Hello,
sorry, this might be a beginner question, but I couldn't find any
infos in the FAQ.
I'm writing a driver (module) for a PCI card with a neural processor
(NP-processor) on it for kernel 2.4.1. The registers of this processor
are mapped to a memory area. I access the different registers of the
NP-processor with ioctl's (there are 8bit and 16bit registers):
switch (cmd) {
case NP_IOCSGCR:
get_user (b, (byte *) arg);
writeb (b, np.mem + Z_GCR);
break;
case NP_IOCGGCR:
b = readb (np.mem + Z_GCR);
put_user (b, (byte *) arg);
break;
case NP_IOCSMIF:
get_user (w, (word *) arg);
writew (w, np.mem + Z_MIF);
break;
case NP_IOCGMIF:
w = readw (np.mem + Z_MIF);
put_user (w, (word *) arg);
break;
When I load the module and init the device, I can read the registers.
Some of them have default values after a reset of the chip and they
are ok. But when I load data to the registers and let the NP-processor
categorize the data, strange things happen:
I wrote a program to test the driver which loads some data to the
NP-processor and tries to categorize it. The program prints its
result to STDOUT.
- everything works ok, results are correct, if I redirect STDOUT to a
file
- if I don't redirect, I get reproducibly wrong results when I print
to STDOUT
My first idea was to disable/enable interrupts when entering/leaving
the ioctl-function (using save_flags(); cli(); and restore_flags();),
but it
didn't help.
Armin.
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sun Apr 15 2001 - 21:00:11 EST