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163 lines
6.0 KiB
Rust
163 lines
6.0 KiB
Rust
// plic.rs
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// Platform Level Interrupt Controller (PLIC)
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// Stephen Marz
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// 1 Nov 2019
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use crate::uart::Uart;
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use crate::virtio;
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const PLIC_PRIORITY: usize = 0x0c00_0000;
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const PLIC_PENDING: usize = 0x0c00_1000;
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const PLIC_INT_ENABLE: usize = 0x0c00_2000;
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const PLIC_THRESHOLD: usize = 0x0c20_0000;
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const PLIC_CLAIM: usize = 0x0c20_0004;
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// Each register is 4-bytes (u32)
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// The PLIC is an external interrupt controller. The one
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// used by QEMU virt is the same as the SiFive PLIC.
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// https://sifive.cdn.prismic.io/sifive%2F834354f0-08e6-423c-bf1f-0cb58ef14061_fu540-c000-v1.0.pdf
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// Chapter 10 explains the priority, pending, interrupt enable, threshold and claims
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// The virt machine has the following external interrupts (from Qemu source):
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// Interrupt 0 is a "null" interrupt and is hardwired to 0.
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// VIRTIO = [1..8]
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// UART0 = 10
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// PCIE = [32..35]
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/// Get the next available interrupt. This is the "claim" process.
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/// The plic will automatically sort by priority and hand us the
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/// ID of the interrupt. For example, if the UART is interrupting
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/// and it's next, we will get the value 10.
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pub fn next() -> Option<u32> {
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let claim_reg = PLIC_CLAIM as *const u32;
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let claim_no;
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// The claim register is filled with the highest-priority, enabled interrupt.
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unsafe {
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claim_no = claim_reg.read_volatile();
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}
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if claim_no == 0 {
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// The interrupt 0 is hardwired to 0, which tells us that there is no
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// interrupt to claim, hence we return None.
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None
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}
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else {
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// If we get here, we've gotten a non-0 interrupt.
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Some(claim_no)
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}
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}
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/// Complete a pending interrupt by id. The id should come
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/// from the next() function above.
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pub fn complete(id: u32) {
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let complete_reg = PLIC_CLAIM as *mut u32;
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unsafe {
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// We actually write a u32 into the entire complete_register.
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// This is the same register as the claim register, but it can
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// differentiate based on whether we're reading or writing.
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complete_reg.write_volatile(id);
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}
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}
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/// Set the global threshold. The threshold can be a value [0..7].
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/// The PLIC will mask any interrupts at or below the given threshold.
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/// This means that a threshold of 7 will mask ALL interrupts and
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/// a threshold of 0 will allow ALL interrupts.
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pub fn set_threshold(tsh: u8) {
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// We do tsh because we're using a u8, but our maximum number
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// is a 3-bit 0b111. So, we and with 7 (0b111) to just get the
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// last three bits.
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let actual_tsh = tsh & 7;
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let tsh_reg = PLIC_THRESHOLD as *mut u32;
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unsafe {
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tsh_reg.write_volatile(actual_tsh as u32);
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}
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}
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/// See if a given interrupt id is pending.
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pub fn is_pending(id: u32) -> bool {
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let pend = PLIC_PENDING as *const u32;
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let actual_id = 1 << id;
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let pend_ids;
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unsafe {
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pend_ids = pend.read_volatile();
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}
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actual_id & pend_ids != 0
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}
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/// Enable a given interrupt id
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pub fn enable(id: u32) {
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let enables = PLIC_INT_ENABLE as *mut u32;
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let actual_id = 1 << id;
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unsafe {
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// Unlike the complete and claim registers, the plic_int_enable
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// register is a bitset where the id is the bit index. The register
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// is a 32-bit register, so that gives us enables for interrupts
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// 31 through 1 (0 is hardwired to 0).
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enables.write_volatile(enables.read_volatile() | actual_id);
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}
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}
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/// Set a given interrupt priority to the given priority.
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/// The priority must be [0..7]
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pub fn set_priority(id: u32, prio: u8) {
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let actual_prio = prio as u32 & 7;
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let prio_reg = PLIC_PRIORITY as *mut u32;
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unsafe {
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// The offset for the interrupt id is:
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// PLIC_PRIORITY + 4 * id
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// Since we're using pointer arithmetic on a u32 type,
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// it will automatically multiply the id by 4.
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prio_reg.add(id as usize).write_volatile(actual_prio);
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}
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}
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pub fn handle_interrupt() {
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if let Some(interrupt) = next() {
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// If we get here, we've got an interrupt from the claim register. The PLIC will
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// automatically prioritize the next interrupt, so when we get it from claim, it
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// will be the next in priority order.
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match interrupt {
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1..=8 => {
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virtio::handle_interrupt(interrupt);
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},
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10 => { // Interrupt 10 is the UART interrupt.
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// We would typically set this to be handled out of the interrupt context,
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// but we're testing here! C'mon!
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// We haven't yet used the singleton pattern for my_uart, but remember, this
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// just simply wraps 0x1000_0000 (UART).
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let mut my_uart = Uart::new(0x1000_0000);
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// If we get here, the UART better have something! If not, what happened??
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if let Some(c) = my_uart.get() {
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// If you recognize this code, it used to be in the lib.rs under kmain(). That
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// was because we needed to poll for UART data. Now that we have interrupts,
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// here it goes!
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match c {
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8 => {
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// This is a backspace, so we
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// essentially have to write a space and
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// backup again:
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print!("{} {}", 8 as char, 8 as char);
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},
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10 | 13 => {
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// Newline or carriage-return
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println!();
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},
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_ => {
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print!("{}", c as char);
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},
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}
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}
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},
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_ => {
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println!("Unknown external interrupt: {}", interrupt);
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}
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}
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// We've claimed it, so now say that we've handled it. This resets the interrupt pending
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// and allows the UART to interrupt again. Otherwise, the UART will get "stuck".
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complete(interrupt);
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}
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}
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