Moved file zorro.rst to equivalent location as source in main tree, ie drivers/zorro This required creation of Documentation/drivers. It is my suggestion that the Documentation tree is organised in the same fashion as the source tree. It is then clear where the documentation pertains to. There will be times when a document file pertains to many parts of the tree. This will need to be resolved on a case by case basis. Signed-off-by: Darryl Bond <darryl.bond@xxxxxxxxx> --- Documentation/drivers/zorro/zorro.rst | 118 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Documentation/zorro.txt | 103 ----------------------------- 2 files changed, 118 insertions(+), 103 deletions(-) create mode 100644 Documentation/drivers/zorro/zorro.rst delete mode 100644 Documentation/zorro.txt diff --git a/Documentation/drivers/zorro/zorro.rst b/Documentation/drivers/zorro/zorro.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5f279c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/drivers/zorro/zorro.rst @@ -0,0 +1,118 @@ +======================================== +Writing Device Drivers for Zorro Devices +======================================== + +Written by Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> +Last revised: September 5, 2003 + + +1. Introduction +--------------- + +The Zorro bus is the bus used in the Amiga family of computers. Thanks to +AutoConfig(tm), it's 100% Plug-and-Play. + +There are two types of Zorro busses, Zorro II and Zorro III: + + * The Zorro II address space is 24-bit and lies within the first 16 MB of the + Amiga's address map. + + * Zorro III is a 32-bit extension of Zorro II, which is backwards compatible + with Zorro II. The Zorro III address space lies outside the first 16 MB. + + +2. Probing for Zorro Devices +---------------------------- + +Zorro devices are found by calling `zorro_find_device()`, which returns a +pointer to the `next` Zorro device with the specified Zorro ID. A probe loop +for the board with Zorro ID `ZORRO_PROD_xxx` looks like: + + .. code-block:: c + + struct zorro_dev *z = NULL; + + while ((z = zorro_find_device(ZORRO_PROD_xxx, z))) { + if (!zorro_request_region(z->resource.start+MY_START, MY_SIZE, + "My explanation")) + ... + } + +`ZORRO_WILDCARD` acts as a wildcard and finds any Zorro device. If your driver +supports different types of boards, you can use a construct like: + + .. code-block:: c + + struct zorro_dev *z = NULL; + + while ((z = zorro_find_device(ZORRO_WILDCARD, z))) { + if (z->id != ZORRO_PROD_xxx1 && z->id != ZORRO_PROD_xxx2 && ...) + continue; + if (!zorro_request_region(z->resource.start+MY_START, MY_SIZE, + "My explanation")) + ... + } + + +3. Zorro Resources +------------------ + +Before you can access a Zorro device's registers, you have to make sure it's +not yet in use. This is done using the I/O memory space resource management +functions: + + .. code-block:: c + + request_mem_region() + release_mem_region() + +Shortcuts to claim the whole device's address space are provided as well: + + .. code-block:: c + + zorro_request_device + zorro_release_device + + +4. Accessing the Zorro Address Space +------------------------------------ + +The address regions in the Zorro device resources are Zorro bus address +regions. Due to the identity bus-physical address mapping on the Zorro bus, +they are CPU physical addresses as well. + +The treatment of these regions depends on the type of Zorro space: + + * Zorro II address space is always mapped and does not have to be mapped + explicitly using z_ioremap(). + + Conversion from bus/physical Zorro II addresses to kernel virtual addresses + and vice versa is done using: + + .. code-block:: c + + virt_addr = ZTWO_VADDR(bus_addr); + bus_addr = ZTWO_PADDR(virt_addr); + + * Zorro III address space must be mapped explicitly using z_ioremap() first + before it can be accessed: + + .. code-block:: c + + virt_addr = z_ioremap(bus_addr, size); + ... + z_iounmap(virt_addr); + + +5. References +------------- + +:: + + linux/include/linux/zorro.h + linux/include/uapi/linux/zorro.h + linux/include/uapi/linux/zorro_ids.h + linux/arch/m68k/include/asm/zorro.h + linux/drivers/zorro + /proc/bus/zorro + diff --git a/Documentation/zorro.txt b/Documentation/zorro.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 90a64d5..0000000 --- a/Documentation/zorro.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,103 +0,0 @@ - Writing Device Drivers for Zorro Devices - ---------------------------------------- - -Written by Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> -Last revised: September 5, 2003 - - -1. Introduction ---------------- - -The Zorro bus is the bus used in the Amiga family of computers. Thanks to -AutoConfig(tm), it's 100% Plug-and-Play. - -There are two types of Zorro busses, Zorro II and Zorro III: - - - The Zorro II address space is 24-bit and lies within the first 16 MB of the - Amiga's address map. - - - Zorro III is a 32-bit extension of Zorro II, which is backwards compatible - with Zorro II. The Zorro III address space lies outside the first 16 MB. - - -2. Probing for Zorro Devices ----------------------------- - -Zorro devices are found by calling `zorro_find_device()', which returns a -pointer to the `next' Zorro device with the specified Zorro ID. A probe loop -for the board with Zorro ID `ZORRO_PROD_xxx' looks like: - - struct zorro_dev *z = NULL; - - while ((z = zorro_find_device(ZORRO_PROD_xxx, z))) { - if (!zorro_request_region(z->resource.start+MY_START, MY_SIZE, - "My explanation")) - ... - } - -`ZORRO_WILDCARD' acts as a wildcard and finds any Zorro device. If your driver -supports different types of boards, you can use a construct like: - - struct zorro_dev *z = NULL; - - while ((z = zorro_find_device(ZORRO_WILDCARD, z))) { - if (z->id != ZORRO_PROD_xxx1 && z->id != ZORRO_PROD_xxx2 && ...) - continue; - if (!zorro_request_region(z->resource.start+MY_START, MY_SIZE, - "My explanation")) - ... - } - - -3. Zorro Resources ------------------- - -Before you can access a Zorro device's registers, you have to make sure it's -not yet in use. This is done using the I/O memory space resource management -functions: - - request_mem_region() - release_mem_region() - -Shortcuts to claim the whole device's address space are provided as well: - - zorro_request_device - zorro_release_device - - -4. Accessing the Zorro Address Space ------------------------------------- - -The address regions in the Zorro device resources are Zorro bus address -regions. Due to the identity bus-physical address mapping on the Zorro bus, -they are CPU physical addresses as well. - -The treatment of these regions depends on the type of Zorro space: - - - Zorro II address space is always mapped and does not have to be mapped - explicitly using z_ioremap(). - - Conversion from bus/physical Zorro II addresses to kernel virtual addresses - and vice versa is done using: - - virt_addr = ZTWO_VADDR(bus_addr); - bus_addr = ZTWO_PADDR(virt_addr); - - - Zorro III address space must be mapped explicitly using z_ioremap() first - before it can be accessed: - - virt_addr = z_ioremap(bus_addr, size); - ... - z_iounmap(virt_addr); - - -5. References -------------- - -linux/include/linux/zorro.h -linux/include/uapi/linux/zorro.h -linux/include/uapi/linux/zorro_ids.h -linux/arch/m68k/include/asm/zorro.h -linux/drivers/zorro -/proc/bus/zorro - -- 2.7.4 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-doc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html