/* This source file is part of the ATMEL AVR-UC3-SoftwareFramework-1.7.0 Release */ /*This file is prepared for Doxygen automatic documentation generation.*/ /*! \file ********************************************************************* * * \brief INTC driver for AVR32 UC3. * * AVR32 Interrupt Controller driver module. * * - Compiler: IAR EWAVR32 and GNU GCC for AVR32 * - Supported devices: All AVR32 devices with an INTC module can be used. * - AppNote: * * \author Atmel Corporation: http://www.atmel.com \n * Support and FAQ: http://support.atmel.no/ * ******************************************************************************/ /* Copyright (c) 2009 Atmel Corporation. All rights reserved. * * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this * list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, * this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation * and/or other materials provided with the distribution. * * 3. The name of Atmel may not be used to endorse or promote products derived * from this software without specific prior written permission. * * 4. This software may only be redistributed and used in connection with an Atmel * AVR product. * * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY ATMEL "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED * WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF * MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NON-INFRINGEMENT ARE * EXPRESSLY AND SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL ATMEL BE LIABLE FOR * ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES * (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; * LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND * ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS * SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE * */ #include #include "compiler.h" #include "preprocessor.h" #include "intc.h" // define _evba from exception.S extern void _evba; //! Values to store in the interrupt priority registers for the various interrupt priority levels. extern const unsigned int ipr_val[AVR32_INTC_NUM_INT_LEVELS]; //! Creates a table of interrupt line handlers per interrupt group in order to optimize RAM space. //! Each line handler table contains a set of pointers to interrupt handlers. #if (defined __GNUC__) #define DECL_INT_LINE_HANDLER_TABLE(GRP, unused) \ static volatile __int_handler _int_line_handler_table_##GRP[Max(AVR32_INTC_NUM_IRQS_PER_GRP##GRP, 1)]; #elif (defined __ICCAVR32__) #define DECL_INT_LINE_HANDLER_TABLE(GRP, unused) \ static volatile __no_init __int_handler _int_line_handler_table_##GRP[Max(AVR32_INTC_NUM_IRQS_PER_GRP##GRP, 1)]; #endif MREPEAT(AVR32_INTC_NUM_INT_GRPS, DECL_INT_LINE_HANDLER_TABLE, ~); #undef DECL_INT_LINE_HANDLER_TABLE //! Table containing for each interrupt group the number of interrupt request //! lines and a pointer to the table of interrupt line handlers. static const struct { unsigned int num_irqs; volatile __int_handler *_int_line_handler_table; } _int_handler_table[AVR32_INTC_NUM_INT_GRPS] = { #define INSERT_INT_LINE_HANDLER_TABLE(GRP, unused) \ {AVR32_INTC_NUM_IRQS_PER_GRP##GRP, _int_line_handler_table_##GRP}, MREPEAT(AVR32_INTC_NUM_INT_GRPS, INSERT_INT_LINE_HANDLER_TABLE, ~) #undef INSERT_INT_LINE_HANDLER_TABLE }; /*! \brief Default interrupt handler. * * \note Taken and adapted from Newlib. */ #if (defined __GNUC__) __attribute__((__interrupt__)) #elif (defined __ICCAVR32__) __interrupt #endif static void _unhandled_interrupt(void) { // Catch unregistered interrupts. while (TRUE); } /*! \brief Gets the interrupt handler of the current event at the \a int_level * interrupt priority level (called from exception.S). * * \param int_level Interrupt priority level to handle. * * \return Interrupt handler to execute. * * \note Taken and adapted from Newlib. */ __int_handler _get_interrupt_handler(unsigned int int_level) { // ICR3 is mapped first, ICR0 last. // Code in exception.S puts int_level in R12 which is used by AVR32-GCC to // pass a single argument to a function. unsigned int int_grp = AVR32_INTC.icr[AVR32_INTC_INT3 - int_level]; unsigned int int_req = AVR32_INTC.irr[int_grp]; // As an interrupt may disappear while it is being fetched by the CPU // (spurious interrupt caused by a delayed response from an MCU peripheral to // an interrupt flag clear or interrupt disable instruction), check if there // are remaining interrupt lines to process. // If a spurious interrupt occurs, the status register (SR) contains an // execution mode and interrupt level masks corresponding to a level 0 // interrupt, whatever the interrupt priority level causing the spurious // event. This behavior has been chosen because a spurious interrupt has not // to be a priority one and because it may not cause any trouble to other // interrupts. // However, these spurious interrupts place the hardware in an unstable state // and could give problems in other/future versions of the CPU, so the // software has to be written so that they never occur. The only safe way of // achieving this is to always clear or disable peripheral interrupts with the // following sequence: // 1: Mask the interrupt in the CPU by setting GM (or IxM) in SR. // 2: Perform the bus access to the peripheral register that clears or // disables the interrupt. // 3: Wait until the interrupt has actually been cleared or disabled by the // peripheral. This is usually performed by reading from a register in the // same peripheral (it DOES NOT have to be the same register that was // accessed in step 2, but it MUST be in the same peripheral), what takes // bus system latencies into account, but peripheral internal latencies // (generally 0 cycle) also have to be considered. // 4: Unmask the interrupt in the CPU by clearing GM (or IxM) in SR. // Note that steps 1 and 4 are useless inside interrupt handlers as the // corresponding interrupt level is automatically masked by IxM (unless IxM is // explicitly cleared by the software). // // Get the right IRQ handler. // // If several interrupt lines are active in the group, the interrupt line with // the highest number is selected. This is to be coherent with the // prioritization of interrupt groups performed by the hardware interrupt // controller. // // If no handler has been registered for the pending interrupt, // _unhandled_interrupt will be selected thanks to the initialization of // _int_line_handler_table_x by INTC_init_interrupts. // // exception.S will provide the interrupt handler with a clean interrupt stack // frame, with nothing more pushed onto the stack. The interrupt handler must // manage the `rete' instruction, what can be done thanks to pure assembly, // inline assembly or the `__attribute__((__interrupt__))' C function // attribute. return (int_req) ? _int_handler_table[int_grp]._int_line_handler_table[32 - clz(int_req) - 1] : NULL; } //! Init EVBA address. This sequence might also be done in the UTILS/STARTUP/GCC/crt0.S static __inline__ void INTC_init_evba(void) { Set_system_register(AVR32_EVBA, (int)&_evba ); } void INTC_init_interrupts(void) { unsigned int int_grp, int_req; INTC_init_evba(); // For all interrupt groups, for (int_grp = 0; int_grp < AVR32_INTC_NUM_INT_GRPS; int_grp++) { // For all interrupt request lines of each group, for (int_req = 0; int_req < _int_handler_table[int_grp].num_irqs; int_req++) { // Assign _unhandled_interrupt as default interrupt handler. _int_handler_table[int_grp]._int_line_handler_table[int_req] = &_unhandled_interrupt; } // Set the interrupt group priority register to its default value. // By default, all interrupt groups are linked to the interrupt priority // level 0 and to the interrupt vector _int0. AVR32_INTC.ipr[int_grp] = ipr_val[AVR32_INTC_INT0]; } } void INTC_register_interrupt(__int_handler handler, unsigned int irq, unsigned int int_level) { // Determine the group of the IRQ. unsigned int int_grp = irq / AVR32_INTC_MAX_NUM_IRQS_PER_GRP; // Store in _int_line_handler_table_x the pointer to the interrupt handler, so // that _get_interrupt_handler can retrieve it when the interrupt is vectored. _int_handler_table[int_grp]._int_line_handler_table[irq % AVR32_INTC_MAX_NUM_IRQS_PER_GRP] = handler; // Program the corresponding IPRX register to set the interrupt priority level // and the interrupt vector offset that will be fetched by the core interrupt // system. // NOTE: The _intx functions are intermediate assembly functions between the // core interrupt system and the user interrupt handler. AVR32_INTC.ipr[int_grp] = ipr_val[int_level & (AVR32_INTC_IPR_INTLEVEL_MASK >> AVR32_INTC_IPR_INTLEVEL_OFFSET)]; }