |
| ((char *)((sym) + _STACK_GUARD_SIZE)) |
| |
| #if CONFIG_X86_KERNEL_OOPS |
| #define _ARCH_EXCEPT(reason_p) do { \ |
| __asm__ volatile( \ |
| "push %[reason]\n\t" \ |
| "int %[vector]\n\t" \ |
| : \ |
| : [vector] "i" (CONFIG_X86_KERNEL_OOPS_VECTOR), \ |
| [reason] "i" (reason_p)); \ |
| CODE_UNREACHABLE; \ |
| } while (0) |
| #endif |
| |
| /** Dummy ESF for fatal errors that would otherwise not have an ESF */ |
| extern const NANO_ESF _default_esf; |
| |
| #ifdef CONFIG_X86_MMU |
| /* Linker variable. It needed to access the start of the Page directory */ |
| extern u32_t __mmu_tables_start; |
| |
| #define X86_MMU_PD ((struct x86_mmu_page_directory *)\ |
| (void *)&__mmu_tables_start) |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief Fetch page table flags for a particular page |
| * |
| * Given a memory address, return the flags for the containing page's |
| * PDE and PTE entries. Intended for debugging. |
| * |
| * @param addr Memory address to example |
| * @param pde_flags Output parameter for page directory entry flags |
| * @param pte_flags Output parameter for page table entry flags |
| */ |
| void _x86_mmu_get_flags(void *addr, u32_t *pde_flags, u32_t *pte_flags); |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief set flags in the MMU page tables |
| * |
| * Modify bits in the existing page tables for a particular memory |
| * range, which must be page-aligned |
| * |
| * @param ptr Starting memory address which must be page-aligned |
| * @param size Size of the region, must be page size multiple |
| * @flags Value of bits to set in the page table entries |
| * @mask Mask indicating which particular bits in the page table entries to |
| * modify |
| */ |
| void _x86_mmu_set_flags(void *ptr, size_t size, u32_t flags, u32_t mask); |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief check page table entry flags |
| * |
| * This routine checks if the buffer is available to whoever calls |
| * this API. |
| * @param addr start address of the buffer |
| * @param size the size of the buffer |
| * @param flags permissions to check. |
| * Consists of 2 bits the bit0 represents the RW permissions |
| * The bit1 represents the user/supervisor permissions |
| * Use macro BUFF_READABLE/BUFF_WRITEABLE or BUFF_USER to build the flags |
| * |
| * @return true-if the permissions of the pde matches the request |
| */ |
| int _x86_mmu_buffer_validate(void *addr, size_t size, int flags); |
| #endif /* CONFIG_X86_MMU */ |
| |
| #endif /* !_ASMLANGUAGE */ |
| |
| /* reboot through Reset Control Register (I/O port 0xcf9) */ |
| |
| #define SYS_X86_RST_CNT_REG 0xcf9 |
| #define SYS_X86_RST_CNT_SYS_RST 0x02 |
| #define SYS_X86_RST_CNT_CPU_RST 0x4 |
| #define SYS_X86_RST_CNT_FULL_RST 0x08 |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| #endif /* _ARCH_IFACE_H */ |