Difference between revisions of "PXI Services"
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The communication protocol for normal PXI commands is documented below. The size of cmd_buf is calculated from the cmd_hdr. With newer FIRM the total size for command header + buffer must be at most 0x40 words, otherwise Process9 will panic. | The communication protocol for normal PXI commands is documented below. The size of cmd_buf is calculated from the cmd_hdr. With newer FIRM the total size for command header + buffer must be at most 0x40 words, otherwise Process9 will panic. | ||
− | Each pxi_id corresponds to a | + | The PXI protocol is bidirectional - both processors can host a PXI service for a given pxi_id. In practice, Process9 hosts all but one of the services (pxi_11 is hosted by pxi-module instead). Each pxi_id corresponds to a PXI command-handler(called from threads) which handles the actual command processing. With newer FIRM the pxi_id must be in a certain range. |
There's a dedicated Process9 thread for receiving data from PXI(in newer FIRM this is the main-thread), once it finishes receiving a request it copies the cmd_buf into a buffer for the corresponding pxi_id then signals an event so that the cmd-handler thread can process it. Once a cmd-handler thread finishes processing a command, the thread itself then sends the response over PXI. This means that multiple commands for different pxiIDs can be be handled at the same time, even when one cmd-handler completely hangs/etc for example. | There's a dedicated Process9 thread for receiving data from PXI(in newer FIRM this is the main-thread), once it finishes receiving a request it copies the cmd_buf into a buffer for the corresponding pxi_id then signals an event so that the cmd-handler thread can process it. Once a cmd-handler thread finishes processing a command, the thread itself then sends the response over PXI. This means that multiple commands for different pxiIDs can be be handled at the same time, even when one cmd-handler completely hangs/etc for example. | ||
Process9 will execute [[SVC|svcBreak]] when it receives a PXI command with a pxi_id where another command with that same pxi_id is still being processed by the command-handler(this won't happen with commands sent by the ARM11 PXI-module, since it waits for the command reply before sending another command request for that same pxi_id). | Process9 will execute [[SVC|svcBreak]] when it receives a PXI command with a pxi_id where another command with that same pxi_id is still being processed by the command-handler(this won't happen with commands sent by the ARM11 PXI-module, since it waits for the command reply before sending another command request for that same pxi_id). | ||
+ | |||
+ | =PXI service "pxi_11"= | ||
+ | {| class="wikitable" border="1" | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | ! Command Header | ||
+ | ! Description | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | 0x00010040 | ||
+ | | PublishToSubscriber - this exposes [[Services|"srv:" notifications]] to the Process9-side using [[SRV:PublishToSubscriber]] (with flags=1), to allow sending card-insert notifications etc. directly to ARM11. | ||
+ | |} | ||
==Request== | ==Request== | ||
Line 44: | Line 54: | ||
7 = pxi_am | 7 = pxi_am | ||
8 = pxi_ps | 8 = pxi_ps | ||
− | 9 = | + | 9 = pxi_11 |
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Services]] |
Latest revision as of 12:27, 18 September 2024
PXI Services[edit]
The 'pxi' sysmodule contains the following services:
Each of these services has up to 4 static IPC buffers of size 0x1000. When any of these service ports are sync:d, the IPC cmdbuf (TLS+0x80+) is sent over PXI to the ARM9.
Each PXI service can only have one session open for it at a time.
Protocol[edit]
The communication protocol for normal PXI commands is documented below. The size of cmd_buf is calculated from the cmd_hdr. With newer FIRM the total size for command header + buffer must be at most 0x40 words, otherwise Process9 will panic.
The PXI protocol is bidirectional - both processors can host a PXI service for a given pxi_id. In practice, Process9 hosts all but one of the services (pxi_11 is hosted by pxi-module instead). Each pxi_id corresponds to a PXI command-handler(called from threads) which handles the actual command processing. With newer FIRM the pxi_id must be in a certain range.
There's a dedicated Process9 thread for receiving data from PXI(in newer FIRM this is the main-thread), once it finishes receiving a request it copies the cmd_buf into a buffer for the corresponding pxi_id then signals an event so that the cmd-handler thread can process it. Once a cmd-handler thread finishes processing a command, the thread itself then sends the response over PXI. This means that multiple commands for different pxiIDs can be be handled at the same time, even when one cmd-handler completely hangs/etc for example.
Process9 will execute svcBreak when it receives a PXI command with a pxi_id where another command with that same pxi_id is still being processed by the command-handler(this won't happen with commands sent by the ARM11 PXI-module, since it waits for the command reply before sending another command request for that same pxi_id).
PXI service "pxi_11"[edit]
Command Header | Description |
---|---|
0x00010040 | PublishToSubscriber - this exposes "srv:" notifications to the Process9-side using SRV:PublishToSubscriber (with flags=1), to allow sending card-insert notifications etc. directly to ARM11. |
Request[edit]
A11->A9 (u32) pxi_id A11->A9 (u32) cmd_hdr A11->A9 (u32[]) cmd_buf
Response[edit]
A9->A11 (u32) pxi_id A9->A11 (u32) cmd_hdr A9->A11 (u32[]) cmd_buf
pxi_id[edit]
0 = pxi_mc 1 = pxi_fs 2 = pxi_fs 3 = pxi_fs 4 = pxi_fs 5 = pxi_pm 6 = pxi_dev 7 = pxi_am 8 = pxi_ps 9 = pxi_11