summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/src/pc80/i8259.c
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'src/pc80/i8259.c')
-rw-r--r--src/pc80/i8259.c167
1 files changed, 133 insertions, 34 deletions
diff --git a/src/pc80/i8259.c b/src/pc80/i8259.c
index a397e0e0d8..1361f379c0 100644
--- a/src/pc80/i8259.c
+++ b/src/pc80/i8259.c
@@ -1,42 +1,141 @@
+/*
+ * This file is part of the coreboot project.
+ *
+ * Copyright (C) 2009 coresystems GmbH
+ *
+ * This program 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; version 2 of the License.
+ *
+ * This program 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 this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+ * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
+ */
+
#include <arch/io.h>
#include <pc80/i8259.h>
-/* code taken from:
-!
-! setup.S Copyright (C) 1991, 1992 Linus Torvalds
-!
-! setup.s is responsible for getting the system data from the BIOS,
-! and putting them into the appropriate places in system memory.
-! both setup.s and system has been loaded by the bootblock.
- */
-/* we're getting screwed again and again by this problem of the 8259.
- * so we're going to leave this lying around for inclusion into
- * crt0.S on an as-needed basis.
-! well, that went ok, I hope. Now we have to reprogram the interrupts :-(
-! we put them right after the intel-reserved hardware interrupts, at
-! int 0x20-0x2F. There they won't mess up anything. Sadly IBM really
-! messed this up with the original PC, and they haven't been able to
-! rectify it afterwards. Thus the bios puts interrupts at 0x08-0x0f,
-! which is used for the internal hardware interrupts as well. We just
-! have to reprogram the 8259's, and it isn't fun.
- */
+#include <console/console.h>
+
+#define MASTER_PIC_ICW1 0x20
+#define SLAVE_PIC_ICW1 0xa0
+#define ICW_SELECT (1 << 4)
+#define OCW_SELECT (0 << 4)
+#define ADI (1 << 2)
+#define SNGL (1 << 1)
+#define IC4 (1 << 0)
+
+#define MASTER_PIC_ICW2 0x21
+#define SLAVE_PIC_ICW2 0xa1
+#define INT_VECTOR_MASTER 0x20
+#define IRQ0 0x00
+#define IRQ1 0x01
+#define INT_VECTOR_SLAVE 0x28
+#define IRQ8 0x00
+#define IRQ9 0x01
+
+#define MASTER_PIC_ICW3 0x21
+#define CASCADED_PIC (1 << 2)
+
+#define MASTER_PIC_ICW4 0x21
+#define SLAVE_PIC_ICW4 0xa1
+#define MICROPROCESSOR_MODE (1 << 0)
+
+#define SLAVE_PIC_ICW3 0xa1
+#define SLAVE_ID 0x02
+
+#define MASTER_PIC_OCW1 0x21
+#define SLAVE_PIC_OCW1 0xa1
+#define IRQ2 (1 << 2)
+#define ALL_IRQS 0xff
+
+#define ELCR1 0x4d0
+#define ELCR2 0x4d1
void setup_i8259(void)
{
- outb(0x11, 0x20); /*! initialization sequence to 8259A-1*/
- outb(0x11, 0xA0); /*! and to 8259A-2*/
- outb(0x20, 0x21); /*! start of hardware int's (0x20)*/
- outb(0x28, 0xA1); /*! start of hardware int's 2 (0x28)*/
- outb(0x04, 0x21); /*! 8259-1 is master*/
- outb(0x02, 0xA1); /*! 8259-2 is slave*/
- outb(0x01, 0x21); /*! 8086 mode for both*/
- outb(0x01, 0xA1);
- outb(0xFF, 0xA1); /*! mask off all interrupts for now*/
- outb(0xFB, 0x21); /*! mask all irq's but irq2 which is cascaded*/
+ /* A write to ICW1 starts the Interrupt Controller Initialization
+ * Sequence. This implicitly causes the following to happen:
+ * - Interrupt Mask register is cleared
+ * - Priority 7 is assigned to IRQ7 input
+ * - Slave mode address is set to 7
+ * - Special mask mode is cleared
+ *
+ * We send the initialization sequence to both the master and
+ * slave i8259 controller.
+ */
+ outb(ICW_SELECT|IC4, MASTER_PIC_ICW1);
+ outb(ICW_SELECT|IC4, SLAVE_PIC_ICW1);
+
+ /* Now the interrupt controller expects us to write to ICW2. */
+ outb(INT_VECTOR_MASTER | IRQ0, MASTER_PIC_ICW2);
+ outb(INT_VECTOR_SLAVE | IRQ8, SLAVE_PIC_ICW2);
+
+ /* Now the interrupt controller expects us to write to ICW3.
+ *
+ * The normal scenario is to set up cascading on IRQ2 on the master
+ * i8259 and assign the slave ID 2 to the slave i8259.
+ */
+ outb(CASCADED_PIC, MASTER_PIC_ICW3);
+ outb(SLAVE_ID, SLAVE_PIC_ICW3);
+
+ /* Now the interrupt controller expects us to write to ICW4.
+ *
+ * We switch both i8259 to microprocessor mode because they're
+ * operating as part of an x86 architecture based chipset
+ */
+ outb(MICROPROCESSOR_MODE, MASTER_PIC_ICW2);
+ outb(MICROPROCESSOR_MODE, SLAVE_PIC_ICW2);
+
+ /* Now clear the interrupts through OCW1.
+ * First we mask off all interrupts on the slave interrupt controller
+ * then we mask off all interrupts but interrupt 2 on the master
+ * controller. This way the cascading stays alife.
+ */
+ outb(ALL_IRQS, SLAVE_PIC_OCW1);
+ outb(ALL_IRQS & ~IRQ2, MASTER_PIC_OCW1);
+}
+
+/**
+ * @brief Configure IRQ triggering in the i8259 compatible Interrupt Controller.
+ *
+ * Switch a certain interrupt to be level / edge triggered.
+ *
+ * @param int_num legacy interrupt number (3-7, 9-15)
+ * @param is_level_triggered 1 for level triggered interrupt, 0 for edge
+ * triggered interrupt
+ */
+void i8259_configure_irq_trigger(int int_num, int is_level_triggered)
+{
+ u16 int_bits = inb(ELCR1) | (((u16)inb(ELCR2)) << 8);
+
+ printk_spew("%s: current interrupts are 0x%x\n", __func__, int_bits);
+ if (is_level_triggered)
+ int_bits |= (1 << int_num);
+ else
+ int_bits &= ~(1 << int_num);
+
+ /* Write new values */
+ printk_spew("%s: try to set interrupts 0x%x\n", __func__, int_bits);
+ outb((u8)(int_bits & 0xff), ELCR1);
+ outb((u8)(int_bits >> 8), ELCR2);
+
+#ifdef PARANOID_IRQ_TRIGGERS
+ /* Try reading back the new values. This seems like an error but is not ... */
+ if (inb(ELCR1) != (int_bits & 0xff)) {
+ printk_err("%s: lower order bits are wrong: want 0x%x, got 0x%x\n",
+ __func__, (int_bits & 0xff), inb(ELCR1));
+ }
+
+ if (inb(ELCR2) != (int_bits >> 8)) {
+ printk_err("%s: higher order bits are wrong: want 0x%x, got 0x%x\n",
+ __func__, (int_bits>>8), inb(ELCR2));
+ }
+#endif
}
-/*
- * I like the way Linus says it:
-! Well, that certainly wasn't fun :-(. Hopefully it works, and we don't
-! need no steenking BIOS anyway (except for the initial loading :-).
-*/