Staging: netwave: delete the driver
[linux/fpc-iii.git] / drivers / gpu / drm / nouveau / nv04_timer.c
blob1d09ddd573996dc94fce652a591c1779be641f2b
1 #include "drmP.h"
2 #include "drm.h"
3 #include "nouveau_drv.h"
4 #include "nouveau_drm.h"
6 int
7 nv04_timer_init(struct drm_device *dev)
9 nv_wr32(dev, NV04_PTIMER_INTR_EN_0, 0x00000000);
10 nv_wr32(dev, NV04_PTIMER_INTR_0, 0xFFFFFFFF);
12 /* Just use the pre-existing values when possible for now; these regs
13 * are not written in nv (driver writer missed a /4 on the address), and
14 * writing 8 and 3 to the correct regs breaks the timings on the LVDS
15 * hardware sequencing microcode.
16 * A correct solution (involving calculations with the GPU PLL) can
17 * be done when kernel modesetting lands
19 if (!nv_rd32(dev, NV04_PTIMER_NUMERATOR) ||
20 !nv_rd32(dev, NV04_PTIMER_DENOMINATOR)) {
21 nv_wr32(dev, NV04_PTIMER_NUMERATOR, 0x00000008);
22 nv_wr32(dev, NV04_PTIMER_DENOMINATOR, 0x00000003);
25 return 0;
28 uint64_t
29 nv04_timer_read(struct drm_device *dev)
31 uint32_t low;
32 /* From kmmio dumps on nv28 this looks like how the blob does this.
33 * It reads the high dword twice, before and after.
34 * The only explanation seems to be that the 64-bit timer counter
35 * advances between high and low dword reads and may corrupt the
36 * result. Not confirmed.
38 uint32_t high2 = nv_rd32(dev, NV04_PTIMER_TIME_1);
39 uint32_t high1;
40 do {
41 high1 = high2;
42 low = nv_rd32(dev, NV04_PTIMER_TIME_0);
43 high2 = nv_rd32(dev, NV04_PTIMER_TIME_1);
44 } while (high1 != high2);
45 return (((uint64_t)high2) << 32) | (uint64_t)low;
48 void
49 nv04_timer_takedown(struct drm_device *dev)