# @(#)aha274x.seq 1.26 94/09/06 jda
#
# Adaptec 274x device driver for Linux.
# Copyright (c) 1994 The University of Calgary Department of Computer Science.
# 
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
# 
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
# 
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

VERSION AHA274X_SEQ_VERSION 1.26

MAXSCB		= 4

SCSISEQ		= 0x00
SXFRCTL0	= 0x01
SXFRCTL1	= 0x02
SCSISIGI	= 0x03
SCSISIGO	= 0x03
SCSIRATE	= 0x04
SCSIID		= 0x05
SCSIDATL	= 0x06
STCNT		= 0x08
STCNT+0		= 0x08
STCNT+1		= 0x09
STCNT+2		= 0x0a
SSTAT0		= 0x0b
CLRSINT1	= 0x0c
SSTAT1		= 0x0c
SIMODE1		= 0x11
SCSIBUSL	= 0x12
SHADDR		= 0x14
SELID		= 0x19
SBLKCTL		= 0x1f
SEQCTL		= 0x60
A		= 0x64				# == ACCUM
SINDEX		= 0x65
DINDEX		= 0x66
ALLZEROS	= 0x6a
NONE		= 0x6a
SINDIR		= 0x6c
DINDIR		= 0x6d
FUNCTION1	= 0x6e
HADDR		= 0x88
HCNT		= 0x8c
HCNT+0		= 0x8c
HCNT+1		= 0x8d
HCNT+2		= 0x8e
SCBPTR		= 0x90
INTSTAT		= 0x91
DFCNTRL		= 0x93
DFSTATUS	= 0x94
DFDAT		= 0x99
QINFIFO		= 0x9b
QINCNT		= 0x9c
QOUTFIFO	= 0x9d

SCSICONF	= 0x5a

#  The two reserved bytes at SCBARRAY+1[23] are expected to be set to
#  zero, and the reserved bit in SCBARRAY+0 is used as an internal flag
#  to indicate whether or not to reload scatter-gather parameters after
#  a disconnect.
#
SCBARRAY+0	= 0xa0
SCBARRAY+1	= 0xa1
SCBARRAY+2	= 0xa2
SCBARRAY+3	= 0xa3
SCBARRAY+7	= 0xa7
SCBARRAY+11	= 0xab
SCBARRAY+14	= 0xae
SCBARRAY+15	= 0xaf
SCBARRAY+16	= 0xb0
SCBARRAY+17	= 0xb1
SCBARRAY+18	= 0xb2
SCBARRAY+19	= 0xb3
SCBARRAY+20	= 0xb4
SCBARRAY+21	= 0xb5
SCBARRAY+22	= 0xb6
SCBARRAY+23	= 0xb7
SCBARRAY+24	= 0xb8
SCBARRAY+25	= 0xb9

SIGNAL_0	= 0x01				# unknown scsi bus phase
SIGNAL_1	= 0x11				# message reject
SIGNAL_2	= 0x21				# no IDENTIFY after reconnect
SIGNAL_3	= 0x31				# no cmd match for reconnect
SIGNAL_4	= 0x41				# SDTR -> SCSIRATE conversion

#  The host adapter card (at least the BIOS) uses 20-2f for SCSI
#  device information, 32-33 and 5a-5f as well.  Since we don't support
#  wide or twin-bus SCSI, 28-2f can be reclaimed.  As it turns out, the
#  BIOS trashes 20-27 anyway, writing the synchronous negotiation results
#  on top of the BIOS values, so we re-use those for our per-target
#  scratchspace (actually a value that can be copied directly into
#  SCSIRATE).  This implies, since we can't get the BIOS config values,
#  that all targets will be negotiated with for synchronous transfer.
#  NEEDSDTR has one bit per target indicating if an SDTR message is
#  needed for that device - this will be set initially, as well as
#  after a bus reset condition.
#
#  The high bit of DROPATN is set if ATN should be dropped before the ACK
#  when outb is called.  REJBYTE contains the first byte of a MESSAGE IN
#  message, so the driver can report an intelligible error if a message is
#  rejected.
#
#  RESELECT's high bit is true if we are currently handling a reselect;
#  its next-highest bit is true ONLY IF we've seen an IDENTIFY message
#  from the reselecting target.  If we haven't had IDENTIFY, then we have
#  no idea what the lun is, and we can't select the right SCB register
#  bank, so force a kernel panic if the target attempts a data in/out or
#  command phase instead of corrupting something.
#
#  Note that LAST_SHADDR and SG_NEXT occupy four bytes each.
#
SYNCNEG		= 0x20
DISC_DSB_A	= 0x32

DROPATN		= 0x30
REJBYTE		= 0x31
RESELECT	= 0x34

MSG_FLAGS	= 0x35
MSG_LEN		= 0x36
MSG_START+0	= 0x37
MSG_START+1	= 0x38
MSG_START+2	= 0x39
MSG_START+3	= 0x3a
MSG_START+4	= 0x3b
MSG_START+5	= 0x3c
-MSG_START+0	= 0xc9				# 2's complement of MSG_START+0

ARG_1		= 0x4c				# sdtr conversion args & return
ARG_2		= 0x4d
RETURN_1	= 0x4c

SIGSTATE	= 0x4e				# value written to SCSISIGO
NEEDSDTR	= 0x4f				# send SDTR message, 1 bit/trgt
LAST_SHADDR	= 0x50				# value after last dma transfer

SG_SIZEOF	= 12				# sizeof(struct scatterlist)
SG_NOLOAD	= 0x54				# load SG pointer/length?
SG_COUNT	= 0x55				# working value of SG count
SG_NEXT		= 0x56				# working value of SG pointer
SG_NEXT+0	= 0x56
SG_NEXT+1	= 0x57
SG_NEXT+2	= 0x58
SG_NEXT+3	= 0x59

#  Poll QINCNT for work - the lower three bits contain
#  the number of entries in the Queue In FIFO.
#
start:
	test	SCSISIGI,0x4	jnz reselect	# BSYI
	test	QINCNT,0x7	jz start

#  We have at least one queued SCB now.  Set the SCB pointer
#  from the FIFO so we see the right bank of SCB registers,
#  then set SCSI options and set the initiator and target
#  SCSI IDs.
#
	mov	SCBPTR,QINFIFO
	mov	SCBARRAY+1	call initialize
	clr	SG_NOLOAD
	clr	RESELECT

#  As soon as we get a successful selection, the target should go
#  into the message out phase since we have ATN asserted.  Prepare
#  the message to send, locking out the device driver.  If the device
#  driver hasn't beaten us with an ABORT or RESET message, then tack
#  on a SDTR negotation if required.
#
#  Messages are stored in scratch RAM starting with a flag byte (high bit
#  set means active message), one length byte, and then the message itself.
#
	mov	SCBARRAY+1	call disconnect	# disconnect ok?

	and	SINDEX,0x7,SCBARRAY+1		# lun
	or	SINDEX,A			# return value from disconnect
	or	SINDEX,0x80	call mk_mesg	# IDENTIFY message

	mov	A,SINDEX
	cmp	MSG_START+0,A	jne !message	# did driver beat us?
	mvi	MSG_START+1	call mk_sdtr	# build SDTR message if needed

!message:

#  Enable selection phase as an initiator, and do automatic ATN
#  after the selection.
#
	mvi	SCSISEQ,0x48			# ENSELO|ENAUTOATNO

#  Wait for successful arbitration.  The AIC-7770 documentation says
#  that SELINGO indicates successful arbitration, and that it should
#  be used to look for SELDO.  However, if the sequencer is paused at
#  just the right time - a parallel fsck(8) on two drives did it for
#  me - then SELINGO can flip back to false before we've seen it.  This
#  makes the sequencer sit in the arbitration loop forever.  This is
#  Not Good.
#
#  Therefore, I've added a check in the arbitration loop for SELDO
#  too.  This could arguably be made a critical section by disabling
#  pauses, but I don't want to make a potentially infinite loop a CS.
#  I suppose you could fold it into the select loop, too, but since
#  I've been hunting this bug for four days it's kinda like a trophy.
#
arbitrate:
	test	SSTAT0,0x40	jnz *select	# SELDO
	test	SSTAT0,0x10	jz arbitrate	# SELINGO

#  Wait for a successful selection.  If the hardware selection
#  timer goes off, then the driver gets the interrupt, so we don't
#  need to worry about it.
#
select:
	test	SSTAT0,0x40	jz select	# SELDO
	jmp	*select

#  Reselection is being initiated by a target - we've seen the BSY
#  line driven active, and we didn't do it!  Enable the reselection
#  hardware, and wait for it to finish.  Make a note that we've been
#  reselected, but haven't seen an IDENTIFY message from the target
#  yet.
#
reselect:
	mvi	SCSISEQ,0x10			# ENRSELI

reselect1:
	test	SSTAT0,0x20	jz reselect1	# SELDI
	mov	SELID		call initialize

	mvi	RESELECT,0x80			# reselected, no IDENTIFY

#  After the [re]selection, make sure that the [re]selection enable
#  bit is off.  This chip is flaky enough without extra things
#  turned on.  Also clear the BUSFREE bit in SSTAT1 since we'll be
#  using it shortly.
#
*select:
	clr	SCSISEQ
	mvi	CLRSINT1,0x8			# CLRBUSFREE

#  Main loop for information transfer phases.  If BSY is false, then
#  we have a bus free condition, expected or not.  Otherwise, wait
#  for the target to assert REQ before checking MSG, C/D and I/O
#  for the bus phase.
#
#  We can't simply look at the values of SCSISIGI here (if we want
#  to do synchronous data transfer), because the target won't assert
#  REQ if it's already sent us some data that we haven't acknowledged
#  yet.
#
ITloop:
	test	SSTAT1,0x8	jnz p_busfree	# BUSFREE
	test	SSTAT1,0x1	jz ITloop	# REQINIT

	and	A,0xe0,SCSISIGI			# CDI|IOI|MSGI

	cmp	ALLZEROS,A	je p_dataout
	cmp	A,0x40		je p_datain
	cmp	A,0x80		je p_command
	cmp	A,0xc0		je p_status
	cmp	A,0xa0		je p_mesgout
	cmp	A,0xe0		je p_mesgin

	mvi	INTSTAT,SIGNAL_0		# unknown - signal driver

p_dataout:
	mvi	0		call scsisig	# !CDO|!IOO|!MSGO
	call	assert
	call	sg_load

	mvi	A,3
	mvi	DINDEX,HCNT
	mvi	SCBARRAY+23	call bcopy

	mvi	A,3
	mvi	DINDEX,STCNT
	mvi	SCBARRAY+23	call bcopy

	mvi	A,4
	mvi	DINDEX,HADDR
	mvi	SCBARRAY+19	call bcopy

	mvi	0x3d		call dma	# SCSIEN|SDMAEN|HDMAEN|
						#   DIRECTION|FIFORESET

	call	sg_advance
	mov	SCBARRAY+18,SG_COUNT		# residual S/G count

	jmp	ITloop

p_datain:
	mvi	0x40		call scsisig	# !CDO|IOO|!MSGO
	call	assert
	call	sg_load

	mvi	A,3
	mvi	DINDEX,HCNT
	mvi	SCBARRAY+23	call bcopy

	mvi	A,3
	mvi	DINDEX,STCNT
	mvi	SCBARRAY+23	call bcopy

	mvi	A,4
	mvi	DINDEX,HADDR
	mvi	SCBARRAY+19	call bcopy

	mvi	0x39		call dma	# SCSIEN|SDMAEN|HDMAEN|
						#   !DIRECTION|FIFORESET
	call	sg_advance
	mov	SCBARRAY+18,SG_COUNT		# residual S/G count

	jmp	ITloop

#  Command phase.  Set up the DMA registers and let 'er rip - the
#  two bytes after the SCB SCSI_cmd_length are zeroed by the driver,
#  so we can copy those three bytes directly into HCNT.
#
p_command:
	mvi	0x80		call scsisig	# CDO|!IOO|!MSGO
	call	assert

	mvi	A,3
	mvi	DINDEX,HCNT
	mvi	SCBARRAY+11	call bcopy

	mvi	A,3
	mvi	DINDEX,STCNT
	mvi	SCBARRAY+11	call bcopy

	mvi	A,4
	mvi	DINDEX,HADDR
	mvi	SCBARRAY+7	call bcopy

	mvi	0x3d		call dma	# SCSIEN|SDMAEN|HDMAEN|
						#   DIRECTION|FIFORESET
	jmp	ITloop

#  Status phase.  Wait for the data byte to appear, then read it
#  and store it into the SCB.
#
p_status:
	mvi	0xc0		call scsisig	# CDO|IOO|!MSGO

	mvi	SCBARRAY+14	call inb
	jmp	ITloop

#  Message out phase.  If there is no active message, but the target
#  took us into this phase anyway, build a no-op message and send it.
#
p_mesgout:
	mvi	0xa0		call scsisig	# CDO|!IOO|MSGO
	mvi	0x8		call mk_mesg	# build NOP message

#  Set up automatic PIO transfer from MSG_START.  Bit 3 in
#  SXFRCTL0 (SPIOEN) is already on.
#
	mvi	SINDEX,MSG_START+0
	mov	DINDEX,MSG_LEN
	clr	A

#  When target asks for a byte, drop ATN if it's the last one in
#  the message.  Otherwise, keep going until the message is exhausted.
#  (We can't use outb for this since it wants the input in SINDEX.)
#
p_mesgout2:
	test	SSTAT0,0x2	jz p_mesgout2	# SPIORDY

	cmp	DINDEX,1	jne p_mesgout3	# last byte?
	mvi	CLRSINT1,0x40			# CLRATNO - drop ATN

#  Write a byte to the SCSI bus.  The AIC-7770 refuses to automatically
#  send ACKs in automatic PIO or DMA mode unless you make sure that the
#  "expected" bus phase in SCSISIGO matches the actual bus phase.  This
#  behaviour is completely undocumented and caused me several days of
#  grief.
#
#  After plugging in different drives to test with and using a longer
#  SCSI cable, I found that I/O in Automatic PIO mode ceased to function,
#  especially when transferring >1 byte.  It seems to be much more stable
#  if STCNT is set to one before the transfer, and SDONE (in SSTAT0) is
#  polled for transfer completion - for both output _and_ input.  The
#  only theory I have is that SPIORDY doesn't drop right away when SCSIDATL
#  is accessed (like the documentation says it does), and that on a longer
#  cable run, the sequencer code was fast enough to loop back and see
#  an SPIORDY that hadn't dropped yet.
#
p_mesgout3:
	call	one_stcnt
	mov	SCSIDATL,SINDIR

p_mesgout4:
	test	SSTAT0,0x4	jz p_mesgout4	# SDONE
	dec	DINDEX
	inc	A
	cmp	MSG_LEN,A	jne p_mesgout2

#  If the next bus phase after ATN drops is a message out, it means
#  that the target is requesting that the last message(s) be resent.
#
p_mesgout5:
	test	SSTAT1,0x8	jnz p_mesgout6	# BUSFREE
	test	SSTAT1,0x1	jz p_mesgout5	# REQINIT

	and	A,0xe0,SCSISIGI			# CDI|IOI|MSGI
	cmp	A,0xa0		jne p_mesgout6
	mvi	0x10		call scsisig	# ATNO - re-assert ATN

	jmp	ITloop

p_mesgout6:
	clr	MSG_FLAGS			# no active msg
	jmp	ITloop

#  Message in phase.  Bytes are read using Automatic PIO mode, but not
#  using inb.  This alleviates a race condition, namely that if ATN had
#  to be asserted under Automatic PIO mode, it had to beat the SCSI
#  circuitry sending an ACK to the target.  This showed up under heavy
#  loads and really confused things, since ABORT commands wouldn't be
#  seen by the drive after an IDENTIFY message in until it had changed
#  to a data I/O phase.
#
p_mesgin:
	mvi	0xe0		call scsisig	# CDO|IOO|MSGO
	mvi	A		call inb_first	# read the 1st message byte
	mvi	REJBYTE,A			# save it for the driver

	cmp	ALLZEROS,A	jne p_mesgin1

#  We got a "command complete" message, so put the SCB pointer
#  into the Queue Out, and trigger a completion interrupt.
#
	mov	QOUTFIFO,SCBPTR
	mvi	INTSTAT,0x2			# CMDCMPLT
	jmp	p_mesgin_done

#  Is it an extended message?  We only support the synchronous data
#  transfer request message, which will probably be in response to
#  an SDTR message out from us.  If it's not an SDTR, reject it -
#  apparently this can be done after any message in byte, according
#  to the SCSI-2 spec.
#
#  XXX - we should really reject this if we didn't initiate the SDTR
#	 negotiation; this may cause problems with unusual devices.
#
p_mesgin1:
	cmp	A,1		jne p_mesgin2	# extended message code?
	
	mvi	A		call inb_next
	cmp	A,3		jne p_mesginN	# extended mesg length = 3
	mvi	A		call inb_next
	cmp	A,1		jne p_mesginN	# SDTR code

	mvi	ARG_1		call inb_next	# xfer period
	mvi	ARG_2		call inb_next	# REQ/ACK offset
	mvi	INTSTAT,SIGNAL_4		# call driver to convert

	call	ndx_sdtr			# index sync config for target
	mov	DINDEX,SINDEX
	mov	DINDIR,RETURN_1			# save returned value

	not	A				# turn off "need sdtr" flag
	and	NEEDSDTR,A

#  Even though the SCSI-2 specification says that a device responding
#  to our SDTR message should honor our parameters for transmitting
#  to us, it doesn't seem to work too well in real life.  In particular,
#  a lot of CD-ROM and tape units don't function: try using the SDTR
#  parameters the device sent us for both transmitting and receiving.
#
	mov	SCSIRATE,RETURN_1
	jmp	p_mesgin_done

#  Is it a disconnect message?  Set a flag in the SCB to remind us
#  and await the bus going free.
#
p_mesgin2:
	cmp	A,4		jne p_mesgin3	# disconnect code?

	or	SCBARRAY+0,0x4			# set "disconnected" bit
	jmp	p_mesgin_done

#  Save data pointers message?  Use SHADDR and STCNT instead of HADDR
#  and HCNT, since it's a reflection of how many bytes were transferred
#  on the SCSI (as opposed to the host) bus.  Make sure to use the values
#  saved after the last DMA transfer - reading the message in byte changes
#  the values in them.
#
p_mesgin3:
	cmp	A,2		jne p_mesgin4	# save data pointers code?

	mvi	A,4
	mvi	DINDEX,SCBARRAY+19
	mvi	LAST_SHADDR	call bcopy

	mvi	A,3
	mvi	DINDEX,SCBARRAY+23
	mvi	SCBARRAY+15	call bcopy	# residual data count (stcnt)

	call	sg_ram2scb

	jmp	p_mesgin_done

#  Restore pointers message?  Data pointers are recopied from the
#  SCB anyway at the start of any DMA operation, so the only thing
#  to copy is the scatter-gather values.
#
p_mesgin4:
	cmp	A,3		jne p_mesgin5	# restore pointers code?

	call	sg_scb2ram
	jmp	p_mesgin_done

#  Identify message?  For a reconnecting target, this tells us the lun
#  that the reconnection is for - find the correct SCB and switch to it,
#  clearing the "disconnected" bit so we don't "find" it by accident later.
#
p_mesgin5:
	test	A,0x80		jz p_mesgin6	# identify message?

	test	A,0x78		jnz p_mesginN	# !DiscPriv|!LUNTAR|!Reserved

	mov	A		call findSCB	# switch to correct SCB

#  If a active message is present after calling findSCB, then either it
#  or the driver is trying to abort the command.  Either way, something
#  untoward has happened and we should just leave it alone.
#
	test	MSG_FLAGS,0x80	jnz p_mesgin_done

	xor	SCBARRAY+0,0x4			# clear disconnect bit in SCB
	mvi	RESELECT,0xc0			# make note of IDENTIFY

	call	sg_scb2ram			# implied restore pointers
						#   required on reselect
	jmp	p_mesgin_done

#  Message reject?  If we have an outstanding SDTR negotiation, assume
#  that it's a response from the target selecting asynchronous transfer,
#  otherwise just ignore it since we have no clue what it pertains to.
#
#  XXX - I don't have a device that responds this way.  Does this code
#	 actually work?
#
p_mesgin6:
	cmp	A,7		jne p_mesgin7	# message reject code?

	and	FUNCTION1,0x70,SCSIID		# outstanding SDTR message?
	mov	A,FUNCTION1
	test	NEEDSDTR,A	jz p_mesgin_done  # no - ignore rejection

	call	ndx_sdtr			# note use of asynch xfer
	mov	DINDEX,SINDEX
	clr	DINDIR

	not	A				# turn off "active sdtr" flag
	and	NEEDSDTR,A

	clr	SCSIRATE			# select asynch xfer
	jmp	p_mesgin_done

#  [ ADD MORE MESSAGE HANDLING HERE ]
#
p_mesgin7:

#  We have no idea what this message in is, and there's no way
#  to pass it up to the kernel, so we issue a message reject and
#  hope for the best.  Since we're now using manual PIO mode to
#  read in the message, there should no longer be a race condition
#  present when we assert ATN.  In any case, rejection should be a
#  rare occurrence - signal the driver when it happens.
#
p_mesginN:
	or	SINDEX,0x10,SIGSTATE		# turn on ATNO
	call	scsisig
	mvi	INTSTAT,SIGNAL_1		# let driver know

	mvi	0x7		call mk_mesg	# MESSAGE REJECT message

p_mesgin_done:
	call	inb_last			# ack & turn auto PIO back on
	jmp	ITloop

#  Bus free phase.  It might be useful to interrupt the device
#  driver if we aren't expecting this.  For now, make sure that
#  ATN isn't being asserted and look for a new command.
#
p_busfree:
	mvi	CLRSINT1,0x40			# CLRATNO
	clr	SIGSTATE
	jmp	start

#  Bcopy: number of bytes to transfer should be in A, DINDEX should
#  contain the destination address, and SINDEX should contain the
#  source address.  All input parameters are trashed on return.
#
bcopy:
	mov	DINDIR,SINDIR
	dec	A
	cmp	ALLZEROS,A	jne bcopy
	ret

#  Locking the driver out, build a one-byte message passed in SINDEX
#  if there is no active message already.  SINDEX is returned intact.
#
mk_mesg:
	mvi	SEQCTL,0x40			# PAUSEDIS
	test	MSG_FLAGS,0x80	jnz mk_mesg1	# active message?

	mvi	MSG_FLAGS,0x80			# if not, there is now
	mvi	MSG_LEN,1			# length = 1
	mov	MSG_START+0,SINDEX		# 1-byte message

mk_mesg1:
	clr	SEQCTL				# !PAUSEDIS
	ret

#  Input byte in Automatic PIO mode.  The address to store the byte
#  in should be in SINDEX.  DINDEX will be used by this routine.
#
inb:
	test	SSTAT0,0x2	jz inb		# SPIORDY
	mov	DINDEX,SINDEX
	call	one_stcnt			# xfer one byte
	mov	DINDIR,SCSIDATL
inb1:
	test	SSTAT0,0x4	jz inb1		# SDONE - wait to "finish"
	ret

#  Carefully read data in Automatic PIO mode.  I first tried this using
#  Manual PIO mode, but it gave me continual underrun errors, probably
#  indicating that I did something wrong, but I feel more secure leaving
#  Automatic PIO on all the time.
#
#  According to Adaptec's documentation, an ACK is not sent on input from
#  the target until SCSIDATL is read from.  So we wait until SCSIDATL is
#  latched (the usual way), then read the data byte directly off the bus
#  using SCSIBUSL.  When we have pulled the ATN line, or we just want to
#  acknowledge the byte, then we do a dummy read from SCISDATL.  The SCSI
#  spec guarantees that the target will hold the data byte on the bus until
#  we send our ACK.
#
#  The assumption here is that these are called in a particular sequence,
#  and that REQ is already set when inb_first is called.  inb_{first,next}
#  use the same calling convention as inb.
#
inb_first:
	mov	DINDEX,SINDEX
	mov	DINDIR,SCSIBUSL	ret		# read byte directly from bus

inb_next:
	mov	DINDEX,SINDEX			# save SINDEX

	call	one_stcnt			# xfer one byte
	mov	NONE,SCSIDATL			# dummy read from latch to ACK
inb_next1:
	test	SSTAT0,0x4	jz inb_next1	# SDONE
inb_next2:
	test	SSTAT0,0x2	jz inb_next2	# SPIORDY - wait for next byte
	mov	DINDIR,SCSIBUSL	ret		# read byte directly from bus

inb_last:
	call	one_stcnt			# ACK with dummy read
	mov	NONE,SCSIDATL
inb_last1:
	test	SSTAT0,0x4	jz inb_last1	# wait for completion
	ret

#  Output byte in Automatic PIO mode.  The byte to output should be
#  in SINDEX.  If DROPATN's high bit is set, then ATN will be dropped
#  before the byte is output.
#
outb:
	test	SSTAT0,0x2	jz outb		# SPIORDY
	call	one_stcnt			# xfer one byte

	test	DROPATN,0x80	jz outb1
	mvi	CLRSINT1,0x40			# CLRATNO
	clr	DROPATN
outb1:
	mov	SCSIDATL,SINDEX
outb2:
	test	SSTAT0,0x4	jz outb2	# SDONE
	ret

#  Write the value "1" into the STCNT registers, for Automatic PIO
#  transfers.
#
one_stcnt:
	clr	STCNT+2
	clr	STCNT+1
	mvi	STCNT+0,1	ret

#  DMA data transfer.  HADDR and HCNT must be loaded first, and
#  SINDEX should contain the value to load DFCNTRL with - 0x3d for
#  host->scsi, or 0x39 for scsi->host.  The SCSI channel is cleared
#  during initialization.
#
dma:
	mov	DFCNTRL,SINDEX
dma1:
dma2:
	test	SSTAT0,0x1	jnz dma3	# DMADONE
	test	SSTAT1,0x10	jz dma1		# PHASEMIS, ie. underrun

#  We will be "done" DMAing when the transfer count goes to zero, or
#  the target changes the phase (in light of this, it makes sense that
#  the DMA circuitry doesn't ACK when PHASEMIS is active).  If we are
#  doing a SCSI->Host transfer, flush the data FIFO.
#
dma3:
	test	SINDEX,0x4	jnz dma5	# DIRECTION
	and	SINDEX,0xfe			# mask out FIFORESET
	or	DFCNTRL,0x2,SINDEX		# FIFOFLUSH
dma4:
	test	DFCNTRL,0x2	jnz dma4	# FIFOFLUSHACK

#  Now shut the DMA enables off, and copy STCNT (ie. the underrun
#  amount, if any) to the SCB registers; SG_COUNT will get copied to
#  the SCB's residual S/G count field after sg_advance is called.  Make
#  sure that the DMA enables are actually off first lest we get an ILLSADDR.
#  Save the value of SHADDR into scratch RAM in case we need to save data
#  pointers.
#
dma5:
	clr	DFCNTRL				# disable DMA
dma6:
	test	DFCNTRL,0x38	jnz dma6	# SCSIENACK|SDMAENACK|HDMAENACK

	mvi	A,4
	mvi	DINDEX,LAST_SHADDR
	mvi	SHADDR		call bcopy

	mvi	A,3
	mvi	DINDEX,SCBARRAY+15
	mvi	STCNT		call bcopy

	ret

#  Common SCSI initialization for selection and reselection.  Expects
#  the target SCSI ID to be in the upper four bits of SINDEX, and A's
#  contents are stomped on return.
#
initialize:
	clr	SBLKCTL				# channel A, !wide
	and	SCSIID,0xf0,SINDEX		# target ID
	and	A,0x7,SCSICONF			# SCSI_ID_A[210]
	or	SCSIID,A

#  Esundry initialization.
#
	clr	DROPATN
	clr	SIGSTATE

#  Turn on Automatic PIO mode now, before we expect to see an REQ
#  from the target.  It shouldn't hurt anything to leave it on.  Set
#  CLRCHN here before the target has entered a data transfer mode -
#  with synchronous SCSI, if you do it later, you blow away some
#  data in the SCSI FIFO that the target has already sent to you.
#
	mvi	SXFRCTL0,0xa			# SPIOEN|CLRCHN

#  Set SCSI bus parity checking and the selection timeout value,
#  and enable the hardware selection timer.  Set the SELTO interrupt
#  to signal the driver.
#
	and	A,0x38,SCSICONF			# PARITY_ENB_A|SEL_TIM_A[10]
	or	SXFRCTL1,0x4,A			# ENSTIMER
	mvi	SIMODE1,0x84			# ENSELTIMO|ENSCSIPERR
	
#  Initialize scatter-gather pointers by setting up the working copy
#  in scratch RAM.
#
	call	sg_scb2ram

#  Initialize SCSIRATE with the appropriate value for this target.
#
	call	ndx_sdtr
	mov	SCSIRATE,SINDIR
	ret

#  Assert that if we've been reselected, then we've seen an IDENTIFY
#  message.
#
assert:
	test	RESELECT,0x80	jz assert1	# reselected?
	test	RESELECT,0x40	jnz assert1	# seen IDENTIFY?

	mvi	INTSTAT,SIGNAL_2		# no - cause a kernel panic

assert1:
	ret

#  Find out if disconnection is ok from the information the BIOS has left
#  us.  The target ID should be in the upper four bits of SINDEX; A will
#  contain either 0x40 (disconnection ok) or 0x00 (diconnection not ok)
#  on exit.
#
#  This is the only place the target ID is limited to three bits, so we
#  can use the FUNCTION1 register.
#
disconnect:
	and	FUNCTION1,0x70,SINDEX		# strip off extra just in case
	mov	A,FUNCTION1
	test	DISC_DSB_A,A	jz disconnect1	# bit nonzero if DISabled

	clr	A		ret
disconnect1:
	mvi	A,0x40		ret

#  Locate the SCB matching the target ID in SELID and the lun in the lower
#  three bits of SINDEX, and switch the SCB to it.  Have the kernel print
#  a warning message if it can't be found - this seems to happen occasionally
#  under high loads.  Also, if not found, generate an ABORT message to the
#  target.
#
findSCB:
	and	A,0x7,SINDEX			# lun in lower three bits
	or	A,A,SELID			# can I do this?
	and	A,0xf7				# only channel A implemented

	clr	SINDEX

findSCB1:
	mov	SCBPTR,SINDEX			# switch to new SCB
	cmp	SCBARRAY+1,A	jne findSCB2	# target ID/channel/lun match?
	test	SCBARRAY+0,0x4	jz findSCB2	# should be disconnected

	ret

findSCB2:
	inc	SINDEX
	cmp	SINDEX,MAXSCB	jne findSCB1

	mvi	INTSTAT,SIGNAL_3		# not found - signal kernel
	mvi	0x6		call mk_mesg	# ABORT message

	or	SINDEX,0x10,SIGSTATE		# assert ATNO
	call	scsisig
	ret

#  Make a working copy of the scatter-gather parameters in the SCB.
#
sg_scb2ram:
	mov	SG_COUNT,SCBARRAY+2

	mvi	A,4
	mvi	DINDEX,SG_NEXT
	mvi	SCBARRAY+3	call bcopy

	mvi	SG_NOLOAD,0x80
	test	SCBARRAY+0,0x10	jnz sg_scb2ram1	# don't reload s/g?
	clr	SG_NOLOAD

sg_scb2ram1:
	ret

#  Copying RAM values back to SCB, for Save Data Pointers message.
#
sg_ram2scb:
	mov	SCBARRAY+2,SG_COUNT

	mvi	A,4
	mvi	DINDEX,SCBARRAY+3
	mvi	SG_NEXT		call bcopy

	and	SCBARRAY+0,0xef,SCBARRAY+0
	test	SG_NOLOAD,0x80	jz sg_ram2scb1	# reload s/g?
	or	SCBARRAY+0,0x10

sg_ram2scb1:
	ret

#  Load a struct scatter if needed and set up the data address and
#  length.  If the working value of the SG count is nonzero, then
#  we need to load a new set of values.
#
#  This, like the above DMA, assumes a little-endian host data storage.
#
sg_load:
	test	SG_COUNT,0xff	jz sg_load3	# SG being used?
	test	SG_NOLOAD,0x80	jnz sg_load3	# don't reload s/g?

	clr	HCNT+2
	clr	HCNT+1
	mvi	HCNT+0,SG_SIZEOF

	mvi	A,4
	mvi	DINDEX,HADDR
	mvi	SG_NEXT		call bcopy

	mvi	DFCNTRL,0xd			# HDMAEN|DIRECTION|FIFORESET

#  Wait for DMA from host memory to data FIFO to complete, then disable
#  DMA and wait for it to acknowledge that it's off.
#
sg_load1:
	test	DFSTATUS,0x8	jz sg_load1	# HDONE

	clr	DFCNTRL				# disable DMA
sg_load2:
	test	DFCNTRL,0x8	jnz sg_load2	# HDMAENACK

#  Copy data from FIFO into SCB data pointer and data count.  This assumes
#  that the struct scatterlist has this structure (this and sizeof(struct
#  scatterlist) == 12 are asserted in aha274x.c):
#
#	struct scatterlist {
#		char *address;		/* four bytes, little-endian order */
#		...			/* four bytes, ignored */
#		unsigned short length;	/* two bytes, little-endian order */
#	}
#
	mov	SCBARRAY+19,DFDAT		# new data address
	mov	SCBARRAY+20,DFDAT
	mov	SCBARRAY+21,DFDAT
	mov	SCBARRAY+22,DFDAT

	mov	NONE,DFDAT			# throw away four bytes
	mov	NONE,DFDAT
	mov	NONE,DFDAT
	mov	NONE,DFDAT

	mov	SCBARRAY+23,DFDAT
	mov	SCBARRAY+24,DFDAT
	clr	SCBARRAY+25

sg_load3:
	ret

#  Advance the scatter-gather pointers only IF NEEDED.  If SG is enabled,
#  and the SCSI transfer count is zero (note that this should be called
#  right after a DMA finishes), then move the working copies of the SG
#  pointer/length along.  If the SCSI transfer count is not zero, then
#  presumably the target is disconnecting - do not reload the SG values
#  next time.
#
sg_advance:
	test	SG_COUNT,0xff	jz sg_advance2	# s/g enabled?

	test	STCNT+0,0xff	jnz sg_advance1	# SCSI transfer count nonzero?
	test	STCNT+1,0xff	jnz sg_advance1
	test	STCNT+2,0xff	jnz sg_advance1

	clr	SG_NOLOAD			# reload s/g next time
	dec	SG_COUNT			# one less segment to go

	clr	A				# add sizeof(struct scatter)
	add	SG_NEXT+0,SG_SIZEOF,SG_NEXT+0
	adc	SG_NEXT+1,A,SG_NEXT+1
	adc	SG_NEXT+2,A,SG_NEXT+2
	adc	SG_NEXT+3,A,SG_NEXT+3

	ret

sg_advance1:
	mvi	SG_NOLOAD,0x80			# don't reload s/g next time
sg_advance2:
	ret

#  Add the array base SYNCNEG to the target offset (the target address
#  is in SCSIID), and return the result in SINDEX.  The accumulator
#  contains the 3->8 decoding of the target ID on return.
#
ndx_sdtr:
	shr	A,SCSIID,4
	and	A,0x7
	add	SINDEX,SYNCNEG,A

	and	FUNCTION1,0x70,SCSIID		# 3-bit target address decode
	mov	A,FUNCTION1	ret

#  If we need to negotiate transfer parameters, build the SDTR message
#  starting at the address passed in SINDEX.  DINDEX is modified on return.
#
mk_sdtr:
	mov	DINDEX,SINDEX			# save SINDEX

	call	ndx_sdtr
	test	NEEDSDTR,A	jnz mk_sdtr1	# do we need negotiation?
	ret

mk_sdtr1:
	mvi	DINDIR,1			# extended message
	mvi	DINDIR,3			# extended message length = 3
	mvi	DINDIR,1			# SDTR code
	mvi	DINDIR,25			# REQ/ACK transfer period
	mvi	DINDIR,15			# REQ/ACK offset

	add	MSG_LEN,-MSG_START+0,DINDEX	# update message length
	ret

#  Set SCSI bus control signal state.  This also saves the last-written
#  value into a location where the higher-level driver can read it - if
#  it has to send an ABORT or RESET message, then it needs to know this
#  so it can assert ATN without upsetting SCSISIGO.  The new value is
#  expected in SINDEX.  Change the actual state last to avoid contention
#  from the driver.
#
scsisig:
	mov	SIGSTATE,SINDEX
	mov	SCSISIGO,SINDEX	ret