unicorn/qemu/include/exec/memattrs.h
Peter Maydell 26c8f31d9e
memory.h: Move MemTxResult type to memattrs.h
Move the MemTxResult type to memattrs.h. We're going to want to
use it in cpu/qom.h, which doesn't want to include all of
memory.h. In practice MemTxResult and MemTxAttrs are pretty
closely linked since both are used for the new-style
read_with_attrs and write_with_attrs callbacks, so memattrs.h
is a reasonable home for this rather than creating a whole
new header file for it.

Backports commit 3114d092b1740f9db9aa559aeb48ee387011e1da from qemu
2018-03-04 13:10:47 -05:00

58 lines
2 KiB
C

/*
* Memory transaction attributes
*
* Copyright (c) 2015 Linaro Limited.
*
* Authors:
* Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
*
* This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or later.
* See the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
*
*/
#ifndef MEMATTRS_H
#define MEMATTRS_H
/* Every memory transaction has associated with it a set of
* attributes. Some of these are generic (such as the ID of
* the bus master); some are specific to a particular kind of
* bus (such as the ARM Secure/NonSecure bit). We define them
* all as non-overlapping bitfields in a single struct to avoid
* confusion if different parts of QEMU used the same bit for
* different semantics.
*/
typedef struct MemTxAttrs {
/* Bus masters which don't specify any attributes will get this
* (via the MEMTXATTRS_UNSPECIFIED constant), so that we can
* distinguish "all attributes deliberately clear" from
* "didn't specify" if necessary.
*/
unsigned int unspecified:1;
/* ARM/AMBA TrustZone Secure access
* x86: System Management Mode access
*/
unsigned int secure:1;
/* Memory access is usermode (unprivileged) */
unsigned int user:1;
} MemTxAttrs;
/* Bus masters which don't specify any attributes will get this,
* which has all attribute bits clear except the topmost one
* (so that we can distinguish "all attributes deliberately clear"
* from "didn't specify" if necessary).
*/
#define MEMTXATTRS_UNSPECIFIED ((MemTxAttrs) { .unspecified = 1 })
/* New-style MMIO accessors can indicate that the transaction failed.
* A zero (MEMTX_OK) response means success; anything else is a failure
* of some kind. The memory subsystem will bitwise-OR together results
* if it is synthesizing an operation from multiple smaller accesses.
*/
#define MEMTX_OK 0
#define MEMTX_ERROR (1U << 0) /* device returned an error */
#define MEMTX_DECODE_ERROR (1U << 1) /* nothing at that address */
typedef uint32_t MemTxResult;
#endif