• Home
  • History
  • Annotate
  • Line#
  • Navigate
  • Raw
  • Download
  • only in /netgear-R7000-V1.0.7.12_1.2.5/components/opensource/linux/linux-2.6.36/arch/m68k/include/asm/
1/****************************************************************************/
2
3/*
4 *	mcfintc.h -- support definitions for the simple ColdFire
5 *		     Interrupt Controller
6 *
7 * 	(C) Copyright 2009,  Greg Ungerer <gerg@uclinux.org>
8 */
9
10/****************************************************************************/
11#ifndef	mcfintc_h
12#define	mcfintc_h
13/****************************************************************************/
14
15/*
16 * Most of the older ColdFire parts use the same simple interrupt
17 * controller. This is currently used on the 5206, 5206e, 5249, 5307
18 * and 5407 parts.
19 *
20 * The builtin peripherals are masked through dedicated bits in the
21 * Interrupt Mask register (IMR) - and this is not indexed (or in any way
22 * related to) the actual interrupt number they use. So knowing the IRQ
23 * number doesn't explicitly map to a certain internal device for
24 * interrupt control purposes.
25 */
26
27/*
28 * Bit definitions for the ICR family of registers.
29 */
30#define	MCFSIM_ICR_AUTOVEC	0x80		/* Auto-vectored intr */
31#define	MCFSIM_ICR_LEVEL0	0x00		/* Level 0 intr */
32#define	MCFSIM_ICR_LEVEL1	0x04		/* Level 1 intr */
33#define	MCFSIM_ICR_LEVEL2	0x08		/* Level 2 intr */
34#define	MCFSIM_ICR_LEVEL3	0x0c		/* Level 3 intr */
35#define	MCFSIM_ICR_LEVEL4	0x10		/* Level 4 intr */
36#define	MCFSIM_ICR_LEVEL5	0x14		/* Level 5 intr */
37#define	MCFSIM_ICR_LEVEL6	0x18		/* Level 6 intr */
38#define	MCFSIM_ICR_LEVEL7	0x1c		/* Level 7 intr */
39
40#define	MCFSIM_ICR_PRI0		0x00		/* Priority 0 intr */
41#define	MCFSIM_ICR_PRI1		0x01		/* Priority 1 intr */
42#define	MCFSIM_ICR_PRI2		0x02		/* Priority 2 intr */
43#define	MCFSIM_ICR_PRI3		0x03		/* Priority 3 intr */
44
45/*
46 * IMR bit position definitions. Not all ColdFire parts with this interrupt
47 * controller actually support all of these interrupt sources. But the bit
48 * numbers are the same in all cores.
49 */
50#define	MCFINTC_EINT1		1		/* External int #1 */
51#define	MCFINTC_EINT2		2		/* External int #2 */
52#define	MCFINTC_EINT3		3		/* External int #3 */
53#define	MCFINTC_EINT4		4		/* External int #4 */
54#define	MCFINTC_EINT5		5		/* External int #5 */
55#define	MCFINTC_EINT6		6		/* External int #6 */
56#define	MCFINTC_EINT7		7		/* External int #7 */
57#define	MCFINTC_SWT		8		/* Software Watchdog */
58#define	MCFINTC_TIMER1		9
59#define	MCFINTC_TIMER2		10
60#define	MCFINTC_I2C		11		/* I2C / MBUS */
61#define	MCFINTC_UART0		12
62#define	MCFINTC_UART1		13
63#define	MCFINTC_DMA0		14
64#define	MCFINTC_DMA1		15
65#define	MCFINTC_DMA2		16
66#define	MCFINTC_DMA3		17
67#define	MCFINTC_QSPI		18
68
69#ifndef __ASSEMBLER__
70
71/*
72 * There is no one-is-one correspondance between the interrupt number (irq)
73 * and the bit fields on the mask register. So we create a per-cpu type
74 * mapping of irq to mask bit. The CPU platform code needs to register
75 * its supported irq's at init time, using this function.
76 */
77extern unsigned char mcf_irq2imr[];
78static inline void mcf_mapirq2imr(int irq, int imr)
79{
80	mcf_irq2imr[irq] = imr;
81}
82
83void mcf_autovector(int irq);
84void mcf_setimr(int index);
85void mcf_clrimr(int index);
86#endif
87
88/****************************************************************************/
89#endif	/* mcfintc_h */
90