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-
- /** @file
- *
- * Buffer internals.
- *
- * A buffer consists of a single, contiguous area of memory, some of
- * which is "filled" and the remainder of which is "free". The
- * "filled" and "free" spaces are not necessarily contiguous.
- *
- * When a buffer is initialised via init_buffer(), it consists of a
- * single free space. As data is added to the buffer via
- * fill_buffer(), this free space decreases and can become fragmented.
- *
- * Each free block within a buffer starts with a "tail byte". If the
- * tail byte is non-zero, this indicates that the free block is the
- * tail of the buffer, i.e. occupies all the remaining space up to the
- * end of the buffer. When the tail byte is non-zero, it indicates
- * that a descriptor (a @c struct @c buffer_free_block) follows the
- * tail byte. The descriptor describes the size of the free block and
- * the address of the next free block.
- *
- * We cannot simply always start a free block with a descriptor,
- * because it is conceivable that we will, at some point, encounter a
- * situation in which the final free block of a buffer is too small to
- * contain a descriptor. Consider a protocol with a blocksize of 512
- * downloading a 1025-byte file into a 1025-byte buffer. Suppose that
- * the first two blocks are received; we have now filled 1024 of the
- * 1025 bytes in the buffer, and our only free block consists of the
- * 1025th byte. Using a "tail byte" solves this problem.
- *
- *
- * Note that the rather convoluted way of manipulating the buffer
- * descriptors (using copy_{to,from}_phys rather than straightforward
- * pointers) is needed to cope with operation as a PXE stack, when we
- * may be running in real mode or 16-bit protected mode, and therefore
- * cannot directly access arbitrary areas of memory using simple
- * pointers.
- *
- */
-
- #include "stddef.h"
- #include "string.h"
- #include "io.h"
- #include "errno.h"
- #include "buffer.h"
-
- /**
- * Initialise a buffer.
- *
- * @v buffer The buffer to be initialised
- * @ret None
- * @err None
- *
- * Set @c buffer->start and @c buffer->end before calling init_buffer().
- * init_buffer() will initialise the buffer to the state of being
- * empty.
- *
- */
- void init_buffer ( struct buffer *buffer ) {
- char tail = 1;
-
- buffer->fill = 0;
- if ( buffer->end != buffer->start )
- copy_to_phys ( buffer->start, &tail, sizeof ( tail ) );
-
- DBG ( "BUFFER [%x,%x) initialised\n", buffer->start, buffer->end );
- }
-
- /**
- * Split a free block.
- *
- * @v desc A descriptor for the free block
- * @v block Start address of the block
- * @v split Address at which to split the block
- * @ret None
- * @err None
- *
- * Split a free block into two separate free blocks. If the split
- * point lies outside the block, no action is taken; this is not an
- * error.
- *
- * @b NOTE: It is the reponsibility of the caller to ensure that there
- * is enough room in each of the two portions for a free block
- * descriptor (a @c struct @c buffer_free_block, except in the case of
- * a tail block which requires only a one byte descriptor). If the
- * caller fails to do this, data corruption will occur.
- *
- * In practice, this means that the granularity at which blocks are
- * split must be at least @c sizeof(struct @c buffer_free_block).
- *
- */
- static void split_free_block ( struct buffer_free_block *desc,
- physaddr_t block, physaddr_t split ) {
- /* If split point is before start of block, do nothing */
- if ( split <= block )
- return;
-
- /* If split point is after end of block, do nothing */
- if ( split >= desc->end )
- return;
-
- DBG ( "BUFFER splitting [%x,%x) -> [%x,%x) [%x,%x)\n",
- block, desc->end, block, split, split, desc->end );
-
- /* Create descriptor for new free block */
- copy_to_phys ( split, &desc->tail, sizeof ( desc->tail ) );
- if ( ! desc->tail )
- copy_to_phys ( split, desc, sizeof ( *desc ) );
-
- /* Update descriptor for old free block */
- desc->tail = 0;
- desc->next_free = split;
- desc->end = split;
- copy_to_phys ( block, desc, sizeof ( *desc ) );
- }
-
- /**
- * Mark a free block as used.
- *
- * @v buffer The buffer containing the block
- * @v desc A descriptor for the free block
- * @v prev_block Address of the previous block
- * @ret None
- * @err None
- *
- * Marks a free block as used, i.e. removes it from the free list.
- *
- */
- static inline void unfree_block ( struct buffer *buffer,
- struct buffer_free_block *desc,
- physaddr_t prev_block ) {
- struct buffer_free_block prev_desc;
-
- /* If this is the first block, just update buffer->fill */
- if ( ! prev_block ) {
- DBG ( "BUFFER marking [%x,%x) as used\n",
- buffer->start + buffer->fill, desc->end );
- buffer->fill = desc->next_free - buffer->start;
- return;
- }
-
- /* Get descriptor for previous block (which cannot be a tail block) */
- copy_from_phys ( &prev_desc, prev_block, sizeof ( prev_desc ) );
-
- DBG ( "BUFFER marking [%x,%x) as used\n",
- prev_desc.next_free, desc->end );
-
- /* Modify descriptor for previous block and write it back */
- prev_desc.next_free = desc->next_free;
- copy_to_phys ( prev_block, &prev_desc, sizeof ( prev_desc ) );
- }
-
- /**
- * Write data into a buffer.
- *
- * @v buffer The buffer into which to write the data
- * @v data The data to be written
- * @v offset Offset within the buffer at which to write the data
- * @v len Length of data to be written
- * @ret True Data was successfully written
- * @ret False Data was not written
- * @err ENOMEM Buffer is too small to contain the data
- *
- * Writes a block of data into the buffer. The block need not be
- * aligned to any particular boundary, or be of any particular size,
- * and it may overlap blocks already in the buffer (i.e. duplicate
- * calls to fill_buffer() are explicitly permitted).
- *
- * @c buffer->fill will be updated to indicate the fill level of the
- * buffer, i.e. the offset to the first gap within the buffer. If the
- * filesize is known (e.g. as with the SLAM protocol), you can test
- * for end-of-file by checking for @c buffer->fill==filesize. If the
- * filesize is not known, but there is a well-defined end-of-file test
- * (e.g. as with the TFTP protocol), you can read @c buffer->fill to
- * determine the final filesize. If blocks are known to be delivered
- * in a strictly sequential order with no packet loss or duplication,
- * then you can pass in @c offset==buffer->fill.
- *
- * @b NOTE: It is the caller's responsibility to ensure that the
- * boundaries between data blocks are more than @c sizeof(struct @c
- * buffer_free_block) apart. If this condition is not satisfied, data
- * corruption will occur. (See split_free_block() for details.)
- *
- * In practice this is not a problem. Callers of fill_buffer() will
- * be download protocols such as TFTP, and very few protocols have a
- * block size smaller than @c sizeof(struct @c buffer_free_block).
- *
- */
- int fill_buffer ( struct buffer *buffer, const void *data,
- off_t offset, size_t len ) {
- struct buffer_free_block desc;
- physaddr_t block, prev_block;
- physaddr_t data_start, data_end;
-
- /* Calculate start and end addresses of data */
- data_start = buffer->start + offset;
- data_end = data_start + len;
- DBG ( "BUFFER [%x,%x) writing portion [%x,%x)\n",
- buffer->start, buffer->end, data_start, data_end );
-
- /* Check buffer bounds */
- if ( data_end > buffer->end ) {
- DBG ( "BUFFER [%x,%x) too small for data!\n",
- buffer->start, buffer->end );
- errno = ENOMEM;
- return 0;
- }
-
- /* Iterate through the buffer's free blocks */
- prev_block = 0;
- block = buffer->start + buffer->fill;
- while ( block < buffer->end ) {
- /* Read block descriptor */
- desc.next_free = buffer->end;
- desc.end = buffer->end;
- copy_from_phys ( &desc.tail, block, sizeof ( desc.tail ) );
- if ( ! desc.tail )
- copy_from_phys ( &desc, block, sizeof ( desc ) );
-
- /* Split block at data start and end markers */
- split_free_block ( &desc, block, data_start );
- split_free_block ( &desc, block, data_end );
-
- /* Block is now either completely contained by or
- * completely outside the data area
- */
- if ( ( block >= data_start ) && ( block < data_end ) ) {
- /* Block is within the data area */
- unfree_block ( buffer, &desc, prev_block );
- copy_to_phys ( block, data + ( block - data_start ),
- desc.end - block );
- } else {
- /* Block is outside the data area */
- prev_block = block;
- }
-
- /* Move to next free block */
- block = desc.next_free;
- }
-
- DBG ( "BUFFER [%x,%x) full up to %x\n",
- buffer->start, buffer->end, buffer->start + buffer->fill );
-
- return 1;
- }
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