1#ifndef _ASM_X86_IRQ_VECTORS_H
2#define _ASM_X86_IRQ_VECTORS_H
3
4#include <linux/threads.h>
5/*
6 * Linux IRQ vector layout.
7 *
8 * There are 256 IDT entries (per CPU - each entry is 8 bytes) which can
9 * be defined by Linux. They are used as a jump table by the CPU when a
10 * given vector is triggered - by a CPU-external, CPU-internal or
11 * software-triggered event.
12 *
13 * Linux sets the kernel code address each entry jumps to early during
14 * bootup, and never changes them. This is the general layout of the
15 * IDT entries:
16 *
17 *  Vectors   0 ...  31 : system traps and exceptions - hardcoded events
18 *  Vectors  32 ... 127 : device interrupts
19 *  Vector  128         : legacy int80 syscall interface
20 *  Vectors 129 ... INVALIDATE_TLB_VECTOR_START-1 except 204 : device interrupts
21 *  Vectors INVALIDATE_TLB_VECTOR_START ... 255 : special interrupts
22 *
23 * 64-bit x86 has per CPU IDT tables, 32-bit has one shared IDT table.
24 *
25 * This file enumerates the exact layout of them:
26 */
27
28#define NMI_VECTOR			0x02
29#define MCE_VECTOR			0x12
30
31/*
32 * IDT vectors usable for external interrupt sources start at 0x20.
33 * (0x80 is the syscall vector, 0x30-0x3f are for ISA)
34 */
35#define FIRST_EXTERNAL_VECTOR		0x20
36/*
37 * We start allocating at 0x21 to spread out vectors evenly between
38 * priority levels. (0x80 is the syscall vector)
39 */
40#define VECTOR_OFFSET_START		1
41
42/*
43 * Reserve the lowest usable vector (and hence lowest priority)  0x20 for
44 * triggering cleanup after irq migration. 0x21-0x2f will still be used
45 * for device interrupts.
46 */
47#define IRQ_MOVE_CLEANUP_VECTOR		FIRST_EXTERNAL_VECTOR
48
49#define IA32_SYSCALL_VECTOR		0x80
50#ifdef CONFIG_X86_32
51# define SYSCALL_VECTOR			0x80
52#endif
53
54/*
55 * Vectors 0x30-0x3f are used for ISA interrupts.
56 *   round up to the next 16-vector boundary
57 */
58#define IRQ0_VECTOR			((FIRST_EXTERNAL_VECTOR + 16) & ~15)
59
60#define IRQ1_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR +  1)
61#define IRQ2_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR +  2)
62#define IRQ3_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR +  3)
63#define IRQ4_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR +  4)
64#define IRQ5_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR +  5)
65#define IRQ6_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR +  6)
66#define IRQ7_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR +  7)
67#define IRQ8_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR +  8)
68#define IRQ9_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR +  9)
69#define IRQ10_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR + 10)
70#define IRQ11_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR + 11)
71#define IRQ12_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR + 12)
72#define IRQ13_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR + 13)
73#define IRQ14_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR + 14)
74#define IRQ15_VECTOR			(IRQ0_VECTOR + 15)
75
76/*
77 * Special IRQ vectors used by the SMP architecture, 0xf0-0xff
78 *
79 *  some of the following vectors are 'rare', they are merged
80 *  into a single vector (CALL_FUNCTION_VECTOR) to save vector space.
81 *  TLB, reschedule and local APIC vectors are performance-critical.
82 */
83
84#define SPURIOUS_APIC_VECTOR		0xff
85/*
86 * Sanity check
87 */
88#if ((SPURIOUS_APIC_VECTOR & 0x0F) != 0x0F)
89# error SPURIOUS_APIC_VECTOR definition error
90#endif
91
92#define ERROR_APIC_VECTOR		0xfe
93#define RESCHEDULE_VECTOR		0xfd
94#define CALL_FUNCTION_VECTOR		0xfc
95#define CALL_FUNCTION_SINGLE_VECTOR	0xfb
96#define THERMAL_APIC_VECTOR		0xfa
97#define THRESHOLD_APIC_VECTOR		0xf9
98#define REBOOT_VECTOR			0xf8
99
100/*
101 * Generic system vector for platform specific use
102 */
103#define X86_PLATFORM_IPI_VECTOR		0xf7
104
105/* Vector for KVM to deliver posted interrupt IPI */
106#ifdef CONFIG_HAVE_KVM
107#define POSTED_INTR_VECTOR		0xf2
108#endif
109
110/*
111 * IRQ work vector:
112 */
113#define IRQ_WORK_VECTOR			0xf6
114
115#define UV_BAU_MESSAGE			0xf5
116
117/* Vector on which hypervisor callbacks will be delivered */
118#define HYPERVISOR_CALLBACK_VECTOR	0xf3
119
120/*
121 * Local APIC timer IRQ vector is on a different priority level,
122 * to work around the 'lost local interrupt if more than 2 IRQ
123 * sources per level' errata.
124 */
125#define LOCAL_TIMER_VECTOR		0xef
126
127#define NR_VECTORS			 256
128
129#ifdef CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC
130#define FIRST_SYSTEM_VECTOR		LOCAL_TIMER_VECTOR
131#else
132#define FIRST_SYSTEM_VECTOR		NR_VECTORS
133#endif
134
135#define FPU_IRQ				  13
136
137#define	FIRST_VM86_IRQ			   3
138#define LAST_VM86_IRQ			  15
139
140#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
141static inline int invalid_vm86_irq(int irq)
142{
143	return irq < FIRST_VM86_IRQ || irq > LAST_VM86_IRQ;
144}
145#endif
146
147/*
148 * Size the maximum number of interrupts.
149 *
150 * If the irq_desc[] array has a sparse layout, we can size things
151 * generously - it scales up linearly with the maximum number of CPUs,
152 * and the maximum number of IO-APICs, whichever is higher.
153 *
154 * In other cases we size more conservatively, to not create too large
155 * static arrays.
156 */
157
158#define NR_IRQS_LEGACY			  16
159
160#define IO_APIC_VECTOR_LIMIT		( 32 * MAX_IO_APICS )
161
162#ifdef CONFIG_X86_IO_APIC
163# define CPU_VECTOR_LIMIT		(64 * NR_CPUS)
164# define NR_IRQS					\
165	(CPU_VECTOR_LIMIT > IO_APIC_VECTOR_LIMIT ?	\
166		(NR_VECTORS + CPU_VECTOR_LIMIT)  :	\
167		(NR_VECTORS + IO_APIC_VECTOR_LIMIT))
168#else /* !CONFIG_X86_IO_APIC: */
169# define NR_IRQS			NR_IRQS_LEGACY
170#endif
171
172#endif /* _ASM_X86_IRQ_VECTORS_H */
173