On Saturday 14 December 2002 05:51, James Morris wrote:
>
>
> GPL Driver status:
>
> HiFn 7751
> James Morris (in progress).
>
> HiFn 7951
> David Bryson (in progress).
> Also see http://sourceforge.net/projects/hifn7951/
>
> HiFn 7901
> See http://sources.colubris.com/en/projects/FreeSWAN/
>
> Motorola MPC190, MPC184
> Steve (in progress).
>
The driver for the MPC190 is now running with limited capability (although not
very clean at the moment). Most of what I've done is workout the details of
configuring the co-processor that are not described in the User's Manuala and
builtind a basic framework to support mutiple coprocessors (of the same type)
and callbacks. Motorola has been very helpful with this.
In case you're interrested here are some details (you can pick me apart if you
want to -- I'm somewhat new to this so I could use some advice):
At this time only MD5 is supported but, now that I've got a better handle on
the ideosyncrasies, implementing additional transforms should take less
effort (and time). The driver is able to detect multiple mpc190s on the PCI
bus and use them dynamically.
Each mpc190 supports 9 execution "channels" (Motorola's term). The driver
hides the fact that there are multiple channels or even multiple coprocessors
and instead only exposes the various transforms (e.g. MD5, DES...).
The driver internally allocates channels to satisfy cipher requests on an as
need basis and does support callback from the bottom-half (interrupt tasklet)
for asynchronous notification of completion of the task.
To simplify management I implemented an abstract I call a "virtual channel"
and maintain linked lists of "virtual channels" on idle and busy queues.
Allocation of a channel is simply moving a channel from the idle queue to the
busy queue. Deallocation is the reverse.
Two of the attributes of a "virtual channel" are the base IO address of the
processor and the offset of the channel to facilitate code that can work with
any channel.
Calling tasks are placed on sleep_interruptable queues (there is one for each
"virtual channel") and are not awakened until after the callback has
completed (if one was requested).
"Virtual channel" states are maintained internally to help track the progress
of a channel and include IDLE, BUSY, PENDING, and CALLBACK. The IDLE and BUSY
states are obvious. The PENDING state identifies a channel that has been
queued for the bottom-half (interrupt tasklet) to process. The CALLBACK state
indicates a channel that is awaiting a return from a call to a client
callback function.
Thoughts for the future:
The MPC184 also uses the channel concept but provides fewer of them (4 versus
9) and doesn't support all of transforms of the mpc190 (MD4 and HMAC-MD5 are
missing). At the same time the mpc184 provides AES whereas the mpc190 does
not. I've been struggling trying to figure out how to extend the "virtual
channel" scheme to allow concurrent use of both an mpc190 and and mpc184 but
not have to support both in the same driver (not something I want to do). The
project which is the true motivation behind all of this has the possibility
of having both on the bus at the same time.
Steve
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Mon Dec 23 2002 - 22:00:15 EST