man pages section 9: DDI and DKI Kernel Functions
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ddi_mem_rep_put8(9F)

Name | Synopsis | Interface Level | Parameters | Description | Context | See Also | Notes

Name

    ddi_mem_rep_put8, ddi_mem_rep_put16, ddi_mem_rep_put32, ddi_mem_rep_put64, ddi_mem_rep_putw, ddi_mem_rep_putl, ddi_mem_rep_putll, ddi_mem_rep_putb– write multiple data to mapped device in the memory space or allocated DMA memory

Synopsis

    #include <sys/ddi.h> 
    #include <sys/sunddi.h>
    
    
    
    void ddi_mem_rep_put8(ddi_acc_handle_t handle, uint8_t *host_addr,
         uint8_t *dev_addr, size_t repcount, uint_t flags);
    void ddi_mem_rep_put16(ddi_acc_handle_t handle, uint16_t *host_addr,
         uint16_t *dev_addr, size_t repcount, uint_t flags);
    void ddi_mem_rep_put32(ddi_acc_handle_t handle, uint32_t *host_addr,
         uint32_t *dev_addr, size_t repcount, uint_t flags);
    void ddi_mem_rep_put64(ddi_acc_handle_t handle, uint64_t *host_addr,
         uint64_t *dev_addr, size_t repcount, uint_t flags);

Interface Level

    Solaris DDI specific (Solaris DDI).

Parameters

    handle

    The data access handle returned from setup calls, such as ddi_regs_map_setup(9F).

    host_addr

    Base host address.

    dev_addr

    Base device address.

    repcount

    Number of data accesses to perform.

    flags

    Device address flags:

    DDI_DEV_AUTOINCR

    Automatically increment the device address, dev_addr, during data accesses.

    DDI_DEV_NO_AUTOINCR

    Do not advance the device address, dev_addr, during data accesses.

Description

    These routines generate multiple writes to memory space or allocated DMA memory. repcount data is copied from the host address, host_addr, to the device address, dev_addr, in memory space. For each input datum, the ddi_mem_rep_put8(), ddi_mem_rep_put16(), ddi_mem_rep_put32(), and ddi_mem_rep_put64() functions write 8 bits, 16 bits, 32 bits and 64 bits of data, respectively, to the device address. dev_addr and host_addr must be aligned to the datum boundary described by the function.

    Each individual datum will automatically be translated to maintain a consistent view between the host and the device based on the encoded information in the data access handle. The translation may involve byte-swapping if the host and the device have incompatible endian characteristics.

    When the flags argument is set to DDI_DEV_AUTOINCR, these functions will treat the device address, dev_addr, as a memory buffer location on the device and increments its address on the next input datum. However, when the flags argument is set to DDI_DEV_NO_AUTOINCR, the same device address will be used for every datum access. For example, this flag may be useful when writing from a data register.

Context

    These functions can be called from user, kernel, or interrupt context.

See Also

Notes

    The functions described in this manual page previously used symbolic names which specified their data access size; the function names have been changed so they now specify a fixed-width data size. See the following table for the new name equivalents:

    Previous Name

    New Name

    ddi_mem_rep_putb

    ddi_mem_rep_put8

    ddi_mem_rep_putw

    ddi_mem_rep_put16

    ddi_mem_rep_putl

    ddi_mem_rep_put32

    ddi_mem_rep_putll

    ddi_mem_rep_put64

SunOS 5.10  Last Revised 28 Oct 1996

Name | Synopsis | Interface Level | Parameters | Description | Context | See Also | Notes