qemu-e2k/include/hw/xtensa/xtensa-isa.h
Markus Armbruster 58ea30f514 Clean up header guards that don't match their file name
Header guard symbols should match their file name to make guard
collisions less likely.

Cleaned up with scripts/clean-header-guards.pl, followed by some
renaming of new guard symbols picked by the script to better ones.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
Message-Id: <20190315145123.28030-6-armbru@redhat.com>
[Rebase to master: update include/hw/net/ne2000-isa.h]
2019-05-13 08:58:55 +02:00

837 lines
26 KiB
C

/* Interface definition for configurable Xtensa ISA support.
*
* Copyright (c) 2001-2013 Tensilica Inc.
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
* a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
* "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
* without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
* distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
* permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
* the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
* in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
* EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
* IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
* CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
* TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
* SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
*/
#ifndef HW_XTENSA_XTENSA_ISA_H
#define HW_XTENSA_XTENSA_ISA_H
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/*
* Version number: This is intended to help support code that works with
* versions of this library from multiple Xtensa releases.
*/
#define XTENSA_ISA_VERSION 7000
/*
* This file defines the interface to the Xtensa ISA library. This
* library contains most of the ISA-specific information for a
* particular Xtensa processor. For example, the set of valid
* instructions, their opcode encodings and operand fields are all
* included here.
*
* This interface basically defines a number of abstract data types.
*
* . an instruction buffer - for holding the raw instruction bits
* . ISA info - information about the ISA as a whole
* . instruction formats - instruction size and slot structure
* . opcodes - information about individual instructions
* . operands - information about register and immediate instruction operands
* . stateOperands - information about processor state instruction operands
* . interfaceOperands - information about interface instruction operands
* . register files - register file information
* . processor states - internal processor state information
* . system registers - "special registers" and "user registers"
* . interfaces - TIE interfaces that are external to the processor
* . functional units - TIE shared functions
*
* The interface defines a set of functions to access each data type.
* With the exception of the instruction buffer, the internal
* representations of the data structures are hidden. All accesses must
* be made through the functions defined here.
*/
typedef struct xtensa_isa_opaque { int unused; } *xtensa_isa;
/*
* Most of the Xtensa ISA entities (e.g., opcodes, regfiles, etc.) are
* represented here using sequential integers beginning with 0. The
* specific values are only fixed for a particular instantiation of an
* xtensa_isa structure, so these values should only be used
* internally.
*/
typedef int xtensa_opcode;
typedef int xtensa_format;
typedef int xtensa_regfile;
typedef int xtensa_state;
typedef int xtensa_sysreg;
typedef int xtensa_interface;
typedef int xtensa_funcUnit;
/* Define a unique value for undefined items. */
#define XTENSA_UNDEFINED -1
/*
* Overview of using this interface to decode/encode instructions:
*
* Each Xtensa instruction is associated with a particular instruction
* format, where the format defines a fixed number of slots for
* operations. The formats for the core Xtensa ISA have only one slot,
* but FLIX instructions may have multiple slots. Within each slot,
* there is a single opcode and some number of associated operands.
*
* The encoding and decoding functions operate on instruction buffers,
* not on the raw bytes of the instructions. The same instruction
* buffer data structure is used for both entire instructions and
* individual slots in those instructions -- the contents of a slot need
* to be extracted from or inserted into the buffer for the instruction
* as a whole.
*
* Decoding an instruction involves first finding the format, which
* identifies the number of slots, and then decoding each slot
* separately. A slot is decoded by finding the opcode and then using
* the opcode to determine how many operands there are. For example:
*
* xtensa_insnbuf_from_chars
* xtensa_format_decode
* for each slot {
* xtensa_format_get_slot
* xtensa_opcode_decode
* for each operand {
* xtensa_operand_get_field
* xtensa_operand_decode
* }
* }
*
* Encoding an instruction is roughly the same procedure in reverse:
*
* xtensa_format_encode
* for each slot {
* xtensa_opcode_encode
* for each operand {
* xtensa_operand_encode
* xtensa_operand_set_field
* }
* xtensa_format_set_slot
* }
* xtensa_insnbuf_to_chars
*/
/* Error handling. */
/*
* Error codes. The code for the most recent error condition can be
* retrieved with the "errno" function. For any result other than
* xtensa_isa_ok, an error message containing additional information
* about the problem can be retrieved using the "error_msg" function.
* The error messages are stored in an internal buffer, which should
* not be freed and may be overwritten by subsequent operations.
*/
typedef enum xtensa_isa_status_enum {
xtensa_isa_ok = 0,
xtensa_isa_bad_format,
xtensa_isa_bad_slot,
xtensa_isa_bad_opcode,
xtensa_isa_bad_operand,
xtensa_isa_bad_field,
xtensa_isa_bad_iclass,
xtensa_isa_bad_regfile,
xtensa_isa_bad_sysreg,
xtensa_isa_bad_state,
xtensa_isa_bad_interface,
xtensa_isa_bad_funcUnit,
xtensa_isa_wrong_slot,
xtensa_isa_no_field,
xtensa_isa_out_of_memory,
xtensa_isa_buffer_overflow,
xtensa_isa_internal_error,
xtensa_isa_bad_value
} xtensa_isa_status;
xtensa_isa_status xtensa_isa_errno(xtensa_isa isa);
char *xtensa_isa_error_msg(xtensa_isa isa);
/* Instruction buffers. */
typedef uint32_t xtensa_insnbuf_word;
typedef xtensa_insnbuf_word *xtensa_insnbuf;
/* Get the size in "insnbuf_words" of the xtensa_insnbuf array. */
int xtensa_insnbuf_size(xtensa_isa isa);
/* Allocate an xtensa_insnbuf of the right size. */
xtensa_insnbuf xtensa_insnbuf_alloc(xtensa_isa isa);
/* Release an xtensa_insnbuf. */
void xtensa_insnbuf_free(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_insnbuf buf);
/*
* Conversion between raw memory (char arrays) and our internal
* instruction representation. This is complicated by the Xtensa ISA's
* variable instruction lengths. When converting to chars, the buffer
* must contain a valid instruction so we know how many bytes to copy;
* thus, the "to_chars" function returns the number of bytes copied or
* XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error. The "from_chars" function first reads the
* minimal number of bytes required to decode the instruction length and
* then proceeds to copy the entire instruction into the buffer; if the
* memory does not contain a valid instruction, it copies the maximum
* number of bytes required for the longest Xtensa instruction. The
* "num_chars" argument may be used to limit the number of bytes that
* can be read or written. Otherwise, if "num_chars" is zero, the
* functions may read or write past the end of the code.
*/
int xtensa_insnbuf_to_chars(xtensa_isa isa, const xtensa_insnbuf insn,
unsigned char *cp, int num_chars);
void xtensa_insnbuf_from_chars(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_insnbuf insn,
const unsigned char *cp, int num_chars);
/* ISA information. */
/* Initialize the ISA information. */
xtensa_isa xtensa_isa_init(void *xtensa_modules, xtensa_isa_status *errno_p,
char **error_msg_p);
/* Deallocate an xtensa_isa structure. */
void xtensa_isa_free(xtensa_isa isa);
/* Get the maximum instruction size in bytes. */
int xtensa_isa_maxlength(xtensa_isa isa);
/*
* Decode the length in bytes of an instruction in raw memory (not an
* insnbuf). This function reads only the minimal number of bytes
* required to decode the instruction length. Returns
* XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_isa_length_from_chars(xtensa_isa isa, const unsigned char *cp);
/*
* Get the number of stages in the processor's pipeline. The pipeline
* stage values returned by other functions in this library will range
* from 0 to N-1, where N is the value returned by this function.
* Note that the stage numbers used here may not correspond to the
* actual processor hardware, e.g., the hardware may have additional
* stages before stage 0. Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_isa_num_pipe_stages(xtensa_isa isa);
/* Get the number of various entities that are defined for this processor. */
int xtensa_isa_num_formats(xtensa_isa isa);
int xtensa_isa_num_opcodes(xtensa_isa isa);
int xtensa_isa_num_regfiles(xtensa_isa isa);
int xtensa_isa_num_states(xtensa_isa isa);
int xtensa_isa_num_sysregs(xtensa_isa isa);
int xtensa_isa_num_interfaces(xtensa_isa isa);
int xtensa_isa_num_funcUnits(xtensa_isa isa);
/* Instruction formats. */
/* Get the name of a format. Returns null on error. */
const char *xtensa_format_name(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_format fmt);
/*
* Given a format name, return the format number. Returns
* XTENSA_UNDEFINED if the name is not a valid format.
*/
xtensa_format xtensa_format_lookup(xtensa_isa isa, const char *fmtname);
/*
* Decode the instruction format from a binary instruction buffer.
* Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED if the format is not recognized.
*/
xtensa_format xtensa_format_decode(xtensa_isa isa, const xtensa_insnbuf insn);
/*
* Set the instruction format field(s) in a binary instruction buffer.
* All the other fields are set to zero. Returns non-zero on error.
*/
int xtensa_format_encode(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_format fmt,
xtensa_insnbuf insn);
/*
* Find the length (in bytes) of an instruction. Returns
* XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_format_length(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_format fmt);
/*
* Get the number of slots in an instruction. Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED
* on error.
*/
int xtensa_format_num_slots(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_format fmt);
/*
* Get the opcode for a no-op in a particular slot.
* Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
xtensa_opcode xtensa_format_slot_nop_opcode(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_format fmt,
int slot);
/*
* Get the bits for a specified slot out of an insnbuf for the
* instruction as a whole and put them into an insnbuf for that one
* slot, and do the opposite to set a slot. Return non-zero on error.
*/
int xtensa_format_get_slot(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_format fmt, int slot,
const xtensa_insnbuf insn, xtensa_insnbuf slotbuf);
int xtensa_format_set_slot(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_format fmt, int slot,
xtensa_insnbuf insn, const xtensa_insnbuf slotbuf);
/* Opcode information. */
/*
* Translate a mnemonic name to an opcode. Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED if
* the name is not a valid opcode mnemonic.
*/
xtensa_opcode xtensa_opcode_lookup(xtensa_isa isa, const char *opname);
/*
* Decode the opcode for one instruction slot from a binary instruction
* buffer. Returns the opcode or XTENSA_UNDEFINED if the opcode is
* illegal.
*/
xtensa_opcode xtensa_opcode_decode(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_format fmt, int slot,
const xtensa_insnbuf slotbuf);
/*
* Set the opcode field(s) for an instruction slot. All other fields
* in the slot are set to zero. Returns non-zero if the opcode cannot
* be encoded.
*/
int xtensa_opcode_encode(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_format fmt, int slot,
xtensa_insnbuf slotbuf, xtensa_opcode opc);
/* Get the mnemonic name for an opcode. Returns null on error. */
const char *xtensa_opcode_name(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc);
/* Check various properties of opcodes. These functions return 0 if
* the condition is false, 1 if the condition is true, and
* XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error. The instructions are classified as
* follows:
*
* branch: conditional branch; may fall through to next instruction (B*)
* jump: unconditional branch (J, JX, RET*, RF*)
* loop: zero-overhead loop (LOOP*)
* call: unconditional call; control returns to next instruction (CALL*)
*
* For the opcodes that affect control flow in some way, the branch
* target may be specified by an immediate operand or it may be an
* address stored in a register. You can distinguish these by
* checking if the instruction has a PC-relative immediate
* operand.
*/
int xtensa_opcode_is_branch(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc);
int xtensa_opcode_is_jump(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc);
int xtensa_opcode_is_loop(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc);
int xtensa_opcode_is_call(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc);
/*
* Find the number of ordinary operands, state operands, and interface
* operands for an instruction. These return XTENSA_UNDEFINED on
* error.
*/
int xtensa_opcode_num_operands(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc);
int xtensa_opcode_num_stateOperands(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc);
int xtensa_opcode_num_interfaceOperands(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc);
/*
* Get functional unit usage requirements for an opcode. Each "use"
* is identified by a <functional unit, pipeline stage> pair. The
* "num_funcUnit_uses" function returns the number of these "uses" or
* XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error. The "funcUnit_use" function returns
* a pointer to a "use" pair or null on error.
*/
typedef struct xtensa_funcUnit_use_struct {
xtensa_funcUnit unit;
int stage;
} xtensa_funcUnit_use;
int xtensa_opcode_num_funcUnit_uses(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc);
xtensa_funcUnit_use *xtensa_opcode_funcUnit_use(xtensa_isa isa,
xtensa_opcode opc, int u);
/* Operand information. */
/* Get the name of an operand. Returns null on error. */
const char *xtensa_operand_name(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd);
/*
* Some operands are "invisible", i.e., not explicitly specified in
* assembly language. When assembling an instruction, you need not set
* the values of invisible operands, since they are either hardwired or
* derived from other field values. The values of invisible operands
* can be examined in the same way as other operands, but remember that
* an invisible operand may get its value from another visible one, so
* the entire instruction must be available before examining the
* invisible operand values. This function returns 1 if an operand is
* visible, 0 if it is invisible, or XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error. Note
* that whether an operand is visible is orthogonal to whether it is
* "implicit", i.e., whether it is encoded in a field in the
* instruction.
*/
int xtensa_operand_is_visible(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd);
/*
* Check if an operand is an input ('i'), output ('o'), or inout ('m')
* operand. Note: The output operand of a conditional assignment
* (e.g., movnez) appears here as an inout ('m') even if it is declared
* in the TIE code as an output ('o'); this allows the compiler to
* properly handle register allocation for conditional assignments.
* Returns 0 on error.
*/
char xtensa_operand_inout(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd);
/*
* Get and set the raw (encoded) value of the field for the specified
* operand. The "set" function does not check if the value fits in the
* field; that is done by the "encode" function below. Both of these
* functions return non-zero on error, e.g., if the field is not defined
* for the specified slot.
*/
int xtensa_operand_get_field(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd,
xtensa_format fmt, int slot,
const xtensa_insnbuf slotbuf, uint32_t *valp);
int xtensa_operand_set_field(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd,
xtensa_format fmt, int slot,
xtensa_insnbuf slotbuf, uint32_t val);
/*
* Encode and decode operands. The raw bits in the operand field may
* be encoded in a variety of different ways. These functions hide
* the details of that encoding. The result values are returned through
* the argument pointer. The return value is non-zero on error.
*/
int xtensa_operand_encode(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd,
uint32_t *valp);
int xtensa_operand_decode(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd,
uint32_t *valp);
/*
* An operand may be either a register operand or an immediate of some
* sort (e.g., PC-relative or not). The "is_register" function returns
* 0 if the operand is an immediate, 1 if it is a register, and
* XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error. The "regfile" function returns the
* regfile for a register operand, or XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_operand_is_register(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd);
xtensa_regfile xtensa_operand_regfile(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc,
int opnd);
/*
* Register operands may span multiple consecutive registers, e.g., a
* 64-bit data type may occupy two 32-bit registers. Only the first
* register is encoded in the operand field. This function specifies
* the number of consecutive registers occupied by this operand. For
* non-register operands, the return value is undefined. Returns
* XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_operand_num_regs(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd);
/*
* Some register operands do not completely identify the register being
* accessed. For example, the operand value may be added to an internal
* state value. By definition, this implies that the corresponding
* regfile is not allocatable. Unknown registers should generally be
* treated with worst-case assumptions. The function returns 0 if the
* register value is unknown, 1 if known, and XTENSA_UNDEFINED on
* error.
*/
int xtensa_operand_is_known_reg(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd);
/*
* Check if an immediate operand is PC-relative. Returns 0 for register
* operands and non-PC-relative immediates, 1 for PC-relative
* immediates, and XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_operand_is_PCrelative(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd);
/*
* For PC-relative offset operands, the interpretation of the offset may
* vary between opcodes, e.g., is it relative to the current PC or that
* of the next instruction? The following functions are defined to
* perform PC-relative relocations and to undo them (as in the
* disassembler). The "do_reloc" function takes the desired address
* value and the PC of the current instruction and sets the value to the
* corresponding PC-relative offset (which can then be encoded and
* stored into the operand field). The "undo_reloc" function takes the
* unencoded offset value and the current PC and sets the value to the
* appropriate address. The return values are non-zero on error. Note
* that these functions do not replace the encode/decode functions; the
* operands must be encoded/decoded separately and the encode functions
* are responsible for detecting invalid operand values.
*/
int xtensa_operand_do_reloc(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd,
uint32_t *valp, uint32_t pc);
int xtensa_operand_undo_reloc(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int opnd,
uint32_t *valp, uint32_t pc);
/* State Operands. */
/*
* Get the state accessed by a state operand. Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED
* on error.
*/
xtensa_state xtensa_stateOperand_state(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc,
int stOp);
/*
* Check if a state operand is an input ('i'), output ('o'), or inout
* ('m') operand. Returns 0 on error.
*/
char xtensa_stateOperand_inout(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_opcode opc, int stOp);
/* Interface Operands. */
/*
* Get the external interface accessed by an interface operand.
* Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
xtensa_interface xtensa_interfaceOperand_interface(xtensa_isa isa,
xtensa_opcode opc,
int ifOp);
/* Register Files. */
/*
* Regfiles include both "real" regfiles and "views", where a view
* allows a group of adjacent registers in a real "parent" regfile to be
* viewed as a single register. A regfile view has all the same
* properties as its parent except for its (long) name, bit width, number
* of entries, and default ctype. You can use the parent function to
* distinguish these two classes.
*/
/*
* Look up a regfile by either its name or its abbreviated "short name".
* Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error. The "lookup_shortname" function
* ignores "view" regfiles since they always have the same shortname as
* their parents.
*/
xtensa_regfile xtensa_regfile_lookup(xtensa_isa isa, const char *name);
xtensa_regfile xtensa_regfile_lookup_shortname(xtensa_isa isa,
const char *shortname);
/*
* Get the name or abbreviated "short name" of a regfile.
* Returns null on error.
*/
const char *xtensa_regfile_name(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_regfile rf);
const char *xtensa_regfile_shortname(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_regfile rf);
/*
* Get the parent regfile of a "view" regfile. If the regfile is not a
* view, the result is the same as the input parameter. Returns
* XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
xtensa_regfile xtensa_regfile_view_parent(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_regfile rf);
/*
* Get the bit width of a regfile or regfile view.
* Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_regfile_num_bits(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_regfile rf);
/*
* Get the number of regfile entries. Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED on
* error.
*/
int xtensa_regfile_num_entries(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_regfile rf);
/* Processor States. */
/* Look up a state by name. Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error. */
xtensa_state xtensa_state_lookup(xtensa_isa isa, const char *name);
/* Get the name for a processor state. Returns null on error. */
const char *xtensa_state_name(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_state st);
/*
* Get the bit width for a processor state.
* Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_state_num_bits(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_state st);
/*
* Check if a state is exported from the processor core. Returns 0 if
* the condition is false, 1 if the condition is true, and
* XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_state_is_exported(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_state st);
/*
* Check for a "shared_or" state. Returns 0 if the condition is false,
* 1 if the condition is true, and XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_state_is_shared_or(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_state st);
/* Sysregs ("special registers" and "user registers"). */
/*
* Look up a register by its number and whether it is a "user register"
* or a "special register". Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED if the sysreg does
* not exist.
*/
xtensa_sysreg xtensa_sysreg_lookup(xtensa_isa isa, int num, int is_user);
/*
* Check if there exists a sysreg with a given name.
* If not, this function returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED.
*/
xtensa_sysreg xtensa_sysreg_lookup_name(xtensa_isa isa, const char *name);
/* Get the name of a sysreg. Returns null on error. */
const char *xtensa_sysreg_name(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_sysreg sysreg);
/* Get the register number. Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error. */
int xtensa_sysreg_number(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_sysreg sysreg);
/*
* Check if a sysreg is a "special register" or a "user register".
* Returns 0 for special registers, 1 for user registers and
* XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_sysreg_is_user(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_sysreg sysreg);
/* Interfaces. */
/*
* Find an interface by name. The return value is XTENSA_UNDEFINED if
* the specified interface is not found.
*/
xtensa_interface xtensa_interface_lookup(xtensa_isa isa, const char *ifname);
/* Get the name of an interface. Returns null on error. */
const char *xtensa_interface_name(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_interface intf);
/*
* Get the bit width for an interface.
* Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_interface_num_bits(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_interface intf);
/*
* Check if an interface is an input ('i') or output ('o') with respect
* to the Xtensa processor core. Returns 0 on error.
*/
char xtensa_interface_inout(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_interface intf);
/*
* Check if accessing an interface has potential side effects.
* Currently "data" interfaces have side effects and "control"
* interfaces do not. Returns 1 if there are side effects, 0 if not,
* and XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_interface_has_side_effect(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_interface intf);
/*
* Some interfaces may be related such that accessing one interface
* has side effects on a set of related interfaces. The interfaces
* are partitioned into equivalence classes of related interfaces, and
* each class is assigned a unique identifier number. This function
* returns the class identifier for an interface, or XTENSA_UNDEFINED
* on error. These identifiers can be compared to determine if two
* interfaces are related; the specific values of the identifiers have
* no particular meaning otherwise.
*/
int xtensa_interface_class_id(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_interface intf);
/* Functional Units. */
/*
* Find a functional unit by name. The return value is XTENSA_UNDEFINED if
* the specified unit is not found.
*/
xtensa_funcUnit xtensa_funcUnit_lookup(xtensa_isa isa, const char *fname);
/* Get the name of a functional unit. Returns null on error. */
const char *xtensa_funcUnit_name(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_funcUnit fun);
/*
* Functional units may be replicated. See how many instances of a
* particular function unit exist. Returns XTENSA_UNDEFINED on error.
*/
int xtensa_funcUnit_num_copies(xtensa_isa isa, xtensa_funcUnit fun);
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
#endif /* HW_XTENSA_XTENSA_ISA_H */