You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
hardware_samsung/exynos5/hal/include/ion.h

145 lines
5.5 KiB

#ifndef _LIB_ION_H_
#define _LIB_ION_H_
#include <unistd.h> /* size_t */
#define ION_HEAP_SYSTEM_MASK (1 << 0)
#define ION_HEAP_SYSTEM_CONTIG_MASK (1 << 1)
#define ION_HEAP_EXYNOS_MASK (1 << 4)
#define ION_HEAP_EXYNOS_CONTIG_MASK (1 << 5)
/* ION_MSYNC_FLAGS
* values of @flags parameter to ion_msync()
*
* IMSYNC_DEV_TO_READ: Device only reads the buffer
* IMSYNC_DEV_TO_WRITE: Device may writes to the buffer
* IMSYNC_DEV_TO_RW: Device reads and writes to the buffer
*
* IMSYNC_SYNC_FOR_DEV: ion_msync() for device to access the buffer
* IMSYNC_SYNC_FOR_CPU: ion_msync() for CPU to access the buffer after device
* has accessed it.
*
* The values must be ORed with one of IMSYNC_DEV_* and one of IMSYNC_SYNC_*.
* Otherwise, ion_msync() will not effect.
*/
enum ION_MSYNC_FLAGS {
IMSYNC_DEV_TO_READ = 0,
IMSYNC_DEV_TO_WRITE = 1,
IMSYNC_DEV_TO_RW = 2,
IMSYNC_SYNC_FOR_DEV = 0x10000,
IMSYNC_SYNC_FOR_CPU = 0x20000,
};
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/* ion_client
* An ION client is an object or an entity that needs to use the service of
* ION and has unique address space. ion_client is an identifier of an ION
* client and it represents the ION client.
* All operations on ION needs a valid ion_client value and it can be obtained
* by ion_client_create().
*/
typedef int ion_client;
/* ion_buffer
* An identifier of a buffer allocated from ION. You must obtain to access
* a buffer allocated from ION. If you have an effective ion_buffer, you have
* three options to work with it.
* - To access the buffer, you can request an address (user virtual address)
* of the buffer with ion_map().
* - To pass the buffer to the kernel, you can pass the ion_buffer to the
* kernel driver directly, if the kernel driver can work with ION.
* - To pass the buffer to other processes, you can pass the ion_buffer to
* other processes through RPC machanism such as socket communication or
* Android Binder because ion_buffer is actually an open file descripotor
* of the current process.
*/
typedef int ion_buffer;
/* ion_client_create()
* @RETURN: new ion_client.
* netative value if creating new ion_client is failed.
*
* A call to ion_client_create() must be paired with ion_client_destroy(),
* symmetrically. ion_client_destroy() needs a valid ion_client that
* is returned by ion_client_create().
*/
ion_client ion_client_create(void);
/* ion_client_destroy()
* @client: An ion_client value to remove.
*/
void ion_client_destroy(ion_client client);
/* ion_alloc() - Allocates new buffer from ION.
* @client: A valid ion_client value returned by ion_client_create().
* @len: Size of a buffer required in bytes.
* @align: Alignment requirements of @len and the start address of the allocated
* buffer. If the @len is not aligned by @align, ION allocates a buffer
* that is aligned by @align and the size of the buffer will be larger
* than @len.
* @flags: Additional requirements about buffer. ION_HEAP_SYSTEM_CONTIG_MASK
* for allocating physically contiguous buffer and ION_HEAP_SYSTEM_MASK
* for virtually contiguous buffer. You can combine those flags or
* simply give -1(0xFFFFFFFF) if you do not care about the contiguouty
* of the buffer.
* @RETURN: An ion_buffer that represents the buffer allocated. It is only
* unique in the context of the given client, @client.
* -error if the allocation failed.
* See the description of ion_buffer above for detailed information.
*/
ion_buffer ion_alloc(ion_client client, size_t len, size_t align,
unsigned int flags);
/* ion_free() - Frees an existing buffer that is allocated by ION
* @buffer: An ion_buffer of the buffer to be released.
*/
void ion_free(ion_buffer buffer);
/* ion_map() - Obtains a virtual address of the buffer identied by @buffer
* @buffer: The buffer to map. The virtual address returned is allocated by the
* kernel.
* @len: The size of the buffer to map. This must not exceed the size of the
* buffer represented by @fd_buf. Thus you need to know the size of it
* before calling this function. If @len is less than the size of the
* buffer, this function just map just the size requested (@len) not the
* entire buffer.
* @offset: How many pages will be ignored while mapping.@offset number of
* pages from the start of the buffer will not be mapped.
* @RETURN: The start virtual addres mapped.
* MAP_FAILED if mapping fails.
*
* Note that @len + (@offset * PAGE_SIZE) must not exceed the size of the
* buffer.
*/
void *ion_map(ion_buffer buffer, size_t len, off_t offset);
/* ion_unmap() - Frees the buffer mapped by ion_map()
* @addr: The address returned by ion_map().
* @len: The size of the buffer mapped by ion_map().
* @RETURN: 0 on success, and -1 on failure.
* errno is also set on failure.
*/
int ion_unmap(void *addr, size_t len);
/* ion_msync() - Makes sure that data in the buffer are visible to H/W peri.
* @client: A valid ion_client value returned by ion_client_create().
* @buffer: The buffer to perform ion_msync().
* @flags: Direction of access of H/W peri and CPU. See the description of
* ION_MSYNC_FLAGS.
* @size: Size to ion_msync() in bytes.
* @offset: Where ion_msync() start in @buffer, size in bytes.
* @RETURN: 0 if successful. -error, otherwise.
*
* Note that @offset + @size must not exceed the size of @buffer.
*/
int ion_msync(ion_client client, ion_buffer buffer, long flags,
size_t size, off_t offset);
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
#endif /* _LIB_ION_H_ */