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/freebsd/sys/modules/dpaa2/
H A DMakefilediff 16295b0a5a577aa70f47d3b3314277e631caee63 Mon Oct 24 22:54:20 CEST 2022 Bjoern A. Zeeb <bz@FreeBSD.org> dpaa2: cleanup some include files

2782ed8f6cd3d7f59219a783bc7fa7bbfb1fe26f fixed the standalone module
build. REmove the now duplicate includes for opt_acpi.h and
opt_platform.h. Als remove the if_mdio.h again in both the Makefile
and the implementation file as it is not (currently) used.

X-MFC with: ba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72
MFC after: 70 days
ba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
/freebsd/sys/dev/dpaa2/
H A Ddpaa2_cmd_if.mba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_mc_if.mba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_ni_dpkg.hba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_swp_if.mba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Dmemac_mdio.hba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Dmemac_mdio_if.mba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_bp.hba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_con.hba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_mac.hba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_bp.cba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_con.cba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_mac.cba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_mc_fdt.cba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_mc_acpi.cba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_swp.cba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_swp.hba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_types.hba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_ni.cdiff 16295b0a5a577aa70f47d3b3314277e631caee63 Mon Oct 24 22:54:20 CEST 2022 Bjoern A. Zeeb <bz@FreeBSD.org> dpaa2: cleanup some include files

2782ed8f6cd3d7f59219a783bc7fa7bbfb1fe26f fixed the standalone module
build. REmove the now duplicate includes for opt_acpi.h and
opt_platform.h. Als remove the if_mdio.h again in both the Makefile
and the implementation file as it is not (currently) used.

X-MFC with: ba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72
MFC after: 70 days
ba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_io.hba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_mcp.hba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_rc.cba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Ddpaa2_mcp.cba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Dmemac_mdio_acpi.cba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
H A Dmemac_mdio_common.cba7319e9091b4f6ef15a9c4be3d3d076f3047f72 Tue Sep 20 11:47:41 CEST 2022 Dmitry Salychev <dsl@FreeBSD.org> Add initial DPAA2 support

DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.

The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.

Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:

acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX

dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.

The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.

Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638

12