qemu/include/hw/clock.h
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   1/*
   2 * Hardware Clocks
   3 *
   4 * Copyright GreenSocs 2016-2020
   5 *
   6 * Authors:
   7 *  Frederic Konrad
   8 *  Damien Hedde
   9 *
  10 * This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or later.
  11 * See the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
  12 */
  13
  14#ifndef QEMU_HW_CLOCK_H
  15#define QEMU_HW_CLOCK_H
  16
  17#include "qom/object.h"
  18#include "qemu/queue.h"
  19#include "qemu/host-utils.h"
  20#include "qemu/bitops.h"
  21
  22#define TYPE_CLOCK "clock"
  23OBJECT_DECLARE_SIMPLE_TYPE(Clock, CLOCK)
  24
  25/*
  26 * Argument to ClockCallback functions indicating why the callback
  27 * has been called. A mask of these values logically ORed together
  28 * is used to specify which events are interesting when the callback
  29 * is registered, so these values must all be different bit values.
  30 */
  31typedef enum ClockEvent {
  32    ClockUpdate = 1, /* Clock period has just updated */
  33    ClockPreUpdate = 2, /* Clock period is about to update */
  34} ClockEvent;
  35
  36typedef void ClockCallback(void *opaque, ClockEvent event);
  37
  38/*
  39 * clock store a value representing the clock's period in 2^-32ns unit.
  40 * It can represent:
  41 *  + periods from 2^-32ns up to 4seconds
  42 *  + frequency from ~0.25Hz 2e10Ghz
  43 * Resolution of frequency representation decreases with frequency:
  44 * + at 100MHz, resolution is ~2mHz
  45 * + at 1Ghz,   resolution is ~0.2Hz
  46 * + at 10Ghz,  resolution is ~20Hz
  47 */
  48#define CLOCK_PERIOD_1SEC (1000000000llu << 32)
  49
  50/*
  51 * macro helpers to convert to hertz / nanosecond
  52 */
  53#define CLOCK_PERIOD_FROM_NS(ns) ((ns) * (CLOCK_PERIOD_1SEC / 1000000000llu))
  54#define CLOCK_PERIOD_FROM_HZ(hz) (((hz) != 0) ? CLOCK_PERIOD_1SEC / (hz) : 0u)
  55#define CLOCK_PERIOD_TO_HZ(per) (((per) != 0) ? CLOCK_PERIOD_1SEC / (per) : 0u)
  56
  57/**
  58 * Clock:
  59 * @parent_obj: parent class
  60 * @period: unsigned integer representing the period of the clock
  61 * @canonical_path: clock path string cache (used for trace purpose)
  62 * @callback: called when clock changes
  63 * @callback_opaque: argument for @callback
  64 * @callback_events: mask of events when callback should be called
  65 * @source: source (or parent in clock tree) of the clock
  66 * @children: list of clocks connected to this one (it is their source)
  67 * @sibling: structure used to form a clock list
  68 */
  69
  70
  71struct Clock {
  72    /*< private >*/
  73    Object parent_obj;
  74
  75    /* all fields are private and should not be modified directly */
  76
  77    /* fields */
  78    uint64_t period;
  79    char *canonical_path;
  80    ClockCallback *callback;
  81    void *callback_opaque;
  82    unsigned int callback_events;
  83
  84    /* Ratio of the parent clock to run the child clocks at */
  85    uint32_t multiplier;
  86    uint32_t divider;
  87
  88    /* Clocks are organized in a clock tree */
  89    Clock *source;
  90    QLIST_HEAD(, Clock) children;
  91    QLIST_ENTRY(Clock) sibling;
  92};
  93
  94/*
  95 * vmstate description entry to be added in device vmsd.
  96 */
  97extern const VMStateDescription vmstate_clock;
  98#define VMSTATE_CLOCK(field, state) \
  99    VMSTATE_CLOCK_V(field, state, 0)
 100#define VMSTATE_CLOCK_V(field, state, version) \
 101    VMSTATE_STRUCT_POINTER_V(field, state, version, vmstate_clock, Clock)
 102#define VMSTATE_ARRAY_CLOCK(field, state, num) \
 103    VMSTATE_ARRAY_CLOCK_V(field, state, num, 0)
 104#define VMSTATE_ARRAY_CLOCK_V(field, state, num, version)          \
 105    VMSTATE_ARRAY_OF_POINTER_TO_STRUCT(field, state, num, version, \
 106                                       vmstate_clock, Clock)
 107
 108/**
 109 * clock_setup_canonical_path:
 110 * @clk: clock
 111 *
 112 * compute the canonical path of the clock (used by log messages)
 113 */
 114void clock_setup_canonical_path(Clock *clk);
 115
 116/**
 117 * clock_new:
 118 * @parent: the clock parent
 119 * @name: the clock object name
 120 *
 121 * Helper function to create a new clock and parent it to @parent. There is no
 122 * need to call clock_setup_canonical_path on the returned clock as it is done
 123 * by this function.
 124 *
 125 * @return the newly created clock
 126 */
 127Clock *clock_new(Object *parent, const char *name);
 128
 129/**
 130 * clock_set_callback:
 131 * @clk: the clock to register the callback into
 132 * @cb: the callback function
 133 * @opaque: the argument to the callback
 134 * @events: the events the callback should be called for
 135 *          (logical OR of ClockEvent enum values)
 136 *
 137 * Register a callback called on every clock update.
 138 * Note that a clock has only one callback: you cannot register
 139 * different callback functions for different events.
 140 */
 141void clock_set_callback(Clock *clk, ClockCallback *cb,
 142                        void *opaque, unsigned int events);
 143
 144/**
 145 * clock_clear_callback:
 146 * @clk: the clock to delete the callback from
 147 *
 148 * Unregister the callback registered with clock_set_callback.
 149 */
 150void clock_clear_callback(Clock *clk);
 151
 152/**
 153 * clock_set_source:
 154 * @clk: the clock.
 155 * @src: the source clock
 156 *
 157 * Setup @src as the clock source of @clk. The current @src period
 158 * value is also copied to @clk and its subtree but no callback is
 159 * called.
 160 * Further @src update will be propagated to @clk and its subtree.
 161 */
 162void clock_set_source(Clock *clk, Clock *src);
 163
 164/**
 165 * clock_has_source:
 166 * @clk: the clock
 167 *
 168 * Returns true if the clock has a source clock connected to it.
 169 * This is useful for devices which have input clocks which must
 170 * be connected by the board/SoC code which creates them. The
 171 * device code can use this to check in its realize method that
 172 * the clock has been connected.
 173 */
 174static inline bool clock_has_source(const Clock *clk)
 175{
 176    return clk->source != NULL;
 177}
 178
 179/**
 180 * clock_set:
 181 * @clk: the clock to initialize.
 182 * @value: the clock's value, 0 means unclocked
 183 *
 184 * Set the local cached period value of @clk to @value.
 185 *
 186 * @return: true if the clock is changed.
 187 */
 188bool clock_set(Clock *clk, uint64_t value);
 189
 190static inline bool clock_set_hz(Clock *clk, unsigned hz)
 191{
 192    return clock_set(clk, CLOCK_PERIOD_FROM_HZ(hz));
 193}
 194
 195static inline bool clock_set_ns(Clock *clk, unsigned ns)
 196{
 197    return clock_set(clk, CLOCK_PERIOD_FROM_NS(ns));
 198}
 199
 200/**
 201 * clock_propagate:
 202 * @clk: the clock
 203 *
 204 * Propagate the clock period that has been previously configured using
 205 * @clock_set(). This will update recursively all connected clocks.
 206 * It is an error to call this function on a clock which has a source.
 207 * Note: this function must not be called during device inititialization
 208 * or migration.
 209 */
 210void clock_propagate(Clock *clk);
 211
 212/**
 213 * clock_update:
 214 * @clk: the clock to update.
 215 * @value: the new clock's value, 0 means unclocked
 216 *
 217 * Update the @clk to the new @value. All connected clocks will be informed
 218 * of this update. This is equivalent to call @clock_set() then
 219 * @clock_propagate().
 220 */
 221static inline void clock_update(Clock *clk, uint64_t value)
 222{
 223    if (clock_set(clk, value)) {
 224        clock_propagate(clk);
 225    }
 226}
 227
 228static inline void clock_update_hz(Clock *clk, unsigned hz)
 229{
 230    clock_update(clk, CLOCK_PERIOD_FROM_HZ(hz));
 231}
 232
 233static inline void clock_update_ns(Clock *clk, unsigned ns)
 234{
 235    clock_update(clk, CLOCK_PERIOD_FROM_NS(ns));
 236}
 237
 238/**
 239 * clock_get:
 240 * @clk: the clk to fetch the clock
 241 *
 242 * @return: the current period.
 243 */
 244static inline uint64_t clock_get(const Clock *clk)
 245{
 246    return clk->period;
 247}
 248
 249static inline unsigned clock_get_hz(Clock *clk)
 250{
 251    return CLOCK_PERIOD_TO_HZ(clock_get(clk));
 252}
 253
 254/**
 255 * clock_ticks_to_ns:
 256 * @clk: the clock to query
 257 * @ticks: number of ticks
 258 *
 259 * Returns the length of time in nanoseconds for this clock
 260 * to tick @ticks times. Because a clock can have a period
 261 * which is not a whole number of nanoseconds, it is important
 262 * to use this function when calculating things like timer
 263 * expiry deadlines, rather than attempting to obtain a "period
 264 * in nanoseconds" value and then multiplying that by a number
 265 * of ticks.
 266 *
 267 * The result could in theory be too large to fit in a 64-bit
 268 * value if the number of ticks and the clock period are both
 269 * large; to avoid overflow the result will be saturated to INT64_MAX
 270 * (because this is the largest valid input to the QEMUTimer APIs).
 271 * Since INT64_MAX nanoseconds is almost 300 years, anything with
 272 * an expiry later than that is in the "will never happen" category
 273 * and callers can reasonably not special-case the saturated result.
 274 */
 275static inline uint64_t clock_ticks_to_ns(const Clock *clk, uint64_t ticks)
 276{
 277    uint64_t ns_low, ns_high;
 278
 279    /*
 280     * clk->period is the period in units of 2^-32 ns, so
 281     * (clk->period * ticks) is the required length of time in those
 282     * units, and we can convert to nanoseconds by multiplying by
 283     * 2^32, which is the same as shifting the 128-bit multiplication
 284     * result right by 32.
 285     */
 286    mulu64(&ns_low, &ns_high, clk->period, ticks);
 287    if (ns_high & MAKE_64BIT_MASK(31, 33)) {
 288        return INT64_MAX;
 289    }
 290    return ns_low >> 32 | ns_high << 32;
 291}
 292
 293/**
 294 * clock_ns_to_ticks:
 295 * @clk: the clock to query
 296 * @ns: duration in nanoseconds
 297 *
 298 * Returns the number of ticks this clock would make in the given
 299 * number of nanoseconds. Because a clock can have a period which
 300 * is not a whole number of nanoseconds, it is important to use this
 301 * function rather than attempting to obtain a "period in nanoseconds"
 302 * value and then dividing the duration by that value.
 303 *
 304 * If the clock is stopped (ie it has period zero), returns 0.
 305 *
 306 * For some inputs the result could overflow a 64-bit value (because
 307 * the clock's period is short and the duration is long). In these
 308 * cases we truncate the result to a 64-bit value. This is on the
 309 * assumption that generally the result is going to be used to report
 310 * a 32-bit or 64-bit guest register value, so wrapping either cannot
 311 * happen or is the desired behaviour.
 312 */
 313static inline uint64_t clock_ns_to_ticks(const Clock *clk, uint64_t ns)
 314{
 315    /*
 316     * ticks = duration_in_ns / period_in_ns
 317     *       = ns / (period / 2^32)
 318     *       = (ns * 2^32) / period
 319     * The hi, lo inputs to divu128() are (ns << 32) as a 128 bit value.
 320     */
 321    uint64_t lo = ns << 32;
 322    uint64_t hi = ns >> 32;
 323    if (clk->period == 0) {
 324        return 0;
 325    }
 326
 327    divu128(&lo, &hi, clk->period);
 328    return lo;
 329}
 330
 331/**
 332 * clock_is_enabled:
 333 * @clk: a clock
 334 *
 335 * @return: true if the clock is running.
 336 */
 337static inline bool clock_is_enabled(const Clock *clk)
 338{
 339    return clock_get(clk) != 0;
 340}
 341
 342/**
 343 * clock_display_freq: return human-readable representation of clock frequency
 344 * @clk: clock
 345 *
 346 * Return a string which has a human-readable representation of the
 347 * clock's frequency, e.g. "33.3 MHz". This is intended for debug
 348 * and display purposes.
 349 *
 350 * The caller is responsible for freeing the string with g_free().
 351 */
 352char *clock_display_freq(Clock *clk);
 353
 354/**
 355 * clock_set_mul_div: set multiplier/divider for child clocks
 356 * @clk: clock
 357 * @multiplier: multiplier value
 358 * @divider: divider value
 359 *
 360 * By default, a Clock's children will all run with the same period
 361 * as their parent. This function allows you to adjust the multiplier
 362 * and divider used to derive the child clock frequency.
 363 * For example, setting a multiplier of 2 and a divider of 3
 364 * will run child clocks with a period 2/3 of the parent clock,
 365 * so if the parent clock is an 8MHz clock the children will
 366 * be 12MHz.
 367 *
 368 * Setting the multiplier to 0 will stop the child clocks.
 369 * Setting the divider to 0 is a programming error (diagnosed with
 370 * an assertion failure).
 371 * Setting a multiplier value that results in the child period
 372 * overflowing is not diagnosed.
 373 *
 374 * Note that this function does not call clock_propagate(); the
 375 * caller should do that if necessary.
 376 */
 377void clock_set_mul_div(Clock *clk, uint32_t multiplier, uint32_t divider);
 378
 379#endif /* QEMU_HW_CLOCK_H */
 380