mirror of
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git
synced 2026-02-28 19:06:51 +01:00
`MIN_SIZE` and `io_addr_assert` are only ever used for IO types which
implement `IoKnownSize` and do not make sense for types that don't.
It looks like they should have been there since the beginning, so move
them while the code is still fresh.
Also update `IoKnownSize`'s documentation since it is not just a marker
trait anymore.
Fixes: 121d87b28e ("rust: io: separate generic I/O helpers from MMIO implementation")
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Courbot <acourbot@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260130-io-min-size-v1-1-65a546e3104d@nvidia.com
[ Fix typo in commit message. - Danilo ]
Signed-off-by: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@kernel.org>
609 lines
20 KiB
Rust
609 lines
20 KiB
Rust
// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
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//! Memory-mapped IO.
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//!
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//! C header: [`include/asm-generic/io.h`](srctree/include/asm-generic/io.h)
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use crate::{
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bindings,
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prelude::*, //
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};
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pub mod mem;
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pub mod poll;
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pub mod resource;
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pub use resource::Resource;
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/// Physical address type.
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///
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/// This is a type alias to either `u32` or `u64` depending on the config option
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/// `CONFIG_PHYS_ADDR_T_64BIT`, and it can be a u64 even on 32-bit architectures.
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pub type PhysAddr = bindings::phys_addr_t;
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/// Resource Size type.
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///
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/// This is a type alias to either `u32` or `u64` depending on the config option
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/// `CONFIG_PHYS_ADDR_T_64BIT`, and it can be a u64 even on 32-bit architectures.
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pub type ResourceSize = bindings::resource_size_t;
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/// Raw representation of an MMIO region.
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///
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/// By itself, the existence of an instance of this structure does not provide any guarantees that
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/// the represented MMIO region does exist or is properly mapped.
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///
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/// Instead, the bus specific MMIO implementation must convert this raw representation into an
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/// `Mmio` instance providing the actual memory accessors. Only by the conversion into an `Mmio`
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/// structure any guarantees are given.
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pub struct MmioRaw<const SIZE: usize = 0> {
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addr: usize,
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maxsize: usize,
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}
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impl<const SIZE: usize> MmioRaw<SIZE> {
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/// Returns a new `MmioRaw` instance on success, an error otherwise.
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pub fn new(addr: usize, maxsize: usize) -> Result<Self> {
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if maxsize < SIZE {
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return Err(EINVAL);
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}
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Ok(Self { addr, maxsize })
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}
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/// Returns the base address of the MMIO region.
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#[inline]
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pub fn addr(&self) -> usize {
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self.addr
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}
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/// Returns the maximum size of the MMIO region.
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#[inline]
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pub fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
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self.maxsize
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}
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}
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/// IO-mapped memory region.
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///
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/// The creator (usually a subsystem / bus such as PCI) is responsible for creating the
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/// mapping, performing an additional region request etc.
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///
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/// # Invariant
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///
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/// `addr` is the start and `maxsize` the length of valid I/O mapped memory region of size
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/// `maxsize`.
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///
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/// # Examples
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///
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/// ```no_run
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/// use kernel::{
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/// bindings,
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/// ffi::c_void,
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/// io::{
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/// Io,
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/// IoKnownSize,
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/// Mmio,
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/// MmioRaw,
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/// PhysAddr,
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/// },
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/// };
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/// use core::ops::Deref;
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///
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/// // See also `pci::Bar` for a real example.
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/// struct IoMem<const SIZE: usize>(MmioRaw<SIZE>);
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///
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/// impl<const SIZE: usize> IoMem<SIZE> {
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/// /// # Safety
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/// ///
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/// /// [`paddr`, `paddr` + `SIZE`) must be a valid MMIO region that is mappable into the CPUs
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/// /// virtual address space.
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/// unsafe fn new(paddr: usize) -> Result<Self>{
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/// // SAFETY: By the safety requirements of this function [`paddr`, `paddr` + `SIZE`) is
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/// // valid for `ioremap`.
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/// let addr = unsafe { bindings::ioremap(paddr as PhysAddr, SIZE) };
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/// if addr.is_null() {
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/// return Err(ENOMEM);
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/// }
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///
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/// Ok(IoMem(MmioRaw::new(addr as usize, SIZE)?))
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/// }
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/// }
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///
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/// impl<const SIZE: usize> Drop for IoMem<SIZE> {
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/// fn drop(&mut self) {
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/// // SAFETY: `self.0.addr()` is guaranteed to be properly mapped by `Self::new`.
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/// unsafe { bindings::iounmap(self.0.addr() as *mut c_void); };
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/// }
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/// }
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///
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/// impl<const SIZE: usize> Deref for IoMem<SIZE> {
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/// type Target = Mmio<SIZE>;
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///
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/// fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
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/// // SAFETY: The memory range stored in `self` has been properly mapped in `Self::new`.
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/// unsafe { Mmio::from_raw(&self.0) }
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/// }
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/// }
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///
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///# fn no_run() -> Result<(), Error> {
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/// // SAFETY: Invalid usage for example purposes.
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/// let iomem = unsafe { IoMem::<{ core::mem::size_of::<u32>() }>::new(0xBAAAAAAD)? };
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/// iomem.write32(0x42, 0x0);
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/// assert!(iomem.try_write32(0x42, 0x0).is_ok());
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/// assert!(iomem.try_write32(0x42, 0x4).is_err());
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/// # Ok(())
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/// # }
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/// ```
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#[repr(transparent)]
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pub struct Mmio<const SIZE: usize = 0>(MmioRaw<SIZE>);
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/// Internal helper macros used to invoke C MMIO read functions.
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///
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/// This macro is intended to be used by higher-level MMIO access macros (define_read) and provides
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/// a unified expansion for infallible vs. fallible read semantics. It emits a direct call into the
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/// corresponding C helper and performs the required cast to the Rust return type.
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///
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/// # Parameters
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///
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/// * `$c_fn` – The C function performing the MMIO read.
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/// * `$self` – The I/O backend object.
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/// * `$ty` – The type of the value to be read.
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/// * `$addr` – The MMIO address to read.
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///
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/// This macro does not perform any validation; all invariants must be upheld by the higher-level
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/// abstraction invoking it.
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macro_rules! call_mmio_read {
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(infallible, $c_fn:ident, $self:ident, $type:ty, $addr:expr) => {
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// SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
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unsafe { bindings::$c_fn($addr as *const c_void) as $type }
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};
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(fallible, $c_fn:ident, $self:ident, $type:ty, $addr:expr) => {{
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// SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
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Ok(unsafe { bindings::$c_fn($addr as *const c_void) as $type })
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}};
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}
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/// Internal helper macros used to invoke C MMIO write functions.
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///
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/// This macro is intended to be used by higher-level MMIO access macros (define_write) and provides
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/// a unified expansion for infallible vs. fallible write semantics. It emits a direct call into the
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/// corresponding C helper and performs the required cast to the Rust return type.
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///
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/// # Parameters
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///
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/// * `$c_fn` – The C function performing the MMIO write.
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/// * `$self` – The I/O backend object.
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/// * `$ty` – The type of the written value.
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/// * `$addr` – The MMIO address to write.
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/// * `$value` – The value to write.
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///
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/// This macro does not perform any validation; all invariants must be upheld by the higher-level
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/// abstraction invoking it.
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macro_rules! call_mmio_write {
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(infallible, $c_fn:ident, $self:ident, $ty:ty, $addr:expr, $value:expr) => {
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// SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
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unsafe { bindings::$c_fn($value, $addr as *mut c_void) }
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};
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(fallible, $c_fn:ident, $self:ident, $ty:ty, $addr:expr, $value:expr) => {{
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// SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
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unsafe { bindings::$c_fn($value, $addr as *mut c_void) };
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Ok(())
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}};
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}
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macro_rules! define_read {
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(infallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $name:ident, $call_macro:ident($c_fn:ident) ->
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$type_name:ty) => {
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/// Read IO data from a given offset known at compile time.
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///
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/// Bound checks are performed on compile time, hence if the offset is not known at compile
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/// time, the build will fail.
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$(#[$attr])*
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// Always inline to optimize out error path of `io_addr_assert`.
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#[inline(always)]
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$vis fn $name(&self, offset: usize) -> $type_name {
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let addr = self.io_addr_assert::<$type_name>(offset);
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// SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for IO operations.
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$call_macro!(infallible, $c_fn, self, $type_name, addr)
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}
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};
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(fallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $try_name:ident, $call_macro:ident($c_fn:ident) ->
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$type_name:ty) => {
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/// Read IO data from a given offset.
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///
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/// Bound checks are performed on runtime, it fails if the offset (plus the type size) is
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/// out of bounds.
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$(#[$attr])*
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$vis fn $try_name(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<$type_name> {
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let addr = self.io_addr::<$type_name>(offset)?;
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// SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for IO operations.
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$call_macro!(fallible, $c_fn, self, $type_name, addr)
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}
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};
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}
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pub(crate) use define_read;
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macro_rules! define_write {
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(infallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $name:ident, $call_macro:ident($c_fn:ident) <-
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$type_name:ty) => {
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/// Write IO data from a given offset known at compile time.
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///
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/// Bound checks are performed on compile time, hence if the offset is not known at compile
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/// time, the build will fail.
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$(#[$attr])*
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// Always inline to optimize out error path of `io_addr_assert`.
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#[inline(always)]
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$vis fn $name(&self, value: $type_name, offset: usize) {
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let addr = self.io_addr_assert::<$type_name>(offset);
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$call_macro!(infallible, $c_fn, self, $type_name, addr, value);
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}
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};
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(fallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $try_name:ident, $call_macro:ident($c_fn:ident) <-
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$type_name:ty) => {
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/// Write IO data from a given offset.
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///
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/// Bound checks are performed on runtime, it fails if the offset (plus the type size) is
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/// out of bounds.
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$(#[$attr])*
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$vis fn $try_name(&self, value: $type_name, offset: usize) -> Result {
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let addr = self.io_addr::<$type_name>(offset)?;
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$call_macro!(fallible, $c_fn, self, $type_name, addr, value)
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}
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};
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}
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pub(crate) use define_write;
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/// Checks whether an access of type `U` at the given `offset`
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/// is valid within this region.
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#[inline]
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const fn offset_valid<U>(offset: usize, size: usize) -> bool {
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let type_size = core::mem::size_of::<U>();
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if let Some(end) = offset.checked_add(type_size) {
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end <= size && offset % type_size == 0
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} else {
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false
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}
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}
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/// Marker trait indicating that an I/O backend supports operations of a certain type.
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///
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/// Different I/O backends can implement this trait to expose only the operations they support.
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///
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/// For example, a PCI configuration space may implement `IoCapable<u8>`, `IoCapable<u16>`,
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/// and `IoCapable<u32>`, but not `IoCapable<u64>`, while an MMIO region on a 64-bit
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/// system might implement all four.
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pub trait IoCapable<T> {}
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/// Types implementing this trait (e.g. MMIO BARs or PCI config regions)
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/// can perform I/O operations on regions of memory.
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///
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/// This is an abstract representation to be implemented by arbitrary I/O
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/// backends (e.g. MMIO, PCI config space, etc.).
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///
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/// The [`Io`] trait provides:
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/// - Base address and size information
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/// - Helper methods for offset validation and address calculation
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/// - Fallible (runtime checked) accessors for different data widths
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///
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/// Which I/O methods are available depends on which [`IoCapable<T>`] traits
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/// are implemented for the type.
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///
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/// # Examples
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///
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/// For MMIO regions, all widths (u8, u16, u32, and u64 on 64-bit systems) are typically
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/// supported. For PCI configuration space, u8, u16, and u32 are supported but u64 is not.
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pub trait Io {
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/// Returns the base address of this mapping.
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fn addr(&self) -> usize;
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/// Returns the maximum size of this mapping.
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fn maxsize(&self) -> usize;
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/// Returns the absolute I/O address for a given `offset`,
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/// performing runtime bound checks.
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#[inline]
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fn io_addr<U>(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<usize> {
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if !offset_valid::<U>(offset, self.maxsize()) {
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return Err(EINVAL);
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}
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// Probably no need to check, since the safety requirements of `Self::new` guarantee that
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// this can't overflow.
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self.addr().checked_add(offset).ok_or(EINVAL)
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}
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/// Fallible 8-bit read with runtime bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn try_read8(&self, _offset: usize) -> Result<u8>
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where
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Self: IoCapable<u8>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support fallible 8-bit read")
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}
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/// Fallible 16-bit read with runtime bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn try_read16(&self, _offset: usize) -> Result<u16>
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where
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Self: IoCapable<u16>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support fallible 16-bit read")
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}
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/// Fallible 32-bit read with runtime bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn try_read32(&self, _offset: usize) -> Result<u32>
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where
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Self: IoCapable<u32>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support fallible 32-bit read")
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}
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/// Fallible 64-bit read with runtime bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn try_read64(&self, _offset: usize) -> Result<u64>
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where
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Self: IoCapable<u64>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support fallible 64-bit read")
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}
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/// Fallible 8-bit write with runtime bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn try_write8(&self, _value: u8, _offset: usize) -> Result
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where
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Self: IoCapable<u8>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support fallible 8-bit write")
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}
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/// Fallible 16-bit write with runtime bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn try_write16(&self, _value: u16, _offset: usize) -> Result
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where
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Self: IoCapable<u16>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support fallible 16-bit write")
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}
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/// Fallible 32-bit write with runtime bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn try_write32(&self, _value: u32, _offset: usize) -> Result
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where
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Self: IoCapable<u32>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support fallible 32-bit write")
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}
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/// Fallible 64-bit write with runtime bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn try_write64(&self, _value: u64, _offset: usize) -> Result
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where
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Self: IoCapable<u64>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support fallible 64-bit write")
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}
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/// Infallible 8-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn read8(&self, _offset: usize) -> u8
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where
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Self: IoKnownSize + IoCapable<u8>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support infallible 8-bit read")
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}
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/// Infallible 16-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn read16(&self, _offset: usize) -> u16
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where
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Self: IoKnownSize + IoCapable<u16>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support infallible 16-bit read")
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}
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/// Infallible 32-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn read32(&self, _offset: usize) -> u32
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where
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Self: IoKnownSize + IoCapable<u32>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support infallible 32-bit read")
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}
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/// Infallible 64-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn read64(&self, _offset: usize) -> u64
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where
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Self: IoKnownSize + IoCapable<u64>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support infallible 64-bit read")
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}
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/// Infallible 8-bit write with compile-time bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn write8(&self, _value: u8, _offset: usize)
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where
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Self: IoKnownSize + IoCapable<u8>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support infallible 8-bit write")
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}
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/// Infallible 16-bit write with compile-time bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn write16(&self, _value: u16, _offset: usize)
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where
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Self: IoKnownSize + IoCapable<u16>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support infallible 16-bit write")
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}
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/// Infallible 32-bit write with compile-time bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn write32(&self, _value: u32, _offset: usize)
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where
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Self: IoKnownSize + IoCapable<u32>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support infallible 32-bit write")
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}
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/// Infallible 64-bit write with compile-time bounds check.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn write64(&self, _value: u64, _offset: usize)
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where
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Self: IoKnownSize + IoCapable<u64>,
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{
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build_error!("Backend does not support infallible 64-bit write")
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||
}
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
/// Trait for types with a known size at compile time.
|
||
///
|
||
/// This trait is implemented by I/O backends that have a compile-time known size,
|
||
/// enabling the use of infallible I/O accessors with compile-time bounds checking.
|
||
///
|
||
/// Types implementing this trait can use the infallible methods in [`Io`] trait
|
||
/// (e.g., `read8`, `write32`), which require `Self: IoKnownSize` bound.
|
||
pub trait IoKnownSize: Io {
|
||
/// Minimum usable size of this region.
|
||
const MIN_SIZE: usize;
|
||
|
||
/// Returns the absolute I/O address for a given `offset`,
|
||
/// performing compile-time bound checks.
|
||
// Always inline to optimize out error path of `build_assert`.
|
||
#[inline(always)]
|
||
fn io_addr_assert<U>(&self, offset: usize) -> usize {
|
||
build_assert!(offset_valid::<U>(offset, Self::MIN_SIZE));
|
||
|
||
self.addr() + offset
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
// MMIO regions support 8, 16, and 32-bit accesses.
|
||
impl<const SIZE: usize> IoCapable<u8> for Mmio<SIZE> {}
|
||
impl<const SIZE: usize> IoCapable<u16> for Mmio<SIZE> {}
|
||
impl<const SIZE: usize> IoCapable<u32> for Mmio<SIZE> {}
|
||
|
||
// MMIO regions on 64-bit systems also support 64-bit accesses.
|
||
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
|
||
impl<const SIZE: usize> IoCapable<u64> for Mmio<SIZE> {}
|
||
|
||
impl<const SIZE: usize> Io for Mmio<SIZE> {
|
||
/// Returns the base address of this mapping.
|
||
#[inline]
|
||
fn addr(&self) -> usize {
|
||
self.0.addr()
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
/// Returns the maximum size of this mapping.
|
||
#[inline]
|
||
fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
|
||
self.0.maxsize()
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
define_read!(fallible, try_read8, call_mmio_read(readb) -> u8);
|
||
define_read!(fallible, try_read16, call_mmio_read(readw) -> u16);
|
||
define_read!(fallible, try_read32, call_mmio_read(readl) -> u32);
|
||
define_read!(
|
||
fallible,
|
||
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
|
||
try_read64,
|
||
call_mmio_read(readq) -> u64
|
||
);
|
||
|
||
define_write!(fallible, try_write8, call_mmio_write(writeb) <- u8);
|
||
define_write!(fallible, try_write16, call_mmio_write(writew) <- u16);
|
||
define_write!(fallible, try_write32, call_mmio_write(writel) <- u32);
|
||
define_write!(
|
||
fallible,
|
||
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
|
||
try_write64,
|
||
call_mmio_write(writeq) <- u64
|
||
);
|
||
|
||
define_read!(infallible, read8, call_mmio_read(readb) -> u8);
|
||
define_read!(infallible, read16, call_mmio_read(readw) -> u16);
|
||
define_read!(infallible, read32, call_mmio_read(readl) -> u32);
|
||
define_read!(
|
||
infallible,
|
||
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
|
||
read64,
|
||
call_mmio_read(readq) -> u64
|
||
);
|
||
|
||
define_write!(infallible, write8, call_mmio_write(writeb) <- u8);
|
||
define_write!(infallible, write16, call_mmio_write(writew) <- u16);
|
||
define_write!(infallible, write32, call_mmio_write(writel) <- u32);
|
||
define_write!(
|
||
infallible,
|
||
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
|
||
write64,
|
||
call_mmio_write(writeq) <- u64
|
||
);
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
impl<const SIZE: usize> IoKnownSize for Mmio<SIZE> {
|
||
const MIN_SIZE: usize = SIZE;
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
impl<const SIZE: usize> Mmio<SIZE> {
|
||
/// Converts an `MmioRaw` into an `Mmio` instance, providing the accessors to the MMIO mapping.
|
||
///
|
||
/// # Safety
|
||
///
|
||
/// Callers must ensure that `addr` is the start of a valid I/O mapped memory region of size
|
||
/// `maxsize`.
|
||
pub unsafe fn from_raw(raw: &MmioRaw<SIZE>) -> &Self {
|
||
// SAFETY: `Mmio` is a transparent wrapper around `MmioRaw`.
|
||
unsafe { &*core::ptr::from_ref(raw).cast() }
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
define_read!(infallible, pub read8_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readb_relaxed) -> u8);
|
||
define_read!(infallible, pub read16_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readw_relaxed) -> u16);
|
||
define_read!(infallible, pub read32_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readl_relaxed) -> u32);
|
||
define_read!(
|
||
infallible,
|
||
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
|
||
pub read64_relaxed,
|
||
call_mmio_read(readq_relaxed) -> u64
|
||
);
|
||
|
||
define_read!(fallible, pub try_read8_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readb_relaxed) -> u8);
|
||
define_read!(fallible, pub try_read16_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readw_relaxed) -> u16);
|
||
define_read!(fallible, pub try_read32_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readl_relaxed) -> u32);
|
||
define_read!(
|
||
fallible,
|
||
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
|
||
pub try_read64_relaxed,
|
||
call_mmio_read(readq_relaxed) -> u64
|
||
);
|
||
|
||
define_write!(infallible, pub write8_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writeb_relaxed) <- u8);
|
||
define_write!(infallible, pub write16_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writew_relaxed) <- u16);
|
||
define_write!(infallible, pub write32_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writel_relaxed) <- u32);
|
||
define_write!(
|
||
infallible,
|
||
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
|
||
pub write64_relaxed,
|
||
call_mmio_write(writeq_relaxed) <- u64
|
||
);
|
||
|
||
define_write!(fallible, pub try_write8_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writeb_relaxed) <- u8);
|
||
define_write!(fallible, pub try_write16_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writew_relaxed) <- u16);
|
||
define_write!(fallible, pub try_write32_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writel_relaxed) <- u32);
|
||
define_write!(
|
||
fallible,
|
||
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
|
||
pub try_write64_relaxed,
|
||
call_mmio_write(writeq_relaxed) <- u64
|
||
);
|
||
}
|