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authorDavid Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>2007-04-30 16:30:56 +1000
committerPaul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>2007-05-02 20:04:30 +1000
commitf88df14b1f15cdeffa060580a40c1ce3e13bb79e (patch)
tree0619f32c2be79a85792537ad4410cc8d729f4f75 /include/asm-powerpc/pgtable-ppc32.h
parent69d48b409cac747cc0707b05b769e38488a6ad35 (diff)
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[POWERPC] Remove arch/powerpc's dependence on asm-ppc/pg{alloc,table}.h
Currently, all 32-bit powerpc platforms use asm-ppc/pgtable.h and asm-ppc/pgalloc.h, even when otherwise compiled with ARCH=powerpc. Those asm-ppc files are a fairly nasty tangle of #ifdefs including a bunch of things which shouldn't be necessary any more in arch/powerpc. Cleaning up that mess is going to take a while, but this patch is a first step. It separates the asm-powerpc/pg{alloc,table}.h into 64 bit and 32 bit versions in asm-powerpc, which the basic .h files in asm-powerpc select based on config. We make a few tiny tweaks to the innards of the files along the way, making the outermost ifdefs (double-inclusion protection and __KERNEL__) a little cleaner, and #including asm-generic/pgtable.h from the top-level asm-powerpc/pgtable.h (since both the old 32-bit and 64-bit versions ended with such an #include). Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'include/asm-powerpc/pgtable-ppc32.h')
-rw-r--r--include/asm-powerpc/pgtable-ppc32.h838
1 files changed, 838 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/include/asm-powerpc/pgtable-ppc32.h b/include/asm-powerpc/pgtable-ppc32.h
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..80c75474c65b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/asm-powerpc/pgtable-ppc32.h
@@ -0,0 +1,838 @@
+#ifndef _ASM_POWERPC_PGTABLE_PPC32_H
+#define _ASM_POWERPC_PGTABLE_PPC32_H
+
+#include <asm-generic/4level-fixup.h>
+
+#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
+#include <linux/sched.h>
+#include <linux/threads.h>
+#include <asm/processor.h> /* For TASK_SIZE */
+#include <asm/mmu.h>
+#include <asm/page.h>
+#include <asm/io.h> /* For sub-arch specific PPC_PIN_SIZE */
+struct mm_struct;
+
+extern unsigned long va_to_phys(unsigned long address);
+extern pte_t *va_to_pte(unsigned long address);
+extern unsigned long ioremap_bot, ioremap_base;
+#endif /* __ASSEMBLY__ */
+
+/*
+ * The PowerPC MMU uses a hash table containing PTEs, together with
+ * a set of 16 segment registers (on 32-bit implementations), to define
+ * the virtual to physical address mapping.
+ *
+ * We use the hash table as an extended TLB, i.e. a cache of currently
+ * active mappings. We maintain a two-level page table tree, much
+ * like that used by the i386, for the sake of the Linux memory
+ * management code. Low-level assembler code in hashtable.S
+ * (procedure hash_page) is responsible for extracting ptes from the
+ * tree and putting them into the hash table when necessary, and
+ * updating the accessed and modified bits in the page table tree.
+ */
+
+/*
+ * The PowerPC MPC8xx uses a TLB with hardware assisted, software tablewalk.
+ * We also use the two level tables, but we can put the real bits in them
+ * needed for the TLB and tablewalk. These definitions require Mx_CTR.PPM = 0,
+ * Mx_CTR.PPCS = 0, and MD_CTR.TWAM = 1. The level 2 descriptor has
+ * additional page protection (when Mx_CTR.PPCS = 1) that allows TLB hit
+ * based upon user/super access. The TLB does not have accessed nor write
+ * protect. We assume that if the TLB get loaded with an entry it is
+ * accessed, and overload the changed bit for write protect. We use
+ * two bits in the software pte that are supposed to be set to zero in
+ * the TLB entry (24 and 25) for these indicators. Although the level 1
+ * descriptor contains the guarded and writethrough/copyback bits, we can
+ * set these at the page level since they get copied from the Mx_TWC
+ * register when the TLB entry is loaded. We will use bit 27 for guard, since
+ * that is where it exists in the MD_TWC, and bit 26 for writethrough.
+ * These will get masked from the level 2 descriptor at TLB load time, and
+ * copied to the MD_TWC before it gets loaded.
+ * Large page sizes added. We currently support two sizes, 4K and 8M.
+ * This also allows a TLB hander optimization because we can directly
+ * load the PMD into MD_TWC. The 8M pages are only used for kernel
+ * mapping of well known areas. The PMD (PGD) entries contain control
+ * flags in addition to the address, so care must be taken that the
+ * software no longer assumes these are only pointers.
+ */
+
+/*
+ * At present, all PowerPC 400-class processors share a similar TLB
+ * architecture. The instruction and data sides share a unified,
+ * 64-entry, fully-associative TLB which is maintained totally under
+ * software control. In addition, the instruction side has a
+ * hardware-managed, 4-entry, fully-associative TLB which serves as a
+ * first level to the shared TLB. These two TLBs are known as the UTLB
+ * and ITLB, respectively (see "mmu.h" for definitions).
+ */
+
+/*
+ * The normal case is that PTEs are 32-bits and we have a 1-page
+ * 1024-entry pgdir pointing to 1-page 1024-entry PTE pages. -- paulus
+ *
+ * For any >32-bit physical address platform, we can use the following
+ * two level page table layout where the pgdir is 8KB and the MS 13 bits
+ * are an index to the second level table. The combined pgdir/pmd first
+ * level has 2048 entries and the second level has 512 64-bit PTE entries.
+ * -Matt
+ */
+/* PMD_SHIFT determines the size of the area mapped by the PTE pages */
+#define PMD_SHIFT (PAGE_SHIFT + PTE_SHIFT)
+#define PMD_SIZE (1UL << PMD_SHIFT)
+#define PMD_MASK (~(PMD_SIZE-1))
+
+/* PGDIR_SHIFT determines what a top-level page table entry can map */
+#define PGDIR_SHIFT PMD_SHIFT
+#define PGDIR_SIZE (1UL << PGDIR_SHIFT)
+#define PGDIR_MASK (~(PGDIR_SIZE-1))
+
+/*
+ * entries per page directory level: our page-table tree is two-level, so
+ * we don't really have any PMD directory.
+ */
+#define PTRS_PER_PTE (1 << PTE_SHIFT)
+#define PTRS_PER_PMD 1
+#define PTRS_PER_PGD (1 << (32 - PGDIR_SHIFT))
+
+#define USER_PTRS_PER_PGD (TASK_SIZE / PGDIR_SIZE)
+#define FIRST_USER_ADDRESS 0
+
+#define USER_PGD_PTRS (PAGE_OFFSET >> PGDIR_SHIFT)
+#define KERNEL_PGD_PTRS (PTRS_PER_PGD-USER_PGD_PTRS)
+
+#define pte_ERROR(e) \
+ printk("%s:%d: bad pte "PTE_FMT".\n", __FILE__, __LINE__, pte_val(e))
+#define pmd_ERROR(e) \
+ printk("%s:%d: bad pmd %08lx.\n", __FILE__, __LINE__, pmd_val(e))
+#define pgd_ERROR(e) \
+ printk("%s:%d: bad pgd %08lx.\n", __FILE__, __LINE__, pgd_val(e))
+
+/*
+ * Just any arbitrary offset to the start of the vmalloc VM area: the
+ * current 64MB value just means that there will be a 64MB "hole" after the
+ * physical memory until the kernel virtual memory starts. That means that
+ * any out-of-bounds memory accesses will hopefully be caught.
+ * The vmalloc() routines leaves a hole of 4kB between each vmalloced
+ * area for the same reason. ;)
+ *
+ * We no longer map larger than phys RAM with the BATs so we don't have
+ * to worry about the VMALLOC_OFFSET causing problems. We do have to worry
+ * about clashes between our early calls to ioremap() that start growing down
+ * from ioremap_base being run into the VM area allocations (growing upwards
+ * from VMALLOC_START). For this reason we have ioremap_bot to check when
+ * we actually run into our mappings setup in the early boot with the VM
+ * system. This really does become a problem for machines with good amounts
+ * of RAM. -- Cort
+ */
+#define VMALLOC_OFFSET (0x1000000) /* 16M */
+#ifdef PPC_PIN_SIZE
+#define VMALLOC_START (((_ALIGN((long)high_memory, PPC_PIN_SIZE) + VMALLOC_OFFSET) & ~(VMALLOC_OFFSET-1)))
+#else
+#define VMALLOC_START ((((long)high_memory + VMALLOC_OFFSET) & ~(VMALLOC_OFFSET-1)))
+#endif
+#define VMALLOC_END ioremap_bot
+
+/*
+ * Bits in a linux-style PTE. These match the bits in the
+ * (hardware-defined) PowerPC PTE as closely as possible.
+ */
+
+#if defined(CONFIG_40x)
+
+/* There are several potential gotchas here. The 40x hardware TLBLO
+ field looks like this:
+
+ 0 1 2 3 4 ... 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
+ RPN..................... 0 0 EX WR ZSEL....... W I M G
+
+ Where possible we make the Linux PTE bits match up with this
+
+ - bits 20 and 21 must be cleared, because we use 4k pages (40x can
+ support down to 1k pages), this is done in the TLBMiss exception
+ handler.
+ - We use only zones 0 (for kernel pages) and 1 (for user pages)
+ of the 16 available. Bit 24-26 of the TLB are cleared in the TLB
+ miss handler. Bit 27 is PAGE_USER, thus selecting the correct
+ zone.
+ - PRESENT *must* be in the bottom two bits because swap cache
+ entries use the top 30 bits. Because 40x doesn't support SMP
+ anyway, M is irrelevant so we borrow it for PAGE_PRESENT. Bit 30
+ is cleared in the TLB miss handler before the TLB entry is loaded.
+ - All other bits of the PTE are loaded into TLBLO without
+ modification, leaving us only the bits 20, 21, 24, 25, 26, 30 for
+ software PTE bits. We actually use use bits 21, 24, 25, and
+ 30 respectively for the software bits: ACCESSED, DIRTY, RW, and
+ PRESENT.
+*/
+
+/* Definitions for 40x embedded chips. */
+#define _PAGE_GUARDED 0x001 /* G: page is guarded from prefetch */
+#define _PAGE_FILE 0x001 /* when !present: nonlinear file mapping */
+#define _PAGE_PRESENT 0x002 /* software: PTE contains a translation */
+#define _PAGE_NO_CACHE 0x004 /* I: caching is inhibited */
+#define _PAGE_WRITETHRU 0x008 /* W: caching is write-through */
+#define _PAGE_USER 0x010 /* matches one of the zone permission bits */
+#define _PAGE_RW 0x040 /* software: Writes permitted */
+#define _PAGE_DIRTY 0x080 /* software: dirty page */
+#define _PAGE_HWWRITE 0x100 /* hardware: Dirty & RW, set in exception */
+#define _PAGE_HWEXEC 0x200 /* hardware: EX permission */
+#define _PAGE_ACCESSED 0x400 /* software: R: page referenced */
+
+#define _PMD_PRESENT 0x400 /* PMD points to page of PTEs */
+#define _PMD_BAD 0x802
+#define _PMD_SIZE 0x0e0 /* size field, != 0 for large-page PMD entry */
+#define _PMD_SIZE_4M 0x0c0
+#define _PMD_SIZE_16M 0x0e0
+#define PMD_PAGE_SIZE(pmdval) (1024 << (((pmdval) & _PMD_SIZE) >> 4))
+
+#elif defined(CONFIG_44x)
+/*
+ * Definitions for PPC440
+ *
+ * Because of the 3 word TLB entries to support 36-bit addressing,
+ * the attribute are difficult to map in such a fashion that they
+ * are easily loaded during exception processing. I decided to
+ * organize the entry so the ERPN is the only portion in the
+ * upper word of the PTE and the attribute bits below are packed
+ * in as sensibly as they can be in the area below a 4KB page size
+ * oriented RPN. This at least makes it easy to load the RPN and
+ * ERPN fields in the TLB. -Matt
+ *
+ * Note that these bits preclude future use of a page size
+ * less than 4KB.
+ *
+ *
+ * PPC 440 core has following TLB attribute fields;
+ *
+ * TLB1:
+ * 0 1 2 3 4 ... 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
+ * RPN................................. - - - - - - ERPN.......
+ *
+ * TLB2:
+ * 0 1 2 3 4 ... 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
+ * - - - - - - U0 U1 U2 U3 W I M G E - UX UW UR SX SW SR
+ *
+ * There are some constrains and options, to decide mapping software bits
+ * into TLB entry.
+ *
+ * - PRESENT *must* be in the bottom three bits because swap cache
+ * entries use the top 29 bits for TLB2.
+ *
+ * - FILE *must* be in the bottom three bits because swap cache
+ * entries use the top 29 bits for TLB2.
+ *
+ * - CACHE COHERENT bit (M) has no effect on PPC440 core, because it
+ * doesn't support SMP. So we can use this as software bit, like
+ * DIRTY.
+ *
+ * With the PPC 44x Linux implementation, the 0-11th LSBs of the PTE are used
+ * for memory protection related functions (see PTE structure in
+ * include/asm-ppc/mmu.h). The _PAGE_XXX definitions in this file map to the
+ * above bits. Note that the bit values are CPU specific, not architecture
+ * specific.
+ *
+ * The kernel PTE entry holds an arch-dependent swp_entry structure under
+ * certain situations. In other words, in such situations some portion of
+ * the PTE bits are used as a swp_entry. In the PPC implementation, the
+ * 3-24th LSB are shared with swp_entry, however the 0-2nd three LSB still
+ * hold protection values. That means the three protection bits are
+ * reserved for both PTE and SWAP entry at the most significant three
+ * LSBs.
+ *
+ * There are three protection bits available for SWAP entry:
+ * _PAGE_PRESENT
+ * _PAGE_FILE
+ * _PAGE_HASHPTE (if HW has)
+ *
+ * So those three bits have to be inside of 0-2nd LSB of PTE.
+ *
+ */
+
+#define _PAGE_PRESENT 0x00000001 /* S: PTE valid */
+#define _PAGE_RW 0x00000002 /* S: Write permission */
+#define _PAGE_FILE 0x00000004 /* S: nonlinear file mapping */
+#define _PAGE_ACCESSED 0x00000008 /* S: Page referenced */
+#define _PAGE_HWWRITE 0x00000010 /* H: Dirty & RW */
+#define _PAGE_HWEXEC 0x00000020 /* H: Execute permission */
+#define _PAGE_USER 0x00000040 /* S: User page */
+#define _PAGE_ENDIAN 0x00000080 /* H: E bit */
+#define _PAGE_GUARDED 0x00000100 /* H: G bit */
+#define _PAGE_DIRTY 0x00000200 /* S: Page dirty */
+#define _PAGE_NO_CACHE 0x00000400 /* H: I bit */
+#define _PAGE_WRITETHRU 0x00000800 /* H: W bit */
+
+/* TODO: Add large page lowmem mapping support */
+#define _PMD_PRESENT 0
+#define _PMD_PRESENT_MASK (PAGE_MASK)
+#define _PMD_BAD (~PAGE_MASK)
+
+/* ERPN in a PTE never gets cleared, ignore it */
+#define _PTE_NONE_MASK 0xffffffff00000000ULL
+
+#elif defined(CONFIG_FSL_BOOKE)
+/*
+ MMU Assist Register 3:
+
+ 32 33 34 35 36 ... 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63
+ RPN...................... 0 0 U0 U1 U2 U3 UX SX UW SW UR SR
+
+ - PRESENT *must* be in the bottom three bits because swap cache
+ entries use the top 29 bits.
+
+ - FILE *must* be in the bottom three bits because swap cache
+ entries use the top 29 bits.
+*/
+
+/* Definitions for FSL Book-E Cores */
+#define _PAGE_PRESENT 0x00001 /* S: PTE contains a translation */
+#define _PAGE_USER 0x00002 /* S: User page (maps to UR) */
+#define _PAGE_FILE 0x00002 /* S: when !present: nonlinear file mapping */
+#define _PAGE_ACCESSED 0x00004 /* S: Page referenced */
+#define _PAGE_HWWRITE 0x00008 /* H: Dirty & RW, set in exception */
+#define _PAGE_RW 0x00010 /* S: Write permission */
+#define _PAGE_HWEXEC 0x00020 /* H: UX permission */
+
+#define _PAGE_ENDIAN 0x00040 /* H: E bit */
+#define _PAGE_GUARDED 0x00080 /* H: G bit */
+#define _PAGE_COHERENT 0x00100 /* H: M bit */
+#define _PAGE_NO_CACHE 0x00200 /* H: I bit */
+#define _PAGE_WRITETHRU 0x00400 /* H: W bit */
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_PTE_64BIT
+#define _PAGE_DIRTY 0x08000 /* S: Page dirty */
+
+/* ERPN in a PTE never gets cleared, ignore it */
+#define _PTE_NONE_MASK 0xffffffffffff0000ULL
+#else
+#define _PAGE_DIRTY 0x00800 /* S: Page dirty */
+#endif
+
+#define _PMD_PRESENT 0
+#define _PMD_PRESENT_MASK (PAGE_MASK)
+#define _PMD_BAD (~PAGE_MASK)
+
+#elif defined(CONFIG_8xx)
+/* Definitions for 8xx embedded chips. */
+#define _PAGE_PRESENT 0x0001 /* Page is valid */
+#define _PAGE_FILE 0x0002 /* when !present: nonlinear file mapping */
+#define _PAGE_NO_CACHE 0x0002 /* I: cache inhibit */
+#define _PAGE_SHARED 0x0004 /* No ASID (context) compare */
+
+/* These five software bits must be masked out when the entry is loaded
+ * into the TLB.
+ */
+#define _PAGE_EXEC 0x0008 /* software: i-cache coherency required */
+#define _PAGE_GUARDED 0x0010 /* software: guarded access */
+#define _PAGE_DIRTY 0x0020 /* software: page changed */
+#define _PAGE_RW 0x0040 /* software: user write access allowed */
+#define _PAGE_ACCESSED 0x0080 /* software: page referenced */
+
+/* Setting any bits in the nibble with the follow two controls will
+ * require a TLB exception handler change. It is assumed unused bits
+ * are always zero.
+ */
+#define _PAGE_HWWRITE 0x0100 /* h/w write enable: never set in Linux PTE */
+#define _PAGE_USER 0x0800 /* One of the PP bits, the other is USER&~RW */
+
+#define _PMD_PRESENT 0x0001
+#define _PMD_BAD 0x0ff0
+#define _PMD_PAGE_MASK 0x000c
+#define _PMD_PAGE_8M 0x000c
+
+/*
+ * The 8xx TLB miss handler allegedly sets _PAGE_ACCESSED in the PTE
+ * for an address even if _PAGE_PRESENT is not set, as a performance
+ * optimization. This is a bug if you ever want to use swap unless
+ * _PAGE_ACCESSED is 2, which it isn't, or unless you have 8xx-specific
+ * definitions for __swp_entry etc. below, which would be gross.
+ * -- paulus
+ */
+#define _PTE_NONE_MASK _PAGE_ACCESSED
+
+#else /* CONFIG_6xx */
+/* Definitions for 60x, 740/750, etc. */
+#define _PAGE_PRESENT 0x001 /* software: pte contains a translation */
+#define _PAGE_HASHPTE 0x002 /* hash_page has made an HPTE for this pte */
+#define _PAGE_FILE 0x004 /* when !present: nonlinear file mapping */
+#define _PAGE_USER 0x004 /* usermode access allowed */
+#define _PAGE_GUARDED 0x008 /* G: prohibit speculative access */
+#define _PAGE_COHERENT 0x010 /* M: enforce memory coherence (SMP systems) */
+#define _PAGE_NO_CACHE 0x020 /* I: cache inhibit */
+#define _PAGE_WRITETHRU 0x040 /* W: cache write-through */
+#define _PAGE_DIRTY 0x080 /* C: page changed */
+#define _PAGE_ACCESSED 0x100 /* R: page referenced */
+#define _PAGE_EXEC 0x200 /* software: i-cache coherency required */
+#define _PAGE_RW 0x400 /* software: user write access allowed */
+
+#define _PTE_NONE_MASK _PAGE_HASHPTE
+
+#define _PMD_PRESENT 0
+#define _PMD_PRESENT_MASK (PAGE_MASK)
+#define _PMD_BAD (~PAGE_MASK)
+#endif
+
+/*
+ * Some bits are only used on some cpu families...
+ */
+#ifndef _PAGE_HASHPTE
+#define _PAGE_HASHPTE 0
+#endif
+#ifndef _PTE_NONE_MASK
+#define _PTE_NONE_MASK 0
+#endif
+#ifndef _PAGE_SHARED
+#define _PAGE_SHARED 0
+#endif
+#ifndef _PAGE_HWWRITE
+#define _PAGE_HWWRITE 0
+#endif
+#ifndef _PAGE_HWEXEC
+#define _PAGE_HWEXEC 0
+#endif
+#ifndef _PAGE_EXEC
+#define _PAGE_EXEC 0
+#endif
+#ifndef _PMD_PRESENT_MASK
+#define _PMD_PRESENT_MASK _PMD_PRESENT
+#endif
+#ifndef _PMD_SIZE
+#define _PMD_SIZE 0
+#define PMD_PAGE_SIZE(pmd) bad_call_to_PMD_PAGE_SIZE()
+#endif
+
+#define _PAGE_CHG_MASK (PAGE_MASK | _PAGE_ACCESSED | _PAGE_DIRTY)
+
+/*
+ * Note: the _PAGE_COHERENT bit automatically gets set in the hardware
+ * PTE if CONFIG_SMP is defined (hash_page does this); there is no need
+ * to have it in the Linux PTE, and in fact the bit could be reused for
+ * another purpose. -- paulus.
+ */
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_44x
+#define _PAGE_BASE (_PAGE_PRESENT | _PAGE_ACCESSED | _PAGE_GUARDED)
+#else
+#define _PAGE_BASE (_PAGE_PRESENT | _PAGE_ACCESSED)
+#endif
+#define _PAGE_WRENABLE (_PAGE_RW | _PAGE_DIRTY | _PAGE_HWWRITE)
+#define _PAGE_KERNEL (_PAGE_BASE | _PAGE_SHARED | _PAGE_WRENABLE)
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_PPC_STD_MMU
+/* On standard PPC MMU, no user access implies kernel read/write access,
+ * so to write-protect kernel memory we must turn on user access */
+#define _PAGE_KERNEL_RO (_PAGE_BASE | _PAGE_SHARED | _PAGE_USER)
+#else
+#define _PAGE_KERNEL_RO (_PAGE_BASE | _PAGE_SHARED)
+#endif
+
+#define _PAGE_IO (_PAGE_KERNEL | _PAGE_NO_CACHE | _PAGE_GUARDED)
+#define _PAGE_RAM (_PAGE_KERNEL | _PAGE_HWEXEC)
+
+#if defined(CONFIG_KGDB) || defined(CONFIG_XMON) || defined(CONFIG_BDI_SWITCH)
+/* We want the debuggers to be able to set breakpoints anywhere, so
+ * don't write protect the kernel text */
+#define _PAGE_RAM_TEXT _PAGE_RAM
+#else
+#define _PAGE_RAM_TEXT (_PAGE_KERNEL_RO | _PAGE_HWEXEC)
+#endif
+
+#define PAGE_NONE __pgprot(_PAGE_BASE)
+#define PAGE_READONLY __pgprot(_PAGE_BASE | _PAGE_USER)
+#define PAGE_READONLY_X __pgprot(_PAGE_BASE | _PAGE_USER | _PAGE_EXEC)
+#define PAGE_SHARED __pgprot(_PAGE_BASE | _PAGE_USER | _PAGE_RW)
+#define PAGE_SHARED_X __pgprot(_PAGE_BASE | _PAGE_USER | _PAGE_RW | _PAGE_EXEC)
+#define PAGE_COPY __pgprot(_PAGE_BASE | _PAGE_USER)
+#define PAGE_COPY_X __pgprot(_PAGE_BASE | _PAGE_USER | _PAGE_EXEC)
+
+#define PAGE_KERNEL __pgprot(_PAGE_RAM)
+#define PAGE_KERNEL_NOCACHE __pgprot(_PAGE_IO)
+
+/*
+ * The PowerPC can only do execute protection on a segment (256MB) basis,
+ * not on a page basis. So we consider execute permission the same as read.
+ * Also, write permissions imply read permissions.
+ * This is the closest we can get..
+ */
+#define __P000 PAGE_NONE
+#define __P001 PAGE_READONLY_X
+#define __P010 PAGE_COPY
+#define __P011 PAGE_COPY_X
+#define __P100 PAGE_READONLY
+#define __P101 PAGE_READONLY_X
+#define __P110 PAGE_COPY
+#define __P111 PAGE_COPY_X
+
+#define __S000 PAGE_NONE
+#define __S001 PAGE_READONLY_X
+#define __S010 PAGE_SHARED
+#define __S011 PAGE_SHARED_X
+#define __S100 PAGE_READONLY
+#define __S101 PAGE_READONLY_X
+#define __S110 PAGE_SHARED
+#define __S111 PAGE_SHARED_X
+
+#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
+/* Make sure we get a link error if PMD_PAGE_SIZE is ever called on a
+ * kernel without large page PMD support */
+extern unsigned long bad_call_to_PMD_PAGE_SIZE(void);
+
+/*
+ * Conversions between PTE values and page frame numbers.
+ */
+
+/* in some case we want to additionaly adjust where the pfn is in the pte to
+ * allow room for more flags */
+#if defined(CONFIG_FSL_BOOKE) && defined(CONFIG_PTE_64BIT)
+#define PFN_SHIFT_OFFSET (PAGE_SHIFT + 8)
+#else
+#define PFN_SHIFT_OFFSET (PAGE_SHIFT)
+#endif
+
+#define pte_pfn(x) (pte_val(x) >> PFN_SHIFT_OFFSET)
+#define pte_page(x) pfn_to_page(pte_pfn(x))
+
+#define pfn_pte(pfn, prot) __pte(((pte_basic_t)(pfn) << PFN_SHIFT_OFFSET) |\
+ pgprot_val(prot))
+#define mk_pte(page, prot) pfn_pte(page_to_pfn(page), prot)
+
+/*
+ * ZERO_PAGE is a global shared page that is always zero: used
+ * for zero-mapped memory areas etc..
+ */
+extern unsigned long empty_zero_page[1024];
+#define ZERO_PAGE(vaddr) (virt_to_page(empty_zero_page))
+
+#endif /* __ASSEMBLY__ */
+
+#define pte_none(pte) ((pte_val(pte) & ~_PTE_NONE_MASK) == 0)
+#define pte_present(pte) (pte_val(pte) & _PAGE_PRESENT)
+#define pte_clear(mm,addr,ptep) do { set_pte_at((mm), (addr), (ptep), __pte(0)); } while (0)
+
+#define pmd_none(pmd) (!pmd_val(pmd))
+#define pmd_bad(pmd) (pmd_val(pmd) & _PMD_BAD)
+#define pmd_present(pmd) (pmd_val(pmd) & _PMD_PRESENT_MASK)
+#define pmd_clear(pmdp) do { pmd_val(*(pmdp)) = 0; } while (0)
+
+#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
+/*
+ * The "pgd_xxx()" functions here are trivial for a folded two-level
+ * setup: the pgd is never bad, and a pmd always exists (as it's folded
+ * into the pgd entry)
+ */
+static inline int pgd_none(pgd_t pgd) { return 0; }
+static inline int pgd_bad(pgd_t pgd) { return 0; }
+static inline int pgd_present(pgd_t pgd) { return 1; }
+#define pgd_clear(xp) do { } while (0)
+
+#define pgd_page_vaddr(pgd) \
+ ((unsigned long) __va(pgd_val(pgd) & PAGE_MASK))
+
+/*
+ * The following only work if pte_present() is true.
+ * Undefined behaviour if not..
+ */
+static inline int pte_read(pte_t pte) { return pte_val(pte) & _PAGE_USER; }
+static inline int pte_write(pte_t pte) { return pte_val(pte) & _PAGE_RW; }
+static inline int pte_exec(pte_t pte) { return pte_val(pte) & _PAGE_EXEC; }
+static inline int pte_dirty(pte_t pte) { return pte_val(pte) & _PAGE_DIRTY; }
+static inline int pte_young(pte_t pte) { return pte_val(pte) & _PAGE_ACCESSED; }
+static inline int pte_file(pte_t pte) { return pte_val(pte) & _PAGE_FILE; }
+
+static inline void pte_uncache(pte_t pte) { pte_val(pte) |= _PAGE_NO_CACHE; }
+static inline void pte_cache(pte_t pte) { pte_val(pte) &= ~_PAGE_NO_CACHE; }
+
+static inline pte_t pte_rdprotect(pte_t pte) {
+ pte_val(pte) &= ~_PAGE_USER; return pte; }
+static inline pte_t pte_wrprotect(pte_t pte) {
+ pte_val(pte) &= ~(_PAGE_RW | _PAGE_HWWRITE); return pte; }
+static inline pte_t pte_exprotect(pte_t pte) {
+ pte_val(pte) &= ~_PAGE_EXEC; return pte; }
+static inline pte_t pte_mkclean(pte_t pte) {
+ pte_val(pte) &= ~(_PAGE_DIRTY | _PAGE_HWWRITE); return pte; }
+static inline pte_t pte_mkold(pte_t pte) {
+ pte_val(pte) &= ~_PAGE_ACCESSED; return pte; }
+
+static inline pte_t pte_mkread(pte_t pte) {
+ pte_val(pte) |= _PAGE_USER; return pte; }
+static inline pte_t pte_mkexec(pte_t pte) {
+ pte_val(pte) |= _PAGE_USER | _PAGE_EXEC; return pte; }
+static inline pte_t pte_mkwrite(pte_t pte) {
+ pte_val(pte) |= _PAGE_RW; return pte; }
+static inline pte_t pte_mkdirty(pte_t pte) {
+ pte_val(pte) |= _PAGE_DIRTY; return pte; }
+static inline pte_t pte_mkyoung(pte_t pte) {
+ pte_val(pte) |= _PAGE_ACCESSED; return pte; }
+
+static inline pte_t pte_modify(pte_t pte, pgprot_t newprot)
+{
+ pte_val(pte) = (pte_val(pte) & _PAGE_CHG_MASK) | pgprot_val(newprot);
+ return pte;
+}
+
+/*
+ * When flushing the tlb entry for a page, we also need to flush the hash
+ * table entry. flush_hash_pages is assembler (for speed) in hashtable.S.
+ */
+extern int flush_hash_pages(unsigned context, unsigned long va,
+ unsigned long pmdval, int count);
+
+/* Add an HPTE to the hash table */
+extern void add_hash_page(unsigned context, unsigned long va,
+ unsigned long pmdval);
+
+/*
+ * Atomic PTE updates.
+ *
+ * pte_update clears and sets bit atomically, and returns
+ * the old pte value. In the 64-bit PTE case we lock around the
+ * low PTE word since we expect ALL flag bits to be there
+ */
+#ifndef CONFIG_PTE_64BIT
+static inline unsigned long pte_update(pte_t *p, unsigned long clr,
+ unsigned long set)
+{
+ unsigned long old, tmp;
+
+ __asm__ __volatile__("\
+1: lwarx %0,0,%3\n\
+ andc %1,%0,%4\n\
+ or %1,%1,%5\n"
+ PPC405_ERR77(0,%3)
+" stwcx. %1,0,%3\n\
+ bne- 1b"
+ : "=&r" (old), "=&r" (tmp), "=m" (*p)
+ : "r" (p), "r" (clr), "r" (set), "m" (*p)
+ : "cc" );
+ return old;
+}
+#else
+static inline unsigned long long pte_update(pte_t *p, unsigned long clr,
+ unsigned long set)
+{
+ unsigned long long old;
+ unsigned long tmp;
+
+ __asm__ __volatile__("\
+1: lwarx %L0,0,%4\n\
+ lwzx %0,0,%3\n\
+ andc %1,%L0,%5\n\
+ or %1,%1,%6\n"
+ PPC405_ERR77(0,%3)
+" stwcx. %1,0,%4\n\
+ bne- 1b"
+ : "=&r" (old), "=&r" (tmp), "=m" (*p)
+ : "r" (p), "r" ((unsigned long)(p) + 4), "r" (clr), "r" (set), "m" (*p)
+ : "cc" );
+ return old;
+}
+#endif
+
+/*
+ * set_pte stores a linux PTE into the linux page table.
+ * On machines which use an MMU hash table we avoid changing the
+ * _PAGE_HASHPTE bit.
+ */
+static inline void set_pte_at(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr,
+ pte_t *ptep, pte_t pte)
+{
+#if _PAGE_HASHPTE != 0
+ pte_update(ptep, ~_PAGE_HASHPTE, pte_val(pte) & ~_PAGE_HASHPTE);
+#else
+ *ptep = pte;
+#endif
+}
+
+/*
+ * 2.6 calles this without flushing the TLB entry, this is wrong
+ * for our hash-based implementation, we fix that up here
+ */
+#define __HAVE_ARCH_PTEP_TEST_AND_CLEAR_YOUNG
+static inline int __ptep_test_and_clear_young(unsigned int context, unsigned long addr, pte_t *ptep)
+{
+ unsigned long old;
+ old = pte_update(ptep, _PAGE_ACCESSED, 0);
+#if _PAGE_HASHPTE != 0
+ if (old & _PAGE_HASHPTE) {
+ unsigned long ptephys = __pa(ptep) & PAGE_MASK;
+ flush_hash_pages(context, addr, ptephys, 1);
+ }
+#endif
+ return (old & _PAGE_ACCESSED) != 0;
+}
+#define ptep_test_and_clear_young(__vma, __addr, __ptep) \
+ __ptep_test_and_clear_young((__vma)->vm_mm->context.id, __addr, __ptep)
+
+#define __HAVE_ARCH_PTEP_TEST_AND_CLEAR_DIRTY
+static inline int ptep_test_and_clear_dirty(struct vm_area_struct *vma,
+ unsigned long addr, pte_t *ptep)
+{
+ return (pte_update(ptep, (_PAGE_DIRTY | _PAGE_HWWRITE), 0) & _PAGE_DIRTY) != 0;
+}
+
+#define __HAVE_ARCH_PTEP_GET_AND_CLEAR
+static inline pte_t ptep_get_and_clear(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr,
+ pte_t *ptep)
+{
+ return __pte(pte_update(ptep, ~_PAGE_HASHPTE, 0));
+}
+
+#define __HAVE_ARCH_PTEP_SET_WRPROTECT
+static inline void ptep_set_wrprotect(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr,
+ pte_t *ptep)
+{
+ pte_update(ptep, (_PAGE_RW | _PAGE_HWWRITE), 0);
+}
+
+#define __HAVE_ARCH_PTEP_SET_ACCESS_FLAGS
+static inline void __ptep_set_access_flags(pte_t *ptep, pte_t entry, int dirty)
+{
+ unsigned long bits = pte_val(entry) &
+ (_PAGE_DIRTY | _PAGE_ACCESSED | _PAGE_RW);
+ pte_update(ptep, 0, bits);
+}
+
+#define ptep_set_access_flags(__vma, __address, __ptep, __entry, __dirty) \
+ do { \
+ __ptep_set_access_flags(__ptep, __entry, __dirty); \
+ flush_tlb_page_nohash(__vma, __address); \
+ } while(0)
+
+/*
+ * Macro to mark a page protection value as "uncacheable".
+ */
+#define pgprot_noncached(prot) (__pgprot(pgprot_val(prot) | _PAGE_NO_CACHE | _PAGE_GUARDED))
+
+struct file;
+extern pgprot_t phys_mem_access_prot(struct file *file, unsigned long pfn,
+ unsigned long size, pgprot_t vma_prot);
+#define __HAVE_PHYS_MEM_ACCESS_PROT
+
+#define __HAVE_ARCH_PTE_SAME
+#define pte_same(A,B) (((pte_val(A) ^ pte_val(B)) & ~_PAGE_HASHPTE) == 0)
+
+/*
+ * Note that on Book E processors, the pmd contains the kernel virtual
+ * (lowmem) address of the pte page. The physical address is less useful
+ * because everything runs with translation enabled (even the TLB miss
+ * handler). On everything else the pmd contains the physical address
+ * of the pte page. -- paulus
+ */
+#ifndef CONFIG_BOOKE
+#define pmd_page_vaddr(pmd) \
+ ((unsigned long) __va(pmd_val(pmd) & PAGE_MASK))
+#define pmd_page(pmd) \
+ (mem_map + (pmd_val(pmd) >> PAGE_SHIFT))
+#else
+#define pmd_page_vaddr(pmd) \
+ ((unsigned long) (pmd_val(pmd) & PAGE_MASK))
+#define pmd_page(pmd) \
+ (mem_map + (__pa(pmd_val(pmd)) >> PAGE_SHIFT))
+#endif
+
+/* to find an entry in a kernel page-table-directory */
+#define pgd_offset_k(address) pgd_offset(&init_mm, address)
+
+/* to find an entry in a page-table-directory */
+#define pgd_index(address) ((address) >> PGDIR_SHIFT)
+#define pgd_offset(mm, address) ((mm)->pgd + pgd_index(address))
+
+/* Find an entry in the second-level page table.. */
+static inline pmd_t * pmd_offset(pgd_t * dir, unsigned long address)
+{
+ return (pmd_t *) dir;
+}
+
+/* Find an entry in the third-level page table.. */
+#define pte_index(address) \
+ (((address) >> PAGE_SHIFT) & (PTRS_PER_PTE - 1))
+#define pte_offset_kernel(dir, addr) \
+ ((pte_t *) pmd_page_vaddr(*(dir)) + pte_index(addr))
+#define pte_offset_map(dir, addr) \
+ ((pte_t *) kmap_atomic(pmd_page(*(dir)), KM_PTE0) + pte_index(addr))
+#define pte_offset_map_nested(dir, addr) \
+ ((pte_t *) kmap_atomic(pmd_page(*(dir)), KM_PTE1) + pte_index(addr))
+
+#define pte_unmap(pte) kunmap_atomic(pte, KM_PTE0)
+#define pte_unmap_nested(pte) kunmap_atomic(pte, KM_PTE1)
+
+extern pgd_t swapper_pg_dir[PTRS_PER_PGD];
+
+extern void paging_init(void);
+
+/*
+ * Encode and decode a swap entry.
+ * Note that the bits we use in a PTE for representing a swap entry
+ * must not include the _PAGE_PRESENT bit, the _PAGE_FILE bit, or the
+ *_PAGE_HASHPTE bit (if used). -- paulus
+ */
+#define __swp_type(entry) ((entry).val & 0x1f)
+#define __swp_offset(entry) ((entry).val >> 5)
+#define __swp_entry(type, offset) ((swp_entry_t) { (type) | ((offset) << 5) })
+#define __pte_to_swp_entry(pte) ((swp_entry_t) { pte_val(pte) >> 3 })
+#define __swp_entry_to_pte(x) ((pte_t) { (x).val << 3 })
+
+/* Encode and decode a nonlinear file mapping entry */
+#define PTE_FILE_MAX_BITS 29
+#define pte_to_pgoff(pte) (pte_val(pte) >> 3)
+#define pgoff_to_pte(off) ((pte_t) { ((off) << 3) | _PAGE_FILE })
+
+/* CONFIG_APUS */
+/* For virtual address to physical address conversion */
+extern void cache_clear(__u32 addr, int length);
+extern void cache_push(__u32 addr, int length);
+extern int mm_end_of_chunk (unsigned long addr, int len);
+extern unsigned long iopa(unsigned long addr);
+extern unsigned long mm_ptov(unsigned long addr) __attribute_const__;
+
+/* Values for nocacheflag and cmode */
+/* These are not used by the APUS kernel_map, but prevents
+ compilation errors. */
+#define KERNELMAP_FULL_CACHING 0
+#define KERNELMAP_NOCACHE_SER 1
+#define KERNELMAP_NOCACHE_NONSER 2
+#define KERNELMAP_NO_COPYBACK 3
+
+/*
+ * Map some physical address range into the kernel address space.
+ */
+extern unsigned long kernel_map(unsigned long paddr, unsigned long size,
+ int nocacheflag, unsigned long *memavailp );
+
+/*
+ * Set cache mode of (kernel space) address range.
+ */
+extern void kernel_set_cachemode (unsigned long address, unsigned long size,
+ unsigned int cmode);
+
+/* Needs to be defined here and not in linux/mm.h, as it is arch dependent */
+#define kern_addr_valid(addr) (1)
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_PHYS_64BIT
+extern int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struct *vma, unsigned long from,
+ unsigned long paddr, unsigned long size, pgprot_t prot);
+
+static inline int io_remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struct *vma,
+ unsigned long vaddr,
+ unsigned long pfn,
+ unsigned long size,
+ pgprot_t prot)
+{
+ phys_addr_t paddr64 = fixup_bigphys_addr(pfn << PAGE_SHIFT, size);
+ return remap_pfn_range(vma, vaddr, paddr64 >> PAGE_SHIFT, size, prot);
+}
+#else
+#define io_remap_pfn_range(vma, vaddr, pfn, size, prot) \
+ remap_pfn_range(vma, vaddr, pfn, size, prot)
+#endif
+
+/*
+ * No page table caches to initialise
+ */
+#define pgtable_cache_init() do { } while (0)
+
+extern int get_pteptr(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, pte_t **ptep,
+ pmd_t **pmdp);
+
+#endif /* !__ASSEMBLY__ */
+
+#endif /* _ASM_POWERPC_PGTABLE_PPC32_H */