MicroAPRS/bertos/io/kblock.h

401 lines
12 KiB
C

/**
* \file
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*
* \defgroup io_kblock KBlock interface
* \ingroup core
* \{
*
* \brief KBlock interface
*
* A block device is a device which can only be read/written
* with data blocks of constant size: flash memories,
* SD cards, hard disks, etc...
* This interface is designed to adapt to most block devices and
* use peculiar features in order to save CPU time and memory space.
*
* There is no init function because you do not have to use this
* structure directly, specific implementations will supply their own init
* functions.
*
* Error handling is done in a way similar to standard C library: whenever a
* function (eg. kblock_flush()) returns error, you need to check the error
* code, which is implementation specific.
*
* Example of code flow:
* \code
* // init a KBlock-derived class
* Flash fls;
* flash_init(&fls.blk, 0);
*
* // use kblock_* functions to access the derived class
* kblock_write(&fls.blk, ...);
* if (kblock_flush(&fls.blk) == EOF)
* {
* // oops, error occurred!
* int err = kblock_error(&fls.blk);
* // handle Flash specific error conditions
* // ...
* // clear error condition
* kblock_clearerr(&fls.blk);
* }
* \endcode
*
* \note The KBlock interface is optimized for block reads. If you need a
* file-like access, you can use \ref kfile_block.
*
* \author Francesco Sacchi <batt@develer.com>
*
* $WIZ$ module_name = "kblock"
*/
#ifndef IO_KBLOCK_H
#define IO_KBLOCK_H
#include <cfg/compiler.h>
#include <cfg/debug.h>
#include <cfg/macros.h>
/** Type for addressing blocks in the device. */
typedef uint32_t block_idx_t;
// Fwd Declaration
struct KBlock;
/**
* \name Prototypes for KBlock low level access functions.
*
* When writing a driver implementing the KBlock interface you can choose which
* function subset to implement, but you have to set to NULL unimplemented
* features.
*
* \{
*/
typedef size_t (* kblock_read_direct_t) (struct KBlock *b, block_idx_t index, void *buf, size_t offset, size_t size);
typedef size_t (* kblock_write_direct_t) (struct KBlock *b, block_idx_t index, const void *buf, size_t offset, size_t size);
typedef size_t (* kblock_read_t) (struct KBlock *b, void *buf, size_t offset, size_t size);
typedef size_t (* kblock_write_t) (struct KBlock *b, const void *buf, size_t offset, size_t size);
typedef int (* kblock_load_t) (struct KBlock *b, block_idx_t index);
typedef int (* kblock_store_t) (struct KBlock *b, block_idx_t index);
typedef int (* kblock_error_t) (struct KBlock *b);
typedef void (* kblock_clearerr_t) (struct KBlock *b);
typedef int (* kblock_close_t) (struct KBlock *b);
/* \} */
/*
* Table of interface functions for a KBlock device.
*/
typedef struct KBlockVTable
{
kblock_read_direct_t readDirect;
kblock_write_direct_t writeDirect;
kblock_read_t readBuf;
kblock_write_t writeBuf;
kblock_load_t load;
kblock_store_t store;
kblock_error_t error; // \sa kblock_error()
kblock_clearerr_t clearerr; // \sa kblock_clearerr()
kblock_close_t close; // \sa kblock_close()
} KBlockVTable;
#define KB_BUFFERED BV(0) ///< Internal flag: true if the KBlock has a buffer
#define KB_CACHE_DIRTY BV(1) ///< Internal flag: true if the cache is dirty
#define KB_PARTIAL_WRITE BV(2) ///< Internal flag: true if the device allows partial block write
/*
* KBlock private members.
* These are the private members of the KBlock interface, please do not
* access these directly, use the KBlock API.
*/
typedef struct KBlockPriv
{
DB(id_t type); // Used to keep track, at runtime, of the class type.
int flags; // Status and error flags.
void *buf; // Pointer to the page buffer for RAM-cached KBlocks.
block_idx_t blk_start; // Start block number when the device is trimmed. \sa kblock_trim().
block_idx_t curr_blk; // Current cached block number in cached KBlocks.
const struct KBlockVTable *vt; // Virtual table of interface functions.
} KBlockPriv;
/**
* KBlock: interface for a generic block device.
*
*/
typedef struct KBlock
{
KBlockPriv priv; ///< Interface private data, do not use directly.
/* Public access members */
size_t blk_size; ///< Block size.
block_idx_t blk_cnt; ///< Number of blocks available in the device.
} KBlock;
/**
* Use a subset of the blocks on the device.
*
* This function is useful for partitioning a device and use it for
* different purposes at the same time.
*
* This function will limit the number of blocks used on the device by setting
* a start index and a number of blocks to be used counting from that index.
*
* The blocks outside this range are no more accessible.
*
* Logical block indexes will be mapped to physical indexes inside this new
* range automatically. Even following calls to kblock_trim() will use logical
* indexes, so, once trimmed, access can only be limited further and never
* expanded back.
*
* Example:
* \code
* //...init KBlock device dev
* kblock_trim(dev, 200, 1500); // Restrict access to the 200-1700 physical block range.
* kblock_read(dev, 0, buf, 0, dev->blk_size); // Read from physical block #200.
* kblock_trim(dev, 0, 300); // Restrict access to the 200-500 physical block range.
* \endcode
*
* \param b KBlock device.
* \param start The index of the start block for the limiting window in logical addressing units.
* \param count The number of blocks to be used.
*
* \return 0 if all is OK, EOF on errors.
*/
int kblock_trim(struct KBlock *b, block_idx_t start, block_idx_t count);
#define KB_ASSERT_METHOD(b, method) \
do \
{ \
ASSERT(b); \
ASSERT((b)->priv.vt); \
ASSERT((b)->priv.vt->method); \
} \
while (0)
/**
* Get the current errors for the device.
*
* \note Calling this function will not clear the errors.
*
* \param b KBlock device.
*
* \return 0 if no error is present, a driver specific mask of errors otherwise.
*
* \sa kblock_clearerr()
*/
INLINE int kblock_error(struct KBlock *b)
{
KB_ASSERT_METHOD(b, error);
return b->priv.vt->error(b);
}
/**
* Clear the errors of the device.
*
* \param b KBlock device.
*
*
* \sa kblock_error()
*/
INLINE void kblock_clearerr(struct KBlock *b)
{
KB_ASSERT_METHOD(b, clearerr);
b->priv.vt->clearerr(b);
}
/**
* Flush the cache (if any) to the device.
*
* This function will write any pending modifications to the device.
* If the device does not have a cache, this function will do nothing.
*
* \return 0 if all is OK, EOF on errors.
* \sa kblock_read(), kblock_write(), kblock_buffered().
*/
int kblock_flush(struct KBlock *b);
/**
* Close the device.
*
* \param b KBlock device.
*
* \return 0 on success, EOF on errors.
*/
INLINE int kblock_close(struct KBlock *b)
{
KB_ASSERT_METHOD(b, close);
return kblock_flush(b) | b->priv.vt->close(b);
}
/**
* \return true if the device \a b is buffered, false otherwise.
* \param b KBlock device.
* \sa kblock_cachedBlock(), kblock_cacheDirty().
*/
INLINE bool kblock_buffered(struct KBlock *b)
{
ASSERT(b);
return (b->priv.flags & KB_BUFFERED);
}
/**
* \return The current cached block number if the device is buffered.
* \param b KBlock device.
* \note This function will throw an ASSERT if called on a non buffered KBlock.
* \sa kblock_buffered(), kblock_cacheDirty().
*/
INLINE block_idx_t kblock_cachedBlock(struct KBlock *b)
{
ASSERT(kblock_buffered(b));
return b->priv.curr_blk;
}
/**
* Return the status of the internal cache.
*
* \param b KBlock device.
* \return If the device supports buffering, returns true if the cache is dirty,
* false if the cache is clean and coherent with device content.
* \note This function will throw an ASSERT if called on a non buffered KBlock.
* \sa kblock_cachedBlock(), kblock_buffered().
*/
INLINE bool kblock_cacheDirty(struct KBlock *b)
{
ASSERT(kblock_buffered(b));
return kblock_buffered(b) && (b->priv.flags & KB_CACHE_DIRTY);
}
/**
* \return true if the device \a b supports partial block write. That is, you
* can call kblock_write() with a size which is lesser than the block
* size.
* \param b KBlock device.
* \sa kblock_write().
*/
INLINE bool kblock_partialWrite(struct KBlock *b)
{
ASSERT(b);
return (b->priv.flags & KB_PARTIAL_WRITE);
}
/**
* Read data from the block device.
*
* This function will read \a size bytes from block \a idx starting at
* address \a offset inside the block.
*
* Most block devices (almost all flash memories, for instance),
* can efficiently read even a part of the block.
*
* \note This function can be slow if you try to partial read a block from
* a device which does not support partial block reads and is opened
* in unbuffered mode.
*
* \param b KBlock device.
* \param idx the block number where you want to read.
* \param buf a buffer where the data will be read.
* \param offset the offset inside the block from which data reading will start.
* \param size the size of data to be read.
*
* \return the number of bytes read.
*
* \sa kblock_write().
*/
size_t kblock_read(struct KBlock *b, block_idx_t idx, void *buf, size_t offset, size_t size);
/**
* Write data to the block device.
*
* This function will write \a size bytes to block \a idx starting at
* address \a offset inside the block.
*
* \note Partial block writes are supported only on certain devices.
* You can use kblock_partialWrite() in order to check if the device
* has this feature or not.
*
* \note If the device is opened in buffered mode, this function will use
* efficiently and trasparently the cache provided.
* In order to be sure that all modifications are actually written
* to the device you have to call kblock_flush().
*
* \param b KBlock device.
* \param idx the block number where you want to write.
* \param buf a pointer to the data to be written.
* \param offset the offset inside the block from which data writing will start.
* \param size the size of data to be written.
*
* \return the number of bytes written.
*
* \sa kblock_read(), kblock_flush(), kblock_buffered(), kblock_partialWrite().
*/
size_t kblock_write(struct KBlock *b, block_idx_t idx, const void *buf, size_t offset, size_t size);
/**
* Copy one block to another.
*
* This function will copy the content of block \a src to block \a dest.
*
* \note This function is available only on devices which support partial
* block write or are opened in buffered mode.
*
* \param b KBlock device.
* \param src source block number.
* \param dest destination block number.
*
* \return 0 if all is OK, EOF on errors.
*/
int kblock_copy(struct KBlock *b, block_idx_t src, block_idx_t dest);
int kblock_swLoad(struct KBlock *b, block_idx_t index);
int kblock_swStore(struct KBlock *b, block_idx_t index);
size_t kblock_swReadBuf(struct KBlock *b, void *buf, size_t offset, size_t size);
size_t kblock_swWriteBuf(struct KBlock *b, const void *buf, size_t offset, size_t size);
int kblock_swClose(struct KBlock *b);
/** \} */ //defgroup io_kblock
#endif /* IO_KBLOCK_H */