#ifndef QEMU_IRQ_H #define QEMU_IRQ_H #include "qom/object.h" /* Generic IRQ/GPIO pin infrastructure. */ #define TYPE_IRQ "irq" OBJECT_DECLARE_SIMPLE_TYPE(IRQState, IRQ) struct IRQState { Object parent_obj; qemu_irq_handler handler; void *opaque; int n; }; void qemu_set_irq(qemu_irq irq, int level); static inline void qemu_irq_raise(qemu_irq irq) { qemu_set_irq(irq, 1); } static inline void qemu_irq_lower(qemu_irq irq) { qemu_set_irq(irq, 0); } static inline void qemu_irq_pulse(qemu_irq irq) { qemu_set_irq(irq, 1); qemu_set_irq(irq, 0); } /* * Init a single IRQ. The irq is assigned with a handler, an opaque data * and the interrupt number. The caller must free this with qemu_free_irq(). * If you are using this inside a device's init or realize method, then * qemu_init_irq_child() is probably a better choice to avoid the need * to manually clean up the IRQ. */ void qemu_init_irq(IRQState *irq, qemu_irq_handler handler, void *opaque, int n); /** * qemu_init_irq_child: Initialize IRQ and make it a QOM child * @parent: QOM object which owns this IRQ * @propname: child property name * @irq: pointer to IRQState to initialize * @handler: handler function for incoming interrupts * @opaque: opaque data to pass to @handler * @n: interrupt number to pass to @handler * * Init a single IRQ and make the IRQ object a child of @parent with * the child-property name @propname. The IRQ object will thus be * automatically freed when @parent is destroyed. */ void qemu_init_irq_child(Object *parent, const char *propname, IRQState *irq, qemu_irq_handler handler, void *opaque, int n); /** * qemu_init_irqs: Initialize an array of IRQs. * * @irq: Array of IRQs to initialize * @count: number of IRQs to initialize * @handler: handler to assign to each IRQ * @opaque: opaque data to pass to @handler */ void qemu_init_irqs(IRQState irq[], size_t count, qemu_irq_handler handler, void *opaque); /* Returns an array of N IRQs. Each IRQ is assigned the argument handler and * opaque data. */ qemu_irq *qemu_allocate_irqs(qemu_irq_handler handler, void *opaque, int n); /* * Allocates a single IRQ. The irq is assigned with a handler, an opaque * data and the interrupt number. */ qemu_irq qemu_allocate_irq(qemu_irq_handler handler, void *opaque, int n); /* Extends an Array of IRQs. Old IRQs have their handlers and opaque data * preserved. New IRQs are assigned the argument handler and opaque data. */ qemu_irq *qemu_extend_irqs(qemu_irq *old, int n_old, qemu_irq_handler handler, void *opaque, int n); void qemu_free_irqs(qemu_irq *s, int n); void qemu_free_irq(qemu_irq irq); /* Returns a new IRQ with opposite polarity. */ qemu_irq qemu_irq_invert(qemu_irq irq); /* For internal use in qtest. Similar to qemu_irq_split, but operating on an existing vector of qemu_irq. */ void qemu_irq_intercept_in(qemu_irq *gpio_in, qemu_irq_handler handler, int n); /** * qemu_irq_is_connected: Return true if IRQ line is wired up * * If a qemu_irq has a device on the other (receiving) end of it, * return true; otherwise return false. * * Usually device models don't need to care whether the machine model * has wired up their outbound qemu_irq lines, because functions like * qemu_set_irq() silently do nothing if there is nothing on the other * end of the line. However occasionally a device model will want to * provide default behaviour if its output is left floating, and * it can use this function to identify when that is the case. */ static inline bool qemu_irq_is_connected(qemu_irq irq) { return irq != NULL; } #endif