port.hh revision 8711
1/* 2 * Copyright (c) 2011 ARM Limited 3 * All rights reserved 4 * 5 * The license below extends only to copyright in the software and shall 6 * not be construed as granting a license to any other intellectual 7 * property including but not limited to intellectual property relating 8 * to a hardware implementation of the functionality of the software 9 * licensed hereunder. You may use the software subject to the license 10 * terms below provided that you ensure that this notice is replicated 11 * unmodified and in its entirety in all distributions of the software, 12 * modified or unmodified, in source code or in binary form. 13 * 14 * Copyright (c) 2002-2005 The Regents of The University of Michigan 15 * All rights reserved. 16 * 17 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 18 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are 19 * met: redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 20 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer; 21 * redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 22 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 23 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution; 24 * neither the name of the copyright holders nor the names of its 25 * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from 26 * this software without specific prior written permission. 27 * 28 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS 29 * "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT 30 * LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR 31 * A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT 32 * OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, 33 * SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT 34 * LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, 35 * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY 36 * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT 37 * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE 38 * OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 39 * 40 * Authors: Ron Dreslinski 41 */ 42 43/** 44 * @file 45 * Port Object Declaration. Ports are used to interface memory objects to 46 * each other. They will always come in pairs, and we refer to the other 47 * port object as the peer. These are used to make the design more 48 * modular so that a specific interface between every type of objcet doesn't 49 * have to be created. 50 */ 51 52#ifndef __MEM_PORT_HH__ 53#define __MEM_PORT_HH__ 54 55#include <list> 56 57#include "base/misc.hh" 58#include "base/range.hh" 59#include "base/types.hh" 60#include "mem/packet.hh" 61#include "mem/request.hh" 62 63/** This typedef is used to clean up getAddrRanges(). It's declared 64 * outside the Port object since it's also used by some mem objects. 65 * Eventually we should move this typedef to wherever Addr is 66 * defined. 67 */ 68 69typedef std::list<Range<Addr> > AddrRangeList; 70typedef std::list<Range<Addr> >::iterator AddrRangeIter; 71 72class MemObject; 73 74/** 75 * Ports are used to interface memory objects to 76 * each other. They will always come in pairs, and we refer to the other 77 * port object as the peer. These are used to make the design more 78 * modular so that a specific interface between every type of objcet doesn't 79 * have to be created. 80 * 81 * Recv accesor functions are being called from the peer interface. 82 * Send accessor functions are being called from the device the port is 83 * associated with, and it will call the peer recv. accessor function. 84 */ 85class Port 86{ 87 protected: 88 /** Descriptive name (for DPRINTF output) */ 89 mutable std::string portName; 90 91 /** A pointer to the peer port. Ports always come in pairs, that way they 92 can use a standardized interface to communicate between different 93 memory objects. */ 94 Port *peer; 95 96 /** A pointer to the MemObject that owns this port. This may not be set. */ 97 MemObject *owner; 98 99 public: 100 /** 101 * Constructor. 102 * 103 * @param _name Port name for DPRINTF output. Should include name 104 * of memory system object to which the port belongs. 105 * @param _owner Pointer to the MemObject that owns this port. 106 * Will not necessarily be set. 107 */ 108 Port(const std::string &_name, MemObject *_owner); 109 110 /** Return port name (for DPRINTF). */ 111 const std::string &name() const { return portName; } 112 113 virtual ~Port(); 114 115 void setName(const std::string &name) 116 { portName = name; } 117 118 /** Function to set the pointer for the peer port. */ 119 virtual void setPeer(Port *port); 120 121 /** Function to get the pointer to the peer port. */ 122 Port *getPeer() { return peer; } 123 124 /** Function to set the owner of this port. */ 125 void setOwner(MemObject *_owner); 126 127 /** Function to return the owner of this port. */ 128 MemObject *getOwner() { return owner; } 129 130 bool isConnected() { return peer != NULL; } 131 132 protected: 133 134 /** These functions are protected because they should only be 135 * called by a peer port, never directly by any outside object. */ 136 137 /** Called to recive a timing call from the peer port. */ 138 virtual bool recvTiming(PacketPtr pkt) = 0; 139 140 /** Called to recive a atomic call from the peer port. */ 141 virtual Tick recvAtomic(PacketPtr pkt) = 0; 142 143 /** Called to recive a functional call from the peer port. */ 144 virtual void recvFunctional(PacketPtr pkt) = 0; 145 146 /** Called to recieve an address range change from the peer port. */ 147 virtual void recvRangeChange() = 0; 148 149 /** Called by a peer port if the send was unsuccesful, and had to 150 wait. This shouldn't be valid for response paths (IO Devices). 151 so it is set to panic if it isn't already defined. 152 */ 153 virtual void recvRetry() { panic("??"); } 154 155 /** Called by a peer port in order to determine the block size of the 156 device connected to this port. It sometimes doesn't make sense for 157 this function to be called, so it just returns 0. Anytthing that is 158 concerned with the size should just ignore that. 159 */ 160 virtual unsigned deviceBlockSize() const { return 0; } 161 162 public: 163 164 /** 165 * Get a list of the non-overlapping address ranges we are 166 * responsible for. The default implementation returns an empty 167 * list and thus no address ranges. Any slave port must override 168 * this function and return a populated list with at least one 169 * item. 170 * 171 * @return a list of ranges responded to 172 */ 173 virtual AddrRangeList getAddrRanges() 174 { AddrRangeList ranges; return ranges; } 175 176 /** 177 * Determine if this port is snooping or not. The default 178 * implementation returns false and thus tells the neighbour we 179 * are not snooping. Any port that is to snoop (e.g. a cache 180 * connected to a bus) has to override this function. 181 * 182 * @return true if the port should be considered a snooper 183 */ 184 virtual bool isSnooping() 185 { return false; } 186 187 /** Function called by associated memory device (cache, memory, iodevice) 188 in order to send a timing request to the port. Simply calls the peer 189 port receive function. 190 @return This function returns if the send was succesful in it's 191 recieve. If it was a failure, then the port will wait for a recvRetry 192 at which point it can possibly issue a successful sendTiming. This is used in 193 case a cache has a higher priority request come in while waiting for 194 the bus to arbitrate. 195 */ 196 bool sendTiming(PacketPtr pkt) { return peer->recvTiming(pkt); } 197 198 /** Function called by the associated device to send an atomic 199 * access, an access in which the data is moved and the state is 200 * updated in one cycle, without interleaving with other memory 201 * accesses. Returns estimated latency of access. 202 */ 203 Tick sendAtomic(PacketPtr pkt) 204 { return peer->recvAtomic(pkt); } 205 206 /** Function called by the associated device to send a functional access, 207 an access in which the data is instantly updated everywhere in the 208 memory system, without affecting the current state of any block or 209 moving the block. 210 */ 211 void sendFunctional(PacketPtr pkt) 212 { return peer->recvFunctional(pkt); } 213 214 /** 215 * Called by the associated device to send a status range to the 216 * peer interface. 217 */ 218 void sendRangeChange() const { peer->recvRangeChange(); } 219 220 /** When a timing access doesn't return a success, some time later the 221 Retry will be sent. 222 */ 223 void sendRetry() { return peer->recvRetry(); } 224 225 /** Called by the associated device if it wishes to find out the blocksize 226 of the device on attached to the peer port. 227 */ 228 unsigned peerBlockSize() const { return peer->deviceBlockSize(); } 229 230 /** This function is a wrapper around sendFunctional() 231 that breaks a larger, arbitrarily aligned access into 232 appropriate chunks. The default implementation can use 233 getBlockSize() to determine the block size and go from there. 234 */ 235 virtual void readBlob(Addr addr, uint8_t *p, int size); 236 237 /** This function is a wrapper around sendFunctional() 238 that breaks a larger, arbitrarily aligned access into 239 appropriate chunks. The default implementation can use 240 getBlockSize() to determine the block size and go from there. 241 */ 242 virtual void writeBlob(Addr addr, uint8_t *p, int size); 243 244 /** Fill size bytes starting at addr with byte value val. This 245 should not need to be virtual, since it can be implemented in 246 terms of writeBlob(). However, it shouldn't be 247 performance-critical either, so it could be if we wanted to. 248 */ 249 virtual void memsetBlob(Addr addr, uint8_t val, int size); 250 251 /** Inject a PrintReq for the given address to print the state of 252 * that address throughout the memory system. For debugging. 253 */ 254 void printAddr(Addr a); 255 256 private: 257 258 /** Internal helper function for read/writeBlob(). 259 */ 260 void blobHelper(Addr addr, uint8_t *p, int size, MemCmd cmd); 261}; 262 263#endif //__MEM_PORT_HH__ 264