spufs(7)


NAME

   spufs - SPU filesystem

DESCRIPTION

   The  SPU filesystem is used on PowerPC machines that implement the Cell
   Broadband Engine Architecture in order to access Synergistic  Processor
   Units (SPUs).

   The  filesystem provides a name space similar to POSIX shared memory or
   message queues.  Users that have write permissions  on  the  filesystem
   can  use  spu_create(2)  to establish SPU contexts under the spufs root
   directory.

   Every SPU context is represented by a directory containing a predefined
   set  of  files.   These files can be used for manipulating the state of
   the logical SPU.  Users can change permissions on the files, but  can't
   add or remove files.

   Mount options
   uid=<uid>
          Set the user owning the mount point; the default is 0 (root).

   gid=<gid>
          Set the group owning the mount point; the default is 0 (root).

   mode=<mode>
          Set  the  mode  of the top-level directory in spufs, as an octal
          mode string.  The default is 0775.

   Files
   The files in spufs mostly follow  the  standard  behavior  for  regular
   system  calls like read(2) or write(2), but often support only a subset
   of the operations supported on regular filesystems.  This list  details
   the  supported operations and the deviations from the standard behavior
   described in the respective man pages.

   All files that support the read(2) operation also support readv(2)  and
   all  files  that support the write(2) operation also support writev(2).
   All files support the access(2) and stat(2) family of  operations,  but
   for  the  latter  call,  the only fields of the returned stat structure
   that contain reliable information are st_mode,  st_nlink,  st_uid,  and
   st_gid.

   All   files   support  the  chmod(2)/fchmod(2)  and  chown(2)/fchown(2)
   operations, but will not be able to grant permissions  that  contradict
   the possible operations (e.g., read access on the wbox file).

   The current set of files is:

   /capabilities
          Contains  a comma-delimited string representing the capabilities
          of this SPU context.  Possible capabilities are:

          sched  This context may be scheduled.

          step   This  context  can  be  run  in  single-step  mode,   for
                 debugging.

          New capabilities flags may be added in the future.

   /mem   the  contents  of the local storage memory of the SPU.  This can
          be accessed like a regular shared memory file and contains  both
          code  and  data  in  the address space of the SPU.  The possible
          operations on an open mem file are:

          read(2), pread(2), write(2), pwrite(2), lseek(2)
                 These operate as usual, with the exception that lseek(2),
                 write(2),  and pwrite(2) are not supported beyond the end
                 of the file.  The file size is  the  size  of  the  local
                 storage of the SPU, which is normally 256 kilobytes.

          mmap(2)
                 Mapping  mem  into  the  process  address  space provides
                 access to  the  SPU  local  storage  within  the  process
                 address space.  Only MAP_SHARED mappings are allowed.

   /regs  Contains the saved general-purpose registers of the SPU context.
          This file contains the 128-bit values  of  each  register,  from
          register  0 to register 127, in order.  This allows the general-
          purpose registers to be inspected for debugging.

          Reading to or writing from this file requires that  the  context
          is  scheduled  out,  so  use  of this file is not recommended in
          normal program operation.

          The regs file is not present on contexts that have been  created
          with the SPU_CREATE_NOSCHED flag.

   /mbox  The  first SPU-to-CPU communication mailbox.  This file is read-
          only and can be read in units of 4 bytes.  The file can be  used
          only  in nonblocking mode - even poll(2) cannot be used to block
          on this file.  The only possible operation on an open mbox  file
          is:

          read(2)
                 If  count  is  smaller  than four, read(2) returns -1 and
                 sets errno to EINVAL.  If there is no data  available  in
                 the  mailbox  (i.e.,  the  SPU  has  not  sent  a mailbox
                 message), the return value is set to -1 and errno is  set
                 to  EAGAIN.   When  data has been read successfully, four
                 bytes are placed in the data buffer and the value four is
                 returned.

   /ibox  The  second  SPU-to-CPU  communication  mailbox.   This  file is
          similar to the first mailbox file, but can be read  in  blocking
          I/O  mode,  thus calling read(2) on an open ibox file will block
          until the SPU has written data to its interrupt mailbox  channel
          (unless  the  file  has been opened with O_NONBLOCK, see below).
          Also, poll(2) and similar system calls can be  used  to  monitor
          for the presence of mailbox data.

          The possible operations on an open ibox file are:

          read(2)
                 If  count  is  smaller  than four, read(2) returns -1 and
                 sets errno to EINVAL.  If there is no data  available  in
                 the  mailbox and the file descriptor has been opened with
                 O_NONBLOCK, the return value is set to -1  and  errno  is
                 set to EAGAIN.

                 If there is no data available in the mailbox and the file
                 descriptor has been opened without O_NONBLOCK,  the  call
                 will  block until the SPU writes to its interrupt mailbox
                 channel.  When data  has  been  read  successfully,  four
                 bytes are placed in the data buffer and the value four is
                 returned.

          poll(2)
                 Poll on the  ibox  file  returns  (POLLIN  |  POLLRDNORM)
                 whenever data is available for reading.

   /wbox  The  CPU-to-SPU communication mailbox.  It is write-only and can
          be written in units of four bytes.   If  the  mailbox  is  full,
          write(2)  will block, and poll(2) can be used to block until the
          mailbox is available for writing again.  The possible operations
          on an open wbox file are:

          write(2)
                 If  count  is  smaller than four, write(2) returns -1 and
                 sets errno to EINVAL.  If there is no space available  in
                 the  mailbox and the file descriptor has been opened with
                 O_NONBLOCK, the return value is set to -1  and  errno  is
                 set to EAGAIN.

                 If  there  is  no  space available in the mailbox and the
                 file descriptor has been opened without  O_NONBLOCK,  the
                 call will block until the SPU reads from its PPE (PowerPC
                 Processing Element) mailbox channel.  When data has  been
                 written successfully, the system call returns four as its
                 function result.

          poll(2)
                 A poll on the wbox file returns  (POLLOUT  |  POLLWRNORM)
                 whenever space is available for writing.

   /mbox_stat, /ibox_stat, /wbox_stat
          These are read-only files that contain the length of the current
          queue of each mailbox---that is, how many words can be  read  from
          mbox  or  ibox  or how many words can be written to wbox without
          blocking.  The files can be read only  in  four-byte  units  and
          return  a  big-endian  binary integer number.  The only possible
          operation on an open *box_stat file is:

          read(2)
                 If count is smaller than four,  read(2)  returns  -1  and
                 sets  errno  to  EINVAL.  Otherwise, a four-byte value is
                 placed in the data buffer.  This value is the  number  of
                 elements  that  can  be  read  from  (for  mbox_stat  and
                 ibox_stat) or written to (for wbox_stat)  the  respective
                 mailbox without blocking or returning an EAGAIN error.

   /npc,  /decr,  /decr_status, /spu_tag_mask, /event_mask, /event_status,
   /srr0, /lslr
          Internal registers of the SPU.  These  files  contain  an  ASCII
          string  representing  the  hex  value of the specified register.
          Reads and writes on these files  (except  for  npc,  see  below)
          require  that  the  SPU  context  be  scheduled out, so frequent
          access to these files is  not  recommended  for  normal  program
          operation.

          The contents of these files are:

          npc             Next  Program  Counter - valid only when the SPU
                          is in a stopped state.

          decr            SPU Decrementer

          decr_status     Decrementer Status

          spu_tag_mask    MFC tag mask for SPU DMA

          event_mask      Event mask for SPU interrupts

          event_status    Number of SPU events pending (read-only)

          srr0            Interrupt Return address register

          lslr            Local Store Limit Register

          The possible operations on these files are:

          read(2)
                 Reads the current register value.  If the register  value
                 is  larger  than  the buffer passed to the read(2) system
                 call, subsequent reads will  continue  reading  from  the
                 same buffer, until the end of the buffer is reached.

                 When a complete string has been read, all subsequent read
                 operations  will  return  zero  bytes  and  a  new   file
                 descriptor needs to be opened to read a new value.

          write(2)
                 A write(2) operation on the file sets the register to the
                 value given in the string.  The string is parsed from the
                 beginning until the first nonnumeric character or the end
                 of the  buffer.   Subsequent  writes  to  the  same  file
                 descriptor overwrite the previous setting.

                 Except  for  the npc file, these files are not present on
                 contexts   that    have    been    created    with    the
                 SPU_CREATE_NOSCHED flag.

   /fpcr  This  file  provides  access  to  the  Floating Point Status and
          Control Register  (fcpr)  as  a  binary,  four-byte  file.   The
          operations on the fpcr file are:

          read(2)
                 If  count  is  smaller  than four, read(2) returns -1 and
                 sets errno to EINVAL.  Otherwise, a  four-byte  value  is
                 placed  in  the data buffer; this is the current value of
                 the fpcr register.

          write(2)
                 If count is smaller than four, write(2)  returns  -1  and
                 sets  errno  to  EINVAL.  Otherwise, a four-byte value is
                 copied from the data buffer, updating the  value  of  the
                 fpcr register.

   /signal1, /signal2
          The files provide access to the two signal notification channels
          of an SPU.  These are read-write files that operate on four-byte
          words.   Writing  to one of these files triggers an interrupt on
          the SPU.  The value written to the signal files can be read from
          the  SPU  through a channel read or from host user space through
          the file.  After the value has been read by the SPU, it is reset
          to  zero.  The possible operations on an open signal1 or signal2
          file are:

          read(2)
                 If count is smaller than four,  read(2)  returns  -1  and
                 sets  errno  to  EINVAL.  Otherwise, a four-byte value is
                 placed in the data buffer; this is the current  value  of
                 the specified signal notification register.

          write(2)
                 If  count  is  smaller than four, write(2) returns -1 and
                 sets errno to EINVAL.  Otherwise, a  four-byte  value  is
                 copied  from  the  data buffer, updating the value of the
                 specified  signal  notification  register.   The   signal
                 notification  register  will  either be replaced with the
                 input data or will be updated to the bitwise OR operation
                 of  the  old  value  and the input data, depending on the
                 contents  of  the  signal1_type  or  signal2_type   files
                 respectively.

   /signal1_type, /signal2_type
          These  two  files change the behavior of the signal1 and signal2
          notification files.  They contain a numeric ASCII  string  which
          is  read  as  either  "1"  or  "0".   In mode 0 (overwrite), the
          hardware replaces the contents of the signal  channel  with  the
          data  that  is  written  to  it.   In  mode  1 (logical OR), the
          hardware accumulates the bits that are subsequently  written  to
          it.    The  possible  operations  on  an  open  signal1_type  or
          signal2_type file are:

          read(2)
                 When the count supplied to the read(2)  call  is  shorter
                 than  the  required  length for the digit (plus a newline
                 character),  subsequent  reads   from   the   same   file
                 descriptor  will  complete  the  string.  When a complete
                 string has been read, all subsequent read operations will
                 return  zero  bytes and a new file descriptor needs to be
                 opened to read the value again.

          write(2)
                 A write(2) operation on the file sets the register to the
                 value given in the string.  The string is parsed from the
                 beginning until the first nonnumeric character or the end
                 of  the  buffer.   Subsequent  writes  to  the  same file
                 descriptor overwrite the previous setting.

   /mbox_info, /ibox_info, /wbox_info, /dma_into, /proxydma_info
          Read-only  files  that  contain  the  saved  state  of  the  SPU
          mailboxes  and  DMA  queues.   This  allows the SPU status to be
          inspected, mainly for debugging.  The  mbox_info  and  ibox_info
          files  each  contain the four-byte mailbox message that has been
          written by the SPU.  If no message has  been  written  to  these
          mailboxes,  then  contents  of  these  files  is undefined.  The
          mbox_stat, ibox_stat and wbox_stat files contain  the  available
          message count.

          The  wbox_info  file  contains  an  array  of  four-byte mailbox
          messages, which have been sent to the SPU.   With  current  CBEA
          machines, the array is four items in length, so up to 4 * 4 = 16
          bytes can be read from this file.  If any mailbox queue entry is
          empty,  then  the  bytes  read at the corresponding location are
          undefined.

          The dma_info file contains the  contents  of  the  SPU  MFC  DMA
          queue, represented as the following structure:

              struct spu_dma_info {
                  uint64_t         dma_info_type;
                  uint64_t         dma_info_mask;
                  uint64_t         dma_info_status;
                  uint64_t         dma_info_stall_and_notify;
                  uint64_t         dma_info_atomic_command_status;
                  struct mfc_cq_sr dma_info_command_data[16];
              };

          The  last member of this data structure is the actual DMA queue,
          containing 16 entries.  The mfc_cq_sr structure is defined as:

              struct mfc_cq_sr {
                  uint64_t mfc_cq_data0_RW;
                  uint64_t mfc_cq_data1_RW;
                  uint64_t mfc_cq_data2_RW;
                  uint64_t mfc_cq_data3_RW;
              };

          The  proxydma_info  file  contains  similar   information,   but
          describes  the proxy DMA queue (i.e., DMAs initiated by entities
          outside the SPU) instead.  The file is in the following format:

              struct spu_proxydma_info {
                  uint64_t         proxydma_info_type;
                  uint64_t         proxydma_info_mask;
                  uint64_t         proxydma_info_status;
                  struct mfc_cq_sr proxydma_info_command_data[8];
              };

          Accessing these files requires that the SPU context is scheduled
          out  -  frequent use can be inefficient.  These files should not
          be used for normal program operation.

          These files are not present on contexts that have  been  created
          with the SPU_CREATE_NOSCHED flag.

   /cntl  This  file provides access to the SPU Run Control and SPU status
          registers, as an ASCII string.   The  following  operations  are
          supported:

          read(2)
                 Reads from the cntl file will return an ASCII string with
                 the hex value of the SPU Status register.

          write(2)
                 Writes to the cntl file will set the  context's  SPU  Run
                 Control register.

   /mfc   Provides  access  to  the  Memory  Flow  Controller  of the SPU.
          Reading from the file returns the contents of the SPU's MFC  Tag
          Status  register,  and  writing to the file initiates a DMA from
          the MFC.  The following operations are supported:

          write(2)
                 Writes to this file need to be in the format of a MFC DMA
                 command, defined as follows:

                     struct mfc_dma_command {
                         int32_t  pad;    /* reserved */
                         uint32_t lsa;    /* local storage address */
                         uint64_t ea;     /* effective address */
                         uint16_t size;   /* transfer size */
                         uint16_t tag;    /* command tag */
                         uint16_t class;  /* class ID */
                         uint16_t cmd;    /* command opcode */
                     };

                 Writes   are   required   to   be  exactly  sizeof(struct
                 mfc_dma_command) bytes in size.  The command will be sent
                 to  the  SPU's MFC proxy queue, and the tag stored in the
                 kernel (see below).

          read(2)
                 Reads the contents of the tag status  register.   If  the
                 file   is   opened   in   blocking  mode  (i.e.,  without
                 O_NONBLOCK), then the read will block until a DMA tag (as
                 performed   by   a   previous  write)  is  complete.   In
                 nonblocking mode, the MFC tag  status  register  will  be
                 returned without waiting.

          poll(2)
                 Calling  poll(2)  on  the mfc file will block until a new
                 DMA can be started (by checking for POLLOUT) or  until  a
                 previously  started DMA (by checking for POLLIN) has been
                 completed.

                 /mss   Provides   access   to   the    MFC    MultiSource
                 Synchronization  (MSS)  facility.   By  mmap(2)-ing  this
                 file, processes can access the MSS area of the SPU.

                 The following operations are supported:

          mmap(2)
                 Mapping mss into the process address space  gives  access
                 to  the  SPU  MSS  area within the process address space.
                 Only MAP_SHARED mappings are allowed.

   /psmap Provides access to the whole problem-state mapping of  the  SPU.
          Applications  can  use this area to interface to the SPU, rather
          than writing to individual register files in spufs.

          The following operations are supported:

          mmap(2)
                 Mapping psmap gives a process a direct  map  of  the  SPU
                 problem   state   area.   Only  MAP_SHARED  mappings  are
                 supported.

   /phys-id
          Read-only file containing the physical SPU number that  the  SPU
          context  is  running  on.  When the context is not running, this
          file contains the string "-1".

          The physical SPU number is given by an ASCII hex string.

   /object-id
          Allows applications to store (or retrieve) a  single  64-bit  ID
          into  the  context.  This ID is later used by profiling tools to
          uniquely identify the context.

          write(2)
                 By  writing  an  ASCII  hex   value   into   this   file,
                 applications  can  set  the object ID of the SPU context.
                 Any previous value of the object ID is overwritten.

          read(2)
                 Reading this file gives an ASCII hex string  representing
                 the object ID for this SPU context.

EXAMPLE

   /etc/fstab  entry
          none      /spu      spufs     gid=spu   0    0

SEE ALSO

   close(2), spu_create(2), spu_run(2), capabilities(7)

   The Cell Broadband Engine Architecture (CBEA) specification

COLOPHON

   This  page  is  part of release 4.09 of the Linux man-pages project.  A
   description of the project, information about reporting bugs,  and  the
   latest     version     of     this    page,    can    be    found    at
   https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.





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