1 /* 2 * Copyright 2012 Tilera Corporation. All Rights Reserved. 3 * 4 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or 5 * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License 6 * as published by the Free Software Foundation, version 2. 7 * 8 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but 9 * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 10 * MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, GOOD TITLE or 11 * NON INFRINGEMENT. See the GNU General Public License for 12 * more details. 13 */ 14 #ifndef _HV_IORPC_H_ 15 #define _HV_IORPC_H_ 16 17 /** 18 * 19 * Error codes and struct definitions for the IO RPC library. 20 * 21 * The hypervisor's IO RPC component provides a convenient way for 22 * driver authors to proxy system calls between user space, linux, and 23 * the hypervisor driver. The core of the system is a set of Python 24 * files that take ".idl" files as input and generates the following 25 * source code: 26 * 27 * - _rpc_call() routines for use in userspace IO libraries. These 28 * routines take an argument list specified in the .idl file, pack the 29 * arguments in to a buffer, and read or write that buffer via the 30 * Linux iorpc driver. 31 * 32 * - dispatch_read() and dispatch_write() routines that hypervisor 33 * drivers can use to implement most of their dev_pread() and 34 * dev_pwrite() methods. These routines decode the incoming parameter 35 * blob, permission check and translate parameters where appropriate, 36 * and then invoke a callback routine for whichever RPC call has 37 * arrived. The driver simply implements the set of callback 38 * routines. 39 * 40 * The IO RPC system also includes the Linux 'iorpc' driver, which 41 * proxies calls between the userspace library and the hypervisor 42 * driver. The Linux driver is almost entirely device agnostic; it 43 * watches for special flags indicating cases where a memory buffer 44 * address might need to be translated, etc. As a result, driver 45 * writers can avoid many of the problem cases related to registering 46 * hardware resources like memory pages or interrupts. However, the 47 * drivers must be careful to obey the conventions documented below in 48 * order to work properly with the generic Linux iorpc driver. 49 * 50 * @section iorpc_domains Service Domains 51 * 52 * All iorpc-based drivers must support a notion of service domains. 53 * A service domain is basically an application context - state 54 * indicating resources that are allocated to that particular app 55 * which it may access and (perhaps) other applications may not 56 * access. Drivers can support any number of service domains they 57 * choose. In some cases the design is limited by a number of service 58 * domains supported by the IO hardware; in other cases the service 59 * domains are a purely software concept and the driver chooses a 60 * maximum number of domains based on how much state memory it is 61 * willing to preallocate. 62 * 63 * For example, the mPIPE driver only supports as many service domains 64 * as are supported by the mPIPE hardware. This limitation is 65 * required because the hardware implements its own MMIO protection 66 * scheme to allow large MMIO mappings while still protecting small 67 * register ranges within the page that should only be accessed by the 68 * hypervisor. 69 * 70 * In contrast, drivers with no hardware service domain limitations 71 * (for instance the TRIO shim) can implement an arbitrary number of 72 * service domains. In these cases, each service domain is limited to 73 * a carefully restricted set of legal MMIO addresses if necessary to 74 * keep one application from corrupting another application's state. 75 * 76 * @section iorpc_conventions System Call Conventions 77 * 78 * The driver's open routine is responsible for allocating a new 79 * service domain for each hv_dev_open() call. By convention, the 80 * return value from open() should be the service domain number on 81 * success, or GXIO_ERR_NO_SVC_DOM if no more service domains are 82 * available. 83 * 84 * The implementations of hv_dev_pread() and hv_dev_pwrite() are 85 * responsible for validating the devhdl value passed up by the 86 * client. Since the device handle returned by hv_dev_open() should 87 * embed the positive service domain number, drivers should make sure 88 * that DRV_HDL2BITS(devhdl) is a legal service domain. If the client 89 * passes an illegal service domain number, the routine should return 90 * GXIO_ERR_INVAL_SVC_DOM. Once the service domain number has been 91 * validated, the driver can copy to/from the client buffer and call 92 * the dispatch_read() or dispatch_write() methods created by the RPC 93 * generator. 94 * 95 * The hv_dev_close() implementation should reset all service domain 96 * state and put the service domain back on a free list for 97 * reallocation by a future application. In most cases, this will 98 * require executing a hardware reset or drain flow and denying any 99 * MMIO regions that were created for the service domain. 100 * 101 * @section iorpc_data Special Data Types 102 * 103 * The .idl file syntax allows the creation of syscalls with special 104 * parameters that require permission checks or translations as part 105 * of the system call path. Because of limitations in the code 106 * generator, APIs are generally limited to just one of these special 107 * parameters per system call, and they are sometimes required to be 108 * the first or last parameter to the call. Special parameters 109 * include: 110 * 111 * @subsection iorpc_mem_buffer MEM_BUFFER 112 * 113 * The MEM_BUFFER() datatype allows user space to "register" memory 114 * buffers with a device. Registering memory accomplishes two tasks: 115 * Linux keeps track of all buffers that might be modified by a 116 * hardware device, and the hardware device drivers bind registered 117 * buffers to particular hardware resources like ingress NotifRings. 118 * The MEM_BUFFER() idl syntax can take extra flags like ALIGN_64KB, 119 * ALIGN_SELF_SIZE, and FLAGS indicating that memory buffers must have 120 * certain alignment or that the user should be able to pass a "memory 121 * flags" word specifying attributes like nt_hint or IO cache pinning. 122 * The parser will accept multiple MEM_BUFFER() flags. 123 * 124 * Implementations must obey the following conventions when 125 * registering memory buffers via the iorpc flow. These rules are a 126 * result of the Linux driver implementation, which needs to keep 127 * track of how many times a particular page has been registered with 128 * the hardware so that it can release the page when all those 129 * registrations are cleared. 130 * 131 * - Memory registrations that refer to a resource which has already 132 * been bound must return GXIO_ERR_ALREADY_INIT. Thus, it is an 133 * error to register memory twice without resetting (i.e. closing) the 134 * resource in between. This convention keeps the Linux driver from 135 * having to track which particular devices a page is bound to. 136 * 137 * - At present, a memory registration is only cleared when the 138 * service domain is reset. In this case, the Linux driver simply 139 * closes the HV device file handle and then decrements the reference 140 * counts of all pages that were previously registered with the 141 * device. 142 * 143 * - In the future, we may add a mechanism for unregistering memory. 144 * One possible implementation would require that the user specify 145 * which buffer is currently registered. The HV would then verify 146 * that that page was actually the one currently mapped and return 147 * success or failure to Linux, which would then only decrement the 148 * page reference count if the addresses were mapped. Another scheme 149 * might allow Linux to pass a token to the HV to be returned when the 150 * resource is unmapped. 151 * 152 * @subsection iorpc_interrupt INTERRUPT 153 * 154 * The INTERRUPT .idl datatype allows the client to bind hardware 155 * interrupts to a particular combination of IPI parameters - CPU, IPI 156 * PL, and event bit number. This data is passed via a special 157 * datatype so that the Linux driver can validate the CPU and PL and 158 * the HV generic iorpc code can translate client CPUs to real CPUs. 159 * 160 * @subsection iorpc_pollfd_setup POLLFD_SETUP 161 * 162 * The POLLFD_SETUP .idl datatype allows the client to set up hardware 163 * interrupt bindings which are received by Linux but which are made 164 * visible to user processes as state transitions on a file descriptor; 165 * this allows user processes to use Linux primitives, such as poll(), to 166 * await particular hardware events. This data is passed via a special 167 * datatype so that the Linux driver may recognize the pollable file 168 * descriptor and translate it to a set of interrupt target information, 169 * and so that the HV generic iorpc code can translate client CPUs to real 170 * CPUs. 171 * 172 * @subsection iorpc_pollfd POLLFD 173 * 174 * The POLLFD .idl datatype allows manipulation of hardware interrupt 175 * bindings set up via the POLLFD_SETUP datatype; common operations are 176 * resetting the state of the requested interrupt events, and unbinding any 177 * bound interrupts. This data is passed via a special datatype so that 178 * the Linux driver may recognize the pollable file descriptor and 179 * translate it to an interrupt identifier previously supplied by the 180 * hypervisor as the result of an earlier pollfd_setup operation. 181 * 182 * @subsection iorpc_blob BLOB 183 * 184 * The BLOB .idl datatype allows the client to write an arbitrary 185 * length string of bytes up to the hypervisor driver. This can be 186 * useful for passing up large, arbitrarily structured data like 187 * classifier programs. The iorpc stack takes care of validating the 188 * buffer VA and CPA as the data passes up to the hypervisor. Unlike 189 * MEM_BUFFER(), the buffer is not registered - Linux does not bump 190 * page refcounts and the HV driver should not reuse the buffer once 191 * the system call is complete. 192 * 193 * @section iorpc_translation Translating User Space Calls 194 * 195 * The ::iorpc_offset structure describes the formatting of the offset 196 * that is passed to pread() or pwrite() as part of the generated RPC code. 197 * When the user calls up to Linux, the rpc code fills in all the fields of 198 * the offset, including a 16-bit opcode, a 16 bit format indicator, and 32 199 * bits of user-specified "sub-offset". The opcode indicates which syscall 200 * is being requested. The format indicates whether there is a "prefix 201 * struct" at the start of the memory buffer passed to pwrite(), and if so 202 * what data is in that prefix struct. These prefix structs are used to 203 * implement special datatypes like MEM_BUFFER() and INTERRUPT - we arrange 204 * to put data that needs translation and permission checks at the start of 205 * the buffer so that the Linux driver and generic portions of the HV iorpc 206 * code can easily access the data. The 32 bits of user-specified 207 * "sub-offset" are most useful for pread() calls where the user needs to 208 * also pass in a few bits indicating which register to read, etc. 209 * 210 * The Linux iorpc driver watches for system calls that contain prefix 211 * structs so that it can translate parameters and bump reference 212 * counts as appropriate. It does not (currently) have any knowledge 213 * of the per-device opcodes - it doesn't care what operation you're 214 * doing to mPIPE, so long as it can do all the generic book-keeping. 215 * The hv/iorpc.h header file defines all of the generic encoding bits 216 * needed to translate iorpc calls without knowing which particular 217 * opcode is being issued. 218 * 219 * @section iorpc_globals Global iorpc Calls 220 * 221 * Implementing mmap() required adding some special iorpc syscalls 222 * that are only called by the Linux driver, never by userspace. 223 * These include get_mmio_base() and check_mmio_offset(). These 224 * routines are described in globals.idl and must be included in every 225 * iorpc driver. By providing these routines in every driver, Linux's 226 * mmap implementation can easily get the PTE bits it needs and 227 * validate the PA offset without needing to know the per-device 228 * opcodes to perform those tasks. 229 * 230 * @section iorpc_kernel Supporting gxio APIs in the Kernel 231 * 232 * The iorpc code generator also supports generation of kernel code 233 * implementing the gxio APIs. This capability is currently used by 234 * the mPIPE network driver, and will likely be used by the TRIO root 235 * complex and endpoint drivers and perhaps an in-kernel crypto 236 * driver. Each driver that wants to instantiate iorpc calls in the 237 * kernel needs to generate a kernel version of the generate rpc code 238 * and (probably) copy any related gxio source files into the kernel. 239 * The mPIPE driver provides a good example of this pattern. 240 */ 241 242 #ifdef __KERNEL__ 243 #include <linux/stddef.h> 244 #else 245 #include <stddef.h> 246 #endif 247 248 #if defined(__HV__) 249 #include <hv/hypervisor.h> 250 #elif defined(__KERNEL__) 251 #include <hv/hypervisor.h> 252 #include <linux/types.h> 253 #else 254 #include <stdint.h> 255 #endif 256 257 258 /** Code indicating translation services required within the RPC path. 259 * These indicate whether there is a translatable struct at the start 260 * of the RPC buffer and what information that struct contains. 261 */ 262 enum iorpc_format_e 263 { 264 /** No translation required, no prefix struct. */ 265 IORPC_FORMAT_NONE, 266 267 /** No translation required, no prefix struct, no access to this 268 * operation from user space. */ 269 IORPC_FORMAT_NONE_NOUSER, 270 271 /** Prefix struct contains user VA and size. */ 272 IORPC_FORMAT_USER_MEM, 273 274 /** Prefix struct contains CPA, size, and homing bits. */ 275 IORPC_FORMAT_KERNEL_MEM, 276 277 /** Prefix struct contains interrupt. */ 278 IORPC_FORMAT_KERNEL_INTERRUPT, 279 280 /** Prefix struct contains user-level interrupt. */ 281 IORPC_FORMAT_USER_INTERRUPT, 282 283 /** Prefix struct contains pollfd_setup (interrupt information). */ 284 IORPC_FORMAT_KERNEL_POLLFD_SETUP, 285 286 /** Prefix struct contains user-level pollfd_setup (file descriptor). */ 287 IORPC_FORMAT_USER_POLLFD_SETUP, 288 289 /** Prefix struct contains pollfd (interrupt cookie). */ 290 IORPC_FORMAT_KERNEL_POLLFD, 291 292 /** Prefix struct contains user-level pollfd (file descriptor). */ 293 IORPC_FORMAT_USER_POLLFD, 294 }; 295 296 297 /** Generate an opcode given format and code. */ 298 #define IORPC_OPCODE(FORMAT, CODE) (((FORMAT) << 16) | (CODE)) 299 300 /** The offset passed through the read() and write() system calls 301 combines an opcode with 32 bits of user-specified offset. */ 302 union iorpc_offset 303 { 304 #ifndef __BIG_ENDIAN__ 305 uint64_t offset; /**< All bits. */ 306 307 struct 308 { 309 uint16_t code; /**< RPC code. */ 310 uint16_t format; /**< iorpc_format_e */ 311 uint32_t sub_offset; /**< caller-specified offset. */ 312 }; 313 314 uint32_t opcode; /**< Opcode combines code & format. */ 315 #else 316 uint64_t offset; /**< All bits. */ 317 318 struct 319 { 320 uint32_t sub_offset; /**< caller-specified offset. */ 321 uint16_t format; /**< iorpc_format_e */ 322 uint16_t code; /**< RPC code. */ 323 }; 324 325 struct 326 { 327 uint32_t padding; 328 uint32_t opcode; /**< Opcode combines code & format. */ 329 }; 330 #endif 331 }; 332 333 334 /** Homing and cache hinting bits that can be used by IO devices. */ 335 struct iorpc_mem_attr 336 { 337 unsigned int lotar_x:4; /**< lotar X bits (or Gx page_mask). */ 338 unsigned int lotar_y:4; /**< lotar Y bits (or Gx page_offset). */ 339 unsigned int hfh:1; /**< Uses hash-for-home. */ 340 unsigned int nt_hint:1; /**< Non-temporal hint. */ 341 unsigned int io_pin:1; /**< Only fill 'IO' cache ways. */ 342 }; 343 344 /** Set the nt_hint bit. */ 345 #define IORPC_MEM_BUFFER_FLAG_NT_HINT (1 << 0) 346 347 /** Set the IO pin bit. */ 348 #define IORPC_MEM_BUFFER_FLAG_IO_PIN (1 << 1) 349 350 351 /** A structure used to describe memory registration. Different 352 protection levels describe memory differently, so this union 353 contains all the different possible descriptions. As a request 354 moves up the call chain, each layer translates from one 355 description format to the next. In particular, the Linux iorpc 356 driver translates user VAs into CPAs and homing parameters. */ 357 union iorpc_mem_buffer 358 { 359 struct 360 { 361 uint64_t va; /**< User virtual address. */ 362 uint64_t size; /**< Buffer size. */ 363 unsigned int flags; /**< nt_hint, IO pin. */ 364 } 365 user; /**< Buffer as described by user apps. */ 366 367 struct 368 { 369 unsigned long long cpa; /**< Client physical address. */ 370 #if defined(__KERNEL__) || defined(__HV__) 371 size_t size; /**< Buffer size. */ 372 HV_PTE pte; /**< PTE describing memory homing. */ 373 #else 374 uint64_t size; 375 uint64_t pte; 376 #endif 377 unsigned int flags; /**< nt_hint, IO pin. */ 378 } 379 kernel; /**< Buffer as described by kernel. */ 380 381 struct 382 { 383 unsigned long long pa; /**< Physical address. */ 384 size_t size; /**< Buffer size. */ 385 struct iorpc_mem_attr attr; /**< Homing and locality hint bits. */ 386 } 387 hv; /**< Buffer parameters for HV driver. */ 388 }; 389 390 391 /** A structure used to describe interrupts. The format differs slightly 392 * for user and kernel interrupts. As with the mem_buffer_t, translation 393 * between the formats is done at each level. */ 394 union iorpc_interrupt 395 { 396 struct 397 { 398 int cpu; /**< CPU. */ 399 int event; /**< evt_num */ 400 } 401 user; /**< Interrupt as described by user applications. */ 402 403 struct 404 { 405 int x; /**< X coord. */ 406 int y; /**< Y coord. */ 407 int ipi; /**< int_num */ 408 int event; /**< evt_num */ 409 } 410 kernel; /**< Interrupt as described by the kernel. */ 411 412 }; 413 414 415 /** A structure used to describe interrupts used with poll(). The format 416 * differs significantly for requests from user to kernel, and kernel to 417 * hypervisor. As with the mem_buffer_t, translation between the formats 418 * is done at each level. */ 419 union iorpc_pollfd_setup 420 { 421 struct 422 { 423 int fd; /**< Pollable file descriptor. */ 424 } 425 user; /**< pollfd_setup as described by user applications. */ 426 427 struct 428 { 429 int x; /**< X coord. */ 430 int y; /**< Y coord. */ 431 int ipi; /**< int_num */ 432 int event; /**< evt_num */ 433 } 434 kernel; /**< pollfd_setup as described by the kernel. */ 435 436 }; 437 438 439 /** A structure used to describe previously set up interrupts used with 440 * poll(). The format differs significantly for requests from user to 441 * kernel, and kernel to hypervisor. As with the mem_buffer_t, translation 442 * between the formats is done at each level. */ 443 union iorpc_pollfd 444 { 445 struct 446 { 447 int fd; /**< Pollable file descriptor. */ 448 } 449 user; /**< pollfd as described by user applications. */ 450 451 struct 452 { 453 int cookie; /**< hv cookie returned by the pollfd_setup operation. */ 454 } 455 kernel; /**< pollfd as described by the kernel. */ 456 457 }; 458 459 460 /** The various iorpc devices use error codes from -1100 to -1299. 461 * 462 * This range is distinct from netio (-700 to -799), the hypervisor 463 * (-800 to -899), tilepci (-900 to -999), ilib (-1000 to -1099), 464 * gxcr (-1300 to -1399) and gxpci (-1400 to -1499). 465 */ 466 enum gxio_err_e { 467 468 /** Largest iorpc error number. */ 469 GXIO_ERR_MAX = -1101, 470 471 472 /********************************************************/ 473 /* Generic Error Codes */ 474 /********************************************************/ 475 476 /** Bad RPC opcode - possible version incompatibility. */ 477 GXIO_ERR_OPCODE = -1101, 478 479 /** Invalid parameter. */ 480 GXIO_ERR_INVAL = -1102, 481 482 /** Memory buffer did not meet alignment requirements. */ 483 GXIO_ERR_ALIGNMENT = -1103, 484 485 /** Memory buffers must be coherent and cacheable. */ 486 GXIO_ERR_COHERENCE = -1104, 487 488 /** Resource already initialized. */ 489 GXIO_ERR_ALREADY_INIT = -1105, 490 491 /** No service domains available. */ 492 GXIO_ERR_NO_SVC_DOM = -1106, 493 494 /** Illegal service domain number. */ 495 GXIO_ERR_INVAL_SVC_DOM = -1107, 496 497 /** Illegal MMIO address. */ 498 GXIO_ERR_MMIO_ADDRESS = -1108, 499 500 /** Illegal interrupt binding. */ 501 GXIO_ERR_INTERRUPT = -1109, 502 503 /** Unreasonable client memory. */ 504 GXIO_ERR_CLIENT_MEMORY = -1110, 505 506 /** No more IOTLB entries. */ 507 GXIO_ERR_IOTLB_ENTRY = -1111, 508 509 /** Invalid memory size. */ 510 GXIO_ERR_INVAL_MEMORY_SIZE = -1112, 511 512 /** Unsupported operation. */ 513 GXIO_ERR_UNSUPPORTED_OP = -1113, 514 515 /** Insufficient DMA credits. */ 516 GXIO_ERR_DMA_CREDITS = -1114, 517 518 /** Operation timed out. */ 519 GXIO_ERR_TIMEOUT = -1115, 520 521 /** No such device or object. */ 522 GXIO_ERR_NO_DEVICE = -1116, 523 524 /** Device or resource busy. */ 525 GXIO_ERR_BUSY = -1117, 526 527 /** I/O error. */ 528 GXIO_ERR_IO = -1118, 529 530 /** Permissions error. */ 531 GXIO_ERR_PERM = -1119, 532 533 534 535 /********************************************************/ 536 /* Test Device Error Codes */ 537 /********************************************************/ 538 539 /** Illegal register number. */ 540 GXIO_TEST_ERR_REG_NUMBER = -1120, 541 542 /** Illegal buffer slot. */ 543 GXIO_TEST_ERR_BUFFER_SLOT = -1121, 544 545 546 /********************************************************/ 547 /* MPIPE Error Codes */ 548 /********************************************************/ 549 550 551 /** Invalid buffer size. */ 552 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_INVAL_BUFFER_SIZE = -1131, 553 554 /** Cannot allocate buffer stack. */ 555 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_NO_BUFFER_STACK = -1140, 556 557 /** Invalid buffer stack number. */ 558 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_BAD_BUFFER_STACK = -1141, 559 560 /** Cannot allocate NotifRing. */ 561 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_NO_NOTIF_RING = -1142, 562 563 /** Invalid NotifRing number. */ 564 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_BAD_NOTIF_RING = -1143, 565 566 /** Cannot allocate NotifGroup. */ 567 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_NO_NOTIF_GROUP = -1144, 568 569 /** Invalid NotifGroup number. */ 570 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_BAD_NOTIF_GROUP = -1145, 571 572 /** Cannot allocate bucket. */ 573 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_NO_BUCKET = -1146, 574 575 /** Invalid bucket number. */ 576 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_BAD_BUCKET = -1147, 577 578 /** Cannot allocate eDMA ring. */ 579 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_NO_EDMA_RING = -1148, 580 581 /** Invalid eDMA ring number. */ 582 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_BAD_EDMA_RING = -1149, 583 584 /** Invalid channel number. */ 585 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_BAD_CHANNEL = -1150, 586 587 /** Bad configuration. */ 588 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_BAD_CONFIG = -1151, 589 590 /** Empty iqueue. */ 591 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_IQUEUE_EMPTY = -1152, 592 593 /** Empty rules. */ 594 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_RULES_EMPTY = -1160, 595 596 /** Full rules. */ 597 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_RULES_FULL = -1161, 598 599 /** Corrupt rules. */ 600 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_RULES_CORRUPT = -1162, 601 602 /** Invalid rules. */ 603 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_RULES_INVALID = -1163, 604 605 /** Classifier is too big. */ 606 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_CLASSIFIER_TOO_BIG = -1170, 607 608 /** Classifier is too complex. */ 609 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_CLASSIFIER_TOO_COMPLEX = -1171, 610 611 /** Classifier has bad header. */ 612 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_CLASSIFIER_BAD_HEADER = -1172, 613 614 /** Classifier has bad contents. */ 615 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_CLASSIFIER_BAD_CONTENTS = -1173, 616 617 /** Classifier encountered invalid symbol. */ 618 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_CLASSIFIER_INVAL_SYMBOL = -1174, 619 620 /** Classifier encountered invalid bounds. */ 621 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_CLASSIFIER_INVAL_BOUNDS = -1175, 622 623 /** Classifier encountered invalid relocation. */ 624 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_CLASSIFIER_INVAL_RELOCATION = -1176, 625 626 /** Classifier encountered undefined symbol. */ 627 GXIO_MPIPE_ERR_CLASSIFIER_UNDEF_SYMBOL = -1177, 628 629 630 /********************************************************/ 631 /* TRIO Error Codes */ 632 /********************************************************/ 633 634 /** Cannot allocate memory map region. */ 635 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_NO_MEMORY_MAP = -1180, 636 637 /** Invalid memory map region number. */ 638 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_BAD_MEMORY_MAP = -1181, 639 640 /** Cannot allocate scatter queue. */ 641 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_NO_SCATTER_QUEUE = -1182, 642 643 /** Invalid scatter queue number. */ 644 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_BAD_SCATTER_QUEUE = -1183, 645 646 /** Cannot allocate push DMA ring. */ 647 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_NO_PUSH_DMA_RING = -1184, 648 649 /** Invalid push DMA ring index. */ 650 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_BAD_PUSH_DMA_RING = -1185, 651 652 /** Cannot allocate pull DMA ring. */ 653 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_NO_PULL_DMA_RING = -1186, 654 655 /** Invalid pull DMA ring index. */ 656 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_BAD_PULL_DMA_RING = -1187, 657 658 /** Cannot allocate PIO region. */ 659 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_NO_PIO = -1188, 660 661 /** Invalid PIO region index. */ 662 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_BAD_PIO = -1189, 663 664 /** Cannot allocate ASID. */ 665 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_NO_ASID = -1190, 666 667 /** Invalid ASID. */ 668 GXIO_TRIO_ERR_BAD_ASID = -1191, 669 670 671 /********************************************************/ 672 /* MICA Error Codes */ 673 /********************************************************/ 674 675 /** No such accelerator type. */ 676 GXIO_MICA_ERR_BAD_ACCEL_TYPE = -1220, 677 678 /** Cannot allocate context. */ 679 GXIO_MICA_ERR_NO_CONTEXT = -1221, 680 681 /** PKA command queue is full, can't add another command. */ 682 GXIO_MICA_ERR_PKA_CMD_QUEUE_FULL = -1222, 683 684 /** PKA result queue is empty, can't get a result from the queue. */ 685 GXIO_MICA_ERR_PKA_RESULT_QUEUE_EMPTY = -1223, 686 687 /********************************************************/ 688 /* GPIO Error Codes */ 689 /********************************************************/ 690 691 /** Pin not available. Either the physical pin does not exist, or 692 * it is reserved by the hypervisor for system usage. */ 693 GXIO_GPIO_ERR_PIN_UNAVAILABLE = -1240, 694 695 /** Pin busy. The pin exists, and is available for use via GXIO, but 696 * it has been attached by some other process or driver. */ 697 GXIO_GPIO_ERR_PIN_BUSY = -1241, 698 699 /** Cannot access unattached pin. One or more of the pins being 700 * manipulated by this call are not attached to the requesting 701 * context. */ 702 GXIO_GPIO_ERR_PIN_UNATTACHED = -1242, 703 704 /** Invalid I/O mode for pin. The wiring of the pin in the system 705 * is such that the I/O mode or electrical control parameters 706 * requested could cause damage. */ 707 GXIO_GPIO_ERR_PIN_INVALID_MODE = -1243, 708 709 /** Smallest iorpc error number. */ 710 GXIO_ERR_MIN = -1299 711 }; 712 713 714 #endif /* !_HV_IORPC_H_ */ 715