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1 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2 -- --
3 -- GNAT RUN-TIME LIBRARY (GNARL) COMPONENTS --
4 -- --
5 -- S Y S T E M . I N T E R R U P T _ M A N A G E M E N T --
6 -- --
7 -- S p e c --
8 -- --
9 -- Copyright (C) 1991-2009, Free Software Foundation, Inc. --
10 -- --
11 -- GNARL is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under --
12 -- terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Soft- --
13 -- ware Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later ver- --
14 -- sion. GNAT is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITH- --
15 -- OUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY --
16 -- or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. --
17 -- --
18 -- As a special exception under Section 7 of GPL version 3, you are granted --
19 -- additional permissions described in the GCC Runtime Library Exception, --
20 -- version 3.1, as published by the Free Software Foundation. --
21 -- --
22 -- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License and --
23 -- a copy of the GCC Runtime Library Exception along with this program; --
24 -- see the files COPYING3 and COPYING.RUNTIME respectively. If not, see --
25 -- <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. --
26 -- --
27 -- GNARL was developed by the GNARL team at Florida State University. --
28 -- Extensive contributions were provided by Ada Core Technologies, Inc. --
29 -- --
30 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
31
32 -- This is the Alpha/VMS version of this package
33
34 -- This package encapsulates and centralizes information about all uses of
35 -- interrupts (or signals), including the target-dependent mapping of
36 -- interrupts (or signals) to exceptions.
37
38 -- PLEASE DO NOT add any with-clauses to this package
39
40 -- PLEASE DO NOT put any subprogram declarations with arguments of type
41 -- Interrupt_ID into the visible part of this package.
42
43 -- The type Interrupt_ID is used to derive the type in Ada.Interrupts, and
44 -- adding more operations to that type would be illegal according to the Ada
45 -- Reference Manual. (This is the reason why the signals sets below are
46 -- implemented as visible arrays rather than functions.)
47
48 with System.OS_Interface;
49
50 package System.Interrupt_Management is
51 pragma Preelaborate;
52
53 type Interrupt_Mask is limited private;
54
55 type Interrupt_ID is new System.OS_Interface.Signal;
56
57 type Interrupt_Set is array (Interrupt_ID) of Boolean;
58
59 -- The following objects serve as constants, but are initialized in the
60 -- body to aid portability. This permits us to use more portable names for
61 -- interrupts, where distinct names may map to the same interrupt ID
62 -- value. For example, suppose SIGRARE is a signal that is not defined on
63 -- all systems, but is always reserved when it is defined. If we have the
64 -- convention that ID zero is not used for any "real" signals, and SIGRARE
65 -- = 0 when SIGRARE is not one of the locally supported signals, we can
66 -- write:
67 -- Reserved (SIGRARE) := true;
68 -- Then the initialization code will be portable.
69
70 Abort_Task_Interrupt : Interrupt_ID;
71 -- The interrupt that is used to implement task abort, if an interrupt is
72 -- used for that purpose. This is one of the reserved interrupts.
73
74 Keep_Unmasked : Interrupt_Set := (others => False);
75 -- Keep_Unmasked (I) is true iff the interrupt I is one that must be kept
76 -- unmasked at all times, except (perhaps) for short critical sections.
77 -- This includes interrupts that are mapped to exceptions (see
78 -- System.Interrupt_Exceptions.Is_Exception), but may also include
79 -- interrupts (e.g. timer) that need to be kept unmasked for other
80 -- reasons. Where interrupts are implemented as OS signals, and signal
81 -- masking is per-task, the interrupt should be unmasked in ALL TASKS.
82
83 Reserve : Interrupt_Set := (others => False);
84 -- Reserve (I) is true iff the interrupt I is one that cannot be permitted
85 -- to be attached to a user handler. The possible reasons are many. For
86 -- example it may be mapped to an exception used to implement task abort.
87
88 Keep_Masked : Interrupt_Set := (others => False);
89 -- Keep_Masked (I) is true iff the interrupt I must always be masked.
90 -- Where interrupts are implemented as OS signals, and signal masking is
91 -- per-task, the interrupt should be masked in ALL TASKS. There might not
92 -- be any interrupts in this class, depending on the environment. For
93 -- example, if interrupts are OS signals and signal masking is per-task,
94 -- use of the sigwait operation requires the signal be masked in all tasks.
95
96 procedure Initialize;
97 -- Initialize the various variables defined in this package.
98 -- This procedure must be called before accessing any object from this
99 -- package and can be called multiple times.
100
101 private
102 use type System.OS_Interface.unsigned_long;
103
104 type Interrupt_Mask is new System.OS_Interface.sigset_t;
105
106 -- Interrupts on VMS are implemented with a mailbox. A QIO read is
107 -- registered on the Rcv channel and the interrupt occurs by registering
108 -- a QIO write on the Snd channel. The maximum number of pending
109 -- interrupts is arbitrarily set at 1000. One nice feature of using
110 -- a mailbox is that it is trivially extendable to cross process
111 -- interrupts.
112
113 Rcv_Interrupt_Chan : System.OS_Interface.unsigned_short := 0;
114 Snd_Interrupt_Chan : System.OS_Interface.unsigned_short := 0;
115 Interrupt_Mailbox : Interrupt_ID := 0;
116 Interrupt_Bufquo : System.OS_Interface.unsigned_long :=
117 1000 * (Interrupt_ID'Size / 8);
118
119 end System.Interrupt_Management;