#include "devices/pit.h" #include #include #include "threads/interrupt.h" #include "threads/io.h" /* Interface to 8254 Programmable Interrupt Timer (PIT). Refer to [8254] for details. */ /* 8254 registers. */ #define PIT_PORT_CONTROL 0x43 /* Control port. */ #define PIT_PORT_COUNTER(CHANNEL) (0x40 + (CHANNEL)) /* Counter port. */ /* PIT cycles per second. */ #define PIT_HZ 1193180 /* Configure the given CHANNEL in the PIT. In a PC, the PIT's three output channels are hooked up like this: - Channel 0 is connected to interrupt line 0, so that it can be used as a periodic timer interrupt, as implemented in Pintos in devices/timer.c. - Channel 1 is used for dynamic RAM refresh (in older PCs). No good can come of messing with this. - Channel 2 is connected to the PC speaker, so that it can be used to play a tone, as implemented in Pintos in devices/speaker.c. MODE specifies the form of output: - Mode 2 is a periodic pulse: the channel's output is 1 for most of the period, but drops to 0 briefly toward the end of the period. This is useful for hooking up to an interrupt controller to generate a periodic interrupt. - Mode 3 is a square wave: for the first half of the period it is 1, for the second half it is 0. This is useful for generating a tone on a speaker. - Other modes are less useful. FREQUENCY is the number of periods per second, in Hz. */ void pit_configure_channel (int channel, int mode, int frequency) { uint16_t count; enum intr_level old_level; ASSERT (channel == 0 || channel == 2); ASSERT (mode == 2 || mode == 3); /* Convert FREQUENCY to a PIT counter value. The PIT has a clock that runs at PIT_HZ cycles per second. We must translate FREQUENCY into a number of these cycles. */ if (frequency < 19) { /* Frequency is too low: the quotient would overflow the 16-bit counter. Force it to 0, which the PIT treats as 65536, the highest possible count. This yields a 18.2 Hz timer, approximately. */ count = 0; } else if (frequency > PIT_HZ) { /* Frequency is too high: the quotient would underflow to 0, which the PIT would interpret as 65536. A count of 1 is illegal in mode 2, so we force it to 2, which yields a 596.590 kHz timer, approximately. (This timer rate is probably too fast to be useful anyhow.) */ count = 2; } else count = (PIT_HZ + frequency / 2) / frequency; /* Configure the PIT mode and load its counters. */ old_level = intr_disable (); outb (PIT_PORT_CONTROL, (channel << 6) | 0x30 | (mode << 1)); outb (PIT_PORT_COUNTER (channel), count); outb (PIT_PORT_COUNTER (channel), count >> 8); intr_set_level (old_level); }