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/* Hardware ports.
   Copyright (C) 1998-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
   Contributed by Andrew Cagney and Cygnus Solutions.

This file is part of GDB, the GNU debugger.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.  */


#ifndef HW_PORTS_H
#define HW_PORTS_H

/* Initialize a port */

struct hw_port_descriptor
{
  const char *name;
  int number;
  int nr_ports;
  port_direction direction;
};

void set_hw_ports (struct hw *hw, const struct hw_port_descriptor ports[]);

typedef void (hw_port_event_method)
     (struct hw *me,
      int my_port,
      struct hw *source,
      int source_port,
      int level);

void set_hw_port_event (struct hw *hw, hw_port_event_method *to_port_event);


/* Port source

   A device drives its output ports using the call

   */

void hw_port_event
(struct hw *me,
 int my_port,
 int value);

/* This port event will then be propagated to any attached
   destination ports.

   Any interpretation of PORT and VALUE is model dependent.  As a
   guideline the following are recommended: PCI interrupts A-D should
   correspond to ports 0-3; level sensitive interrupts be requested
   with a value of one and withdrawn with a value of 0; edge sensitive
   interrupts always have a value of 1, the event its self is treated
   as the interrupt.


   Port destinations

   Attached to each port of a device can be zero or more
   destinations.  These destinations consist of a device/port pair.
   A destination is attached/detached to a device line using the
   attach and detach calls. */

void hw_port_attach
(struct hw *me,
 int my_port,
 struct hw *dest,
 int dest_port,
 object_disposition disposition);

void hw_port_detach
(struct hw *me,
 int my_port,
 struct hw *dest,
 int dest_port);


/* Iterate over the list of ports attached to a device */

typedef void (hw_port_traverse_function)
     (struct hw *me,
      int my_port,
      struct hw *dest,
      int dest_port,
      void *data);

void hw_port_traverse
(struct hw *me,
 hw_port_traverse_function *handler,
 void *data);


/* DESTINATION is attached (detached) to LINE of the device ME


   Port conversion

   Users refer to port numbers symbolically.  For instance a device
   may refer to its `INT' signal which is internally represented by
   port 3.

   To convert to/from the symbolic and internal representation of a
   port name/number.  The following functions are available. */

int hw_port_decode
(struct hw *me,
 const char *symbolic_name,
 port_direction direction);

int hw_port_encode
(struct hw *me,
 int port_number,
 char *buf,
 int sizeof_buf,
 port_direction direction);


#endif