DMAINIT(10.2) (x86) DMAINIT(10.2) NAME dmainit, dmasetup, dmadone, dmaend, dmacount - platform- specific DMA support SYNOPSIS void dmainit(int chan) long dmasetup(int chan, void *va, long len, int isread) int dmadone(int chan) void dmaend(int chan) int dmacount(int chan) DESCRIPTION These functions manage DMA on a bus that uses ISA-style DMA controllers. They were originally devised for the x86 plat- form, but the same interface, and similar code, is used by other platforms that use similar controllers. They compen- sate as best they can for the limitations of older DMA implementations (eg, alignment, boundary and length restric- tions). There are 8 DMA channels: 0 to 3 are byte-oriented; 4 to 7 are word-oriented (16-bit words). Dmainit must be called early in a driver's initialisation to prepare chan for use. Amongst other things, it allocates a page-sized buffer to help circumvent hardware restrictions on DMA addressing. Dmasetup prepares DMA channel chan for a transfer between a device configured to use it and the virtual address va. (The transfer is started by issuing a command to the device.) If va lies outside the kernel address space, the transfer crosses a 64k boundary, or exceeds the 16 Mbyte limit imposed by some DMA controllers, the transfer will be split into page-sized transfers using the buffer previously allo- cated by dmainit. If isread is true (non-zero), data is to be transferred from chan to va; if false, data is trans- ferred from va to chan. In all cases, dmasetup returns the number of bytes to be transferred. That value (rather than len) must be given to the device in the read or write request that starts the transfer. Dmadone returns true (non-zero) if chan is idle. Dmaend must be called at the end of every DMA operation. It disables chan, preventing further access to the previously associated memory and, if a low-memory buffer was required for input, transfers its contents to the appropriate part of Page 1 Plan 9 (printed 12/22/24) DMAINIT(10.2) (x86) DMAINIT(10.2) the target buffer. Dmacount returns the number of bytes that were last trans- ferred by channel chan. The count is always even for word- oriented DMA channels. SOURCE /os/pc/dma.c Page 2 Plan 9 (printed 12/22/24)