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DSP56K(4) Linux Programmer's Manual DSP56K(4)
dsp56k - DSP56001 interface device
#include <asm/dsp56k.h>
ssize_t read(int fd, void *data, size_t length);
ssize_t write(int fd, void *data, size_t length);
int ioctl(int fd, DSP56K_UPLOAD, struct dsp56k_upload *program);
int ioctl(int fd, DSP56K_SET_TX_WSIZE, int wsize);
int ioctl(int fd, DSP56K_SET_RX_WSIZE, int wsize);
int ioctl(int fd, DSP56K_HOST_FLAGS, struct dsp56k_host_flags *flags);
int ioctl(int fd, DSP56K_HOST_CMD, int cmd);
The dsp56k device is a character device with major number 55 and
minor number 0.
The Motorola DSP56001 is a fully programmable 24-bit digital signal
processor found in Atari Falcon030-compatible computers. The dsp56k
special file is used to control the DSP56001, and to send and receive
data using the bidirectional handshaked host port.
To send a data stream to the signal processor, use write(2) to the
device, and read(2) to receive processed data. The data can be sent
or received in 8, 16, 24, or 32-bit quantities on the host side, but
will always be seen as 24-bit quantities in the DSP56001.
The following ioctl(2) calls are used to control the dsp56k device:
DSP56K_UPLOAD
resets the DSP56001 and uploads a program. The third ioctl(2)
argument must be a pointer to a struct dsp56k_binary with
members bin pointing to a DSP56001 binary program, and len set
to the length of the program, counted in 24-bit words.
DSP56K_SET_TX_WSIZE
sets the transmit word size. Allowed values are in the range
1 to 4, and is the number of bytes that will be sent at a time
to the DSP56001. These data quantities will either be padded
with zero bytes, or truncated to fit the native 24-bit data
format of the DSP56001.
DSP56K_SET_RX_WSIZE
sets the receive word size. Allowed values are in the range 1
to 4, and is the number of bytes that will be received at a
time from the DSP56001. These data quantities will either
truncated, or padded with a null byte ('\0') to fit the native
24-bit data format of the DSP56001.
DSP56K_HOST_FLAGS
read and write the host flags. The host flags are four
general-purpose bits that can be read by both the hosting
computer and the DSP56001. Bits 0 and 1 can be written by the
host, and bits 2 and 3 can be written by the DSP56001.
To access the host flags, the third ioctl(2) argument must be
a pointer to a struct dsp56k_host_flags. If bit 0 or 1 is set
in the dir member, the corresponding bit in out will be
written to the host flags. The state of all host flags will
be returned in the lower four bits of the status member.
DSP56K_HOST_CMD
sends a host command. Allowed values are in the range 0 to
31, and is a user-defined command handled by the program
running in the DSP56001.
/dev/dsp56k
linux/include/asm-m68k/dsp56k.h, linux/drivers/char/dsp56k.c,
⟨http://dsp56k.nocrew.org/⟩, DSP56000/DSP56001 Digital Signal Proces‐
sor User's Manual
This page is part of release 4.15 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/.
Linux 2017-09-15 DSP56K(4)
Copyright and license for this manual page