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Part I Designing Device Drivers for the Solaris Platform 1. Overview of Solaris Device Drivers 2. Solaris Kernel and Device Tree 5. Managing Events and Queueing Tasks 7. Device Access: Programmed I/O Handling High-Level Interrupts 10. Mapping Device and Kernel Memory 14. Layered Driver Interface (LDI) Part II Designing Specific Kinds of Device Drivers 15. Drivers for Character Devices 18. SCSI Host Bus Adapter Drivers 19. Drivers for Network Devices Part III Building a Device Driver 21. Compiling, Loading, Packaging, and Testing Drivers 22. Debugging, Testing, and Tuning Device Drivers 23. Recommended Coding Practices B. Summary of Solaris DDI/DKI Services C. Making a Device Driver 64-Bit Ready |
Interrupt Handler FunctionalityThe driver framework and the device each place demands on the interrupt handler. All interrupt handlers are required to do the following tasks:
The following example shows an interrupt routine for a device called mydev. Example 8-9 Interrupt Examplestatic uint_t mydev_intr(caddr_t arg1, caddr_t arg2) { struct mydevstate *xsp = (struct mydevstate *)arg1; uint8_t status; volatile uint8_t temp; /* * Claim or reject the interrupt.This example assumes * that the device's CSR includes this information. */ mutex_enter(&xsp->high_mu); /* use data access routines to read status */ status = ddi_get8(xsp->data_access_handle, &xsp->regp->csr); if (!(status & INTERRUPTING)) { mutex_exit(&xsp->high_mu); return (DDI_INTR_UNCLAIMED); /* dev not interrupting */ } /* * Inform the device that it is being serviced, and re-enable * interrupts. The example assumes that writing to the * CSR accomplishes this. The driver must ensure that this data * access operation makes it to the device before the interrupt * service routine returns. For example, using the data access * functions to read the CSR, if it does not result in unwanted * effects, can ensure this. */ ddi_put8(xsp->data_access_handle, &xsp->regp->csr, CLEAR_INTERRUPT | ENABLE_INTERRUPTS); /* flush store buffers */ temp = ddi_get8(xsp->data_access_handle, &xsp->regp->csr); mutex_exit(&xsp->mu); return (DDI_INTR_CLAIMED); } Most of the steps performed by the interrupt routine depend on the specifics of the device itself. Consult the hardware manual for the device to determine the cause of the interrupt, detect error conditions, and access the device data registers. |
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