/* $Id: page.h,v 1.39 2002/02/09 19:49:31 davem Exp $ */ #ifndef _SPARC64_PAGE_H #define _SPARC64_PAGE_H #include #define PAGE_SHIFT 13 #ifndef __ASSEMBLY__ /* I have my suspicions... -DaveM */ #define PAGE_SIZE (1UL << PAGE_SHIFT) #else #define PAGE_SIZE (1 << PAGE_SHIFT) #endif #define PAGE_MASK (~(PAGE_SIZE-1)) #ifdef __KERNEL__ #ifndef __ASSEMBLY__ /* Sparc64 is slow at multiplication, we prefer to use some extra space. */ #define WANT_PAGE_VIRTUAL 1 extern void _clear_page(void *page); #define clear_page(X) _clear_page((void *)(X)) struct page; extern void clear_user_page(void *addr, unsigned long vaddr, struct page *page); #define copy_page(X,Y) __memcpy((void *)(X), (void *)(Y), PAGE_SIZE) extern void copy_user_page(void *to, void *from, unsigned long vaddr, struct page *topage); /* GROSS, defining this makes gcc pass these types as aggregates, * and thus on the stack, turn this crap off... -DaveM */ /* #define STRICT_MM_TYPECHECKS */ #ifdef STRICT_MM_TYPECHECKS /* These are used to make use of C type-checking.. */ typedef struct { unsigned long pte; } pte_t; typedef struct { unsigned long iopte; } iopte_t; typedef struct { unsigned int pmd; } pmd_t; typedef struct { unsigned int pgd; } pgd_t; typedef struct { unsigned long ctxd; } ctxd_t; typedef struct { unsigned long pgprot; } pgprot_t; typedef struct { unsigned long iopgprot; } iopgprot_t; #define pte_val(x) ((x).pte) #define iopte_val(x) ((x).iopte) #define pmd_val(x) ((x).pmd) #define pgd_val(x) ((x).pgd) #define ctxd_val(x) ((x).ctxd) #define pgprot_val(x) ((x).pgprot) #define iopgprot_val(x) ((x).iopgprot) #define __pte(x) ((pte_t) { (x) } ) #define __iopte(x) ((iopte_t) { (x) } ) #define __pmd(x) ((pmd_t) { (x) } ) #define __pgd(x) ((pgd_t) { (x) } ) #define __ctxd(x) ((ctxd_t) { (x) } ) #define __pgprot(x) ((pgprot_t) { (x) } ) #define __iopgprot(x) ((iopgprot_t) { (x) } ) #else /* .. while these make it easier on the compiler */ typedef unsigned long pte_t; typedef unsigned long iopte_t; typedef unsigned int pmd_t; typedef unsigned int pgd_t; typedef unsigned long ctxd_t; typedef unsigned long pgprot_t; typedef unsigned long iopgprot_t; #define pte_val(x) (x) #define iopte_val(x) (x) #define pmd_val(x) (x) #define pgd_val(x) (x) #define ctxd_val(x) (x) #define pgprot_val(x) (x) #define iopgprot_val(x) (x) #define __pte(x) (x) #define __iopte(x) (x) #define __pmd(x) (x) #define __pgd(x) (x) #define __ctxd(x) (x) #define __pgprot(x) (x) #define __iopgprot(x) (x) #endif /* (STRICT_MM_TYPECHECKS) */ #if defined(CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_4MB) #define HPAGE_SHIFT 22 #elif defined(CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_512K) #define HPAGE_SHIFT 19 #elif defined(CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_64K) #define HPAGE_SHIFT 16 #endif #ifdef CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE #define HPAGE_SIZE ((1UL) << HPAGE_SHIFT) #define HPAGE_MASK (~(HPAGE_SIZE - 1UL)) #define HUGETLB_PAGE_ORDER (HPAGE_SHIFT - PAGE_SHIFT) #endif #define TASK_UNMAPPED_BASE (test_thread_flag(TIF_32BIT) ? \ (0x0000000070000000UL) : (PAGE_OFFSET)) #endif /* !(__ASSEMBLY__) */ /* to align the pointer to the (next) page boundary */ #define PAGE_ALIGN(addr) (((addr)+PAGE_SIZE-1)&PAGE_MASK) /* We used to stick this into a hard-coded global register (%g4) * but that does not make sense anymore. */ #define PAGE_OFFSET 0xFFFFF80000000000 #define __pa(x) ((unsigned long)(x) - PAGE_OFFSET) #define __va(x) ((void *)((unsigned long) (x) + PAGE_OFFSET)) /* PFNs are real physical page numbers. However, mem_map only begins to record * per-page information starting at pfn_base. This is to handle systems where * the first physical page in the machine is at some huge physical address, such * as 4GB. This is common on a partitioned E10000, for example. */ #define pfn_to_page(pfn) (mem_map + ((pfn)-(pfn_base))) #define page_to_pfn(page) ((unsigned long)(((page) - mem_map) + pfn_base)) #define virt_to_page(kaddr) pfn_to_page(__pa(kaddr)>>PAGE_SHIFT) #define pfn_valid(pfn) (((pfn)-(pfn_base)) < max_mapnr) #define virt_addr_valid(kaddr) pfn_valid(__pa(kaddr) >> PAGE_SHIFT) #define virt_to_phys __pa #define phys_to_virt __va #ifndef __ASSEMBLY__ /* The following structure is used to hold the physical * memory configuration of the machine. This is filled in * probe_memory() and is later used by mem_init() to set up * mem_map[]. We statically allocate SPARC_PHYS_BANKS of * these structs, this is arbitrary. The entry after the * last valid one has num_bytes==0. */ struct sparc_phys_banks { unsigned long base_addr; unsigned long num_bytes; }; #define SPARC_PHYS_BANKS 32 extern struct sparc_phys_banks sp_banks[SPARC_PHYS_BANKS]; /* Pure 2^n version of get_order */ static __inline__ int get_order(unsigned long size) { int order; size = (size-1) >> (PAGE_SHIFT-1); order = -1; do { size >>= 1; order++; } while (size); return order; } #endif /* !(__ASSEMBLY__) */ #define VM_DATA_DEFAULT_FLAGS (VM_READ | VM_WRITE | VM_EXEC | \ VM_MAYREAD | VM_MAYWRITE | VM_MAYEXEC) #endif /* !(__KERNEL__) */ #endif /* !(_SPARC64_PAGE_H) */