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1=======================
2Z8530 Programming Guide
3=======================
4
5:Author: Alan Cox
6
7Introduction
8============
9
10The Z85x30 family synchronous/asynchronous controller chips are used on
11a large number of cheap network interface cards. The kernel provides a
12core interface layer that is designed to make it easy to provide WAN
13services using this chip.
14
15The current driver only support synchronous operation. Merging the
16asynchronous driver support into this code to allow any Z85x30 device to
17be used as both a tty interface and as a synchronous controller is a
18project for Linux post the 2.4 release
19
20Driver Modes
21============
22
23The Z85230 driver layer can drive Z8530, Z85C30 and Z85230 devices in
24three different modes. Each mode can be applied to an individual channel
25on the chip (each chip has two channels).
26
27The PIO synchronous mode supports the most common Z8530 wiring. Here the
28chip is interface to the I/O and interrupt facilities of the host
29machine but not to the DMA subsystem. When running PIO the Z8530 has
30extremely tight timing requirements. Doing high speeds, even with a
31Z85230 will be tricky. Typically you should expect to achieve at best
329600 baud with a Z8C530 and 64Kbits with a Z85230.
33
34The DMA mode supports the chip when it is configured to use dual DMA
35channels on an ISA bus. The better cards tend to support this mode of
36operation for a single channel. With DMA running the Z85230 tops out
37when it starts to hit ISA DMA constraints at about 512Kbits. It is worth
38noting here that many PC machines hang or crash when the chip is driven
39fast enough to hold the ISA bus solid.
40
41Transmit DMA mode uses a single DMA channel. The DMA channel is used for
42transmission as the transmit FIFO is smaller than the receive FIFO. it
43gives better performance than pure PIO mode but is nowhere near as ideal
44as pure DMA mode.
45
46Using the Z85230 driver
47=======================
48
49The Z85230 driver provides the back end interface to your board. To
50configure a Z8530 interface you need to detect the board and to identify
51its ports and interrupt resources. It is also your problem to verify the
52resources are available.
53
54Having identified the chip you need to fill in a struct z8530_dev,
55which describes each chip. This object must exist until you finally
56shutdown the board. Firstly zero the active field. This ensures nothing
57goes off without you intending it. The irq field should be set to the
58interrupt number of the chip. (Each chip has a single interrupt source
59rather than each channel). You are responsible for allocating the
60interrupt line. The interrupt handler should be set to
61:c:func:`z8530_interrupt()`. The device id should be set to the
62z8530_dev structure pointer. Whether the interrupt can be shared or not
63is board dependent, and up to you to initialise.
64
65The structure holds two channel structures. Initialise chanA.ctrlio and
66chanA.dataio with the address of the control and data ports. You can or
67this with Z8530_PORT_SLEEP to indicate your interface needs the 5uS
68delay for chip settling done in software. The PORT_SLEEP option is
69architecture specific. Other flags may become available on future
70platforms, eg for MMIO. Initialise the chanA.irqs to &z8530_nop to
71start the chip up as disabled and discarding interrupt events. This
72ensures that stray interrupts will be mopped up and not hang the bus.
73Set chanA.dev to point to the device structure itself. The private and
74name field you may use as you wish. The private field is unused by the
75Z85230 layer. The name is used for error reporting and it may thus make
76sense to make it match the network name.
77
78Repeat the same operation with the B channel if your chip has both
79channels wired to something useful. This isn't always the case. If it is
80not wired then the I/O values do not matter, but you must initialise
81chanB.dev.
82
83If your board has DMA facilities then initialise the txdma and rxdma
84fields for the relevant channels. You must also allocate the ISA DMA
85channels and do any necessary board level initialisation to configure
86them. The low level driver will do the Z8530 and DMA controller
87programming but not board specific magic.
88
89Having initialised the device you can then call
90:c:func:`z8530_init()`. This will probe the chip and reset it into
91a known state. An identification sequence is then run to identify the
92chip type. If the checks fail to pass the function returns a non zero
93error code. Typically this indicates that the port given is not valid.
94After this call the type field of the z8530_dev structure is
95initialised to either Z8530, Z85C30 or Z85230 according to the chip
96found.
97
98Once you have called z8530_init you can also make use of the utility
99function :c:func:`z8530_describe()`. This provides a consistent
100reporting format for the Z8530 devices, and allows all the drivers to
101provide consistent reporting.
102
103Attaching Network Interfaces
104============================
105
106If you wish to use the network interface facilities of the driver, then
107you need to attach a network device to each channel that is present and
108in use. In addition to use the generic HDLC you need to follow some
109additional plumbing rules. They may seem complex but a look at the
110example hostess_sv11 driver should reassure you.
111
112The network device used for each channel should be pointed to by the
113netdevice field of each channel. The hdlc-> priv field of the network
114device points to your private data - you will need to be able to find
115your private data from this.
116
117The way most drivers approach this particular problem is to create a
118structure holding the Z8530 device definition and put that into the
119private field of the network device. The network device fields of the
120channels then point back to the network devices.
121
122If you wish to use the generic HDLC then you need to register the HDLC
123device.
124
125Before you register your network device you will also need to provide
126suitable handlers for most of the network device callbacks. See the
127network device documentation for more details on this.
128
129Configuring And Activating The Port
130===================================
131
132The Z85230 driver provides helper functions and tables to load the port
133registers on the Z8530 chips. When programming the register settings for
134a channel be aware that the documentation recommends initialisation
135orders. Strange things happen when these are not followed.
136
137:c:func:`z8530_channel_load()` takes an array of pairs of
138initialisation values in an array of u8 type. The first value is the
139Z8530 register number. Add 16 to indicate the alternate register bank on
140the later chips. The array is terminated by a 255.
141
142The driver provides a pair of public tables. The z8530_hdlc_kilostream
143table is for the UK 'Kilostream' service and also happens to cover most
144other end host configurations. The z8530_hdlc_kilostream_85230 table
145is the same configuration using the enhancements of the 85230 chip. The
146configuration loaded is standard NRZ encoded synchronous data with HDLC
147bitstuffing. All of the timing is taken from the other end of the link.
148
149When writing your own tables be aware that the driver internally tracks
150register values. It may need to reload values. You should therefore be
151sure to set registers 1-7, 9-11, 14 and 15 in all configurations. Where
152the register settings depend on DMA selection the driver will update the
153bits itself when you open or close. Loading a new table with the
154interface open is not recommended.
155
156There are three standard configurations supported by the core code. In
157PIO mode the interface is programmed up to use interrupt driven PIO.
158This places high demands on the host processor to avoid latency. The
159driver is written to take account of latency issues but it cannot avoid
160latencies caused by other drivers, notably IDE in PIO mode. Because the
161drivers allocate buffers you must also prevent MTU changes while the
162port is open.
163
164Once the port is open it will call the rx_function of each channel
165whenever a completed packet arrived. This is invoked from interrupt
166context and passes you the channel and a network buffer (struct
167sk_buff) holding the data. The data includes the CRC bytes so most
168users will want to trim the last two bytes before processing the data.
169This function is very timing critical. When you wish to simply discard
170data the support code provides the function
171:c:func:`z8530_null_rx()` to discard the data.
172
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173To active PIO mode sending and receiving the ``z8530_sync_open`` is called.
174This expects to be passed the network device and the channel. Typically
175this is called from your network device open callback. On a failure a
176non zero error status is returned.
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177The :c:func:`z8530_sync_close()` function shuts down a PIO
178channel. This must be done before the channel is opened again and before
179the driver shuts down and unloads.
180
181The ideal mode of operation is dual channel DMA mode. Here the kernel
182driver will configure the board for DMA in both directions. The driver
183also handles ISA DMA issues such as controller programming and the
184memory range limit for you. This mode is activated by calling the
185:c:func:`z8530_sync_dma_open()` function. On failure a non zero
186error value is returned. Once this mode is activated it can be shut down
187by calling the :c:func:`z8530_sync_dma_close()`. You must call
188the close function matching the open mode you used.
189
190The final supported mode uses a single DMA channel to drive the transmit
191side. As the Z85C30 has a larger FIFO on the receive channel this tends
192to increase the maximum speed a little. This is activated by calling the
60202365 193``z8530_sync_txdma_open``. This returns a non zero error code on failure. The
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194:c:func:`z8530_sync_txdma_close()` function closes down the Z8530
195interface from this mode.
196
197Network Layer Functions
198=======================
199
200The Z8530 layer provides functions to queue packets for transmission.
201The driver internally buffers the frame currently being transmitted and
202one further frame (in order to keep back to back transmission running).
203Any further buffering is up to the caller.
204
205The function :c:func:`z8530_queue_xmit()` takes a network buffer
206in sk_buff format and queues it for transmission. The caller must
207provide the entire packet with the exception of the bitstuffing and CRC.
208This is normally done by the caller via the generic HDLC interface
209layer. It returns 0 if the buffer has been queued and non zero values
210for queue full. If the function accepts the buffer it becomes property
211of the Z8530 layer and the caller should not free it.
212
213The function :c:func:`z8530_get_stats()` returns a pointer to an
214internally maintained per interface statistics block. This provides most
215of the interface code needed to implement the network layer get_stats
216callback.
217
218Porting The Z8530 Driver
219========================
220
221The Z8530 driver is written to be portable. In DMA mode it makes
222assumptions about the use of ISA DMA. These are probably warranted in
223most cases as the Z85230 in particular was designed to glue to PC type
224machines. The PIO mode makes no real assumptions.
225
226Should you need to retarget the Z8530 driver to another architecture the
227only code that should need changing are the port I/O functions. At the
228moment these assume PC I/O port accesses. This may not be appropriate
229for all platforms. Replacing :c:func:`z8530_read_port()` and
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230``z8530_write_port`` is intended to be all that is required to port
231this driver layer.
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232
233Known Bugs And Assumptions
234==========================
235
236Interrupt Locking
237 The locking in the driver is done via the global cli/sti lock. This
238 makes for relatively poor SMP performance. Switching this to use a
239 per device spin lock would probably materially improve performance.
240
241Occasional Failures
242 We have reports of occasional failures when run for very long
243 periods of time and the driver starts to receive junk frames. At the
244 moment the cause of this is not clear.
245
246Public Functions Provided
247=========================
248
249.. kernel-doc:: drivers/net/wan/z85230.c
250 :export:
251
252Internal Functions
253==================
254
255.. kernel-doc:: drivers/net/wan/z85230.c
256 :internal: