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David Brazdil0f672f62019-12-10 10:32:29 +00001/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 WITH Linux-syscall-note
2 *
3 * Copyright 2016-2019 HabanaLabs, Ltd.
4 * All Rights Reserved.
5 *
6 */
7
8#ifndef HABANALABS_H_
9#define HABANALABS_H_
10
11#include <linux/types.h>
12#include <linux/ioctl.h>
13
14/*
15 * Defines that are asic-specific but constitutes as ABI between kernel driver
16 * and userspace
17 */
18#define GOYA_KMD_SRAM_RESERVED_SIZE_FROM_START 0x8000 /* 32KB */
19
20/*
21 * Queue Numbering
22 *
23 * The external queues (PCI DMA channels) MUST be before the internal queues
24 * and each group (PCI DMA channels and internal) must be contiguous inside
25 * itself but there can be a gap between the two groups (although not
26 * recommended)
27 */
28
29enum goya_queue_id {
30 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_DMA_0 = 0,
31 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_DMA_1 = 1,
32 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_DMA_2 = 2,
33 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_DMA_3 = 3,
34 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_DMA_4 = 4,
35 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_CPU_PQ = 5,
36 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_MME = 6, /* Internal queues start here */
37 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_TPC0 = 7,
38 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_TPC1 = 8,
39 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_TPC2 = 9,
40 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_TPC3 = 10,
41 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_TPC4 = 11,
42 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_TPC5 = 12,
43 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_TPC6 = 13,
44 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_TPC7 = 14,
45 GOYA_QUEUE_ID_SIZE
46};
47
48/*
49 * Engine Numbering
50 *
51 * Used in the "busy_engines_mask" field in `struct hl_info_hw_idle'
52 */
53
54enum goya_engine_id {
55 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_DMA_0 = 0,
56 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_DMA_1,
57 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_DMA_2,
58 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_DMA_3,
59 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_DMA_4,
60 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_MME_0,
61 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_TPC_0,
62 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_TPC_1,
63 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_TPC_2,
64 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_TPC_3,
65 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_TPC_4,
66 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_TPC_5,
67 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_TPC_6,
68 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_TPC_7,
69 GOYA_ENGINE_ID_SIZE
70};
71
72enum hl_device_status {
73 HL_DEVICE_STATUS_OPERATIONAL,
74 HL_DEVICE_STATUS_IN_RESET,
75 HL_DEVICE_STATUS_MALFUNCTION
76};
77
78/* Opcode for management ioctl
79 *
80 * HW_IP_INFO - Receive information about different IP blocks in the
81 * device.
82 * HL_INFO_HW_EVENTS - Receive an array describing how many times each event
83 * occurred since the last hard reset.
84 * HL_INFO_DRAM_USAGE - Retrieve the dram usage inside the device and of the
85 * specific context. This is relevant only for devices
86 * where the dram is managed by the kernel driver
87 * HL_INFO_HW_IDLE - Retrieve information about the idle status of each
88 * internal engine.
89 * HL_INFO_DEVICE_STATUS - Retrieve the device's status. This opcode doesn't
90 * require an open context.
91 * HL_INFO_DEVICE_UTILIZATION - Retrieve the total utilization of the device
92 * over the last period specified by the user.
93 * The period can be between 100ms to 1s, in
94 * resolution of 100ms. The return value is a
95 * percentage of the utilization rate.
96 * HL_INFO_HW_EVENTS_AGGREGATE - Receive an array describing how many times each
97 * event occurred since the driver was loaded.
98 */
99#define HL_INFO_HW_IP_INFO 0
100#define HL_INFO_HW_EVENTS 1
101#define HL_INFO_DRAM_USAGE 2
102#define HL_INFO_HW_IDLE 3
103#define HL_INFO_DEVICE_STATUS 4
104#define HL_INFO_DEVICE_UTILIZATION 6
105#define HL_INFO_HW_EVENTS_AGGREGATE 7
106
107#define HL_INFO_VERSION_MAX_LEN 128
108
109struct hl_info_hw_ip_info {
110 __u64 sram_base_address;
111 __u64 dram_base_address;
112 __u64 dram_size;
113 __u32 sram_size;
114 __u32 num_of_events;
115 __u32 device_id; /* PCI Device ID */
116 __u32 reserved[3];
117 __u32 armcp_cpld_version;
118 __u32 psoc_pci_pll_nr;
119 __u32 psoc_pci_pll_nf;
120 __u32 psoc_pci_pll_od;
121 __u32 psoc_pci_pll_div_factor;
122 __u8 tpc_enabled_mask;
123 __u8 dram_enabled;
124 __u8 pad[2];
125 __u8 armcp_version[HL_INFO_VERSION_MAX_LEN];
126};
127
128struct hl_info_dram_usage {
129 __u64 dram_free_mem;
130 __u64 ctx_dram_mem;
131};
132
133struct hl_info_hw_idle {
134 __u32 is_idle;
135 /*
136 * Bitmask of busy engines.
137 * Bits definition is according to `enum <chip>_enging_id'.
138 */
139 __u32 busy_engines_mask;
140};
141
142struct hl_info_device_status {
143 __u32 status;
144 __u32 pad;
145};
146
147struct hl_info_device_utilization {
148 __u32 utilization;
149 __u32 pad;
150};
151
152struct hl_info_args {
153 /* Location of relevant struct in userspace */
154 __u64 return_pointer;
155 /*
156 * The size of the return value. Just like "size" in "snprintf",
157 * it limits how many bytes the kernel can write
158 *
159 * For hw_events array, the size should be
160 * hl_info_hw_ip_info.num_of_events * sizeof(__u32)
161 */
162 __u32 return_size;
163
164 /* HL_INFO_* */
165 __u32 op;
166
167 union {
168 /* Context ID - Currently not in use */
169 __u32 ctx_id;
170 /* Period value for utilization rate (100ms - 1000ms, in 100ms
171 * resolution.
172 */
173 __u32 period_ms;
174 };
175
176 __u32 pad;
177};
178
179/* Opcode to create a new command buffer */
180#define HL_CB_OP_CREATE 0
181/* Opcode to destroy previously created command buffer */
182#define HL_CB_OP_DESTROY 1
183
184struct hl_cb_in {
185 /* Handle of CB or 0 if we want to create one */
186 __u64 cb_handle;
187 /* HL_CB_OP_* */
188 __u32 op;
189 /* Size of CB. Maximum size is 2MB. The minimum size that will be
190 * allocated, regardless of this parameter's value, is PAGE_SIZE
191 */
192 __u32 cb_size;
193 /* Context ID - Currently not in use */
194 __u32 ctx_id;
195 __u32 pad;
196};
197
198struct hl_cb_out {
199 /* Handle of CB */
200 __u64 cb_handle;
201};
202
203union hl_cb_args {
204 struct hl_cb_in in;
205 struct hl_cb_out out;
206};
207
208/*
209 * This structure size must always be fixed to 64-bytes for backward
210 * compatibility
211 */
212struct hl_cs_chunk {
213 /*
214 * For external queue, this represents a Handle of CB on the Host
215 * For internal queue, this represents an SRAM or DRAM address of the
216 * internal CB
217 */
218 __u64 cb_handle;
219 /* Index of queue to put the CB on */
220 __u32 queue_index;
221 /*
222 * Size of command buffer with valid packets
223 * Can be smaller then actual CB size
224 */
225 __u32 cb_size;
226 /* HL_CS_CHUNK_FLAGS_* */
227 __u32 cs_chunk_flags;
228 /* Align structure to 64 bytes */
229 __u32 pad[11];
230};
231
232#define HL_CS_FLAGS_FORCE_RESTORE 0x1
233
234#define HL_CS_STATUS_SUCCESS 0
235
236struct hl_cs_in {
237 /* this holds address of array of hl_cs_chunk for restore phase */
238 __u64 chunks_restore;
239 /* this holds address of array of hl_cs_chunk for execution phase */
240 __u64 chunks_execute;
241 /* this holds address of array of hl_cs_chunk for store phase -
242 * Currently not in use
243 */
244 __u64 chunks_store;
245 /* Number of chunks in restore phase array */
246 __u32 num_chunks_restore;
247 /* Number of chunks in execution array */
248 __u32 num_chunks_execute;
249 /* Number of chunks in restore phase array - Currently not in use */
250 __u32 num_chunks_store;
251 /* HL_CS_FLAGS_* */
252 __u32 cs_flags;
253 /* Context ID - Currently not in use */
254 __u32 ctx_id;
255};
256
257struct hl_cs_out {
258 /*
259 * seq holds the sequence number of the CS to pass to wait ioctl. All
260 * values are valid except for 0 and ULLONG_MAX
261 */
262 __u64 seq;
263 /* HL_CS_STATUS_* */
264 __u32 status;
265 __u32 pad;
266};
267
268union hl_cs_args {
269 struct hl_cs_in in;
270 struct hl_cs_out out;
271};
272
273struct hl_wait_cs_in {
274 /* Command submission sequence number */
275 __u64 seq;
276 /* Absolute timeout to wait in microseconds */
277 __u64 timeout_us;
278 /* Context ID - Currently not in use */
279 __u32 ctx_id;
280 __u32 pad;
281};
282
283#define HL_WAIT_CS_STATUS_COMPLETED 0
284#define HL_WAIT_CS_STATUS_BUSY 1
285#define HL_WAIT_CS_STATUS_TIMEDOUT 2
286#define HL_WAIT_CS_STATUS_ABORTED 3
287#define HL_WAIT_CS_STATUS_INTERRUPTED 4
288
289struct hl_wait_cs_out {
290 /* HL_WAIT_CS_STATUS_* */
291 __u32 status;
292 __u32 pad;
293};
294
295union hl_wait_cs_args {
296 struct hl_wait_cs_in in;
297 struct hl_wait_cs_out out;
298};
299
300/* Opcode to alloc device memory */
301#define HL_MEM_OP_ALLOC 0
302/* Opcode to free previously allocated device memory */
303#define HL_MEM_OP_FREE 1
304/* Opcode to map host memory */
305#define HL_MEM_OP_MAP 2
306/* Opcode to unmap previously mapped host memory */
307#define HL_MEM_OP_UNMAP 3
308
309/* Memory flags */
310#define HL_MEM_CONTIGUOUS 0x1
311#define HL_MEM_SHARED 0x2
312#define HL_MEM_USERPTR 0x4
313
314struct hl_mem_in {
315 union {
316 /* HL_MEM_OP_ALLOC- allocate device memory */
317 struct {
318 /* Size to alloc */
319 __u64 mem_size;
320 } alloc;
321
322 /* HL_MEM_OP_FREE - free device memory */
323 struct {
324 /* Handle returned from HL_MEM_OP_ALLOC */
325 __u64 handle;
326 } free;
327
328 /* HL_MEM_OP_MAP - map device memory */
329 struct {
330 /*
331 * Requested virtual address of mapped memory.
332 * The driver will try to map the requested region to
333 * this hint address, as long as the address is valid
334 * and not already mapped. The user should check the
335 * returned address of the IOCTL to make sure he got
336 * the hint address. Passing 0 here means that the
337 * driver will choose the address itself.
338 */
339 __u64 hint_addr;
340 /* Handle returned from HL_MEM_OP_ALLOC */
341 __u64 handle;
342 } map_device;
343
344 /* HL_MEM_OP_MAP - map host memory */
345 struct {
346 /* Address of allocated host memory */
347 __u64 host_virt_addr;
348 /*
349 * Requested virtual address of mapped memory.
350 * The driver will try to map the requested region to
351 * this hint address, as long as the address is valid
352 * and not already mapped. The user should check the
353 * returned address of the IOCTL to make sure he got
354 * the hint address. Passing 0 here means that the
355 * driver will choose the address itself.
356 */
357 __u64 hint_addr;
358 /* Size of allocated host memory */
359 __u64 mem_size;
360 } map_host;
361
362 /* HL_MEM_OP_UNMAP - unmap host memory */
363 struct {
364 /* Virtual address returned from HL_MEM_OP_MAP */
365 __u64 device_virt_addr;
366 } unmap;
367 };
368
369 /* HL_MEM_OP_* */
370 __u32 op;
371 /* HL_MEM_* flags */
372 __u32 flags;
373 /* Context ID - Currently not in use */
374 __u32 ctx_id;
375 __u32 pad;
376};
377
378struct hl_mem_out {
379 union {
380 /*
381 * Used for HL_MEM_OP_MAP as the virtual address that was
382 * assigned in the device VA space.
383 * A value of 0 means the requested operation failed.
384 */
385 __u64 device_virt_addr;
386
387 /*
388 * Used for HL_MEM_OP_ALLOC. This is the assigned
389 * handle for the allocated memory
390 */
391 __u64 handle;
392 };
393};
394
395union hl_mem_args {
396 struct hl_mem_in in;
397 struct hl_mem_out out;
398};
399
400#define HL_DEBUG_MAX_AUX_VALUES 10
401
402struct hl_debug_params_etr {
403 /* Address in memory to allocate buffer */
404 __u64 buffer_address;
405
406 /* Size of buffer to allocate */
407 __u64 buffer_size;
408
409 /* Sink operation mode: SW fifo, HW fifo, Circular buffer */
410 __u32 sink_mode;
411 __u32 pad;
412};
413
414struct hl_debug_params_etf {
415 /* Address in memory to allocate buffer */
416 __u64 buffer_address;
417
418 /* Size of buffer to allocate */
419 __u64 buffer_size;
420
421 /* Sink operation mode: SW fifo, HW fifo, Circular buffer */
422 __u32 sink_mode;
423 __u32 pad;
424};
425
426struct hl_debug_params_stm {
427 /* Two bit masks for HW event and Stimulus Port */
428 __u64 he_mask;
429 __u64 sp_mask;
430
431 /* Trace source ID */
432 __u32 id;
433
434 /* Frequency for the timestamp register */
435 __u32 frequency;
436};
437
438struct hl_debug_params_bmon {
439 /* Two address ranges that the user can request to filter */
440 __u64 start_addr0;
441 __u64 addr_mask0;
442
443 __u64 start_addr1;
444 __u64 addr_mask1;
445
446 /* Capture window configuration */
447 __u32 bw_win;
448 __u32 win_capture;
449
450 /* Trace source ID */
451 __u32 id;
452 __u32 pad;
453};
454
455struct hl_debug_params_spmu {
456 /* Event types selection */
457 __u64 event_types[HL_DEBUG_MAX_AUX_VALUES];
458
459 /* Number of event types selection */
460 __u32 event_types_num;
461 __u32 pad;
462};
463
464/* Opcode for ETR component */
465#define HL_DEBUG_OP_ETR 0
466/* Opcode for ETF component */
467#define HL_DEBUG_OP_ETF 1
468/* Opcode for STM component */
469#define HL_DEBUG_OP_STM 2
470/* Opcode for FUNNEL component */
471#define HL_DEBUG_OP_FUNNEL 3
472/* Opcode for BMON component */
473#define HL_DEBUG_OP_BMON 4
474/* Opcode for SPMU component */
475#define HL_DEBUG_OP_SPMU 5
476/* Opcode for timestamp (deprecated) */
477#define HL_DEBUG_OP_TIMESTAMP 6
478/* Opcode for setting the device into or out of debug mode. The enable
479 * variable should be 1 for enabling debug mode and 0 for disabling it
480 */
481#define HL_DEBUG_OP_SET_MODE 7
482
483struct hl_debug_args {
484 /*
485 * Pointer to user input structure.
486 * This field is relevant to specific opcodes.
487 */
488 __u64 input_ptr;
489 /* Pointer to user output structure */
490 __u64 output_ptr;
491 /* Size of user input structure */
492 __u32 input_size;
493 /* Size of user output structure */
494 __u32 output_size;
495 /* HL_DEBUG_OP_* */
496 __u32 op;
497 /*
498 * Register index in the component, taken from the debug_regs_index enum
499 * in the various ASIC header files
500 */
501 __u32 reg_idx;
502 /* Enable/disable */
503 __u32 enable;
504 /* Context ID - Currently not in use */
505 __u32 ctx_id;
506};
507
508/*
509 * Various information operations such as:
510 * - H/W IP information
511 * - Current dram usage
512 *
513 * The user calls this IOCTL with an opcode that describes the required
514 * information. The user should supply a pointer to a user-allocated memory
515 * chunk, which will be filled by the driver with the requested information.
516 *
517 * The user supplies the maximum amount of size to copy into the user's memory,
518 * in order to prevent data corruption in case of differences between the
519 * definitions of structures in kernel and userspace, e.g. in case of old
520 * userspace and new kernel driver
521 */
522#define HL_IOCTL_INFO \
523 _IOWR('H', 0x01, struct hl_info_args)
524
525/*
526 * Command Buffer
527 * - Request a Command Buffer
528 * - Destroy a Command Buffer
529 *
530 * The command buffers are memory blocks that reside in DMA-able address
531 * space and are physically contiguous so they can be accessed by the device
532 * directly. They are allocated using the coherent DMA API.
533 *
534 * When creating a new CB, the IOCTL returns a handle of it, and the user-space
535 * process needs to use that handle to mmap the buffer so it can access them.
536 *
537 */
538#define HL_IOCTL_CB \
539 _IOWR('H', 0x02, union hl_cb_args)
540
541/*
542 * Command Submission
543 *
544 * To submit work to the device, the user need to call this IOCTL with a set
545 * of JOBS. That set of JOBS constitutes a CS object.
546 * Each JOB will be enqueued on a specific queue, according to the user's input.
547 * There can be more then one JOB per queue.
548 *
549 * The CS IOCTL will receive three sets of JOBS. One set is for "restore" phase,
550 * a second set is for "execution" phase and a third set is for "store" phase.
551 * The JOBS on the "restore" phase are enqueued only after context-switch
552 * (or if its the first CS for this context). The user can also order the
553 * driver to run the "restore" phase explicitly
554 *
555 * There are two types of queues - external and internal. External queues
556 * are DMA queues which transfer data from/to the Host. All other queues are
557 * internal. The driver will get completion notifications from the device only
558 * on JOBS which are enqueued in the external queues.
559 *
560 * For jobs on external queues, the user needs to create command buffers
561 * through the CB ioctl and give the CB's handle to the CS ioctl. For jobs on
562 * internal queues, the user needs to prepare a "command buffer" with packets
563 * on either the SRAM or DRAM, and give the device address of that buffer to
564 * the CS ioctl.
565 *
566 * This IOCTL is asynchronous in regard to the actual execution of the CS. This
567 * means it returns immediately after ALL the JOBS were enqueued on their
568 * relevant queues. Therefore, the user mustn't assume the CS has been completed
569 * or has even started to execute.
570 *
571 * Upon successful enqueue, the IOCTL returns a sequence number which the user
572 * can use with the "Wait for CS" IOCTL to check whether the handle's CS
573 * external JOBS have been completed. Note that if the CS has internal JOBS
574 * which can execute AFTER the external JOBS have finished, the driver might
575 * report that the CS has finished executing BEFORE the internal JOBS have
576 * actually finish executing.
577 *
578 * Even though the sequence number increments per CS, the user can NOT
579 * automatically assume that if CS with sequence number N finished, then CS
580 * with sequence number N-1 also finished. The user can make this assumption if
581 * and only if CS N and CS N-1 are exactly the same (same CBs for the same
582 * queues).
583 */
584#define HL_IOCTL_CS \
585 _IOWR('H', 0x03, union hl_cs_args)
586
587/*
588 * Wait for Command Submission
589 *
590 * The user can call this IOCTL with a handle it received from the CS IOCTL
591 * to wait until the handle's CS has finished executing. The user will wait
592 * inside the kernel until the CS has finished or until the user-requeusted
593 * timeout has expired.
594 *
595 * The return value of the IOCTL is a standard Linux error code. The possible
596 * values are:
597 *
598 * EINTR - Kernel waiting has been interrupted, e.g. due to OS signal
599 * that the user process received
600 * ETIMEDOUT - The CS has caused a timeout on the device
601 * EIO - The CS was aborted (usually because the device was reset)
602 * ENODEV - The device wants to do hard-reset (so user need to close FD)
603 *
604 * The driver also returns a custom define inside the IOCTL which can be:
605 *
606 * HL_WAIT_CS_STATUS_COMPLETED - The CS has been completed successfully (0)
607 * HL_WAIT_CS_STATUS_BUSY - The CS is still executing (0)
608 * HL_WAIT_CS_STATUS_TIMEDOUT - The CS has caused a timeout on the device
609 * (ETIMEDOUT)
610 * HL_WAIT_CS_STATUS_ABORTED - The CS was aborted, usually because the
611 * device was reset (EIO)
612 * HL_WAIT_CS_STATUS_INTERRUPTED - Waiting for the CS was interrupted (EINTR)
613 *
614 */
615
616#define HL_IOCTL_WAIT_CS \
617 _IOWR('H', 0x04, union hl_wait_cs_args)
618
619/*
620 * Memory
621 * - Map host memory to device MMU
622 * - Unmap host memory from device MMU
623 *
624 * This IOCTL allows the user to map host memory to the device MMU
625 *
626 * For host memory, the IOCTL doesn't allocate memory. The user is supposed
627 * to allocate the memory in user-space (malloc/new). The driver pins the
628 * physical pages (up to the allowed limit by the OS), assigns a virtual
629 * address in the device VA space and initializes the device MMU.
630 *
631 * There is an option for the user to specify the requested virtual address.
632 *
633 */
634#define HL_IOCTL_MEMORY \
635 _IOWR('H', 0x05, union hl_mem_args)
636
637/*
638 * Debug
639 * - Enable/disable the ETR/ETF/FUNNEL/STM/BMON/SPMU debug traces
640 *
641 * This IOCTL allows the user to get debug traces from the chip.
642 *
643 * Before the user can send configuration requests of the various
644 * debug/profile engines, it needs to set the device into debug mode.
645 * This is because the debug/profile infrastructure is shared component in the
646 * device and we can't allow multiple users to access it at the same time.
647 *
648 * Once a user set the device into debug mode, the driver won't allow other
649 * users to "work" with the device, i.e. open a FD. If there are multiple users
650 * opened on the device, the driver won't allow any user to debug the device.
651 *
652 * For each configuration request, the user needs to provide the register index
653 * and essential data such as buffer address and size.
654 *
655 * Once the user has finished using the debug/profile engines, he should
656 * set the device into non-debug mode, i.e. disable debug mode.
657 *
658 * The driver can decide to "kick out" the user if he abuses this interface.
659 *
660 */
661#define HL_IOCTL_DEBUG \
662 _IOWR('H', 0x06, struct hl_debug_args)
663
664#define HL_COMMAND_START 0x01
665#define HL_COMMAND_END 0x07
666
667#endif /* HABANALABS_H_ */