2 * Memory transaction attributes
4 * Copyright (c) 2015 Linaro Limited.
7 * Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
9 * This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or later.
10 * See the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
17 /* Every memory transaction has associated with it a set of
18 * attributes. Some of these are generic (such as the ID of
19 * the bus master); some are specific to a particular kind of
20 * bus (such as the ARM Secure/NonSecure bit). We define them
21 * all as non-overlapping bitfields in a single struct to avoid
22 * confusion if different parts of QEMU used the same bit for
23 * different semantics.
25 typedef struct MemTxAttrs
{
26 /* Bus masters which don't specify any attributes will get this
27 * (via the MEMTXATTRS_UNSPECIFIED constant), so that we can
28 * distinguish "all attributes deliberately clear" from
29 * "didn't specify" if necessary.
31 unsigned int unspecified
:1;
33 * ARM/AMBA: TrustZone Secure access
34 * x86: System Management Mode access
36 unsigned int secure
:1;
38 * ARM: ArmSecuritySpace. This partially overlaps secure, but it is
39 * easier to have both fields to assist code that does not understand
40 * ARMv9 RME, or no specific knowledge of ARM at all (e.g. pflash).
43 /* Memory access is usermode (unprivileged) */
46 * Bus interconnect and peripherals can access anything (memories,
47 * devices) by default. By setting the 'memory' bit, bus transaction
48 * are restricted to "normal" memories (per the AMBA documentation)
49 * versus devices. Access to devices will be logged and rejected
50 * (see MEMTX_ACCESS_ERROR).
52 unsigned int memory
:1;
53 /* Requester ID (for MSI for example) */
54 unsigned int requester_id
:16;
57 /* Bus masters which don't specify any attributes will get this,
58 * which has all attribute bits clear except the topmost one
59 * (so that we can distinguish "all attributes deliberately clear"
60 * from "didn't specify" if necessary).
62 #define MEMTXATTRS_UNSPECIFIED ((MemTxAttrs) { .unspecified = 1 })
64 /* New-style MMIO accessors can indicate that the transaction failed.
65 * A zero (MEMTX_OK) response means success; anything else is a failure
66 * of some kind. The memory subsystem will bitwise-OR together results
67 * if it is synthesizing an operation from multiple smaller accesses.
70 #define MEMTX_ERROR (1U << 0) /* device returned an error */
71 #define MEMTX_DECODE_ERROR (1U << 1) /* nothing at that address */
72 #define MEMTX_ACCESS_ERROR (1U << 2) /* access denied */
73 typedef uint32_t MemTxResult
;