/* Copyright (c) 2013 The Chromium OS Authors. All rights reserved. * Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be * found in the LICENSE file. */ /* Hardware timer driver API */ #ifndef __CROS_EC_HWTIMER_H #define __CROS_EC_HWTIMER_H /** * Programs when the next timer should fire an interrupt. * * The deadline is ahead of the current counter (which may of course wrap) by * the number of microseconds until the interrupt should fire. * * @param deadline timestamp of the event in microseconds */ void __hw_clock_event_set(uint32_t deadline); /* Returns the timestamp of the next programed event */ uint32_t __hw_clock_event_get(void); /* Cancel the next event programed by __hw_clock_event_set */ void __hw_clock_event_clear(void); /** * Get the value of the free-running counter used as clock * * The counter resolution must be 1us, since udelay() relies on this. * * @return current counter value */ uint32_t __hw_clock_source_read(void); /** * Override the current value of the hardware counter * * The new value takes effect immediately and the counter continues counting * from there, assuming it is enabled * * @ts Value to write */ void __hw_clock_source_set(uint32_t ts); /** * Enable clock to a timer. * * @param n Timer number to enable/disable * @param enable Enable (!=0) or disable (=0) clock to timer */ void __hw_timer_enable_clock(int n, int enable); /** * Initializes the hardware timer used to provide clock services, using the * specified start timer value. * * It returns the IRQ number of the timer routine. */ int __hw_clock_source_init(uint32_t start_t); /** * Searches the next deadline and program it in the timer hardware. * * overflow: if true, the 32-bit counter as overflowed since the last call. * * This function is exported from the common timers code as an helper for the * hardware timer interrupt routine. */ void process_timers(int overflow); /** * Set up the timer that we will use as a watchdog warning. * * Once this has been set up, we will print a warning shortly before the * real watchdog fires. To avoid this, hwtimer_reset_watchdog() must be * called periodically. * * This is needed since the real watchdog timer (IWDG) does not provide * an interrupt to warn of an impending watchdog reset. */ void hwtimer_setup_watchdog(void); /* Reset the watchdog timer, to avoid the watchdog warning */ void hwtimer_reset_watchdog(void); #endif /* __CROS_EC_HWTIMER_H */