Fix: rseq: arm branch to failure
[deliverable/linux.git] / drivers / watchdog / sb_wdog.c
1 /*
2 * Watchdog driver for SiByte SB1 SoCs
3 *
4 * Copyright (C) 2007 OnStor, Inc. * Andrew Sharp <andy.sharp@lsi.com>
5 *
6 * This driver is intended to make the second of two hardware watchdogs
7 * on the Sibyte 12XX and 11XX SoCs available to the user. There are two
8 * such devices available on the SoC, but it seems that there isn't an
9 * enumeration class for watchdogs in Linux like there is for RTCs.
10 * The second is used rather than the first because it uses IRQ 1,
11 * thereby avoiding all that IRQ 0 problematic nonsense.
12 *
13 * I have not tried this driver on a 1480 processor; it might work
14 * just well enough to really screw things up.
15 *
16 * It is a simple timer, and there is an interrupt that is raised the
17 * first time the timer expires. The second time it expires, the chip
18 * is reset and there is no way to redirect that NMI. Which could
19 * be problematic in some cases where this chip is sitting on the HT
20 * bus and has just taken responsibility for providing a cache block.
21 * Since the reset can't be redirected to the external reset pin, it is
22 * possible that other HT connected processors might hang and not reset.
23 * For Linux, a soft reset would probably be even worse than a hard reset.
24 * There you have it.
25 *
26 * The timer takes 23 bits of a 64 bit register (?) as a count value,
27 * and decrements the count every microsecond, for a max value of
28 * 0x7fffff usec or about 8.3ish seconds.
29 *
30 * This watchdog borrows some user semantics from the softdog driver,
31 * in that if you close the fd, it leaves the watchdog running, unless
32 * you previously wrote a 'V' to the fd, in which case it disables
33 * the watchdog when you close the fd like some other drivers.
34 *
35 * Based on various other watchdog drivers, which are probably all
36 * loosely based on something Alan Cox wrote years ago.
37 *
38 * (c) Copyright 1996 Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk>,
39 * All Rights Reserved.
40 *
41 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
42 * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
43 * version 1 or 2 as published by the Free Software Foundation.
44 *
45 */
46
47 #define pr_fmt(fmt) KBUILD_MODNAME ": " fmt
48
49 #include <linux/module.h>
50 #include <linux/io.h>
51 #include <linux/uaccess.h>
52 #include <linux/fs.h>
53 #include <linux/reboot.h>
54 #include <linux/miscdevice.h>
55 #include <linux/watchdog.h>
56 #include <linux/interrupt.h>
57
58 #include <asm/sibyte/sb1250.h>
59 #include <asm/sibyte/sb1250_regs.h>
60 #include <asm/sibyte/sb1250_int.h>
61 #include <asm/sibyte/sb1250_scd.h>
62
63 static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(sbwd_lock);
64
65 /*
66 * set the initial count value of a timer
67 *
68 * wdog is the iomem address of the cfg register
69 */
70 void sbwdog_set(char __iomem *wdog, unsigned long t)
71 {
72 spin_lock(&sbwd_lock);
73 __raw_writeb(0, wdog);
74 __raw_writeq(t & 0x7fffffUL, wdog - 0x10);
75 spin_unlock(&sbwd_lock);
76 }
77
78 /*
79 * cause the timer to [re]load it's initial count and start counting
80 * all over again
81 *
82 * wdog is the iomem address of the cfg register
83 */
84 void sbwdog_pet(char __iomem *wdog)
85 {
86 spin_lock(&sbwd_lock);
87 __raw_writeb(__raw_readb(wdog) | 1, wdog);
88 spin_unlock(&sbwd_lock);
89 }
90
91 static unsigned long sbwdog_gate; /* keeps it to one thread only */
92 static char __iomem *kern_dog = (char __iomem *)(IO_BASE + (A_SCD_WDOG_CFG_0));
93 static char __iomem *user_dog = (char __iomem *)(IO_BASE + (A_SCD_WDOG_CFG_1));
94 static unsigned long timeout = 0x7fffffUL; /* useconds: 8.3ish secs. */
95 static int expect_close;
96
97 static const struct watchdog_info ident = {
98 .options = WDIOF_CARDRESET | WDIOF_SETTIMEOUT |
99 WDIOF_KEEPALIVEPING | WDIOF_MAGICCLOSE,
100 .identity = "SiByte Watchdog",
101 };
102
103 /*
104 * Allow only a single thread to walk the dog
105 */
106 static int sbwdog_open(struct inode *inode, struct file *file)
107 {
108 nonseekable_open(inode, file);
109 if (test_and_set_bit(0, &sbwdog_gate))
110 return -EBUSY;
111 __module_get(THIS_MODULE);
112
113 /*
114 * Activate the timer
115 */
116 sbwdog_set(user_dog, timeout);
117 __raw_writeb(1, user_dog);
118
119 return 0;
120 }
121
122 /*
123 * Put the dog back in the kennel.
124 */
125 static int sbwdog_release(struct inode *inode, struct file *file)
126 {
127 if (expect_close == 42) {
128 __raw_writeb(0, user_dog);
129 module_put(THIS_MODULE);
130 } else {
131 pr_crit("%s: Unexpected close, not stopping watchdog!\n",
132 ident.identity);
133 sbwdog_pet(user_dog);
134 }
135 clear_bit(0, &sbwdog_gate);
136 expect_close = 0;
137
138 return 0;
139 }
140
141 /*
142 * 42 - the answer
143 */
144 static ssize_t sbwdog_write(struct file *file, const char __user *data,
145 size_t len, loff_t *ppos)
146 {
147 int i;
148
149 if (len) {
150 /*
151 * restart the timer
152 */
153 expect_close = 0;
154
155 for (i = 0; i != len; i++) {
156 char c;
157
158 if (get_user(c, data + i))
159 return -EFAULT;
160 if (c == 'V')
161 expect_close = 42;
162 }
163 sbwdog_pet(user_dog);
164 }
165
166 return len;
167 }
168
169 static long sbwdog_ioctl(struct file *file, unsigned int cmd,
170 unsigned long arg)
171 {
172 int ret = -ENOTTY;
173 unsigned long time;
174 void __user *argp = (void __user *)arg;
175 int __user *p = argp;
176
177 switch (cmd) {
178 case WDIOC_GETSUPPORT:
179 ret = copy_to_user(argp, &ident, sizeof(ident)) ? -EFAULT : 0;
180 break;
181
182 case WDIOC_GETSTATUS:
183 case WDIOC_GETBOOTSTATUS:
184 ret = put_user(0, p);
185 break;
186
187 case WDIOC_KEEPALIVE:
188 sbwdog_pet(user_dog);
189 ret = 0;
190 break;
191
192 case WDIOC_SETTIMEOUT:
193 ret = get_user(time, p);
194 if (ret)
195 break;
196
197 time *= 1000000;
198 if (time > 0x7fffffUL) {
199 ret = -EINVAL;
200 break;
201 }
202 timeout = time;
203 sbwdog_set(user_dog, timeout);
204 sbwdog_pet(user_dog);
205
206 case WDIOC_GETTIMEOUT:
207 /*
208 * get the remaining count from the ... count register
209 * which is 1*8 before the config register
210 */
211 ret = put_user((u32)__raw_readq(user_dog - 8) / 1000000, p);
212 break;
213 }
214 return ret;
215 }
216
217 /*
218 * Notifier for system down
219 */
220 static int sbwdog_notify_sys(struct notifier_block *this, unsigned long code,
221 void *erf)
222 {
223 if (code == SYS_DOWN || code == SYS_HALT) {
224 /*
225 * sit and sit
226 */
227 __raw_writeb(0, user_dog);
228 __raw_writeb(0, kern_dog);
229 }
230
231 return NOTIFY_DONE;
232 }
233
234 static const struct file_operations sbwdog_fops = {
235 .owner = THIS_MODULE,
236 .llseek = no_llseek,
237 .write = sbwdog_write,
238 .unlocked_ioctl = sbwdog_ioctl,
239 .open = sbwdog_open,
240 .release = sbwdog_release,
241 };
242
243 static struct miscdevice sbwdog_miscdev = {
244 .minor = WATCHDOG_MINOR,
245 .name = "watchdog",
246 .fops = &sbwdog_fops,
247 };
248
249 static struct notifier_block sbwdog_notifier = {
250 .notifier_call = sbwdog_notify_sys,
251 };
252
253 /*
254 * interrupt handler
255 *
256 * doesn't do a whole lot for user, but oh so cleverly written so kernel
257 * code can use it to re-up the watchdog, thereby saving the kernel from
258 * having to create and maintain a timer, just to tickle another timer,
259 * which is just so wrong.
260 */
261 irqreturn_t sbwdog_interrupt(int irq, void *addr)
262 {
263 unsigned long wd_init;
264 char *wd_cfg_reg = (char *)addr;
265 u8 cfg;
266
267 cfg = __raw_readb(wd_cfg_reg);
268 wd_init = __raw_readq(wd_cfg_reg - 8) & 0x7fffff;
269
270 /*
271 * if it's the second watchdog timer, it's for those users
272 */
273 if (wd_cfg_reg == user_dog)
274 pr_crit("%s in danger of initiating system reset "
275 "in %ld.%01ld seconds\n",
276 ident.identity,
277 wd_init / 1000000, (wd_init / 100000) % 10);
278 else
279 cfg |= 1;
280
281 __raw_writeb(cfg, wd_cfg_reg);
282
283 return IRQ_HANDLED;
284 }
285
286 static int __init sbwdog_init(void)
287 {
288 int ret;
289
290 /*
291 * register a reboot notifier
292 */
293 ret = register_reboot_notifier(&sbwdog_notifier);
294 if (ret) {
295 pr_err("%s: cannot register reboot notifier (err=%d)\n",
296 ident.identity, ret);
297 return ret;
298 }
299
300 /*
301 * get the resources
302 */
303
304 ret = request_irq(1, sbwdog_interrupt, IRQF_SHARED,
305 ident.identity, (void *)user_dog);
306 if (ret) {
307 pr_err("%s: failed to request irq 1 - %d\n",
308 ident.identity, ret);
309 goto out;
310 }
311
312 ret = misc_register(&sbwdog_miscdev);
313 if (ret == 0) {
314 pr_info("%s: timeout is %ld.%ld secs\n",
315 ident.identity,
316 timeout / 1000000, (timeout / 100000) % 10);
317 return 0;
318 }
319 free_irq(1, (void *)user_dog);
320 out:
321 unregister_reboot_notifier(&sbwdog_notifier);
322
323 return ret;
324 }
325
326 static void __exit sbwdog_exit(void)
327 {
328 misc_deregister(&sbwdog_miscdev);
329 free_irq(1, (void *)user_dog);
330 unregister_reboot_notifier(&sbwdog_notifier);
331 }
332
333 module_init(sbwdog_init);
334 module_exit(sbwdog_exit);
335
336 MODULE_AUTHOR("Andrew Sharp <andy.sharp@lsi.com>");
337 MODULE_DESCRIPTION("SiByte Watchdog");
338
339 module_param(timeout, ulong, 0);
340 MODULE_PARM_DESC(timeout,
341 "Watchdog timeout in microseconds (max/default 8388607 or 8.3ish secs)");
342
343 MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
344
345 /*
346 * example code that can be put in a platform code area to utilize the
347 * first watchdog timer for the kernels own purpose.
348
349 void platform_wd_setup(void)
350 {
351 int ret;
352
353 ret = request_irq(1, sbwdog_interrupt, IRQF_SHARED,
354 "Kernel Watchdog", IOADDR(A_SCD_WDOG_CFG_0));
355 if (ret) {
356 pr_crit("Watchdog IRQ zero(0) failed to be requested - %d\n", ret);
357 }
358 }
359
360
361 */
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