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      1.. Copyright 2001 Matthew Wilcox
      2..
      3..     This documentation is free software; you can redistribute
      4..     it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public
      5..     License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
      6..     version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later
      7..     version.
      8
      9===============================
     10Bus-Independent Device Accesses
     11===============================
     12
     13:Author: Matthew Wilcox
     14:Author: Alan Cox
     15
     16Introduction
     17============
     18
     19Linux provides an API which abstracts performing IO across all busses
     20and devices, allowing device drivers to be written independently of bus
     21type.
     22
     23Memory Mapped IO
     24================
     25
     26Getting Access to the Device
     27----------------------------
     28
     29The most widely supported form of IO is memory mapped IO. That is, a
     30part of the CPU's address space is interpreted not as accesses to
     31memory, but as accesses to a device. Some architectures define devices
     32to be at a fixed address, but most have some method of discovering
     33devices. The PCI bus walk is a good example of such a scheme. This
     34document does not cover how to receive such an address, but assumes you
     35are starting with one. Physical addresses are of type unsigned long.
     36
     37This address should not be used directly. Instead, to get an address
     38suitable for passing to the accessor functions described below, you
     39should call ioremap(). An address suitable for accessing
     40the device will be returned to you.
     41
     42After you've finished using the device (say, in your module's exit
     43routine), call iounmap() in order to return the address
     44space to the kernel. Most architectures allocate new address space each
     45time you call ioremap(), and they can run out unless you
     46call iounmap().
     47
     48Accessing the device
     49--------------------
     50
     51The part of the interface most used by drivers is reading and writing
     52memory-mapped registers on the device. Linux provides interfaces to read
     53and write 8-bit, 16-bit, 32-bit and 64-bit quantities. Due to a
     54historical accident, these are named byte, word, long and quad accesses.
     55Both read and write accesses are supported; there is no prefetch support
     56at this time.
     57
     58The functions are named readb(), readw(), readl(), readq(),
     59readb_relaxed(), readw_relaxed(), readl_relaxed(), readq_relaxed(),
     60writeb(), writew(), writel() and writeq().
     61
     62Some devices (such as framebuffers) would like to use larger transfers than
     638 bytes at a time. For these devices, the memcpy_toio(),
     64memcpy_fromio() and memset_io() functions are
     65provided. Do not use memset or memcpy on IO addresses; they are not
     66guaranteed to copy data in order.
     67
     68The read and write functions are defined to be ordered. That is the
     69compiler is not permitted to reorder the I/O sequence. When the ordering
     70can be compiler optimised, you can use __readb() and friends to
     71indicate the relaxed ordering. Use this with care.
     72
     73While the basic functions are defined to be synchronous with respect to
     74each other and ordered with respect to each other the busses the devices
     75sit on may themselves have asynchronicity. In particular many authors
     76are burned by the fact that PCI bus writes are posted asynchronously. A
     77driver author must issue a read from the same device to ensure that
     78writes have occurred in the specific cases the author cares. This kind
     79of property cannot be hidden from driver writers in the API. In some
     80cases, the read used to flush the device may be expected to fail (if the
     81card is resetting, for example). In that case, the read should be done
     82from config space, which is guaranteed to soft-fail if the card doesn't
     83respond.
     84
     85The following is an example of flushing a write to a device when the
     86driver would like to ensure the write's effects are visible prior to
     87continuing execution::
     88
     89    static inline void
     90    qla1280_disable_intrs(struct scsi_qla_host *ha)
     91    {
     92        struct device_reg *reg;
     93
     94        reg = ha->iobase;
     95        /* disable risc and host interrupts */
     96        WRT_REG_WORD(&reg->ictrl, 0);
     97        /*
     98         * The following read will ensure that the above write
     99         * has been received by the device before we return from this
    100         * function.
    101         */
    102        RD_REG_WORD(&reg->ictrl);
    103        ha->flags.ints_enabled = 0;
    104    }
    105
    106PCI ordering rules also guarantee that PIO read responses arrive after any
    107outstanding DMA writes from that bus, since for some devices the result of
    108a readb() call may signal to the driver that a DMA transaction is
    109complete. In many cases, however, the driver may want to indicate that the
    110next readb() call has no relation to any previous DMA writes
    111performed by the device. The driver can use readb_relaxed() for
    112these cases, although only some platforms will honor the relaxed
    113semantics. Using the relaxed read functions will provide significant
    114performance benefits on platforms that support it. The qla2xxx driver
    115provides examples of how to use readX_relaxed(). In many cases, a majority
    116of the driver's readX() calls can safely be converted to readX_relaxed()
    117calls, since only a few will indicate or depend on DMA completion.
    118
    119Port Space Accesses
    120===================
    121
    122Port Space Explained
    123--------------------
    124
    125Another form of IO commonly supported is Port Space. This is a range of
    126addresses separate to the normal memory address space. Access to these
    127addresses is generally not as fast as accesses to the memory mapped
    128addresses, and it also has a potentially smaller address space.
    129
    130Unlike memory mapped IO, no preparation is required to access port
    131space.
    132
    133Accessing Port Space
    134--------------------
    135
    136Accesses to this space are provided through a set of functions which
    137allow 8-bit, 16-bit and 32-bit accesses; also known as byte, word and
    138long. These functions are inb(), inw(),
    139inl(), outb(), outw() and
    140outl().
    141
    142Some variants are provided for these functions. Some devices require
    143that accesses to their ports are slowed down. This functionality is
    144provided by appending a ``_p`` to the end of the function.
    145There are also equivalents to memcpy. The ins() and
    146outs() functions copy bytes, words or longs to the given
    147port.
    148
    149__iomem pointer tokens
    150======================
    151
    152The data type for an MMIO address is an ``__iomem`` qualified pointer, such as
    153``void __iomem *reg``. On most architectures it is a regular pointer that
    154points to a virtual memory address and can be offset or dereferenced, but in
    155portable code, it must only be passed from and to functions that explicitly
    156operated on an ``__iomem`` token, in particular the ioremap() and
    157readl()/writel() functions. The 'sparse' semantic code checker can be used to
    158verify that this is done correctly.
    159
    160While on most architectures, ioremap() creates a page table entry for an
    161uncached virtual address pointing to the physical MMIO address, some
    162architectures require special instructions for MMIO, and the ``__iomem`` pointer
    163just encodes the physical address or an offsettable cookie that is interpreted
    164by readl()/writel().
    165
    166Differences between I/O access functions
    167========================================
    168
    169readq(), readl(), readw(), readb(), writeq(), writel(), writew(), writeb()
    170
    171  These are the most generic accessors, providing serialization against other
    172  MMIO accesses and DMA accesses as well as fixed endianness for accessing
    173  little-endian PCI devices and on-chip peripherals. Portable device drivers
    174  should generally use these for any access to ``__iomem`` pointers.
    175
    176  Note that posted writes are not strictly ordered against a spinlock, see
    177  Documentation/driver-api/io_ordering.rst.
    178
    179readq_relaxed(), readl_relaxed(), readw_relaxed(), readb_relaxed(),
    180writeq_relaxed(), writel_relaxed(), writew_relaxed(), writeb_relaxed()
    181
    182  On architectures that require an expensive barrier for serializing against
    183  DMA, these "relaxed" versions of the MMIO accessors only serialize against
    184  each other, but contain a less expensive barrier operation. A device driver
    185  might use these in a particularly performance sensitive fast path, with a
    186  comment that explains why the usage in a specific location is safe without
    187  the extra barriers.
    188
    189  See memory-barriers.txt for a more detailed discussion on the precise ordering
    190  guarantees of the non-relaxed and relaxed versions.
    191
    192ioread64(), ioread32(), ioread16(), ioread8(),
    193iowrite64(), iowrite32(), iowrite16(), iowrite8()
    194
    195  These are an alternative to the normal readl()/writel() functions, with almost
    196  identical behavior, but they can also operate on ``__iomem`` tokens returned
    197  for mapping PCI I/O space with pci_iomap() or ioport_map(). On architectures
    198  that require special instructions for I/O port access, this adds a small
    199  overhead for an indirect function call implemented in lib/iomap.c, while on
    200  other architectures, these are simply aliases.
    201
    202ioread64be(), ioread32be(), ioread16be()
    203iowrite64be(), iowrite32be(), iowrite16be()
    204
    205  These behave in the same way as the ioread32()/iowrite32() family, but with
    206  reversed byte order, for accessing devices with big-endian MMIO registers.
    207  Device drivers that can operate on either big-endian or little-endian
    208  registers may have to implement a custom wrapper function that picks one or
    209  the other depending on which device was found.
    210
    211  Note: On some architectures, the normal readl()/writel() functions
    212  traditionally assume that devices are the same endianness as the CPU, while
    213  using a hardware byte-reverse on the PCI bus when running a big-endian kernel.
    214  Drivers that use readl()/writel() this way are generally not portable, but
    215  tend to be limited to a particular SoC.
    216
    217hi_lo_readq(), lo_hi_readq(), hi_lo_readq_relaxed(), lo_hi_readq_relaxed(),
    218ioread64_lo_hi(), ioread64_hi_lo(), ioread64be_lo_hi(), ioread64be_hi_lo(),
    219hi_lo_writeq(), lo_hi_writeq(), hi_lo_writeq_relaxed(), lo_hi_writeq_relaxed(),
    220iowrite64_lo_hi(), iowrite64_hi_lo(), iowrite64be_lo_hi(), iowrite64be_hi_lo()
    221
    222  Some device drivers have 64-bit registers that cannot be accessed atomically
    223  on 32-bit architectures but allow two consecutive 32-bit accesses instead.
    224  Since it depends on the particular device which of the two halves has to be
    225  accessed first, a helper is provided for each combination of 64-bit accessors
    226  with either low/high or high/low word ordering. A device driver must include
    227  either <linux/io-64-nonatomic-lo-hi.h> or <linux/io-64-nonatomic-hi-lo.h> to
    228  get the function definitions along with helpers that redirect the normal
    229  readq()/writeq() to them on architectures that do not provide 64-bit access
    230  natively.
    231
    232__raw_readq(), __raw_readl(), __raw_readw(), __raw_readb(),
    233__raw_writeq(), __raw_writel(), __raw_writew(), __raw_writeb()
    234
    235  These are low-level MMIO accessors without barriers or byteorder changes and
    236  architecture specific behavior. Accesses are usually atomic in the sense that
    237  a four-byte __raw_readl() does not get split into individual byte loads, but
    238  multiple consecutive accesses can be combined on the bus. In portable code, it
    239  is only safe to use these to access memory behind a device bus but not MMIO
    240  registers, as there are no ordering guarantees with regard to other MMIO
    241  accesses or even spinlocks. The byte order is generally the same as for normal
    242  memory, so unlike the other functions, these can be used to copy data between
    243  kernel memory and device memory.
    244
    245inl(), inw(), inb(), outl(), outw(), outb()
    246
    247  PCI I/O port resources traditionally require separate helpers as they are
    248  implemented using special instructions on the x86 architecture. On most other
    249  architectures, these are mapped to readl()/writel() style accessors
    250  internally, usually pointing to a fixed area in virtual memory. Instead of an
    251  ``__iomem`` pointer, the address is a 32-bit integer token to identify a port
    252  number. PCI requires I/O port access to be non-posted, meaning that an outb()
    253  must complete before the following code executes, while a normal writeb() may
    254  still be in progress. On architectures that correctly implement this, I/O port
    255  access is therefore ordered against spinlocks. Many non-x86 PCI host bridge
    256  implementations and CPU architectures however fail to implement non-posted I/O
    257  space on PCI, so they can end up being posted on such hardware.
    258
    259  In some architectures, the I/O port number space has a 1:1 mapping to
    260  ``__iomem`` pointers, but this is not recommended and device drivers should
    261  not rely on that for portability. Similarly, an I/O port number as described
    262  in a PCI base address register may not correspond to the port number as seen
    263  by a device driver. Portable drivers need to read the port number for the
    264  resource provided by the kernel.
    265
    266  There are no direct 64-bit I/O port accessors, but pci_iomap() in combination
    267  with ioread64/iowrite64 can be used instead.
    268
    269inl_p(), inw_p(), inb_p(), outl_p(), outw_p(), outb_p()
    270
    271  On ISA devices that require specific timing, the _p versions of the I/O
    272  accessors add a small delay. On architectures that do not have ISA buses,
    273  these are aliases to the normal inb/outb helpers.
    274
    275readsq, readsl, readsw, readsb
    276writesq, writesl, writesw, writesb
    277ioread64_rep, ioread32_rep, ioread16_rep, ioread8_rep
    278iowrite64_rep, iowrite32_rep, iowrite16_rep, iowrite8_rep
    279insl, insw, insb, outsl, outsw, outsb
    280
    281  These are helpers that access the same address multiple times, usually to copy
    282  data between kernel memory byte stream and a FIFO buffer. Unlike the normal
    283  MMIO accessors, these do not perform a byteswap on big-endian kernels, so the
    284  first byte in the FIFO register corresponds to the first byte in the memory
    285  buffer regardless of the architecture.
    286
    287Device memory mapping modes
    288===========================
    289
    290Some architectures support multiple modes for mapping device memory.
    291ioremap_*() variants provide a common abstraction around these
    292architecture-specific modes, with a shared set of semantics.
    293
    294ioremap() is the most common mapping type, and is applicable to typical device
    295memory (e.g. I/O registers). Other modes can offer weaker or stronger
    296guarantees, if supported by the architecture. From most to least common, they
    297are as follows:
    298
    299ioremap()
    300---------
    301
    302The default mode, suitable for most memory-mapped devices, e.g. control
    303registers. Memory mapped using ioremap() has the following characteristics:
    304
    305* Uncached - CPU-side caches are bypassed, and all reads and writes are handled
    306  directly by the device
    307* No speculative operations - the CPU may not issue a read or write to this
    308  memory, unless the instruction that does so has been reached in committed
    309  program flow.
    310* No reordering - The CPU may not reorder accesses to this memory mapping with
    311  respect to each other. On some architectures, this relies on barriers in
    312  readl_relaxed()/writel_relaxed().
    313* No repetition - The CPU may not issue multiple reads or writes for a single
    314  program instruction.
    315* No write-combining - Each I/O operation results in one discrete read or write
    316  being issued to the device, and multiple writes are not combined into larger
    317  writes. This may or may not be enforced when using __raw I/O accessors or
    318  pointer dereferences.
    319* Non-executable - The CPU is not allowed to speculate instruction execution
    320  from this memory (it probably goes without saying, but you're also not
    321  allowed to jump into device memory).
    322
    323On many platforms and buses (e.g. PCI), writes issued through ioremap()
    324mappings are posted, which means that the CPU does not wait for the write to
    325actually reach the target device before retiring the write instruction.
    326
    327On many platforms, I/O accesses must be aligned with respect to the access
    328size; failure to do so will result in an exception or unpredictable results.
    329
    330ioremap_wc()
    331------------
    332
    333Maps I/O memory as normal memory with write combining. Unlike ioremap(),
    334
    335* The CPU may speculatively issue reads from the device that the program
    336  didn't actually execute, and may choose to basically read whatever it wants.
    337* The CPU may reorder operations as long as the result is consistent from the
    338  program's point of view.
    339* The CPU may write to the same location multiple times, even when the program
    340  issued a single write.
    341* The CPU may combine several writes into a single larger write.
    342
    343This mode is typically used for video framebuffers, where it can increase
    344performance of writes. It can also be used for other blocks of memory in
    345devices (e.g. buffers or shared memory), but care must be taken as accesses are
    346not guaranteed to be ordered with respect to normal ioremap() MMIO register
    347accesses without explicit barriers.
    348
    349On a PCI bus, it is usually safe to use ioremap_wc() on MMIO areas marked as
    350``IORESOURCE_PREFETCH``, but it may not be used on those without the flag.
    351For on-chip devices, there is no corresponding flag, but a driver can use
    352ioremap_wc() on a device that is known to be safe.
    353
    354ioremap_wt()
    355------------
    356
    357Maps I/O memory as normal memory with write-through caching. Like ioremap_wc(),
    358but also,
    359
    360* The CPU may cache writes issued to and reads from the device, and serve reads
    361  from that cache.
    362
    363This mode is sometimes used for video framebuffers, where drivers still expect
    364writes to reach the device in a timely manner (and not be stuck in the CPU
    365cache), but reads may be served from the cache for efficiency. However, it is
    366rarely useful these days, as framebuffer drivers usually perform writes only,
    367for which ioremap_wc() is more efficient (as it doesn't needlessly trash the
    368cache). Most drivers should not use this.
    369
    370ioremap_np()
    371------------
    372
    373Like ioremap(), but explicitly requests non-posted write semantics. On some
    374architectures and buses, ioremap() mappings have posted write semantics, which
    375means that writes can appear to "complete" from the point of view of the
    376CPU before the written data actually arrives at the target device. Writes are
    377still ordered with respect to other writes and reads from the same device, but
    378due to the posted write semantics, this is not the case with respect to other
    379devices. ioremap_np() explicitly requests non-posted semantics, which means
    380that the write instruction will not appear to complete until the device has
    381received (and to some platform-specific extent acknowledged) the written data.
    382
    383This mapping mode primarily exists to cater for platforms with bus fabrics that
    384require this particular mapping mode to work correctly. These platforms set the
    385``IORESOURCE_MEM_NONPOSTED`` flag for a resource that requires ioremap_np()
    386semantics and portable drivers should use an abstraction that automatically
    387selects it where appropriate (see the `Higher-level ioremap abstractions`_
    388section below).
    389
    390The bare ioremap_np() is only available on some architectures; on others, it
    391always returns NULL. Drivers should not normally use it, unless they are
    392platform-specific or they derive benefit from non-posted writes where
    393supported, and can fall back to ioremap() otherwise. The normal approach to
    394ensure posted write completion is to do a dummy read after a write as
    395explained in `Accessing the device`_, which works with ioremap() on all
    396platforms.
    397
    398ioremap_np() should never be used for PCI drivers. PCI memory space writes are
    399always posted, even on architectures that otherwise implement ioremap_np().
    400Using ioremap_np() for PCI BARs will at best result in posted write semantics,
    401and at worst result in complete breakage.
    402
    403Note that non-posted write semantics are orthogonal to CPU-side ordering
    404guarantees. A CPU may still choose to issue other reads or writes before a
    405non-posted write instruction retires. See the previous section on MMIO access
    406functions for details on the CPU side of things.
    407
    408ioremap_uc()
    409------------
    410
    411ioremap_uc() behaves like ioremap() except that on the x86 architecture without
    412'PAT' mode, it marks memory as uncached even when the MTRR has designated
    413it as cacheable, see Documentation/x86/pat.rst.
    414
    415Portable drivers should avoid the use of ioremap_uc().
    416
    417ioremap_cache()
    418---------------
    419
    420ioremap_cache() effectively maps I/O memory as normal RAM. CPU write-back
    421caches can be used, and the CPU is free to treat the device as if it were a
    422block of RAM. This should never be used for device memory which has side
    423effects of any kind, or which does not return the data previously written on
    424read.
    425
    426It should also not be used for actual RAM, as the returned pointer is an
    427``__iomem`` token. memremap() can be used for mapping normal RAM that is outside
    428of the linear kernel memory area to a regular pointer.
    429
    430Portable drivers should avoid the use of ioremap_cache().
    431
    432Architecture example
    433--------------------
    434
    435Here is how the above modes map to memory attribute settings on the ARM64
    436architecture:
    437
    438+------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
    439| API                    | Memory region type and cacheability        |
    440+------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
    441| ioremap_np()           | Device-nGnRnE                              |
    442+------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
    443| ioremap()              | Device-nGnRE                               |
    444+------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
    445| ioremap_uc()           | (not implemented)                          |
    446+------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
    447| ioremap_wc()           | Normal-Non Cacheable                       |
    448+------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
    449| ioremap_wt()           | (not implemented; fallback to ioremap)     |
    450+------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
    451| ioremap_cache()        | Normal-Write-Back Cacheable                |
    452+------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
    453
    454Higher-level ioremap abstractions
    455=================================
    456
    457Instead of using the above raw ioremap() modes, drivers are encouraged to use
    458higher-level APIs. These APIs may implement platform-specific logic to
    459automatically choose an appropriate ioremap mode on any given bus, allowing for
    460a platform-agnostic driver to work on those platforms without any special
    461cases. At the time of this writing, the following ioremap() wrappers have such
    462logic:
    463
    464devm_ioremap_resource()
    465
    466  Can automatically select ioremap_np() over ioremap() according to platform
    467  requirements, if the ``IORESOURCE_MEM_NONPOSTED`` flag is set on the struct
    468  resource. Uses devres to automatically unmap the resource when the driver
    469  probe() function fails or a device in unbound from its driver.
    470
    471  Documented in Documentation/driver-api/driver-model/devres.rst.
    472
    473of_address_to_resource()
    474
    475  Automatically sets the ``IORESOURCE_MEM_NONPOSTED`` flag for platforms that
    476  require non-posted writes for certain buses (see the nonposted-mmio and
    477  posted-mmio device tree properties).
    478
    479of_iomap()
    480
    481  Maps the resource described in a ``reg`` property in the device tree, doing
    482  all required translations. Automatically selects ioremap_np() according to
    483  platform requirements, as above.
    484
    485pci_ioremap_bar(), pci_ioremap_wc_bar()
    486
    487  Maps the resource described in a PCI base address without having to extract
    488  the physical address first.
    489
    490pci_iomap(), pci_iomap_wc()
    491
    492  Like pci_ioremap_bar()/pci_ioremap_bar(), but also works on I/O space when
    493  used together with ioread32()/iowrite32() and similar accessors
    494
    495pcim_iomap()
    496
    497  Like pci_iomap(), but uses devres to automatically unmap the resource when
    498  the driver probe() function fails or a device in unbound from its driver
    499
    500  Documented in Documentation/driver-api/driver-model/devres.rst.
    501
    502Not using these wrappers may make drivers unusable on certain platforms with
    503stricter rules for mapping I/O memory.
    504
    505Generalizing Access to System and I/O Memory
    506============================================
    507
    508.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/iosys-map.h
    509   :doc: overview
    510
    511.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/iosys-map.h
    512   :internal:
    513
    514Public Functions Provided
    515=========================
    516
    517.. kernel-doc:: arch/x86/include/asm/io.h
    518   :internal:
    519
    520.. kernel-doc:: lib/pci_iomap.c
    521   :export: