[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Little help with Seabios PV-Drivers for XEN
On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 5:34 AM, Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk <konrad.wilk@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, Mar 09, 2012 at 08:35:40AM +0900, Daniel Castro wrote: >> Hello All, >> >> I have a little setback with the development of PV Drivers for Xen in >> SeaBIOS. > > Hey, seems I read your emails out of sync. > >> The initialization code that runs in 32 Bit is working properly. >> But, when the system tries to read on the disk I use the ring macros >> to get a request. The macro usage looks like this: >> struct blkif_ring * shared = memalign_low(4096,4096); //return >> 0x000fd630 this above 16bit address space >> SHARED_RING_INIT(shared); >> So far I have a pointer located at 0x0009a000 >> Under 32bit the struct is correct and all is working according to plan. >> >> But on 16bit operation read on disk I have >> struct blkfront_info * shared_ring = >> container_of(op->drive_g.info->shared)); // I get d630 I should get it >> from the correct segment, but how? >> RING_GET_REQUEST(shared_ring); //this returns 0xffff and should be >> something 0xa010 segment SS or something like that >> >> SeaBios has some macros that convert a pointer in 32Bit to 16Bit by >> changing the segment register, yet I do not know in what segment the >> ring is located, and the macros are not applied inside the procedure >> of the macro, for example: > > There should be some way to set your physical address (so > 9a000) to a segment? > >> MAKE_FLATPTR(GET_SEG(SS),RING_GET_REQUEST(shared_ring)); >> But this will change a 16Bit pointer of segment SS to a 32 bit >> segment. There is also the reverse but, again I do not know the >> segment in which I should look for. Lastly the process inside the >> macro does not get this benefin, and I do not know if the macro will >> work with a pointer of size 16bits. > > 16-bits should be fine. The problem is if you run your pointer > outside the 16-bit segment. Thanks for the response Konrad, Seabios provides some macross that will set the segment automatically, you only need to use a specific malloc to get the memory; For example: int * pointer VAR16VISIBLE; pointer = mallow_low(sizeof(pointer)); This code will create the pointer in a specific segment, so later when I use: printf("%p",GET_GLOBALFLAT(pointer)); This will return the 32bit address of it, If I do not use the GET_GLOBAL macro I will only get the offset on the segment. > >> >> Any help will be GREATLY appreciated, I am almost done. >> >> Thanks, >> >> Daniel >> -- >> +-=====---------------------------+ >> | +---------------------------------+ | This space intentionally blank >> for notetaking. >> | | | Daniel Castro, | >> | | | Consultant/Programmer.| >> | | | U Andes | >> +-------------------------------------+ >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Xen-devel mailing list >> Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx >> http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel -- +-=====---------------------------+ | +---------------------------------+ | This space intentionally blank for notetaking. | | | Daniel Castro, | | | | Consultant/Programmer.| | | | U Andes | +-------------------------------------+ _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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