Abstract:
An apparatus for local direct memory access control includes a processor unit for generating a direct memory access designator when needed data is not available and continuing processing which does not require the unavailable data. A memory access designator holder receives the memory access designator, and a local data memory access controller performs a data memory access transaction in accordance with the content of a descriptor. Staging registers hold components of a data memory access designator and transfer the components to a selected portion of the data memory access designator holder. The data memory access controller transfers the contents of the staging registers to the data memory access designator holder when one of the staging registers is written to by the processor unit. The processor unit stalls if a write to the staging register occurs when the data memory access designator holders contain a data memory access designator, and ceases the stall when one of the plurality of data memory access designator holders ceases to contain a data memory access designator.

Description:
RELATED APPLICATIONS 
   This application is related to previously filed U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/402,182 entitled “Hardware Assisted Firmware Task Scheduling and Management,” and Ser. No. 10/401,459 entitled “Local Emulation of Data Ram Utilizing Write-Through Cache Hardware Within a CPU Module,” both assigned to the same assignee as the present application. 
   BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
   Host bus adapters are well known in the art, e.g., for establishing and maintaining an interface between a very fast bus, e.g., a fibre channel and a host computer and/or local network of host computers. They function to perform many tasks, e.g., reassembling and checking the correctness of packets of communicated information received over the input channel, e.g., a fibre channel and, e.g., serializing the data for transmission to the host computer, e.g., over a serial bus to the serial bus port of the host computer, and the like. As the communication channels are becoming even more capable of increasing the bit transmission rate (“BTR”) there is a need for a new architecture for a host bus adapter, particularly one implemented on a microchip. 
   SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
   A method and apparatus for local direct memory access control is disclosed which may comprise a processor module having a direct memory access control apparatus which may comprise: a processor unit adapted to generate a direct memory access designator when in a condition of needed data not being available and to thereafter continue processing which does not require the not available data; a memory access designator holder contained within the processor module and adapted to receive and hold the memory access designator; and, a local data memory access controller contained within the processor module and adapted to carry out a data memory access transaction in accordance with the content of the descriptor. The memory access designator holder may be adapted to hold a plurality of memory access designators each associated with a memory access transaction and adapted to present each of the plurality of memory access designators to the local data memory access controller successively. The apparatus may further comprise a plurality of staging registers each adapted to hold at least one component of a data memory access designator and adapted to transfer the at least one component of the data memory access designator to a selected portion of the data memory access designator holder. The data memory access designator holder may be one of a plurality of data memory access designator holders arranged in a first-in-first-out configuration. The data memory access controller may also be adapted to transfer the contents of the respective plurality of staging registers to the data memory access designator holder when a selected one of the staging registers is written to by the processor unit. The processor unit may be adapted to stall if a write to the selected one of the staging registers occurs when each of the plurality of data memory access designator holders contains a data memory access designator and to cease the stall when one of the plurality of data memory access designator holders ceases to contain a data memory access designator. 

   
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       FIG. 1  shows an overall architecture for a system according to an embodiment of the present invention; 
       FIG. 2  shows an architecture for a CPU module contained on the chip containing the system of  FIG. 1 ; 
       FIG. 3  shows a more detailed view of portions of the CPU module of  FIG. 2 ; 
       FIG. 4  shows host bus adapters according to an embodiment of the present invention as incorporated into various configurations of communication networks; and 
       FIG. 5  shows a more detailed view of portions of the CPU/Bus memory interface according to embodiments of the present invention. 
   

   DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
   Turning now to  FIG. 1  a host bus adapter system  10  according to an embodiment of the present invention, which may be located on a single integrated circuit (chip) may include a plurality of CPU modules, e.g.,  100   0 – 100   5 , which may be connected a common bus, which may be e.g., a standard processor local bus (“PLB”)  20   0 , which for convenience will be referred to as the north PLB  20   0 . Also connected to the PLB  20   0  may be a bridge  30  to a south PLB  20   1 . Also connected to the PLB  20   0  may be a double data rate memory controller DDR  32  and a buffer manager  34 . Connected to the PLB  20   1  may be a CPU module  100   6  a host DMA  36 , a quad data rate memory controller (“QDR”)  38  which can be an SRAM controller, an N-Port Interface Layer  40  for a standard fibre channel N-Port and a universal asynchronous receiver/transmitter (“UART”)  42 , which may include a flash memory controller, etc. As is well known in the art, a UART, ordinarily on a microchip or a part of a microchip, can contain programming or be otherwise operated under program control to control a computer&#39;s (processor&#39;s) interface, e.g., to its attached serial devices. Specifically, it can provide the computer with an interface, e.g., an EIA standard RS-232 (C) data terminal equipment (“DTE”) interface so that it can “talk” to and exchange data with modems and other serial devices. As part of this interface, a UART usually also can convert the bytes it receives from the computer along parallel circuits into a single serial bit stream for outbound transmission and vice-versa for inbound traffic, add a parity bit (if it&#39;s been selected) on outbound transmissions and check the parity of incoming bytes (if selected) and then discard the parity bit, add start and stop delineators on outbound traffic and strip them from inbound transmissions, handle interrupts from the processor and/or its other input devices, e.g., keyboard/mouse, which are serial devices with special ports, and handle other kinds of interrupt and device management that require coordinating the computer&#39;s (processor&#39;s) speed of operation with device speeds. The UART  42  may also provide some amount of buffering of data so that the computer (processor) and serial devices data streams remain coordinated. The specific UART  42  can be a standard cell, e.g., an IBM module emulating a 16550, which has a 16-byte buffer that can get filled before the computer/processor needs to handle the data. 
   Connected to the UART  42  may be a debug/test unit  50  and an input/output  52  for 35 signals for interfacing the UART and flash control, e.g., to a terminal device. Connected to the NIL  40  may be an input/output signal port  60 , e.g., a 10 gigahertz N port, which in turn has connected to it a chip signal input/output  60 , e.g., to a fibre channel communication link. The same signals may also be received on an input to the debug/test unit  50 . Connected to the DDR SDRAM controller  32  is an input/output port  72  that may be connected to DDR SDRAM memory. Connected to the QDR controller  38  is an input output connection that may be connected to SRAM memory. Connected to the host DMA  36  may be a host interface, e.g., a PCI-X host interface  74  connected to a host input/output signal connection from the chip  10  to the host computer, e.g., over a PCI bus interface  76 . 
   Turning now to  FIG. 2  a CPU module  100  according to an embodiment of the present invention is shown in more detail. The CPU module  100  is a key component of an embodiment of the present invention. The CPU module  100  may consist of a standard embedded CPU core  102 , such as the Xtensa that is available from Tensilica, local memories, which may include both a dual ported data ram (“DPDR”)  104 , a data cache (“DCache”)  106  and an instruction cache (“ICache”)  108 , a CPU bus/memory interface (“CPU-IF”)  110 , which may in turn include a local data memory access (“LDMA”) controller and local message and task queuing functionalities as explained in more detail below. The Xtensa core  102  itself contains all of the Tensilica Instruction Extension (“TIE”) instructions. 
   The ICache  108  may consist of, e.g., a 32K direct mapped cache memory contained on the chip  10  with the CPU  102  and connected to the CPU  102  by, e.g., a 64 bit wide ICache bus  120 . The DCache  106  may consist of, e.g., a 4K direct mapped cache memory contained on the chip  10  with the CPU  102  and connected to the CPU  102  by, e.g., a 64 bit wide DCache bus  122 . The DPDR  104  may be, e.g., a 20K bit RAM contained on the chip  10  with the CPU  102  and connected at one port (A) to the CPU  102  by, e.g., a 64 bit DPDR/CPU bus  126  and at the other port (B) to the CPU-IF  110  by a DPDR/CPU-IF bus  132 . The CPU  102  is also connected to the CPU-IF  110  by a CPU/CPU-IF bus  128  which may also be, e.g., a 64 bit wide bus. The CPU-IF  110  may be connected directly to the PLB. Also contained in each CPU module  100  may be a plurality of, e.g., 32 message queues  202   0 – 202   31  as discussed in more detail below. This design, including, e.g., bus sizes, was selected among a number of possible designs for a variety of reasons including available real estate on the chip  10  and power consumption, with seven CPU modules  100 , which may be essentially identical, on the chip  10 . It will be understood that other configurations of the CPU module may be possible, an added IRAM external to the core and larger buses, e.g., all 128 bits wide. Also connected to the PLB may be an external memory  150 , which may be, e.g., a 4G memory, which may be, e.g., broken down into 2G of cacheable memory space  154 , and 2G of non-cacheable memory space  152 , and may include a specifically set aside RAM emulation address space  156 , e.g., within the cacheable portion  154 . 
   In order to maximize the design for mean time between failure from, e.g., soft error rate, the local memories may support byte error correction coding (“ECC”) on, e.g., the DPDR  104 , while the DCache  106  and the ICache  108  may be validated based upon a parity error scheme, both as are well known in the art. 
   Message Passing. Turning now to  FIG. 3  there is shown a message passing system  200  according to an embodiment of the present invention. Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may include hardware in the message passing system  200  to support low-overhead passing of messages. The message system  200  may include a plurality of message queues, e.g., 32 message queues  202   0 – 202   31 . The message system  200  may be optimized but not limited to for a single producer, e.g., a single CPU module  100   0 , sending messages to a single message queue, e.g., message queue  202   0  in CPU module  100   1 . Multiple producers to the same set of queues  202   0 – 202   31  may be implemented, but such a design under all the circumstances of the embodiments disclosed in this application may not perform as well as a plurality of sets of queues. Messages may originate from other CPU modules  100   0 – 100   6  on the chip  10 , local DMA engines within the respective modules  100  or DMA from other third parties on the chip  10 , i.e., units other than CPU modules  100   0 – 100   6 . The sender, as described in more detail below, is always responsible for not overflowing the target message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . This may be accomplished, as explained in more detail below, by utilizing, e.g., a credit-based scheme using, e.g., a plurality of credit count registers (“CCRs”)  210  provided in each CPU module  100 . In some cases, however, the flow-control may be inherent in the firmware and the CCRs  210  may not be necessary. 
   Each CPU module  100  may have 32 message queues  202   0 – 202   31  that may be supported by, e.g., some of 64 local CCRs  210   0 – 210   63 . A message queue, e.g.,  20   20  may consume a local CCR, e.g., CCR  210   0 , e.g., if notification is required for that queue  202   0 . The local queue  202   0  may also consume a remote CCR  210 , e.g., a CCR  210  in another CPU module  100 , if hardware assist is required for flow control. Therefore, in the typical application, e.g., two CCRs  210  are consumed for each message queue  202 . For example, one CCR  210  may be utilized on the sender CPU module  100   0  for tracking credits available to the sender CPU module  100   0  and one on the receiver CPU module  100   0  for counting messages received in the respective message queue  202   0  associated with the receiver CPU  100   1 . The size and location of each message queue  202   0 – 202   31  may be made programmable, but ordinarily will be a multiple of 16-bytes and may be in the present embodiment of the present invention not more than 4KB in size. Message queues  202   0 – 202   31  for each CPU  102  may be arranged in memory, e.g., the DPDR  104  for each respective CPU  102 , to start at any 16-byte aligned address in the DPDR  104 . 
   Messages can be designated as fixed-length or variable-length on a queue-by-queue basis. The firmware, e.g., in association with the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  may handle credits differently for the two types of message formats, and also dependant upon whether the CCR is in a sender CPU  1000  or a receiver CPU  1001 . For example, hardware may maintain a tail pointer as part of storing the message into the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  within the respective DPDR  104 . Hardware may also, e.g., maintain a header pointer but some support will be required from the firmware in this event. For example, the lower 8-bits of the first 32-bit word of any variable-length message may contain the length of the message, e.g., specified in 32-bit words. This would imply a maximum message length of 1K bytes. The length of fixed-length messages may be specified by the firmware, e.g., as configured in a queue configuration register, discussed in more detail below. Messages may be broken up over multiple transactions, e.g., between a sender CPU  100   0  to a receiver CPU  100   1 , but the message must be the exact length specified. Notification for the receipt of the message, e.g., by the receiver CPU  100   1  to the sender CPU  100   0  may be required to be given only after the entire message has been received by the receiver CPU  100   1 . 
   There may also be cases where a message may “wrap” back within the memory space allocated to a given message queue  202   0 – 202   31  to the beginning of the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  in the middle of the message. The firmware may also specify the maximum size message that the hardware can guarantee not to wrap. If the firmware allows wrapping of messages in a respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  then the firmware will also have to detect and deal with this case. If there is not room for the entire message at the end of a message queue the hardware will place the entire message at the beginning of the queue  202   0 – 202   31  Message wrapping must also be considered when determining the appropriate number of credits to be assigned to each message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . 
   Message Notification. Each CCR  210   0 – 210   63  has a notification control register that can be used to specify the conditions where notification will be requested. If notification is being requested, the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  will attempt to win notification arbitration by asserting its arbitration request signal. The firmware may create an array of “queue vectors,” normally somewhere in the DPDR  104 . Each queue vector is a pointer to a data structure f 0 –f n , in an array  294  of data structures f 0 –f n , each of which can contains the necessary information to process that particular queue  202   0 – 202   31 . Hardware will select the winner of notification arbitration and place the address of a queue vector for that queue f 0 –f n  into a queue vector pointer register (“QVPR”)  290 . If there is currently nothing to do, the contents of an NOP offset vector pointer register will be copied into the QVPR  290 . Processing the NOP vector will result in reading the QVPR  290  again. 
   The QVPR  290  may contain the address of a queue vector base field, qvec_base, e.g., in bits  31 : 9  and a queue vector offset field, qvec_offset, e.g., in bits  8 : 2 , with bits  1 : 0  set to zero. The QVPR  290  may be initialized to all zeros, e.g., at power up. The NOP vector offset register can contain an NOP offset, nop_offset, e.g., in bits  6 : 0 , with the rest of the bits in the register reserved. 
   If notification is enabled for a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  will attempt to notify the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6  anytime the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  count is non-negative. The CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  may be implemented as 10-bit counters so the number is considered to be negative if the MSB bit  9  (“sign bit”) is asserted. The CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  may be sign-extended on reads. Notification normally can be in the form of hardware arbitration. Notification may also be specified to be an interrupt to the local CPU  100   0  or  100   6  or simply asserting a bit in a notification poll register, as discussed below. 
   Notification arbitration may be divided into four different arbitration groups. Each CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that is participating in notification arbitration may be assigned to one of the arbitration groups. The relative arbitration priority may be specified between the different groups, i.e., each group may be given a priority class, which also may be, e.g., one of four possible classes. Therefore, the group for each CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may be specified in its notification configuration register. The class for each arbitration group is specified in the arbitration group control register. Simple round-robin arbitration may be performed within each arbitration group, each such CCR  210   0 – 210   63  within each such arbitration group, by definition, being of the same priority class. Each arbitration group can be dynamically enabled or disabled from the arbitration process by the setting of an arbitration enable bit in the arbitration group enable register during normal operation without impacting the fairness within an arbitration group. 
   Head Pointer Management. Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may contain hardware support for managing such things as messaging, e.g., by managing such things as message queue head pointers, e.g., within CPU bus/memory interface  110 . The firmware may, e.g., read the next head pointer register  296  to get, e.g., an address of the first word of a message. The firmware may be configured to create the next head pointer by writing the length of the current message to an update head pointer register. Hardware can then, e.g., calculate the next head pointer and store the value back. Accesses to the next head pointer register  296  and the update head pointer register may be made after reading the QVPR  290  or writing to an arbitration results register, as discussed below. 
   Flow Control. Message queue  202   0 – 202   31  flow control may be configured to be exclusively under firmware control. The hardware provides credit-counting registers (“CCRs”), e.g., CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  which may be utilized to assist in credit management if necessary, as explained in more detail below. In some cases, flow control may be implicit in the protocol for some message queues  202   0 – 202   31  and credit-based flow control will not be required as to those respective ones of, e.g., the message queues  202   0 – 202   31 . If required, however, the credit scheme may be used as part of the message flow control for the message queues  202   0 – 202   31 . A credit can represent some amount of physical storage in the message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . The message producer must never send a message unless it has enough credits. For a fixed-length message, it is most efficient to have one credit represent the storage required for one message. For variable-length messages, however, a choice for the representation of amount in a credit may be, e.g., two words (8-bytes) of queue  202   0 – 202   31  storage. Two words is a good choice because in the described embodiment this is can also be selected as the smallest unit of storage ever consumed when storing a message, e.g., in a message queue  202   0 – 202   31  in the DPDR  104 . Any message that is an odd number of words in length will consume an extra word of storage because in the disclosed embodiment, e.g., new messages are stored at 8-byte aligned addresses. This message alignment can be taken into consideration when doing flow control and when determining the required size of a queue  202   0 – 202   31 . The other parameter that must also be taken into consideration is the effect of hardware wrapping. 
   There are several registers on each CPU module  100  that may be dedicated to message passing. Some of these registers are located in CPU-IF  110  PIF register space and may have low-latency access time. Others may be located in configuration space and are relatively slower. 
   Queue Configuration Registers (“QCR”). Each message queue  202   0 – 202   32  may have associated with it a message queue configuration register (“QCR”). Each QCR may be used to specify the size and behavior of each of the respective message queues  202   0 – 202   31 . Each of the respective QCRs may normally be configured by the firmware, e.g., at power up and ordinarily does not need to be modified thereafter during operation of the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6 . The fields in each of the respective QCRs may be configured to include the various fields. Each QCR may include a message size field, msg_size, e.g. in bits  7 : 0 , which may be used to specify the maximum message size, e.g., in 4-byte words, that is guaranteed by the hardware not to wrap within the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . For fixed-length messages the message size field can also specify the exact length of all messages sent to this queue  202   0 – 202   31 . Each QCR may also include a fixed length message field, fixed_len, e.g. in bit  30 , which may be used to indicate that all of the messages for the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  must be exactly the length specified in the message size field msg_size. 
   Each QCR may also include a message queue size field, qsize, e.g. in bits  27 : 20 , which may represent the size of the respective message queue with a granularity of multiples of sixteen bytes. The message queue  202   0 – 202   31  may have (qsize+1) 16-byte quad-words. A maximum size may be established, e.g., 4KB that can be configured in the respective QCR. Each QCR may also include a message queue base address field, qbase, e.g., in bits  17 : 8  of the QCR register in hardware. The message queue base field, qbase, may be used to specify the base DPDR  104  offset for the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  which identifies the location of the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  within the respective DPDR  104 . 
   Message queues  202   0 – 202   31  can be located, e.g., at any 16-byte aligned address in the respective DPDR  104 . Each QCR may also include a CCR increment enable bit ccr_en, e.g., at bit  18 , which may be used, when asserted, to cause the respective CCR 0 –CCR − corresponding to the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  to be incremented when a new message has been received. Message queue  202   0  may be related to CCR 0 , message queue  202   1  may be related to CCR 1 , etc. Each message queue QCR- 210   31  may also have a head pointer enable field, hptr 13  en, e.g., at bit  19 , which may be utilized, when asserted, to cause the CCR 0 –CCR 31  corresponding to this message queue  202   0 – 202   31  to be decremented when an update head pointer register is written when the respective queue  202   0 – 202   31  is the most recent winner of notification arbitration, as explained in more detail below. 
   The message queues  202   0 – 202   32  may be configured to not have direct notification capability. If notification is needed the ccr_en bit must be asserted in the respective message queue configuration register. This causes the respective CCR 0 –CCR 31  designated for that respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  to be incremented by the hardware, e.g., once for each message that is written to the respective queue  202   0 – 202   31 . The respective CCR 0 –CCR − may be configured to have notification capabilities. If the hptr_en bit is asserted in the respective queue configuration register the respective CCR 0 –CCR 31  may be decremented by the hardware, e.g., when an update head pointer register is written. If a respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  is not using its respective CCR 0 –CCR 31  ccr_en will be set to 0 and hptr_en will be set to 0. The respective CCR 0 –CCR 31 , which may be simply a general purpose register within the respective CPU module  100   0 – 100   6 , may be used for other purposes. Most message queues  202   0 – 202   31  will ordinarily need notification and therefore consume a respective local CCR 0 –CCR 31 . If enabled, notification for arbitration purposes may be configured to be attempted anytime the respective CCR 0 –CCR 31  value is non-negative, i.e., the sign bit in the respective CCR 0 –CCR 31  is set to 0. The respective queue configuration registers ordinarily are initialized by the firmware prior to receiving any messages, e.g., at power up. 
   Queue Tail Pointer Registers (TPR). Each message queue  202   0 – 202   31  may maintain a tail pointer register (“TPR”) that may contain an address within DPDR  104  where the next word of a next message to be consumed will be stored, once received. These TPR registers may be maintained by the hardware but may also be initialized by the firmware to point to the beginning of the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31 , e.g., at power up. The TPR registers are described in more detail below. Messages are ordinarily stored in a DPDR  104  beginning with an 8-byte aligned address. This can impact the amount of storage required for messages. For example, if a message contains an odd number of words, the respective TPR register will be incremented by hardware to point to the next word prior to receiving the next message. This will be an indication that an extra word was consumed for storing the message. This extra word must be taken into consideration when sizing the message queues  202   0 – 202   31  and when determining the number of credits required to send a message, as explained in more detail below. For example, if a credit is designated by the firmware to represent 1 word of storage in the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31 , it requires 4 credits to send a message of actual length  3 . Likewise, if a message queue  202   0 – 202   31  needs to hold eight 5-word messages it would need to be 48 words (8×6) deep. 
   Each TPR may include a read/write message tail pointer field, tail_ptr, e.g., in bits  14 : 2 , which may be used to specify the location in the DPDR  104  where the next word of the message will be stored once received. This tail pointer field in the TPR register may be initialized by the firmware prior to receiving the first message to point to the base of the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . Each TPR may also contain a read/write message word count field, word_cnt, e.g., in bits  23 : 16 , which may be utilized as temporary storage by the hardware to count the number of words in an incoming message. This message word count field may be initialized to Verilog, e.g., 8′h00 eight bits hexadecimal starting at 00 by firmware at power up. Each TPR may also contain a read/write queue wrap indication field, W, e.g., at bit  24 , which may be utilized by being toggled by the hardware to indicate each time the hardware wraps a message in the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  back to the beginning of the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . This queue wrap indication field may be used only to distinguish full from empty, e.g., for message queue overflow detection. The firmware should initialize this bit to 0. Direct access to the TPRs may only be supported at certain times, e.g., at initialization and for test. Direct access while any sort of messages are active may result in undefined behavior. 
   Credit Counter Registers. Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may actually contain, e.g., 64 CCRs  210   0 – 210   63 . Each CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may be configured to contain a read/write credit count field, credit_cnt, e.g., in bits  9 : 0 , which can be utilized by being incremented or decremented as applicable by the hardware every time a credit is consumed by the receipt of a message or utilized by the transmission of a message. The respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may also be sign-extended when read. This is done so the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  will interpret the number as negative any time credit_cnt[ 9 ]=1. The credit count field, credit_cnt can contain the number of credits currently available for the designated resource, i.e., that is being serviced by the respective CCR  210 . 
   These CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  may function primarily as counting semaphores and can be used for several different applications in addition to those described above. The first 32 CCRs  210   0 – 210   31  may be slightly specialized in that they can, as discussed above, be logically tied to a respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  by asserting the ccr_en bit in the CCR enable field of the corresponding queue configuration register for the message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . The respective CCR  210   0 – 210   31  may function as a message counter. In this application the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   31  may be incremented by hardware when a message is delivered to the corresponding message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . The hardware may also optionally decrement the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   31  that is the winner of notification during arbitration, e.g., when the head pointer field in the update head pointer register is updated by writing to the update head pointer register. 
   Any of the CCRs  210   0 – 210   31  may be incremented by, e.g., the local DMA controller within the CPU bus interface  110 , e.g., upon the completion of a DMA operation. In this application the CCRs  210 , e.g., CCRs  210   0 – 210   31 , may be used primarily to provide notification to the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6  when a DMA operation has been completed. For example, prior to initiating a local DMA operation the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6  could write a DMA completion message directly to a respective one of the message queues  202   0 – 202   31 . The respective one of the message queues  202   0 – 202   31  should not have its CCR  210   0 – 210   31  enabled, i.e., no notification of the message will occur. Then the CPU  102  may schedule the DMA with it configured to increment the ccr_n field within the respective one of the CCRs  210   0 – 210   31  upon completion of the DMA operation. In this example a completion message would reside in the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  before the DMA is completed and it would not be “delivered” to the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6  until the DMA operation was complete. This mechanism can also be used effectively if notification of the DMA completion is required but no message is needed. In this case a respective one of the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  could be used but a respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  not used. 
   Any one of the 64 CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  may also be designated, e.g., to provide flow control for a DMA queue (“DMAQ”). In such an application the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may be used primarily to notify the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6  when room becomes available in the DMAQ for additional DMA operations. When this function is enabled, the respective one of the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  may be initialized by the firmware to reflect the depth of the DMAQ, e.g., 8 entries. The firmware may perform a read-decrement to the designated CCR  210   0 – 210   63 , e.g., to check for available credits, e.g., prior to writing a descriptor to the DMAQ. The designated CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may be incremented by hardware any time a DMA operation completes. 
   Any CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may also be used to track credits to a respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . The respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  may either be local to the respective CPU  102  on the respective CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  or on a remote CPU module  100   0 – 100   6 . In such an application the firmware should initialize the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  to the number of credits available. Ordinarily the firmware on the respective local CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  will decrement the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  by the appropriate number of credits when sending a message. Similarly, ordinarily the firmware on the respective CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  containing the receiving CPU  102   0 – 102   6  may increment the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  on the respective CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  containing the sending CPU  102   0 – 102   6  by the appropriate number of credits once the message has been removed from the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  on the respective CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  containing the receiving CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . 
   In some instances the sending and receiving CPU  102  may be the same, in which event only CCRs  210  on the same CPU module  100  will be involved. CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  may be considered to be 10-bit signed values. When the value in a CCR  210  is read by a CPU  102  the data will be sign-extended so the CPU will interpret the contents as a negative number if the most significant bit of the CCR credit count field credit_cnt in the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63 , is set to a 1, i.e., the credit_cnt field has been decremented until the sign bit, MSB in the credit_cnt field (bit  9 ) is set. 
   CCR Commands. Each CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may be aliased to four different addresses in either the Processor Local Bus (“PLB”)  20   0 – 20   1  address space and or the local CPU-IF  110  register space. A function that may result from each of the possible settings of the bits, e.g., bits  5 : 4  in a command field within each CCR  210   0 – 210   63  address may be to select four different functions. The cmd field may be derived from 2 bits of the address used to access the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63 . The composition of a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  address may differ, e.g., for a PLB  20  access and a local CPU bus/memory  110  access. The PLB CCR address may include certain bits that are always set or not set to indicate to the firmware that this is a particular kind of address, e.g., a PLB CCR address, e.g., bits  6 ,  18  and  28 : 27 . The PLB CCR address may also include a CCR number field, ccr_num, e.g., in bits  12 : 0 , that identifies a target CCR  210   0 – 210   63  on a target CPU  102   0 – 102   6  on a target bus. The PLB CCR address may also include the identify of a target CPU unit in a unit number field, unit_num, e.g., in bits  23 : 20  and a target bus identification field, bus, e.g., in bits  30 : 29 . 
   In addition to the normal processor bus/memory interface  110  and PLB  20  direct access to the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63 , the hardware and firmware may be configured to allow indirect access, which may be provided, e.g., via a processor bus/memory interface  110  register, e.g., containing the identity of the most recent winner of notification arbitration as the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  being accessed. The address of, e.g., the processor bus/memory interface  110  CCR/NCR register used for such indirect access of the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may contain a notification field bit, i.e., bit  6  in the CCR local address access register is asserted the indirect access will go to the notification configuration register instead of the CCR. The target of an indirect CCR access can also be specified by writing to an arbitration results register. The CCR Local Access address may have certain bits set or not set to indicate to the firmware that it is an address accessible only locally on the respective CPU  100  module from the bus interface  110  side. The local address may have a bit  6  that is set or not to indicate if an indirect access is being made that it should be through the notification configuration register and not the respective CCR.  210 . 
   The four separate functionalities may be used for a read to read contents and for a write to add the written value, or for a read to read the contents and for a write to subtract the written value or for a read to read and decrement and for a write to write the value and finally for a read to read, decrement and lock and for a write to unlock, depending upon the condition of, e.g., bits  5 : 4 . The address for the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  can be contained in a seven bit CCR number field ccr_num, e.g., in bits  12 : 6  indicating the given CCR number within the given target unit that contains the target CCR  210   0 – 210   63  on the given bus. A certain physical CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may always be selected to be CCR  210   0 . For CPUs  102   0 – 102   6 , the unit number may be the same as the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  number. The access address register can also indicate the bus on which the CCR is, e.g., in a bus field, bus, e.g., in bits  30 : 29 , and can indicate the target CPU unit number, e.g., in a CPU unit number field, unit_num, e.g., in bits  24 : 20 , i.e., up to sixteen units. 
   Each CCR  210   0 – 210   63  register may be capable of handling a simultaneous access from both sides, i.e., external and local. 
   A Read/Decrement command will return the contents of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63 , and also decrement the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  by 1 unless the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  already contains a −1. The CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  and the firmware may also decrement the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  even if its contents are negative but not −1. A Read/Decrement/Lock command will return the contents of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  unless the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is already locked, in which case it will return a −1. The CCR  210   0 – 210   63  will then be decremented by 1 unless a −1 was returned as the read data, which can be because of the lock or because the contents were already −1. The CCR  210   0 – 210   63  will be locked if the content of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  was actually decremented (i.e. anything but −1 was returned). The CCR  210   0 – 210   63  will remained locked until an unlock command is issued. The Read/Decrement/Lock and unlock commands may be the only commands for which the operation performed responsive to the command is affected by whether the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is locked or not. Other functions may ignore a locked state of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  and/or not change the state of the lock bit. The lock bit may only be initialized by doing an unlock operation, and therefore, this should be part of the initialization process. 
   Indirect CCR Access. In addition to the normal PIF and PLB direct access to the CCRs, indirect access can be provided via a PIF register using the most recent winner of notification arbitration as the CCR being accessed. The address used for indirect access of the CCR may contain a command field cmd, e.g., in bits  5 : 4 , and if bit  6  is asserted the indirect access will go to the notification configuration register instead of the CCR. The target of an indirect CCR access can also be specified by writing to the Arbitration Results Register. 
   Multiple Producer Support. Single message queues  202   0 – 202   31  with multiple producers potentially writing to the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  can be supported by using the lock functionality of the respective CCRs  210   0 – 210   63 . For example, when a read/decrement/lock operation is targeted to the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  according to the disclosed embodiment it will normally return the contents of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63 , e.g., in cases where, e.g., two message producers need to share a message queue and share credits, or possibly other resource sharing, e.g., between CPUs. If the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is already locked when the read occurs a −1 will be returned (no credit) regardless of the contents of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  register. The lock function should only be required, e.g., if the transaction that writes the message to the queue  202   0 – 202   31  is not guaranteed to deliver the data atomically. The lock function can be used to, e.g., prevent messages from multiple producers from becoming intermixed by restricting the system to one message at a time. The producer must obtain the lock and credit and then complete all of the write transaction to the respective bus prior to relinquishing the lock. For this mechanism to be effective and simple to configure, usually it requires that all messages be the same length and a single credit represents an entire message. If messages are delivered atomically the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  can still required to obtain credits but the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may not need to be locked. 
   Another possible configuration, as an alternative to requiring atomic messages from the performance perspective, could be to distribute the available credits among the multiple producers. For example, if a queue  202   0 – 202   31  is sized for 4 messages with two producers (A and B), device A could be given 2 credits and device B would get two credits. This eliminates the need for a CPU  102   0 – 102   6  to have to do an external read to obtain a credit. However, in such a configuration the queue  202   0 – 202   31  may be less efficiently used because no one producer is capable of filling the entire queue  202   0 – 202   31 . Also, the message consumer has to look at the message content to figure out where to recycle the credit, as explained in more detail below. 
   Message Notification Registers. A number of registers are utilized for notification of the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  including the notification control registers, each associated with a respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63 . The respective notification control register can be used for control, e.g., of if, when, and how a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  attempts to notify a CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . The fields in the respective NCRs may include a read/write notify enable field, notify_en, e.g., in bit  0 , which, when asserted, will cause CPU notification to be attempted when the credit count field, credit_count, in the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is a non-negative number. Notification in the embodiment disclosed can be configured to always include setting a bit in a notification poll register. Interrupts and arbitration are also options. 
   The configuration and contents of the respective NCRs can also include a read/write arbitration enable field, arb_en, e.g., at bit  2 , which, when set, will cause the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  to notify the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  by participating in notification arbitration. This field is ignored if the notify enable field, notify_en is=0. The respective NCRs may also include a read/write interrupt enable field, int_en, e.g., at bit  1 , which, when asserted, can cause the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  to notify the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  by generating an interrupt. The respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may also include a read/write arbitration group field, arb_gp, e.g., at bits  4 : 3 , which specifies the arbitration group to which the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  belongs. 
   This arbitration group field is ignored if the notify enable field, notify_en, is=0 or the arbitration enable field, arb_en, is=0. 
   A CCR  210   0 – 210   63  will attempt notification any time it is enabled and the value in the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is non-negative. As an example: if a producer wants to send a message that requires 5 credits the producer would, e.g., generate a write subtract to the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  in order to subtract 5 from the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  by doing such a write to the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   31  and then perform a local read to the respective local CCR  210   0 – 210   63  to see if the respective local CCR  210   0 – 210   63  was still non-negative. 
   If the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  contains a negative number, it would then enable notification and go on to perform some other function. When the 5 th  credit is placed in the CCR  210   0 – 210   63 , the value would be equal to 0 and the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  would again attempt notification. When the producer is notified it must remember that it has already subtracted the 5 credits and it is now safe to send the message. 
   NCR commands. Each NCR may also be aliased to four different addresses in either the PLB  20  address space and or the local processor bus/memory interface  110  register space. The four separate functionalities may be, e.g., for a read a read contents and for a write a write contents, or for a read a read contents and for a write a write to the notify enable field notify_en in the notification control register, or two other functionalities currently reserved, as is determined by the contents of the command field cmd in the NCR access address, e.g., a PLB NCR access address. The command field, cmd, may be e.g., bits  5 : 4  of the NCR access address. 
   Similarly, a local processor bus/memory interface  110  NCR address, distinguished from a PLB NCR access address as noted above with respect to PLB CCR and local CCR access addresses, including bit  6  set to 1, may contain similar fields. 
   Queue Vector Pointer Register (“QVPR”). The contents of a queue vector pointer register (“QVPR”)  290 , shown in  FIG. 3  may be configured to be determined by both firmware and hardware. The firmware may initialize a queue vector base field, qvec_base, and the hardware may generate a queue vector offset field, qvec_offset. The queue vector offset field, qvec_offset, may be based on the most recent winner of notification arbitration. If there is currently no CCR  210   0 – 210   63  requesting notification arbitration, the queue vector offset field, qvec_offset, may be derived from the contents of the NOP vector offset register. The firmware may initialize an array of pointers somewhere in memory that point to data structures contained in an array  294  used to process each of the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63 . The firmware may also initialize the queue vector base field, qvec_base, to point to that array  294 . Once initialized, the QVPR  290  should always contain the address of the pointer for the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that is the most recent winner of notification arbitration. 
   When the firmware is looking for the next thing to do it will read the QVPR  290  to get the address of the next pointer to process, i.e., the one that was the most recent winner of the arbitration process. The queue vector offset field, qvec_offset, is a read only field in the respective QVCR  290  that is, e.g., in bits  8 : 2 , which specifies the offset into the array of pointers  294  located at the memory location specified in the queue vector base field qvec_base. The value of the queue vector offset qvec_offset is always the same as the curr_ccr field of an arbitration results register. The curr_ccr field also specifies the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that is the most recent winner of notification arbitration process. The queue vector base field, qvec_base, is a read/write field that contains the base memory address of the array of pointers  294  used to process the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that won notification arbitration. 
   Reading the queue vector pointer register has the side effect of locking in the current CCR field, curr_ccr, in the arbitration results register. The value in the current CCR field, curr_ccr, in the arbitration results register will not change until the QVPR  290  is read again. The current CCR field, curr_ccr, can be used to determine the value of the next header pointer register  296  and indirect accesses to the CCRs and NCRs. The current value field, curr_ccr, in the arbitration results register can also be used when writing to the update head pointer register. The current CCR field, curr_ccr, in the arbitration results register can also be modified by writing to the arbitration results register. 
   Head Pointer Register (HPR). Each message queue  202   0 – 202   31  maintains a head pointer. The head pointer is never used directly by the hardware, except for message queue  202   0 – 202   31  overflow detection. The head pointer is provided to assist the firmware in loading the next message from a particular message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . There is a head pointer register (“HPR”) included for each of the message queues  202   0 – 202   31 . The HPRs will normally be accessed indirectly via the next head pointer register  296  and the update head pointer register. The HPRs can be read and written directly but that may only be allowed for initialization and diagnostic purposes. Direct access to the HPRs while there is other head pointer activity can cause corruption of the head pointers. Each respective head pointer register may contain a head pointer field, head_ptr, e.g., at bits  14 : 2 , which is a read/write field that specifies the address in local data RAM, i.e., the DPDR  104 , where the first word of the next message in a respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  is stored. Each respective head pointer register must be initialized by the firmware to point to the base location of the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  prior to receiving the first message. 
   This initialization value may be obtained from the queue vector base field, qvec_base, and queue vector offset field, qvec_offset, values in the respective queue vector pointer register  290 . Each head pointer register also has a wrap field, W, e.g., at bit  15 , which is maintained by hardware and used to distinguish a message queue  202   0 – 202   31  that is full from a message queue  202   0 – 202   31  that is empty when the head pointer equals the tail pointer. The bit must be initialized to 0 by firmware before using the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   3  and not be modified while the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  is in operation. 
   Next Head Pointer Register (NHPR). The respective NHPRs can be utilized to always reflect the value of the HPR associated with the most recent winner of notification arbitration. If the most recent winner was a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  greater than CCR  210   31 , the contents of the NHPR will be undefined, when no further message queues exists in addition to message queues  202   0 – 202   31 . The most recent winner of notification arbitration is established when the QVPR  290  is read. The head pointer base field, head_ptr_base in the next head pointer registers NHPRs is initialized by firmware to point to the base address of the respective one of the message queues  202   0 – 202   31 . This would normally be the internal DPDR  104  address but could be mapped to the PIF  110  or PLB  20  DPDR  104  address. Writes to the NHPRs are done only to initialize the head pointer base field, head_ptr_base. 
   Update Head Pointer Register (UHPR). An update head pointer register (“UHPR”) can be provided to assist the firmware in updating the head pointer registers. Writes to each respective UHPR will result in the value written being added to the contents of the respective head pointer register pointed to by the most recent winner of notification arbitration process. The hardware can be configured to deal with wrap-around on the head pointer based on the specified queue size and message size. The msg_size field of the respective QCR, will specify the maximum size message that the hardware can guarantee not to wrap. If the firmware reads a message of length less than or equal to value of the message size field, msg_size, the firmware does not have to check for the wrap case. If the current winner of notification arbitration is a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  number greater than CCR 31 , writes to this register will have no effect. 
   The head pointer increment field, head_ptr_inc, a write only field, e.g., at bits  7 : 0  of the update head pointer register may be used to contain a value that can be added to the value stored in the head pointer register associated with the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that most recently won notification arbitration. The hardware will deal with roll-over of the head pointer. If the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that most recently won notification arbitration is not associated with a message queue  202   0 – 202   31  then writing this register has no effect. 
   QVPR Stall Enable Register. Each QVPR  290  may contain a stall enable bit, which, when asserted will cause the QVPR  290  to stall the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  on reads when no CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is attempting notification arbitration. The stall will be caused essentially by the respective QVCR  290  not returning a data ready to the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  when there is no CCR  210   0 – 210   63  attempting notification arbitration. This stall may be broken if an interrupt is issued to the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . This feature is useful in conserving power and preventing unnecessary bus communication for a processor that is not fully utilized looking for something else to do. The QVPR  290  stall enable registers may include a stall enable field, stall_en, which is a read/write field, e.g., contained at bit  0 , which when set will cause reads to the respective QVPR to stall the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  if there are no CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  requesting notification arbitration. The QVPR stall enable registers may also contain an arbitration mode read/write field, e.g., at bit  1  that when set will cause a re-arbitration to take place for every CCR request change that occurs. This mode will increase the average latency of reading the QVPR but should produce more effective arbitration results. 
   NOP Vector Offset Pointer Register. The NOP vector offset pointer register can be initialized by the firmware, e.g., following reset. The NOP vector offset pointer register may include a read/write NOP offset field, nop_offset, e.g., in bits  6 : 0  that can be copied from bits  8 : 2  of the respective QVPR if there is no CCR  210   0 – 210   63  requesting notification arbitration. 
   Normally this field will be set to the maximum number of CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  participating in notification arbitration +1. The purpose of the NOP vector is to indicate to the firmware that there are no CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  requesting arbitration notification. 
   Notification Poll Register. A notification poll register can be a read-only register that contains a bit for every CCR  210   0 – 210   63 . Each such bit, e.g., notify_poll[0] maps to a respective one of the CCRs, i.e., CCR 0 , notify poll[1] maps to CCR 1 , etc. Each such bit can be asserted if the corresponding CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is attempting notification. Notification will be attempted anytime (notify_en=1) and (CCR&gt;=0). The Notification poll register must be accessed as two separate 32-bit registers, unless a TIE instruction is utilized. Writes to the notification poll registers have no effect. The main intent of the notification poll register is to provide the firmware with all the information it needs to determine which CCR  210   0 – 210   63  to service next in case it doesn&#39;t want to use the hardware arbitration or interrupt method. 
   Notification Interrupt Register (NIR). A notification interrupt register can be used to identify any CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that is attempting notification via interrupts. It is also a 64-bit register with each bit used to indicate if the associated CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is issuing an interrupt. All CCR  210   0 – 210   63  interrupts can map to the same interrupt signal to the Xtensa core  102 . An interrupt can be cleared by either disabling the interrupt or by taking steps necessary to make the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  value negative. 
   Notification Arbitration. Notification arbitration is the primary means of a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  notifying a respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  of a message/task being ready for processing. Each CCR  210   0 – 210   63  participating in notification arbitration will be assigned to one of four arbitration groups, e.g., in the notification (arbitration) control register (“NCR”). 
   Arbitration Group Control Register. Each arbitration group can be assigned a class and a priority, e.g., in the arbitration group control register. Each of the groups, e.g.,  3 - 0  may be defined in the arbitration group control register, e.g., utilizing four groups of 8 bits, respectively  7 : 0 ,  15 : 8 ,  23 : 16  and  31 : 24 , with the 6 LSBs in each such group containing the priority count and the upper two MSBs identifying the class of the group. 
   These two fields determine the order in which hardware service requests will occur when there are multiple notification requests active. The notification configuration register can be used to specify which arbitration group the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is using. The four groups in the arbitration group control register may each include a priority field, priority, e.g., in bits  5 : 0 ,  13 : 8 ,  21 : 16  and  29 : 24  that is a read/write field that can be used to specify the priority count of group N. This field can be implemented as a count of the number of times a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  in another group in the same class will be the winner of arbitration relative to this group. The higher the priority count, the lower the priority. Each of the other two MSBs in the four groups in the arbitration group control register may be used to identify a respective one of four classes to be associated the respective group  3 - 0 . Arbitration groups will not win notification arbitration if there is an active request from a group with a higher class. The higher the class number, the higher the priority. 
   CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  of similar functionality can be in the same group. For example, all messages queues  202   0 – 202   31  that are used for “new work” can be put it the same arbitration group. If the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  gets to a point where it is unable to service new work, due, e.g., to its memory being full, it would disable arbitration for that group of message queues  202   0 – 202   31 . This would have no effect on the other arbitration groups. Each arbitration group is assigned a priority count and class relative to the other arbitration groups. For example, if arbitration groups  0  and  1  are both arbitrating at class  3  and group  0  has a priority count of 1 and group  1  has a priority count of 10, group  1  will win arbitration approximately every 10 th  time over arbitration group  0 , again, assuming there are always requests active in both groups. 
   Arbitration Group Enable Register 
   An arbitration group enable register may be used to control whether the associated arbitration group  0 -N, e.g.,  0 - 3  is enabled to participate in notification arbitration. The arbitration group enable registers may all be implemented as read/write registers having the LSB form an enabled field, E, which when asserted for the group  0 -N associated with the particular arbitration group enable register is participating in notification arbitration. The arbitration group enable registers can be accessed directly via the PIF  110 . 
   Arbitration Results Register. The current CCR field, curr_ccr, of the arbitration results register can be updated by hardware when the respective QVPR is read to contain the winner of notification arbitration. If there are no CCRs requesting arbitration when the QVPR is read, the current CCR field, curr_ccr, reflects the contents of the respective NOP vector pointer register. The current CCR field, curr_ccr, can be modified directly by firmware in order to control any of the CPU modules  100   0 – 100   6  indirect registers that are based on the most recent winner of notification arbitration. The current CCR field, curr_ccr, can be a read/write field that can be updated by hardware with the most recent winner of notification arbitration when the QVPR is read. It can be written by firmware to control access to indirect registers. The re-arbitrate bit provides a means for the firmware to initiate a new arbitration. Writing the re-arbitration bit, which is write only, does not update the arbitration priorities. The re-arbitration bit should not be necessary for normal operation. This bit can be written to force the arbitration circuit to re-arbitrate. Normally re-arbitration will only take place following a read of the QVPR. Forcing a re-arbitration does not change the round-robin arbitration priorities. 
   Local DMA Controller. Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  can also contain a local DMA (LDMA) controller  310 . The primary purpose of the local DMA controller  310  is to offload from the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  the tasks of data movement, e.g., from directly moving data into or out of its local data RAMs, e.g., the DPDR  104 . To perform this function effectively, the LDMA controller  310  requires very low overhead for the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  to queue a DMA operation. As a part of this, the LDMA controller  310  advantageously can be able to queue a message following the completion of a DMA operation; transfer data between, e.g., the local DPDR  104  and any other PLB  20  addresses; transfer data between two local locations, e.g., different locations in the DPDR  104 , transfer data from any PLB  20  address directly into a local message queue; and transfers data between two PLB  20  locations. Also, advantageously the LDMA controller  310  should be able to do a single word store to any PLB  20  address. Also, advantageously a Fibre Channel CRC should be able to be calculated on any data that is moved with the LDMA  310  engine. Also the LDMA engine should be capable of searching an array of data to find, e.g., a specific match, e.g., a 32-bit match. 
   The firmware should essentially never have to wait for data that has been fetched, e.g., from DDR. It would instead queue a DMA request with a message to a local message queue to be issued upon completion of the transaction by the LDMA controller  310 . This is effective when the overhead for queuing the DMA and scheduling a new task is lower than the delay incurred by waiting for the data to be returned from memory, e.g., a double data rate (“DDR”) synchronous DRAM (“SDRAM”) or the like. 
   Referring now to  FIGS. 3 and 5 , LDMA controller  310  can have a queue (“DMAQ”)  320  that, e.g., can hold up to 8 descriptors, e.g., in an eight position FIFO having room for a descriptor in each position  330  of the FIFO of the DMAQ  320 . Once in the DMAQ  320 , the LDMA  310  operations can be completed in order, e.g., by processing each descriptor in each position  330  of the FIFO of the DMAQ  320  in order. The LDMA controller  310  may be configured to support different options for flow-control on the DMAQ  320 . The LDMA controller  310  can have the ability to increment any given CCR  210   0 – 210   63  once a descriptor is removed from the DMAQ  320 . The firmware can use this particular CCR  210   0 – 210   63  to flow control the DMAQ  320  in a similar fashion to any other message queue, e.g.,  202   0 – 202   31 . There can also be a stall mode supported that could cause any write to a full DMAQ  320  to simply stall the local processor CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . This can be made invisible to the firmware. The stall option may be useful when there is little else that could be accomplished if the DMAQ  320  is full. 
   The LDMA controller  310  also can be made to support a mode called immediate DMA (iDMA). If the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  needs to move some data but also needs to wait for it to finish before moving on to the next task, it can initiate an iDMA that bypasses any descriptors that may be in the DMAQ  320 . An iDMA status register can be included in the CPU bus/memory interface  110  register space that can be read by the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . The status may be set up to not be returned until the DMA transaction is complete. From the perspective of the firmware, the firmware simply initiates the DMA transaction and then reads the status. At the point the status is returned, the firmware knows the DMA transaction has been completed. There are no completion messages associated with an iDMA transaction. LDMA Descriptor. The LDMA controller  310  DMAQ  320  may be formed by an 8-entry FIFO that feeds the LDMA controller  310 . Each entry of the DMAQ  320  may be, e.g., a 119-bit value that represents a descriptor and a completion message. The DMAQ  320  may be written via eight 32-bit staging registers,  360 ,  362 ,  364 ,  366 ,  368 ,  370 ,  372  and  352 , which may be contained in the PIF register space in the Message Hardware/Local DMA unit  110 . Each field of the descriptor may, e.g., appear as the least significant bits of its own 32-bit register. The descriptor will be written to the DMAQ  320  when the PLB  20  address register  360  is written. The DMAQ  320  staging registers  352 ,  360 ,  362 ,  364 ,  366 ,  368 ,  370  and  372  may retain their value so they do not need to be rewritten between descriptors if the values in these registers have not changed. For example, if all local DMA  310  transactions use the same type of notification the LDMA notify register  366  would never need to be written after it is initialized. The DMA controller  310  descriptor staging registers  352 ,  360 ,  362 ,  364 ,  366 ,  368 ,  370  and  372  may be configured to be write-only registers. The contents of the DMAQ  320  itself can be read for diagnostic purposes. 
   The DMAQ  320  may be targeted to any of the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  for flow-control purposes. The firmware may be configured to avoid overflowing the DMAQ  320  by checking the designated CCR  210   0 – 210   63  to see if there is available space. The firmware can initialize the designated CCR  210   0 – 210   63  to the depth of the DMAQ  320 , i.e., 8. Alternatively, flow-control can be accomplished via the DMAQ  320  stall function. When enabled, writes to the DMA PLB  20  address register  360  will stall the CPU  102   0  if the DMAQ  320  is full. The write will only complete when room becomes available in the DMAQ  320  and also possibly during certain error conditions. Several of the LDMA  310  descriptor fields show up in more than one register  352 ,  360 ,  362 ,  364 ,  366 ,  368 ,  370  and  372 . In this case, whichever register  352 ,  360 ,  362 ,  364 ,  366 ,  368 ,  370  and  372  is written last, but prior to writing the LDMA PLB address register, is the one that can be selected to be used to complete the descriptor. 
   LDMA Type Register. One part of the LDMA descriptor can be included in an LDMA type register  368 . The LDMA type register can be a write only register with the three LSBs of the register defining the type of operation the DMA controller  310  will perform. In some cases the exact definition of the other DMA  310  fields is also a function of the value of the type field. The meaning of the possible values for the type field of the LDMA type register  368  can be, e.g., copy data from the PLB address to a local data RAM address; copy data from a local data RAM address to the PLB address; copy from one location in local data RAM to another location in local data RAM; copy data from the PLB address to a local message queue (exactly one message must be contained in the DMA operation), calculate the cyclic redundancy check (“CRC”) from data at the PLB address (data is not stored and the local offset register must be set to 0); calculate the CRC from data at the local data RAM address (data is not stored and the PLB Address must be set to 0); store the contents of a DMA message register to the PLB  20  address specified in an LDMA PLB Address register  360  (this DMA type may be highly constrained since the message type can be set, e.g., at 0, the size can be set, e.g., at 4, the visible bit can be specified, e.g., at be 1, and the crc_en bit can also be specified, e.g., at 0); or copy data from one PLB  20  address to another PLB  20  address, depending upon which bits of the type register  368  field are set. The type register  368  only needs to be written when the value actually changes. Otherwise the current contents of the type register will be used when creating the DMA  310  descriptor. 
   LDMA Notify Register. An LDMA  310  descriptor may also contain notify fields, which can specify the target device (if any) to notify upon completion of the DMA  310  transaction. It may also be used to indicate whether to send a completion message and whether to force the message to be visible on the PLB  20 . The notify fields may be contained in an LDMA notify register  366 , which may include a write only message queue number field, mq_num, e.g., at bits  5 : 0 , that can be utilized to specify the target message queue  202   0 – 202   31  or other CCR  210   32 – 210   63  for the completion message. The notify register may also include a unit number field, unit_num, e.g., at bits  9 : 6 , which may be utilized to specify the target CPU  102   0 – 102   6  unit, and which is not used when V=0. The notify register  366  may also include a bus field, bus, e.g., at bits  11 : 1 , that can be utilized to specify the target bus, and is not used if V=0. The notify register  366  may also include a visibility field, V, e.g., at bit  12 , which selects if the transaction on the LDMA  310  is to be visible, i.e., when asserted the message will be sent via the PLB  20  even if the target is within the local CPU module  100   0 – 100   6 . When cleared it is assumed that the target message queue  202   0 – 202   31  or other CCR  210   32 – 210   63  is local and no transaction will be issued on the PLB  20 . The notify register  366  may also include a message type field, mtype, e.g., at bits  15 : 12 , which can be utilized to specify the type of completion message to be utilized, from among a set of completion messages described in more detail below. The notify register  366  only needs to be written when the value actually changes. Otherwise the current contents will be used when creating the next DMA  310  descriptor. The notify register  366  may be ignored when doing an iDMA. Also, the hardware may, e.g., force the mtype to 0 when an iDMA operation command is issued. 
   LDMA Size Register. Also associated with an LDMA  310  transaction may be an LDMA size register  364 , which may, e.g., contain in its 12 LSBs a size field, size, that is an indication of the length of the DMA transfer of, e.g., the data/message to be transferred, e.g., the number of bytes to be transferred. The maximum value for transactions involving the PLB  20  is currently limited to be 4080−plb_addr[ 3 : 0 ]). The maximum legal value of the size field, therefore, is (4080−plb_addr[ 3 : 0 ]) when either the source or the destination of the DMA  310  operation is the PLB bus  20 . The size field in the LDMA size register  364  can also be programmed from an LDMA control register, described below. 
   LDMA Control Register. An LDMA control register (not shown) may also be provided as a short-cut to programming the size  364 , type  368 , and notify  366  registers with a single write. These size, type and notify fields will frequently be a constant for many firmware functions. 
   These size, type and notify fields reference the exact same physical registers as the type  368 , notify  366 , and size  364  registers. The LDMA control register, therefore is a register containing all of the same fields just described for the type register  364 , message register  352 , PLB address register  360 , notify register  366 , and size register  368 , with the same fields, mq_num, e.g., at bits  5 : 0 , unit_num, e.g., at bits  9 : 6 , bus, e.g., at bits  11 : 10 , V, at bit  13 , mtype at bits  15 : 13 , size, e.g., at bits  27 : 16 , and type, e.g., at bits  30 : 28 , with the last bit  31  used as a CRC enable field. 
   LDMA Local Offset Register. An LDMA local offset register  362  can be provided, primarily to be used to store an index into the DPDR  104 . For PLB  20 -to-PLB  20  DMA transactions, the DPDR  104  is not used and this local offset register  362  may be ignored. The local offset register  362  may not be big enough to store a whole PLB  20  address. In this case, the local offset register may be used to hold only, e.g., response message data. The response message data can be limited to 16-bits in this case. Some parts of the response message may be used to hold control information, e.g., if CRC or compare operations are enabled. The LDMA local offset register  362  is a write only register that contains a compare enable field, comp_en, e.g., at bits  7 : 4 , which can be defined when doing compare operations on PLB  20 -to-PLB  20  DMA (crc_en=1;crc_type=1;dma_type=7). Each bit of the comp_en field can be used to enable the comparison operation for the corresponding byte of a CRC seed register, discussed below. The local offset register  362  may also have a CRC delay field, crc_delay, e.g., at bits  3 : 0 , which can be utilized to define a delay when doing a CRC operation with delay on a PLB  20 -to-PLB  20  DMA operation (crc_en=1;crc_delay=1;dma_type=7). This CRC delay field can specify, e.g., the number of 64-bit words of DMA data to skip before starting the CRC calculation. The local offset register  362  alternatively may be used to specify a local offset field, local_offset, also in bits  15 : 0 , which can be utilized to perform local DMA transactions. The local_offset field normally contains the byte offset into the DPDR  104  for most transactions. For local-to-local transfers this offset represents the source of the data. For transactions to local message queues  202 – 202   31  the local_offset field can be treated to contain the 5-bit value that specifies the target message queue  202 – 202   31 . For PLB  20 -to-PLB  20  DMA, this field may be used for the completion message. These fields may be updated in the local offset register  362  at the start of each DMA transaction depending upon whether it is a local or a PLB  20  transaction. 
   LDMA PLB Address Register. There may also be provided an LDMA PLB address register  360 . Writing to the LDMA PLB address register may be configured to be what initiates an LDMA operation, and a DMAQ  320  load. The PLB address register  360  may contain in its bits, e.g., bits  31 : 0  a PLB  20  address field, plb_addr. The plb_addr field normally contains the 32-bit address of the initial PLB  20  address for the DMA transfer. For local-to-local transfers the plb_addr field can contain the 15-bit offset into the local data RAM, e.g., the DPLR  104  for the destination location. For PLB  20 -to-PLB  20  transfers the plb_addr field can contain only the destination PLB  20  address. Access to the plb_addr field may be write only. 
   The LDMA PLB address register  360  may be aliased into two locations in the address map. Writing the register  360  through the first address may be configured to cause the descriptor to be copied from the LDMA registers, i.e., the LDMA PLB priority register  370 , the LDMA CRC Control register  372 , the LDMA type register  368 , LDMA message register  352 , LDMA PLB address register  360 , LDMA notify register  366 , and the LDMA size register  364 , or simply from the LDMA control register (not shown), into the DMAQ position  330  made up of a plurality of registers as discussed below. Writing it through the other address can be configured to cause the descriptor to be used for iDMA and the DMAQ  320  registers  330  may then be bypassed. Initiating an iDMA transaction ordinarily must be followed by a read of the immediate DMA status register discussed below. 
   LDMA Message Register. An LDMA message register  352  may be provided to contain a 32-bit completion message that is optionally sent upon completion of the DMA operation in a DMA response field, dma_resp_data, e.g., in bits  31 : 0 . This message contained in the dma_resp-data field can be sent to any message queue  202   0 – 202   31  in the chip, i.e., associated with any CPU unit CPU 0 –CPU 6 . For PLB  20 -to-PLB  20  DMA operations this LDMA message register may be used for the source PLB  20  address and the LDMA local offset register  362  may be used for the completion message. This configuration can save storage space in the LDMA controller  310  that would have been required to support PLB  20 -to-PLB  20  DMA transactions. This LDMA message register  352  may also optionally be used for some control information when doing CRC or compare operations, by accessing the field containing comp_en, e.g., in bits  7 : 4  and crc_delay, e.g., in bits  0 : 3  and also, where there is a DMA response message is to be used, the dma_resp field, contained, e.g., in bits  31 : 8 . The dma_resp field contains the actual completion message data when doing a DMA operation that includes a non-zero response. The exception is when doing PLB  20 -to-PLB  20  DMA this dma_resp field is used for the source PLB  20  address. Dual purposing this message register  352  also reduces the number of registers needed. The comp_en field can be used to define when doing compare operations (crc_en=1;crc_type=1). Each bit of the comp_en field can be used to enable the comparison operation for the corresponding byte of the CRC seed register. The crc_delay field can be used to define, when doing a CRC operation with delay (crc_en=1;crc_delay=1), the number of 64-bit words of DMA data to skip before starting the CRC calculation. Access to these fields is all write only. Messages to the respective local CPU  102   0 – 102   6  can also be forced to write their messages to the PLB  20  (visible mode), e.g., for diagnostic purposes. 
   LDMA PLB Priority Register. An LDMA PLB priority register  370  may be utilized to program the priority used when mastering a PLB  20  transaction. The contents of this PLB priority register may be loaded into the LDMA controller  310  on the DMAQ, e.g., when the PLB address register is written, along with the rest of the DMA descriptor. The PLB priority register may have a priority field, pri, e.g., in its two LSBs that may be utilized to indicate the priority level to be used when the DMA transaction is initiated on the PLB  20 . Access to this field is write only. 
   LDMA CRC Control Register. The Local DMA controller  310  engine can be configured to have the ability to calculate a CRC while moving data. A seed can be used to calculate the CRC and can come from one of 4 different seed registers (not shown). A CRC may, e.g., be chained between two or more different DMA operations, e.g., by using a single seed register. This can allow up to 4 different CRC chains to be active simultaneously. The CRC result can be read directly from the respective CRC seed register or it can be returned as part of the completion message. The CRC will work correctly only if the destination address is 4-byte aligned and the length of the data is a multiple of 4-bytes. The contents of a CRC control register  372  may be copied into the DMAQ  320  along with the rest of the descriptor, e.g., when the PLB address register is written. The CRC control register  372  may contain a CRC enable field, crc_en, e.g., in bit  0 , which can be utilized to generate a CRC during the DMA process. The CRC control register may also include a CRC type field, crc_type, e.g., at bit  4 , which may be used to specify whether the hardware is to do a Fibre Channel CRC operation or to do a compare function between the respective CRC seed register and the DMA data. For the compare operation the data returned may be used as an index that points to the location of the first match as well as a match and multiple-match indication. Chaining the compare functions may not be effective given that the contents of the respective seed register is changed to the index by the DMA operation. The compare results can be returned in the completion message in the exact same fashion as the normal CRC results. Bits  7 : 4  of the response message may be utilized as a byte compare enable field when using the compare function. For example if dma_resp_msg[ 7 : 4 ]==4′b1000, then only the most significant byte of the DMA data word would be compared to the contents of the target seed register. The CRC control register  372  may also include a CRC selection field, crc_sel, e.g., in bits  2 : 0 , which can be utilized to specify which of the four CRC seed registers will be used for the CRC calculation. The CRC control register  372  may also include a CRC chain field, crc_chain, e.g., at bit  3 , which may be utilized when asserted to cause the CRC calculation to use the contents of the respective seed register as the CRC seed. When cleared, the respective CRC seed register will be initialized to 0xffffffff before starting the calculation. The CRC type field also can be utilized to cause a Fibre Channel CRC to be calculated. When asserted, the DMA data will be compared to the contents of the specified seed register. Bits[ 7 : 4 ] of the response message field of the DMA descriptor are used as byte compare enables. The CRC results will contain the index of the first match that was encountered as well as match and multiple-match indications. The CRC control register  372  may also contain a CRC delay field, crc_delay, e.g., in bit  5 , which may be utilized when asserted to cause the first N double words (8 bytes) of the DMA data to be skipped before starting the CRC calculation. N is specified in the lower 4-bits of the response message field for the DMA descriptor. N has a maximum value of 15 that will allow up to 15, 64-bit words to be skipped before starting the CRC calculation. If the target address of the DMA operation starts on a 32-bit aligned address, the first skip will actually only skip 1 word of data, reducing the maximum amount of data that can be skipped to 29 32-bit words. Access to these fields may be write only. 
   In operation the stall mode may be accomplished by the CPU writing to the LDMA PLB address register  360  into the plb_addr field as a last step in creating a designator for loading into the DMAQ  320  into a position  330  in the FIFO of the DMAQ  320 . At this point if the DMAQ  320  is indicated to be full and the stall mode is enabled, the CPU  100   0  will stall until the ongoing LDMA transaction is completed processing after which a position  330  in the FIFO of the DMAQ  320  will open, e.g., by the next in order position  330  in the FIFO of the DMAQ  320  being loaded into the LDMA controller  310 . The content of the staging registers  360 ,  362 ,  364 ,  366 ,  368 ,  370  and  372  may then be loaded into the DMAQ  320  and the CPU  100   0  taken out of the stall condition. 
   In operation, the respective fields of the staging registers  360 ,  362 ,  364 ,  366 ,  368 ,  370  and  372  may be hard wired into the respective bit positions of the DMAQ  320  FIFO position DMAQ entry registers N 0    340 , N 1    341 , N 2    342  and N 3    343 . 
   CRC Seed Registers. The local DMA controller  310  engine may have four 32-bit seed registers used as the accumulators when calculating the CRC during a local DMA transfer. These seed registers may be utilized to hold the compare value when using the compare function. The seed registers can be directly accessed via the bus memory interface  110  register space. The seed register may have a CRC field, crc, e.g., in bits  31 : 0 , which may be accessed by, read or write and which may be utilized to contain, when doing a CRC operation (crc_en=1;crc_type=0), the CRC value. If the CRC operation is not chained, the respective seed register may be initialized to 32′hfffffff by the hardware. The seed registers may contain the final CRC value following the DMA operation. The seed register may also contain a computed value field, comp_value, also, e.g., in bits  31 : 0 , which may be used to contain, prior to doing a compare operation (crc_en=1;crc_type=1) a value initialized by the firmware to the compare value. The actual bytes compared can be controlled by the byte compare enable bits, which are bits [ 7 : 4 ] of the DMA response message. The seed register may also include a match field, match, e.g., at bit  12 , that may serve to indicate, following the compare operation being completed, if at least one successful match occurred. The seed register may also contain a multiple match field, multiple_match, e.g., at bit  13 , which may be utilized, e.g., to indicate, after the compare function has been performed, if 2 or more successful matches occurred. The seed register may also contain an index field, index, e.g., in bits  11 : 0 , which may be utilized, after a compare has been completed, and if the match bit is asserted, to indicate the word index into the DMA data where the first successful match occurred. Access to these fields are by read or write. 
   LDMA Enable Register. An LDMA enable register may be used to enable/disable additional local DMA operations. DMA operations that are in progress will complete normally. This LDMA enable register may also contain a reset bit that will empty the LDMA controller  310 . The LDMA enable register may include a DMA enable field, e.g., dma_enable, e.g., contained at bit  0 , which when asserted may be utilized to enable the DMA process, such that DMA transactions will be processed normally. When cleared, any DMAs in progress will be completed but no additional ones will be issued. The LDMA enable register may include a DMA active field, dma_active, e.g., in bit  1 , which when asserted, along with dma_enable=1 to allow DMA transactions to occur. The bit in this field is asserted when a DMA operation is in progress. If dma_enable=0 and dma_active=0 then there will not be any more DMA transactions until dma_enable is again asserted. Access to the dma_enable field is both read and write and access to the dma_active field is only write. The DMA enable register may also have a DMA queue reset field, dmaq_reset, that is accessible by write only, e.g., in bit  2 , that when asserted can be utilized to remove all descriptors in the DMAQ  320 . This will not affect any DMA transactions already in progress. The DMA enable register may also have a stall enable field, stall_enable, e.g., at bit  31 , which may be both read and write accessible and when asserted may be utilized to cause the bus memory interface  110  to stall the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  when an attempt is made to queue a DMA transaction when the LDMA  310  is full. Writes to the DMAQ  320  may be discarded if the FIFO of the DMAQ  320  is full and an error has been detected. If the stall_enable bit is not asserted, the descriptors may be discarded even if an error has not been detected. This may be necessary to avoid a deadlock situation where the processor is attempting to fetch an instruction but it is blocked by DMA descriptors that can not fit in the LDMA  310 . 
   Immediate DMA Status Register. An immediate DMA, iDMA, status register may be contained in the respective CPUs  102   0 – 102   6  bus memory interface  110  register space. The iDMA status register may include a complete field, complete, which may be read accessible only, e.g., in bit  0 , which when set, can indicate that the DMA operation has completed. The iDMA status register may include a data error field, data_err, that may be accessible only by a read, e.g., contained at bit  1 , which when asserted may indicate that the DMA operation did not complete successfully due to a data error on the PLB  20 . 
   The primary function of the iDMA status register is to stall the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  until an immediate DMA operation has been completed. When read, it will delay the return of the status to the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6  until there isn&#39;t an iDMA operation pending. The iDMA, status register returns the status of the last iDMA operation to complete. If the register is read when DMA is not enabled the read will return immediately and the complete field bit will not be asserted. The iDMA status register may include an overflow error field, ovfl_err, which may be accessible by read only and which may be contained, e.g., at bit  2 , and, when asserted, may indicate that a descriptor was dropped because the LDMAQ  320  was full. The iDMA status register may include a fatal error field, fatal_err, e.g., at bit  3 , which may be accessible by a read only and, when asserted, may indicate that the DMA operation was terminated due to the fatal error signal being asserted. 
   LDMA CCR Register. An LDMA CCR register may be utilized to specify if a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is to be used for flow control of the LDMA  310  and which one. The LDMA CCR register may have an enable field, E, which may be accessible by both a read and write, e.g., at bit  31 , and when asserted indicates that, e.g., a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  will be incremented when a DMA descriptor is removed from the LDMAQ  320 . The LDMA CCR register may also have a LDMA CCR designation field, ldma_ccr, which may be accessible by a read or a write, e.g., at bits  5 : 0 , which may be utilized to include the target CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that will be incremented by hardware every time a DMA operation is completed. An iDMA operation will not increment the target CCR  210   0 – 210   63 . 
   LDMA Diagnostic Registers. Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may be provided with the ability to read the contents of the DMAQ  320 , e.g., for diagnostic purposes. This should only be done when DMA is not enabled and not active. There may be 4 registers for each of the 8 possible descriptors that may be stored in the DMAQ  320 . These include the DMAQ entry registers N 0 –N 3 . The DMAQ entry register N 0  may include a message data field, msg_data, e.g., in bits  31 : 0 , that may be read only accessible and normally contains message data that is used in the completion message. For PLB  20 -to-PLB  20  transactions this is the source PLB  20  address. The DMAQ entry register N 1  may contain a PLB address field, plb_addr, e.g., in bits  31 : 0 , which may be accessible only by a read, and which may contain the value programmed through the LDMA PLB address register for the associated descriptor. The DMAQ entry register N 2  may contain a local offset field, local_offset, e.g., in bits  15 : 0  which may contain the value programmed through the LDMA local offset register for the associated descriptor, as well as a size field, size, e.g., in bits  27 : 16 , which may contain the value programmed through the LDMA size register for the associated descriptor, and a notify field, notify, e.g., at bits  31 : 28 , which may contain, e.g., the lower 4 bits of the value programmed through the LDMA notify register for the associated descriptor. Access to these fields may all be by read only. The DMAQ entry register N 3  may contain two notify fields, notify [ 15 : 12 ] and notify [ 10 : 4 ], e.g., respectively at bits  10 : 7  and  6 : 0 , which represent the contents of LDMA notify register, a type field, type, e.g., at bits  13 : 11 , which may contain the value programmed through the LDMA type register for the associated descriptor, a priority field, pri, e.g., at bits  15 : 14 , which may contain the value programmed through the LDMA PLB priority register for the associated descriptor, a CCR control field, ccr_ctrl, e.g., in bits  20 : 16 , which may contain, the value programmed through the LDMA CRC control register for the associated descriptor, a write pointer field, e.g., at bits  27 : 24 , which may contain an LDMA write pointer, e.g., which indicates the location where the next descriptor will be stored, and a read pointer, rd_ptr, e.g., at bits  31 : 28 , which may contain an LDMA read pointer, which, e.g., indicates the entry at the head of the LDMA. If rd_ptr==wrt_ptr==the LDMA is empty. If the first three LSBs of rd_ptr the first three LSBs of wrt_ptr and the MSB of rd_ptr[ 3 ]!=wrt_ptr[ 3 ])) then the LDMA is full. 
   In addition to providing the ability to read the contents of the DMAQ  310 , there are registers to provide the current DMA descriptor. If an error occurs during a DMA operation, these registers can be utilized to obtain the DMA descriptor that was being executed when the error occurred. These registers should only be read when the DMA is not active. 
   An LDMA control diagnostic register may also be provided having an LDMA control diagnostic field, ldma_control_diag, e.g., in bits  31 : 0 , which may be accessible by read only and which contain bits that are defined exactly like the LDMA control register, i.e., with values that reflect the most recently executed DMA operation. An LDMA local offset register may be provided having an LDMA local offset diagnostic field, ldma_local_offset_diag, e.g., in bits  31 : 0  which may be accessible by a read only and which represent one of the addresses used for the most recent DMA operation, e.g., it can will always be the address that was not written to the PLB address register. An LDMA PLB address diagnostic register may be provided having an LDMA PLB address field, ldma_plb_addr_diag, e.g., in bits  31 : 0 , being accessible by a read only and which can contain the address that was written to the PLB address register for the DMA operation that was most recently completed. An LDMA message diagnostic register may be provided having an LDMA message diagnostic field, ldma_message_diag, e.g., in bits  31 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read only and may contain the completion message data for the DMA operation that was most recently completed. 
   LDMA Completion Messages. The message type field, mtype, field of the LDMA notify register  368  and the LDMA control register (not shown) may be used to specify the exact format of the completion message. The supported completion message formats may be: type  1 , no completion message, zero-length message, e.g., the CCR specified in the mq_num field will be incremented on the local CPU module  100   0 – 100   6 ; type  3 , 2 word completion message with header followed by message data; type  3 , 2 word completion message with header followed by CRC data; type  4 , 2 word completion message with message data followed by CRC data; or type  5 , 3 word completion message with header followed by message data followed by CRC data, depending on the state of the bits in the mtype field. If a completion message is selected that contains CRC data, the data may be copied from the CRC control register specified by the CRC select bits. This will happen regardless of whether a CRC is actually being calculated. The CRC register could be used to extend the programmable part of the completion message if a CRC is not necessary. The exact format of the various completion message types is discussed below. 
   LDMA Completion Message Formats. Each of three of the LDMA completion message formats can contain a length field, e.g., in bits  7 : 0  that can be utilized to define length of the message in four byte words. Each of the message formats can contain a source field, UNIT_CPUXX, e.g., in bits  19 : 8 , within the message, and which can be utilized to identify the source CPU unit CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . The format of this field can be {4′hA,bus_number[ 3 : 0 ], unit_number[ 3 : 0 ]}. For example, CPU 3  on the north PLB bus  20   0  would be 0xA03. The “SLI processor” CPU  102   6  on the south PLB bus  20   0  would be 0xA10. Each of the message formats can contain a type field, e.g., in bits  31 : 20 , which may be set up to contain MESG_LDMA_RESP=0xABC for all successful local DMA operations, which indicates, e.g., the message is from a local DMA or MESG_LDMA_ERR_RESP=0xABD for all local DMA operations that encounter an error. One of these three LDMA message completion formats, corresponding to completion message type  2 , can contain a DMA response data field, DMA_RESP_DATA, e.g., in bits  63 : 32 , which may contain normally the bits taken directly from the contents of the LDMA message register  352  at the time the descriptor was added to the queue. For PLB  20 -to-PLB  20  DMA transactions the lower 16-bits of this field can be taken from the LDMA local offset register  362  and the upper 16-bits can be set to 0. Another of these three LDMA message completion formats, corresponding to completion message type  3 , may contain a CRC field, CRC, e.g., in bits  63 : 32 , which can contain the contents of the CRC register  372  {N} at the completion of the DMA operation. N indicates the contents of the crc_sel field of the LDMA CRC control register  372 . This occurs whether the CRC calculation is enabled or not. If a completion message type  4  is sent to a variable-length message queue, bits  7 : 0  of the DMA_RESP_DATA field may be configured to be required to be a 2. The hardware may use these bits as the length field for the message. The third of these three LDMA message completion formats, corresponding to type  5 , may contain the DMA_RESP_DATA field in bits  63 : 32  and the CRC field in bits  95 : 64 . Another of the LDMA completion message formats, corresponding to type  4 , may contain the DMA_RESP_DATA field in bits  31 : 0  and the CRC field in bits  63 : 32 . 
   CPU Error Register. A CPU error register may be provided to indicate the location where any errors detected in the CPU module  100   0 -100 6  are logged. Additional information about the error may be logged in other registers. The CPU error register may contain a fatal mode field, fatal_mode, e.g., at bit  28 , that is accessible by a read only and which indicates when set that an error has occurred that is configured to cause the chip  10  to enter fatal mode. The CPU error register may contain a global error interrupt field, global_err_int, e.g., at bit  24 , which may be accessible by a read only and, which indicates when set that an error has occurred that is configured to cause a global interrupt. The CPU error register may contain a local error interrupt field, local_err_int, e.g., at bit  20 , that is accessible by a read only and which indicates when set that an error has occurred that is configured to cause an interrupt to the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . The CPU error register may contain a ram emulation error field, ram_em_err, e.g., at bit  16 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that there was an illegal access caused by a data cache miss that is stored in a section of data cache designated for RAM emulation, as discussed in more detail below. The CPU error register may contain a data tag parity error field, dtag_perr, e.g., at bit  15 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that there was a parity error detected in the data cache  106  tag RAM (not shown). The CPU error register may contain a instruction tag parity error field, itag_perr, e.g., at bit  14 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that there was a parity error detected in the instruction cache  108  tag RAM (not shown). The CPU error register may contain a DMA overflow field, dma_ovfl_err, e.g., at bit  13 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that a DMA descriptor was dropped due to a write to the LDMA  310  when it was full. The CPU error register may contain a DCache  106  parity error field, dcache_perr, e.g., at bit  12 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that there was a parity error detected in the data cache  108  data RAM. The CPU error register may contain an ICache  108  parity error field, icache_perr, e.g., at bit  11 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that there was a parity error detected in the instruction cache  108  data RAM. The CPU error register may contain a DMA PLB error field, dma —plb _err, e.g., at bit  3 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that a PLB  20  read error was encountered while performing the DMA operation. All DMA operations will stop when the dma_plb_err bit is asserted. The CPU error register may contain a message frame error field, msg_frame_err, e.g., at bit  4 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that something illegal was attempted when writing a message. This could be caused from starting a message somewhere other than offset 0, or writing a message that was different than the specified length. The CPU error register may contain a CCR overflow field, ccr_ovfl_err, e.g., at bit  0 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  overflowed. The CPU error register may contain a CCR underflow field, ccr_undrfl_err, e.g., at bit  1 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  underflowed. This error cannot be caused by a read/decrement operation. The CPU error register may contain a message queue overflow field, q_ovrfl_err, e.g., at bit  2 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that a message queue overflowed. The CPU error register may contain an address 0  access error field, add 0 _err, e.g., at bit  5 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that an access to address  0  was issued to the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . The CPU error register may contain an IRAM correctable error field, iram_ecc_err, e.g., at bit  6 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that there was a correctable error detected in an optionally included IRAM (not shown). The CPU error register may contain an DPDR  104  correctable error field, dpdrA_ecc_err, e.g., at bit  10 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that there was a correctable error detected in the DPDR  104  at port A. The CPU error register may contain a DPDR  104  correctable error field, dpdrB_ecc_err, e.g., at bit  10 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that there was a correctable error detected in the DPDR  104  at port B. The CPU error register may contain an PLB read error field, cpu —plb _err, e.g., at bit  8 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that a CPU  102   0 – 102   6  initiated a PLB  20   0 – 20   1  read transaction that returned data with the error signal asserted. The CPU error register may contain a DPDR collision error field, dpdr_collision, e.g., at bit  7 , that is accessible by a read only and which can indicate when set that a CPU  102   0 – 102   6  initiated a DPDR  104  access was to the same address as a PLB  20   0 – 20   1  side DPDR  104  access on the same cycle. At least one of the transactions must be a write for the error to be signaled. The address of the collision is logged in a DPDR CPU error register discussed below. The CPU error register may contain a clear error field, clr_err, e.g., at bit  31 , that is accessible by a write only and which can indicate when written with a 1, the error conditions will be cleared and normal operations will resume. The clear error bit will not actually be cleared if a new error condition has occurred since the last time the register was read. The clear error bit always returns  0  when read. 
   CPU Error Enable Register. A CPU error enable register may be provided to enable signaling for the various types of errors detected by the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6 . When a particular type of error detection is disabled, no action will be taken when the error condition is detected, although logging may still occur. Signaling for a particular error can be configured to take the form of a local interrupt, a global interrupt, or a fatal error. All error signaling may be disabled at power up. The CPU error enable register may contain an error enable field, err_en, e.g., at bits  16 : 0 , which may be accessed by a read or a write and which may be utilized to enable a response to a detected error logged in the corresponding bit position of the CPU error register. That is, for each of these bits set to 1, a response is enabled for the corresponding error in bits  16 : 0  of the CPU error register. 
   CPU Error Global Interrupt Enable Register. Similarly, a CPU error global interrupt enable register may contain corresponding bits in its bit positions  16 : 0 , which when asserted, the associated error condition will results in a “global” error being issued when the error condition occurs as indicated in the CPU error register. A global error is visible to all processors  102   0 – 102   6  on the chip  10 . The CPU error global interrupt enable register may be set up to have no effect on error conditions that have the error enable bit cleared or the severity bit discussed below asserted. When asserted, for each of the respective bits in the CPU error global interrupt enable register, the associated error condition will result in asserting the error interrupt signal driven to all processors  102   0 – 102   6  on the chip  10 . 
   CPU Error Severity Register. A CPU error severity register may be provided to enable fatal error signaling for the associated error condition. A fatal error will cause all CPUs  102   0 – 102   6  in the system  10  to receive an NMI as well as shutting down any additional host DMA and the transmission of any additional packets on the link. Fatal errors may be configured to not be recoverable. Fatal errors may also be configured to only occur for error conditions that have signaling enabled. The CPU error severity register may have an error severity field, error_severity, e.g., in bits  16 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read or a write, and which when asserted, for each respective bit the associated error condition in the corresponding bit position in the CPU error register will result in the chip  10  being put into fatal mode if signaling is enabled for that error, i.e., in the CPU error enable register. 
   PLB Error Address Register. A PLB error address register may be provided to contain the address of data that was returned from a PLB  20   0 – 20   1  read with the error signal asserted. The read may have been initiated as the result of a DMA  240  transaction or a CPU request, e.g., either a cache miss or a load. This PLB error address register may be used to log only the first error that occurs since the last clear error operation was completed. The PLB error address register may include a PLB error address field, plb_error addr, e.g., contained in bits  31 : 4  (with the 4 LSBs set to 0), which may be accessible by a read only and which may contain the PLB  20   0 – 20   1  address of data that was returned with the error signal asserted. 
   Message Framing Error Register. A message framing error register may be provided to contain the number of the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  following the detection of a message framing error. A message framing error may be signaled, e.g., if a new message does not start at offset 0 or is not the exact length specified by the length field of the message for a variable-length message or the length specified in the msg_length field of the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  configuration register for fixed-length messages. The message framing error register may include a framing error field, V, e.g., at bit  8 , and a queue identification field, qnum, e.g., at bits  4 : 0 , each of which fields may be accessible by read only, and the former being set when a message framing error is detected, and cleared by doing a clear error operation, and the later of which indicating the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  in which the framing error was detected. 
   Message Overflow Error Register. A message overflow error register may be provided to contain the message queue  202   0 – 202   3 , number for a message queue  202   0 – 202   31  that detects an overflow error. A message overflow may be detected, e.g., if a new message is received and the last word of the message will pass the current location of the head pointer for that message. If the head pointer is advanced prior to completely consuming a new message, parts of the message could be over-written without detecting an overflow error. The overflow error condition may be set up to be only checked at the beginning of a new message based on the advertised length of the message. The message overflow error register may include a message overflow error field, V, e.g., at bit  8  and a queue identification field, qnum, e.g., at bits  4 : 0 , each of which fields may be accessible by read only, and the former being set when a message overflow error is detected, and cleared by doing a clear error operation, and the later of which indicating the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  in which the overflow error was detected. 
   Cache Error Enable Register. A cache error enable register may be provided to enable parity error detection for the tags and caches. Note that error detection will be disabled at reset and must be enabled by firmware. The cache error enable register may have an ICache  108  tag parity error detection enable field, itag_perr_en, e.g., at bit  3 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and which, when asserted, can indicate that parity error detection is enabled for the instruction cache  108  tag RAMs (not shown). The cache error enable register may have a ICache  106  parity error detection enable field, icache_perr_en, e.g., at bit  2 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and which, when asserted, can indicate that parity error detection is enabled for the instruction cache  108 . The cache error enable register may have an DCache  106  tag parity error detection enable field, dtag_perr_en, e.g., at bit  1 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and which, when asserted, can indicate that parity error detection is enabled for the data cache  106  tag RAMs (not shown). The cache error enable register may have a DCache  106  parity error detection enable field, dcache_perr_en, e.g., at bit  0 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and which, when asserted, can indicate that parity error detection is enabled for the data cache  106 . 
   Cache Error Seed Register. A cache error seed register may be provided to seed a parity error in the instruction cache  108  and/or data cache  106  and/or in their respective tags. When a bit is asserted in the cache error seed register, the corresponding bit will be inverted on the next write to the targeted RAM array. The cache error seed register will clear itself following a single write. The inverted bit should result in a parity error the next time the location of the targeted device is read. Normally the RAM array will be read within a few cycles of being written. The cache error seed register may include a data tag error mask field, dtag_err_mask, e.g., at bit  20 , which may be accessible by a write only and when set forces a parity error on bit  9  of the data cache tag in the cache data tag RAM in the Deache  106 . The cache error seed register may include an instruction tag error mask field, itag_err_mask, e.g., at bit  16 , which may be accessible by a write only and when set forces a parity error on bit  9  of the instruction cache tag in the instruction cache  106  tag RAM in the Icache  108 . The cache error seed register  410  may include a Dcache  106  data error mask field, ddata_err_mask, e.g., at bits  15 : 8 , which may be accessible by a write only, and which for each asserted bit will force a parity error in the corresponding byte of the instruction cache  108  data RAM. The cache error seed register  410  may include a Icache  108  data error mask field, idata_err_mask, e.g., at bits  7 : 0 , which may be accessible by a write only, and which for each asserted bit will force a parity error in the corresponding byte of the data cache  106  data RAM. 
   Instruction Cache Error Address Register. An instruction cache error address register may be provided to hold the RAM address where a parity error was detected. The tag and data addresses may be contained in the same register but they may also be independent. The appropriate bits of the CPU error register indicate whether the parity error was detected in the data, tag, or both. The instruction cache error address register may include an instruction cache  108  RAM address field, icache_err_addr, e.g., in bits  14 : 3 , which may be accessible only by a read, and which contains the ICache  108  data RAM address where a parity error was detected. The instruction cache error address register may include an instruction cache  108  tag RAM address field, itag_err_addr, e.g., in bits  30 : 22 , which may be accessible only by a read, and which contains the ICache  108  tag RAM address where a parity error was detected. 
   Data Cache Error Address Register. A data cache error address register may be provided to hold the RAM address where a parity error was detected. The tag and data addresses may be contained in the same register but they may also be independent. The appropriate bits of the CPU error register indicate whether the parity error was detected in the data, tag, or both. The data cache error address register may include a data cache  106  RAM address field, dcache_err_addr, e.g., in bits  11 : 3 , which may be accessible only by a read, and which contains the DCache  106  data RAM address where a parity error was detected. The data cache error address register may include a data cache  108  tag RAM address field, dtag_err addr, e.g., in bits  27 : 22 , which may be accessible only by a read, and which contains the DCache  106  tag RAM address where a parity error was detected. 
   DPDR Error Address Registers. The DPDR  104  may be provided with byte error correction coding (“ECC”). When an error is corrected the DPDR  104  address will be logged in a DPDR error address register. Only the first error will be logged. The firmware may be configured to re-arm the logging, e.g., by reading the DPDR error address register and performing a clear error operation. There are two separate error address registers for the DPDR  104 . A DPDR PLB error address register may be utilized for errors that occur on the PLB  20   0 – 20   1  side of the DPDR  104 . A DPDR CPU error address register may be provided for errors that are detected on the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  side of the DPDR  104 . Each of the DPDR PLB error address register and the DPDR CPU error address register may include an error address field, dpdr_addr, e.g., in bits  14 : 3 , which may be accessible by a read only and which contain the address in the DPDR  104  that had an error, respectively from the PLB  20   0 – 20   1  side and the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  side. The DPDR  104  may not detect (or correct) double bit errors. If a DPDR  104  collision error occurs, the address of the collision will be logged in the DPDR CPU error register. The bottom three bits in each of the DPDR PLB error address register and the DPDR CPU error address register may be set to 0. 
   RAM Emulation Error Registers. A RAM emulation error register may be provided to detect illegal accesses when using some or all of the Dcache  108  to emulate local RAM, i.e., as an extension of the DPDR  104 , as discussed in more detail below. The RAM emulation error register may have a size field, size, e.g., contained in bits  1 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and may be utilized to specify the amount of Dcache  106  being used for RAM emulation, e.g., none, 1K, 2K or 4K, depending on the state of bits  0 : 1 . A RAM emulation error access register may be provided, having a RAM emulation address field, ram_em_addr, e.g., at bits  31 : 6 , which may be accessible by a read only, and contains the address of the cache line that caused the RAM emulation access violation. If a RAM emulation access error is detected, the ram_em_err error signal will be asserted in the CPU error register. The address of the offending cache miss will be stored in a RAM emulation error address register. The address of the RAM emulation should always start at 0x901c — 0000 and extend through the size specified in the RAM emulation error register size field. 
   CCR Overflow Error Register. A CCR overflow error register may be provided to contain the number of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that has experienced an overflow or underflow condition. An overflow can occur, e.g., if a positive value is added to a positive number and the result is a negative number. Or, a negative number may be subtracted from a positive number and the result is negative. An underflow error may be indicated, e.g., a positive number is subtracted from a negative number and the result is a positive number. Or, a negative number may be added to a negative number and the result is a positive number. The CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  may be implemented as 10-bit signed values so the maximum positive number they can hold is  511 . The CCR overflow error register may include a CCR overflow field, V, e.g., in bit  8 , which may be accessible by a read only and, when set, indicates that a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  underflow or overflow was detected. The CCR overflow error register may also include a CCR identification field, ccr_num, e.g., in bits  5 : 0 , that is accessible by a read only and contains the number of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that experienced an underflow or overflow error. 
   CPU ID Register. Each CPU module  102   0 – 102   6  may also be assigned a unique ID, e.g., which can be used during the boot process, e.g., to establish a “master processor”. The unique ID may also be useful, e.g., for diagnostic reasons. The CPU ID register may include a revision field, rev_id, e.g., in bits  15 : 12 , which may be accessible by a read only and which can be utilized to specify the revision number for the chip. This number may, e.g., will start with 4′d0, and can be incremented by 1 for any chip  10  that has a firmware visible difference. The CPU ID register may also have a unit number field, unit_num, e.g., at bits  9 : 6 , that may be accessible by a read only, and can contain the unit number for the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . The CPU ID register may also include a bus identification field, bus, e.g., at bits  11 : 10 , which may be accessible by a read only and which can contain the identity of the PLB bus  20   0 – 20   1  to which the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6  is attached. 
   CPU PLB Priority Register. A CPU PLB priority register may be provided to specify the arbitration priority used for PLB transactions initiated by the Xtensa core of the CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . The default value may be set to 3, which should normally be the desired value. The CPU PLB priority register may contain a priority field, pri, e.g., at bits  1 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read or a write, and which can Specify the priority used when the Xtensa core initiates a PLB transaction, e.g., between one of four possible priorities. 
   DCR Data Register. A DCR data register may be provided as a PLB  20   0 – 20   1  configuration register that may be utilized to set PLB  20   0 – 20   1  parameters, e.g., following a reset. The PLB  20   0 – 20   1  may be configured such that it cannot be active when using the DCR data register. All CPU modules  100   0 – 100   6  can contain a DCR data register but they will normally only be connected to the DCR bus only in the SLI processor  102   6 . The CPU  102   0 – 102   6  can load all the code it needs for driving the DCR into its ICache  108  prior to starting the initialization process. The DCR data register may contain a DCR data field, dcr_data, e.g., in bits  31 : 0 , that may be accessible by a read or a write and be configured such that writes to this field can be configured to result in DCR bus writes of the same data to the address previously stored in a DCR address register. 
   DCR Address Register. A DCR address register may be provided having a DCR data address field, dcr_addr, e.g., in bits  9 : 0 , that can be accessed by a write only and can contain an address to be utilized for the DCR bus write discussed with respect to the DCR data register. 
   Scrub Lock Register. A scrub lock register may be provided to lock the local PLB  20   0 – 20   1  for the purpose of scrubbing a DDR location that has experienced a single-bit error. This lock may be configured to be highly restricted in that the DDR is the only target that is supported while the lock bit is asserted. This means that the scrub operation then must be done by a processor  102   0 – 102   6  that resides on the same PLB  20   0 – 20   1  as the DDR controller being scrubbed, i.e., locks are not supported across the bridge  30 . Therefore at least one processor  102   0 – 102   6  on the north PLB bus  200  and one processor on the south PLB bus  20   1  must be capable of doing the scrub operation. The scrub lock register may include a scrub lock field, L, e.g., in bit  0 , which may be accessible by a read or a write, and, when set, indicates that no other device will be allowed to master transactions on the local PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . The only target that is supported when L=1 is the local DDR controller  32 . When the scrub lock field bit is asserted it guarantees that no other device will be allowed to master a transaction on the local PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . The process for scrubbing a memory location can involve, e.g., setting the CPU&#39;s  102   0 – 102   6  PLB  20   0 – 20   1  priority to 3, i.e., writing a 3 to the CPU PLB priority register bits  1 : 0 , writing a 1 to the scrub lock field bit in the scrub lock register, doing any number of read and/or write operations to DDR locations, and then writing a 0 to the scrub lock field bit. While the scrub lock field bit is asserted the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may be configured to not be able to attempt to issue any new DMA operations. 
   CPU Command Register. A CPU command register may be provided to be accessible via configuration space and the bus/memory interface  110 . A CPU command register may be provided as a simple means to pass commands to the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  from the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . The CPU  102   0 – 102   6  can poll this CPU command register via the bus/memory interface  110  without creating traffic on the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . This may be useful, e.g., in fatal mode. After taking an NMI, the processor  102   0 – 102   6  could be configured to do nothing but poll this CPU command register, waiting for a message dictating what the processor  102   0 – 102   6  should do next. For example, it may receive a command to dump the contents of its internal registers. The firmware can be configured to define the actual commands that are possible. The CPU command register may contain a command field, command, e.g., in bits  7 : 0 , that may be accessible by a read or a write and are typically written via configuration space by a third party, e.g., on the chip  10 , to issue a command to the CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . Normally this CPU command register would be read-only from the bus/memory interface  110  address and write-only from the configuration address. 
   CPU Response Register. A CPU response register may be provided as a companion register to the CPU command register. The CPU response register can be used to communicate responses to commands. The CPU response register is typically written from the bus/memory interface  110  and read back through the configuration space. The CPU response register may include a response field, response, e.g., in bits  7 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read or write and is typically written via the bus/memory interface  110  in response to a command issued via the CPU command register. 
   DDR Configuration Register. A DDR configuration register may be provided to specify the amount of addressable SDRAM that is available. The DDR configuration register should be written as part of the boot process and never changed. The system  10  may be configured such that only CPU 6  is connected to the DDR controller  32 . In that case, for all other CPUs, i.e.,  102   0 – 102   5  the DDR configuration register will have no effect. The DDR address always starts at offset 0x0 inside, e.g., a 256 MB space allocated in the address map, regardless of contents of this register. If the ddr_size field is set to reflect an addressable region larger than what is populated with SDRAM devices, it could result in hanging up the PLB  20   0 – 20   1  if an access is attempted to an unpopulated location. The DDR configuration register may have a DDR size field, ddr_size, e.g., at bits  2 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and which is written following boot to specify the amount of addressable space to use for DDR memory. The supported values for this field may be 256 MB, 128 MB, 64 MB, 32 MB, and unsupported, depending on the state of the bits in the ddr_size field. 
   Interrupts. Interrupts may be used, e.g., for exception cases and not for mainstream performance cases. In the case where it is desirable to keep all CPU modules  100   0 – 100   6  identical, most interrupts would be routed to all the CPUs  102   0 – 102   6 . Normally, any given interrupt would only be enabled on a single CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . Interrupts that are generated by the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may be OR&#39;ed together outside the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  and then brought back in. This can be utilized to support a CPU  102   0 – 102   6  interrupting any other CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . There may be other interrupts generated by CPUs  102   0 – 102   6  that can be driven only to that local CPU  102   0 – 102   6  and are not visible by other CPUs  102   0 – 102   6 . All interrupts may be configured to do a true interrupt or to simply increment a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  on the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . Most interrupts may be configured to be level-sensitive, the exceptions may be a mS interrupt and an sli_reset. The Xtensa core of the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  is configured to have only 3 interrupt inputs. All the hardware interrupt sources may be mapped to one of the three Xtensa interrupt wires. The Xtensa level  1  interrupt may be used for all interrupts except the debug interrupt, level  2 , from the internal logic analyzer and the NMI, level  3 , which is driven by the “fatal” signal and the sli_reset. Timer and software interrupts may be generated from inside the Xtensa core. They may be level  1  interrupts but have a different interrupt number than the externally generated level  1  interrupts. Possible interrupt sources are listed in Table I. The “Bit Num” column in Table I refers to the bit position in all interrupt registers outside the Xtensa core. The “Xtensa Num” column refers to the Xtensa core interrupt number used for registers inside the Xtensa core. 
   
     
       
             
             
             
             
             
           
             
             
             
             
             
           
         
             
               TABLE I 
             
             
                 
             
             
               Interrupt Source 
               Level 
               Bit Num 
               Xtensa Num 
               Description 
             
             
                 
             
           
           
             
                 
             
           
        
         
             
               Fatal Error 
               3 
               0 
               1 
               This signal can be driven 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               programmatically by any CPU or by 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               any number of error detection circuits 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               in the chip. This is used only for 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               serious errors that need immediate 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               containment and/or diagnosis. Fatal 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               Errors are not recoverable. 
             
             
               external CPU 
               1 
               1 
               3 
               This interrupt can be asserted 
             
             
               Error 
                 
                 
                 
               programmatically (for test) or by any 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               of the error detection circuits in the 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               CPU module. This signal will be 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               driven externally so that other CPU&#39;s 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               can observe it. 
             
             
               internal CPU 
               1 
               2 
               3 
               This interrupt can be asserted 
             
             
               Error 
                 
                 
                 
               programmatically (for test) or by any 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               of the error detection circuits in the 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               CPU module. This signal is not 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               driven externally and therefore cannot 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               be observed by other CPUs. 
             
             
               Notification 
               1 
               3 
               3 
               This interrupt can be asserted 
             
             
               Interrupt 
                 
                 
                 
               programmatically (for test) or by any 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               of the CCRs that are configured to 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               generate an interrupt. 
             
             
               general interrupt 
               1 
               4 
               3 
               These interrupts are asserted 
             
             
               0 
                 
                 
                 
               programmatically and are driven to all 
             
             
               general interrupt 
               1 
               5 
               3 
               other CPUs. 
             
             
               1 
             
             
               general interrupt 
               1 
               6 
               3 
             
             
               2 
             
             
               general interrupt 
               1 
               7 
               3 
             
             
               3 
             
             
               mS Interrupt 
               1 
               8 
               3 
               This interrupt is asserted once every 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               mS by hardware. Note that this 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               interrupt is edge-sensitive and must be 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               cleared by writing to the ICR. 
             
             
               Buffer Manager 
               1 
               9 
               3 
               This interrupt is driven by the buffer 
             
             
               Int 
                 
                 
                 
               manager when an error is detected. 
             
             
               Link Interrupt 
               1 
               10 
               3 
             
             
               Host Interrupt 
               1 
               11 
               3 
             
             
               Serial Port 
               1 
               12 
               3 
               Interrupt signal from the serial port 
             
             
               North DDR 
               1 
               13 
               3 
               This interrupt is driven as when a 
             
             
               Interrupt 
                 
                 
                 
               correctable error was detected in the 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               DDR. 
             
             
               South Q/DDR 
               1 
               14 
               3 
               This interrupt is driven when a 
             
             
               Interrupt 
                 
                 
                 
               correctable error was detected in the 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               south DDR (or QDR?) 
             
             
               ASSI 
               1 
               15 
               3 
               Added for future storage product 
             
             
               XGN Port 
               1 
               16 
               3 
               Used to signal an exception occurred 
             
             
               Interrupt 
                 
                 
                 
               in the XGN Port 
             
             
               frxq Interrupt 
               1 
               17 
               3 
               Used to indicate an exception in the 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               FRXQ 
             
             
               ILA Interrupt 
               2 
               18 
               N/A 
               Asserted by the internal logic analyzer. 
             
             
               SLI Reset 
               3 
               19 
               1 
               Asserted by the internal logic analyzer. 
             
             
               Timer 0 
               1 
               N/A 
               0 
               Asserted by the Timer inside the 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               Xtensa core 
             
             
               Software 
               1 
               N/A 
               2 
               Caused when firmware does a WSR 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               write to the Xtensa INTERRUPT 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
                 
               register 
             
             
                 
             
           
        
       
     
   
   Interrupt Enable Register (IER). All interrupts must be enabled via an interrupt enable register that may be accessible from the PLB  20   0 – 20   1  in order for the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  to see the interrupt. Each bit of the interrupt enable register may be used to enable the corresponding interrupt source. The interrupt enable register may be cleared by reset so no interrupts will occur until enabled by the firmware. The hardware may OR the value written with the current contents of the interrupt enable register. This can be utilized to avoid the need to do a read-modify-write when setting a single interrupt. The interrupt enable register may have an interrupt field, interrupt, e.g., in bits  18 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read only and a read will return an asserted bit for every interrupt that is currently enabled. The interrupt enable register may also have an interrupt field, interrupt, e.g., in bits  18 : 0  that is accessible by a write only and the contents of the write can be OR&#39;ed with the data already stored in the interrupt field and the results stored back in the interrupt field of the interrupt enable register. 
   Interrupt Disable Register (IDR). An interrupt disable register may be used to disable interrupts. The interrupt disable register may be provided to avoid the need to do a read-modify-write when disabling an interrupt. The interrupt disable register may include an interrupt field, interrupt, e.g., in bits  18 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read only and a read will return an asserted bit for every interrupt that is currently enabled. The interrupt disable register may also include an interrupt field, interrupt, e.g., contained in bits  18 : 0  that is accessible by a write only and any bit position that is written with a 1 will result in the same bit position in the register being cleared for purposes of later being accessed by a read. 
   Interrupt Active Register (IAR). An interrupt active register may be provided as a read-only register that may be used, e.g., to observe which interrupts are currently being asserted. The contents of this interrupt pending register may be configured to not be affected by the interrupt enable register. The interrupt active register may include an interrupt field, interrupt, e.g., contained in bits  18 : 0 , that may be accessible by a read only and in which a bit may be asserted for every interrupt signal that is high, regardless of whether the interrupt is enabled. 
   Interrupt Pending Register (IPR). An interrupt pending register may be provided as a read-only register that may be used to observe which interrupts are currently causing the Xtensa core interrupt signal(s) to be asserted. The interrupt pending register may have an interrupt field, interrupt, e.g., in bits  18 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read only and in which a bit may be asserted for every interrupt that is being driven to a 1 and is enabled, therefore causing the Xtensa interrupt signal(s) to be asserted. When servicing an interrupt, all bits in the interrupt pending register should be cleared before returning. This may be done by identifying the source of each interrupt being reported in the interrupt pending register and servicing it or by disabling the interrupt. 
   Interrupt Assert Register (IAR). An interrupt assert register may be provided to be used to programmatically assert one of the interrupt sources that can be driven by the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . Interrupts[ 3 : 0 ] may have other sources so in some cases those interrupts may be asserted without writing to the interrupt assert register. In those cases, the bit may still be a 1 when reading the interrupt assert register regardless of what has been written to the interrupt assert register. The interrupt assert register may have an interrupt field, interrupt, e.g., in bits  8 : 0 , which may be accessible by a write only and the write data will be OR&#39;ed with the contents of the interrupt assert register. Each bit position that has a 1 will cause the corresponding interrupt to be asserted. The interrupt assert register may also have an interrupt field, interrupt, e.g., in bits  8 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read only and a 1 will be returned in every bit position where the corresponding interrupt signal is being asserted. In some cases the interrupt may be asserted as the result of an error or some other condition. The actual source of the interrupt must be resolved before the signal will be read as a zero. Interrupts  2 ,  3 , and  8  may be driven only to the local processor  102   0 – 102   6  while the other 6 interrupts can be observed by all processors  102   0 – 102   6 . 
   Interrupt Clear Register (ICR). An interrupt clear register may be provided to be used to force one or more interrupts to the inactive state. Each bit position in the write data that contains a 1 may be used to force the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6  to stop asserting the corresponding interrupt. When read, the interrupt clear register may be configured to return a 1 in each bit position that the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6  is driving high. This may be configured to not show interrupts that are being asserted by other devices. The interrupt clear register may have an interrupt field, interrupt, e.g., at bits  8 : 0 , which may be accessible by a write only, and when a bit location is written with a 1, that interrupt can be configured to no longer be able to be programmatically asserted. Interrupts[ 3 : 0 ] may have other sources that could still be issuing the interrupt even after clearing it in the interrupt clear register. The interrupt clear register may also have an interrupt field, interrupt, e.g., in bits  8 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read only and in which a 1 may be returned in every bit position where the corresponding interrupt signal is being driven high by the local CPU module  100   0 – 100   6 . The 1 being asserted may be configured to persist on reads until all sources of the interrupt have been serviced. 
   Interrupt Configuration Register. An interrupt configuration register may be provided to be used to specify which interrupts result in true interrupts to the local CPU  102   0 – 102   6  Xtensa core and which will result in a specified CCR  210   0 – 210   63  being incremented. The interrupt configuration register may include a CCR identification field, ccr_num, e.g., in bits  29 : 24  which may be accessible by a read or a write, and may specify the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that will be incremented when arbitration notification is enabled. The interrupt configuration register may include a CCR increment field, ccr_inc, e.g., in bits  18 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and when a bit of the inc_ccr field is asserted, the corresponding interrupt will result in the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  specified by the ccr_num field being incremented. When a bit is cleared, the corresponding interrupt source may be configured to cause a normal interrupt in the local Xtensa core. The respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may be configured to only be incremented when the interrupt pending register transitions from zero to non-zero. Additional incoming interrupts may be configured to not cause another increment until the interrupts are all cleared. 
   Log Message Support. Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may contain support for sending log messages to the DDR controller  32  with very low firmware overhead. Registers in the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may be utilized to coalesce up to four 32-bit words into a single 128-bit message to efficiently utilize the full width of the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . The CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  can be configured to automatically generate the address for the log message and store it, e.g., in a circular queue in DDR memory space. The CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  hardware can support a mode that will automatically append a 32-bit timestamp to a 96-bit message. The timestamp may be synchronized between all CPUs  102   0 – 102   6 . Each CPU  102   0 – 102   6  may be configured to write to its own circular queue so there is no need to identify the source of the message. Each CPU  102   0 – 102   6  may be connected to an internal logic analyzer&#39;s trigger mechanism that can be used to enable or disable the issuing of log messages. Log messages may be configured to not use the normal message address space. The timestamp counter may have the ability to increment a CCR  210   0 – 210   63  when it rolls-over. This functionality can be used to notify the firmware so the effective size of the timestamp counter can be extended. If the log message hardware is not being used, this feature can allow the counter to be potentially used for other events that require periodic notification. 
   Log Message Data Registers. Four data registers may be used to hold the actual message. These registers may reside in the CPU&#39;s bus/memory interface  110  register space and may be aliased into two different spaces. A write to the first three log message data registers through the first address space may be configured to only update the targeted register to the new value. A write to the fourth register through the first address space may be configured to update the fourth register and then issue a 16-byte write to the PLB  20   0 – 20   1  with the contents of all four log message registers. A write to the first two log message data registers through the second address space may be configured to only update the target register. A write to the third log message data register through the second address space may be configured to update the third register and then issue a PLB  20   0 – 20   1  write with the contents of the first three registers and the contents of the timestamp counter. 
   Log Message Control Register. A log message control register may be provided to be used to control the behavior of the log message hardware. The log message control register may include a CCR number field, ccr_num, e.g., at bits  29 : 24 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and may be utilized to specify which of the local CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  will be incremented when the timestamp counter rolls-over, assuming notify_en=1. The log message control register may include a notify enable field, notify_en, e.g. in bit  4 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and may, when asserted, cause the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  specified in field ccr_num[ 5 : 0 ] to be incremented when the timestamp counter contains a value of 0xFFFF_FFFF. 
   The log message control register may also include a log enable field, log_en, e.g., at bit  0 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and, when asserted, a log message will be issued on the PLB  20   0 – 20   1  when the “last” log message data register is updated. The log message control register may include a disable on trigger field, dot, e.g., in bit  8 , which, when asserted, the log_en bit will be cleared by hardware on the rising edge of a trigger signal from an interrupt logic analyzer (“ILA”). This may disable additional logging of messages. The log message control register may also include an enable on trigger field, eoto, e.g., in bit  12 , which, when asserted, the log_en bit will be asserted by hardware on the first rising edge of the trigger signal from the ILA. This can enable logging of messages. The log message control register may also include a queue wrap enable field, wrap_en, e.g., at bit  16 , which, when asserted, the log message queue will be allowed to wrap on itself after filling. When cleared, the log_en bit will be cleared once the log message queue is full, stopping additional logging. The log message control register may also include an ILA trigger detected field, trigger, e.g., in bit  20 , which can be asserted by hardware when the first rising edge of the ILA trigger signal is detected. The bit may be configured so that it must be reset by the firmware. The log message control register may also include a time stamp counter enable field, cnt_en, e.g., at bit  31 , which, when asserted, can enable the timestamp counter to free run. 
   Log Message Address Register. A log message address register may be provided to be an auto-incrementing register that may be programmed with the address of a circular queue in DDR memory that holds the log messages. The size of the circular queue may be specified via a log message mask register. The log message address register may include a log message address field, log_msg_addr, e.g., in bits  31 : 4 , with the first four LSBs set to 0, which may be accessed by a read or a writ and may be utilized to specify the address in the DDR memory space where the next log message will be stored. The log message address register may be automatically updated by hardware when a new log message is sent on the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . The address may be forced to be 16-byte aligned to support single cycle transfers on the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . 
   Log Message Address Mask. A log message address mask register may be provided to specify the size of the circular queue in DDR memory space. The log message address mask register can support queue sizes between 16K and 16M bytes. Each CPU  102   0 – 102   6  can be configured to have its own unique queue. The log message address mask register may include a message mask field, msg_mask, e.g., in bits  23 : 4 , with the four LSBs set to 0, which may be accessed by a read or a write, and can be updated to vary the size of the log message queue in DDR memory space. If the field is non-zero, it can be configured to be required to be a string of 1&#39;s starting on the right and extending to the left. The more 1&#39;s the bigger the circular queue. 0x0→16K queue; 0x1→32K queue; 0x3→64K queue; 0x7→128K queue; etc. The next log message address may be calculated by doing ((addr &amp; ˜mask)|((addr+16) &amp; mask)) where addr is the contents of the log message address register and mask is the contents of the log message address mask. Table II lists the registers that can be used for log messages and gives their addresses. 
   
     
       
             
             
             
             
           
         
             
                 
               TABLE II 
             
             
                 
                 
             
             
                 
               Address 
               Register 
               Description 
             
             
                 
                 
             
           
           
             
                 
               0x1016_0000 
               Log Message Data 
               Log Message Data 
             
             
                 
                 
               Register 0 
               Registers w/o 
             
             
                 
               0x1016_0004 
               Log Message Data 
               timestamp 
             
             
                 
                 
               Register 1 
             
             
                 
               0x1016_0008 
               Log Message Data 
             
             
                 
                 
               Register 2 
             
             
                 
               0x1016_000c 
               Log Message Data 
             
             
                 
                 
               Register 3 
             
             
                 
               0x1016_0010 
               Log Message Data 
               Log Message Data 
             
             
                 
                 
               Register 0 
               Registers w/ 
             
             
                 
               0x1016_0014 
               Log Message Data 
               timestamp 
             
             
                 
                 
               Register 1 
             
             
                 
               0x1016_0018 
               Log Message Data 
             
             
                 
                 
               Register 2 
             
             
                 
               0x1016_001c 
               Timestamp counter 
               Free running counter 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
               at PLB frequency 
             
             
                 
               offset 0x950 
               Log Message 
               Contains the address 
             
             
                 
                 
               Address Register 
               where the next 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
               log message will be 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
               stored in DDR 
             
             
                 
               offset 0x970 
               Log Message Mask 
               Used to set the size 
             
             
                 
                 
               Register 
               of the circular 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
               queue in DDR. 
             
             
                 
               offset 0x960 
               Log Message 
               Used to enable log 
             
             
                 
                 
               control Register 
               messages and other 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
               features 
             
             
                 
                 
             
           
        
       
     
   
   Performance Counter Select Register. A performance counter select register may be provided to be used to select which of the available CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  countable events are driven out to the a set of 4 counters that can count individual events. The performance counter select register may provide, e.g., multiplexer (“mux”) control for each of the 4 different counters as well as for one adder through the utilization of the fields discussed below. The four counters may be shared between all the CPUs  102   0 – 102   6  as well as other modules on the chip  10 . Only one device in the chip  10  may be allowed to use a counter at any given time. The performance counter select register may have a performance adder select field, pa_sel, e.g., at bits  17 : 16 , which may be accessible by a read or a write, and may be used to choose between counting the LDMA_depth ( 1 ) or the message length ( 2 ). When set to zero, the value to be added can be as passed from another CPU module  100   0 – 100   2 . The performance counter select register may also have a event select field, pcnt_sel[X], where X may be, e.g., 0–3, e.g., respectively in bits  3 : 0 ,  7 : 4 ,  11 : 8  and  15 : 12 , which may be accessible by a read or a write, and which may be used to specify what event to count on counter X. The respective counter can be made available to another CPU  102   0 – 102   6  to count an event. 
   Debug Address Count Registers. Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may provide the ability to create countable events when a specific address is executed. There may be, e.g., two debug address count registers that can be provided that can be programmed with an address. When the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  executes that address an event may be issued to the performance counters, if selected in the performance counter select register. The debug address count registers may need to be configured to only count the rising edge because otherwise the CPU  100   0 – 100   6  could stall on the instruction. These programmable debug event count registers might be utilized, e.g., to start the counters at a certain address and stop the counters at a different address. While the counters are running they could be used to count, e.g., cache misses or stalled cycles. This could be used to profile the code, e.g., to figure out where all the time is being spend. The debug event count registers may include a count address field, count_addr, e.g., at bits  31 : 0 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and which may contain the address that will cause a countable event, e.g., when the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  executes the instruction located at that exact address. 
   Event Register. An event register may be provided to create a countable event under program control. A write to the event register may cause an event for any of the asserted bits, assuming the event register is selected in the performance counter select register. An event may also be used to start or stop the event counters. The event register bits may be cleared by hardware following the creation of the event. The event register may have an event field, event, e.g., in bits  5 : 0 , that may be accessible by a write only, and the bits when asserted may result in a countable event being generated. 
   Debug Signal Select Register. A debug signal select register may be used to control which debug signals are driven from each CPU  102   0 – 102   6  to the internal logic analyzer and the external probe signals. The debug signal select register may have a trace address select field, trace_addr_sel, e.g., in bits  3 : 0 , which may be addressable by a read or a write and which may specify where the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  trace port signals are positioned within the set of debug signals. The debug signal select register may also contain a trace data select field, trace_data_sel, e.g., at bit  4 , which may be accessible by a read or a write and which may be used to specify whether the data trace signals are included with the address trace signals. The trace data select field bit may be configured to be only meaningful for some values of trace_addr_sel[ 3 : 0 ]. 
   Debug Signal Select Register. Address trace signals may be defined as {2′b00,Pstatus[ 5 : 0 ],PdebugData[ 31 : 0 ]}. Data trace signals may be defined as {1′b0,Pstatus[ 12 : 6 ],PdebugData[ 63 : 32 ]}. PdebugData and Pstatus are outputs of the Xtensa core trace port and are defined in the Xtensa Data Book. If all the signals are observed, the exact behavior of the Xtensa core can be deduced. The primary purpose of the trace_addr_sel and trace_data_en signals are to control where these signals show up within a set of debug signals. This functionality is provided to support observing multiple CPU cores  102   0 – 102   6  simultaneously. 
   CPU Address Map. The chip  10  may have a flat address space. Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  can access the entire address space, including it&#39;s own externally visible registers, at the defined address. The CPUs  102   0 – 102   6  may be configured so that the upper half of the address space is in the cacheable region and the lower half is non-cacheable. All external addresses may be aliased into both halves of the address space. Each CPU  102   0 – 102   6  may have some local memory that is not visible externally. Each CPU  102   0 – 102   6  may be configured to see its own local memory at the same address. 
   External Address Map. Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may have, e.g., 1 MB of unique host bus adapter address space that is visible on the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . This space may be divided into, e.g., 5 different areas within the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6 . The five areas are described in Table III. 
                           TABLE III               Area   Access Type   Description                   Message Queues   Write-only   Each Message Queue gets           (burst)   1 KB of address space.               New messages must start               at offset 0 inside the               queue space.       Credit count   Read/Write   This space is used primarily       Registers   (word)   by 3 rd  party CPUs to               access the CCR registers.               This space is also used               for the Notification Con-               figuration Registers since               they are physically imple-               mented in the same               storage element as the CCR.               The exact definition               for external CCR addresses               is shown in       .       DPDR   Read/Write   PLB transactions that           (burst)   directly access DPDR will               use this space. Current               thinking is that this space               will only be used for diag-               nostic reasons. The               DPDR will normally be               accessed via local DMA               or the message queues.       Debug Log   Write (burst)   This space is defined to       Messages       handshake write trans-               actions and then toss               the data. It is provided               exclusively for log               messages that are to be               captured by the ILA.       Configuration   Read/Write   This space provides glo-       Registers   (word)   bal access to all the non-               CPU core registers (ex-               cept the CCRs) in the CPU               module. Note that even               the local CPU will use               this space to access the               registers. Access to               registers via this path               is fairly slow and should               not be done as part of               the performance path.                    
PLB  20   0 – 20   1  accesses to undefined areas of the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  address map may not be supported and may, e.g., cause the bus to hang up.
 
   Message Queue Addresses. Each message queue  202   0 – 202   31  on the chip  10  may have its own unique, e.g., 1 KB address range. The data from any write transaction to an address in the message queue range  202   0 – 202   31  may then be put on the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . Any write to offset 0 of the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  address range may be assumed to be the beginning of a new message. The system may be configured such that any new message cannot be started until all of the previous messages have been received for that message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . Since there are a relatively small number of message queues  202   0 – 202   31  on the chip  10 , a 12-bit form of the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  address is may be defined. This format can be used to save storage when dealing with message queue  202   0 – 202   31  addresses. The message queue  202   0 – 202   31  compact address may be defined as a message queue number field, mq_num, e.g., in bits  5 : 0 , which may specify the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  number within the given target unit  100   0 – 100   6 . One of the message queue numbers, e.g., mq_num[ 5 ] may always be selected to be 0. The message queue  202   0 – 202   31  compact address may also be defined as a unit number field, unit_num, e.g., in bits  9 : 6 , which can specify the target unit  100   0 – 100   6  that contains the target message queue  202   0 – 202   31  on the given bus  20   0 – 20   1 . One of the unit numbers, e.g., unit_num[ 3 ] may always be set to be 0. The message queue  202   0 – 202   31  compact address may also be defined as a bus field, bus, e.g., at bits  11 : 10 , which can specify the bus  20   0 – 20   1  that contains the target message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . One of the bus numbers, e.g., bus[ 1 ] may always be set to be 0. The compact address for the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  expands to a unique 32-bit address using these same fields, in different locations in the 32 address as well as an 8 bit offset field, msg_offset. Only 9 of the 12-bits of the compact address are actually used. The message offset may be configured to always indicate which word of the current message is being transferred. The offset may be configured to be 0 if and only if the data represents the beginning of a new message. 
   Credit Count Register External Addresses. Similarly, since there are a relatively small number of CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  on the chip  10 , a 12-bit form of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  address may be defined, similar to the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  compact address. This format can also be used to save storage when dealing with CCR  210   0 – 210   63  addresses. The CCR  210   0 – 210   63  compact address may include a CCR number field, ccr_num, e.g. in bits  5 : 0  of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  address, which can specify the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  number within the given target unit  100   0 – 100   6 , a unit number field, unit_num, e.g., at bits  9 : 6  of the CCR  210   0 – 2106   31  which can specify the target unit  100   0 – 100   6  that contains the target CCR  210   0 – 210   63  on the given bus  20   0 – 20   1 . As above, unit_num[ 3 ] may always be 0. The CCR  210   0 – 210   63  compact address may include a bus field, e.g., at bits  11 : 10  of the compact CCR address. As above, bus [ 1 ] may always be 0. 
   The compact address for the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  expands to a unique 32-bit address similarly as noted above with the addition of a 2 bit command field, cmd. Only 10 of the 12-bits of the compact address are actually utilized. The CCR cmd field, e.g., in bits the CCR address can be used to indicate the type of operation to perform when accessing the CCR  210   0 – 210   63 . Notification control registers may be stored in the same physical location as the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63 . The notification control registers may be given a separate address so that they can be updated without affecting the contents of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63 . The fields of the NCR addresses are similar to the ones listed above for the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63 . Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may be configured to support a 32K address space for the DPDR  104  of the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6 . The 32K address space for the DPDR  104  of the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may be mapped in a unique location for each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  and may be fully accessible from the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . The composition of the external DPDR  104  addresses can include a DPDR offset field, dpdr_offset, e.g., in bits  14 : 2  of the DPDR address with bits  1 : 0  set to 0. 
   Debug Log Message Space. Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  can support an address space that can be written to without any side effects. This space may be utilized, e.g., to write log messages from the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  that will be captured by the internal logic analyzer but will not cause any unwanted side effects. Bursts of any size may be supported. This space may be treated as write-only. 
   Configuration Register Map. The CPU  102   0 – 102   6  configuration registers are normally configured by the firmware following reset or observed for diagnostic purposes and would normally never change. In some cases these registers may be configured to not be accessible when certain functions are active. These registers may have a unique address for every CPU  102   0 – 102   6  and may be accessed via the PLB  20   0 – 20   1  by any on board device or even the host computer connected to the host bus adapter interface  10 . Access to these registers may be by way of a 16-bit register bus internal to the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  so access is relatively slow. The composition of a possible configuration of the base addresses for the CPU module configuration registers is shown in Table IV. 
   
     
       
             
             
             
           
         
             
               TABLE IV 
             
             
                 
             
             
               Offset 
               Register Name 
               Description 
             
             
                 
             
           
           
             
               0x000 
               Head Pointer 0 (HPR0) 
               Contains a pointer to the beginning of the 
             
             
               0x010 
               Head Pointer 1 (HPR1) 
               message for the corresponding message 
             
             
               . 
               . 
               queue 
             
             
               . 
               . 
             
             
               . 
               . 
             
             
               0x1F0 
               Head Pointer 31 (HPRR31) 
             
             
               0x200 
               Queue Config 0 (QCR0) 
               Contains configuration info for message 
             
             
               0x210 
               Queue Config 1 (QCR1) 
               queues 
             
             
               . 
               . 
             
             
               . 
               . 
             
             
               . 
               . 
             
             
               0x3F0 
               Queue Config 31 (QCR31) 
             
             
               0x400 
               Tail Pointer 0 (TPR0) 
               Contains the pointer to the tail of each 
             
             
               0x410 
               Tail Pointer 1 (TPR1) 
               message queue. 
             
             
               . 
               . 
             
             
               . 
               . 
             
             
               . 
               . 
             
             
               0x5F0 
               Tail Pointer 31 (TPR31) 
             
             
               0x600 
               DMA FIFO0 
               LDMA FIFO RAM location 0 (4 registers) 
             
             
               0x640 
               DMA FIFO1 
               LDMA FIFO RAM location 1 (4 registers) 
             
             
               0x680 
               DMA FIFO2 
               LDMA FIFO RAM location 2 (4 registers) 
             
             
               0x6C0 
               DMA FIFO3 
               LDMA FIFO RAM location 3 (4 registers) 
             
             
               0x700 
               DMA FIFO4 
               LDMA FIFO RAM location 4 (4 registers) 
             
             
               0x740 
               DMA FIFO5 
               LDMA FIFO RAM location 5 (4 registers) 
             
             
               0x780 
               DMA FIFO6 
               LDMA FIFO RAM location 6 (4 registers) 
             
             
               0x7C0 
               DMA FIFO7 
               LDMA FIFO RAM location 7 (4 registers) 
             
             
               0x800 
               NOP Vector Offset Register 
               Used to specify the value to be read 
             
             
                 
                 
               through the QVPR when no CCR is 
             
             
                 
                 
               attempting arbitration. 
             
             
               0x820 
               DMA Enable Register 
               Used to enable DMA operations and to, 
             
             
                 
                 
               reset the DMA queue 
             
             
               0x830 
               DMA CCR Register 
               Used to specify the CCR used to track 
             
             
                 
                 
               credits for the LDMA 
             
             
               0x840 
               CPU Error Register 
               Tracks error detected in the CPU module 
             
             
               0x850 
               CPU Error Enable Register 
               Used to enable error detection in the CPU 
             
             
                 
                 
               module. 
             
             
               0x860 
               DPDR PLB Error Address Register 
               Contains the address of the DPDR PLB- 
             
             
                 
                 
               side location where an error was detected 
             
             
               0x870 
               Error Severity Register 
               Used to specify the severity of each error 
             
             
                 
                 
               detected in the CPU module. 
             
             
               0x8C0 
               Command Register 
               Used in fatal mode to send a command to 
             
             
                 
                 
               the processor. Normally it is write-only in 
             
             
                 
                 
               configuration space. 
             
             
               0x8D0 
               Command Response Register 
               Used in fatal mode to communicate the 
             
             
                 
                 
               results of a command. Normally it is read- 
             
             
                 
                 
               only in configuration space 
             
             
               0x8E0 
               Message Framing Error Register 
               Contains the message queue number for 
             
             
                 
                 
               the queue that detected a framing error. 
             
             
               0x8F0 
               CCR Overflow Error Register 
               Contains the CCR number for a CCR that 
             
             
                 
                 
               experiences an underflow or overflow 
             
             
                 
                 
               condition. 
             
             
               0x900 
               Notify Poll 
               Contains one bit for each CCR requesting 
             
             
                 
                 
               notification 
             
             
               0x940 
               Arbitration Group Control 
               Used to specify the priorities and class for 
             
             
                 
               Register 
               each of the four arbitration groups 
             
             
               0x950 
               Log Message Address Register 
               Used to locate the log message queue 
             
             
               0x960 
               Log Message Control Register 
               Used to control the log message features 
             
             
               0x970 
               Log Message Mask Register 
               Used to specify the log message queue 
             
             
                 
                 
               size 
             
             
               0x980 
               Cache Error seed register 
               Used to seed errors in the CPU cache and 
             
             
                 
                 
               tag RAM 
             
             
               0xA10 
               QVPR Stall Enable Register 
               Contains the enable bit for stalling on 
             
             
                 
                 
               QVPR reads with no CCR requesting 
             
             
                 
                 
               notification arbitration 
             
             
               0xA20 
               Interrupt Enable Register 
               Used to enable individual interrupts 
             
             
               0xA30 
               Interrupt Disable Register 
               Used to disable individual interrupts 
             
             
               0xA40 
               Interrupt Assert Register 
               Used to issue a local interrupt 
             
             
               0xA50 
               Interrupt Clear Register 
               Used to clear interrupts that have been 
             
             
                 
                 
               locally issued. 
             
             
               0xA60 
               Interrupt Active Register 
               A read-only register to observe which 
             
             
                 
                 
               interrupts are currently being asserted 
             
             
                 
                 
               (even if not enabled). 
             
             
               0xA70 
               Interrupt Pending Register 
               A read-only register used to observe which 
             
             
                 
                 
               interrupts are currently being asserted and 
             
             
                 
                 
               are enabled. 
             
             
               0xA80 
               Interrupt Configuration Register 
               Used to designate interrupts as a true 
             
             
                 
                 
               interrupt or to increment a CCR. 
             
             
               0xAA0 
               PLB priority register 
               Used to specify the priority of PLB 
             
             
                 
                 
               transactions issued directly from the CPU. 
             
             
               0xAB0 
               Message Overflow Error Register 
               Contains the number of the message queue 
             
             
                 
                 
               that experienced an overflow condition 
             
             
               0xAC0 
               DPDR CPU error address Register 
               Contains the DPDR address that detected 
             
             
                 
                 
               an ECC error on the CPU side 
             
             
               0xAD0 
               PLB Error Address Register 
               Contains the address of the PLB 
             
             
                 
                 
               transaction that experienced an error. 
             
             
               0xAE0 
               Data Cache Error Address Register 
               Contains the data cache/tag address that 
             
             
                 
                 
               resulted in a parity error. 
             
             
               0xAF0 
               Instruction Cache Error Addr Register 
               Contains the instruction cache/tag address 
             
             
                 
                 
               that resulted in a parity error 
             
             
               0xB00 
               Performance Counter Select Register 
               Used to specify which items to count 
             
             
               0xB10 
               RAM Emulation Error Enable Reg 
               Used to enable error detection for RAM 
             
             
                 
                 
               emulation mode. 
             
             
               0xB20 
               RAM Emulation Error Address Reg 
               Used to store the address of the erroneous 
             
             
                 
                 
               cache miss when using RAM emulation 
             
             
                 
                 
               mode. 
             
             
               0xB30 
               Debug Control Register 
               Used to specify the signals that are 
             
             
                 
                 
               brought out of the CPU module for debug 
             
             
                 
                 
               purposes. 
             
             
               0xB40 
               Cache Error Enable Register 
               Used to enable cache parity error 
             
             
                 
                 
               detection. 
             
             
               0xB50 
               Debug Address0 Count Register 
               Registers used to store the address that 
             
             
               0xB60 
               Debug Address1 Count Register 
               creates a countable event when executed 
             
             
                 
                 
               by a CPU. 
             
             
               0xB70 
               CPU Error Global Int Enable Register 
               Used to force error conditions to issue 
             
             
                 
                 
               global interrupts. 
             
             
               0xB80 
               DDR Configuration Register 
               Used to on some CPUs to set the amount 
             
             
                 
                 
               of addressable SDRAM that is available 
             
             
                 
             
           
        
       
     
   
   Local Address Map. All memory that is local to the CPU  102   0 – 102   6 , e.g., DPDR  104  and PIF  20   0 – 20   1  registers, may be mapped into the address space that is reserved for this purpose. The local address map may be the same for all CPUs  102   0 – 102   6  regardless of the amount of local RAM actually implemented. Addresses in this range may be configured to never be visible on the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . The system  10  may be configured so that no other device can use this address space, e.g., because the CPUs  102   0 – 102   6  would not be able to directly address the space, e.g., the transaction could be diverted to local targets and never reach the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . The CPU  102   0 – 102   6  can optionally detect an access to location 0x0000 — 0000 and flag it as an error. This can provide, e.g., a quick detection of the case where firmware attempts to de-reference a null pointer. Each CPU  102   0 – 102   6  may have a 1 MB block of “local PIF” address space. Transactions to the local bus/memory interface  110  space may be issued on the bus/memory interface  110  by the CPU but may be configured to not be forwarded to the PLB  20   0 – 20   1  like most bus/memory interface  110  transactions would be. The local bus/memory interface  110  space may be mapped in both the cacheable and non-cacheable regions. These memory spaces are summarized in Table V. 
   
     
       
             
             
             
           
             
             
             
             
           
         
             
                 
               TABLE V 
             
             
                 
                 
             
             
                 
               Size 
               Description 
             
             
                 
                 
             
           
           
             
                 
             
           
        
         
             
               0x9000_8000 
               32 
               K 
               Dual-ported data RAM (uses the 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
               XLMI for initial implementation) 
             
             
               0x9001_0000 
               64 
               K 
               Instruction RAM (not used in 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
               initial implementation) 
             
             
               0x9002_0000 
               32 
               K 
               XLMI Register space (not used in 
             
             
                 
                 
                 
               initial implementation) 
             
             
               0x9010_0000 
               1 
               MB 
               Cacheable Local PIF space. 
             
             
               0x1010_0000 
               1 
               MB 
               Non-cacheable Local PIF space. 
             
             
                 
             
           
        
       
     
   
   Local PIF Address Space. The local bus/memory interface  110  address space may be, e.g., a 1 MB region that is local to each CPU  100   0 – 100   6 . This region may be accessible through both the cacheable and non-cacheable address space, e.g., DPDR  104  reads are the only accesses that can be configured for a cacheable access. The local bus/memory interface  110  space may be spit, e.g., into 4 blocks as described in Table VI. Transactions in local bus/memory interface  110  space may be configured to not be visible on the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 , or to the logic analyzer. 
   
     
       
             
             
             
           
         
             
               TABLE VI 
             
             
                 
             
             
               Area 
               Access Type 
               Description 
             
             
                 
             
           
           
             
               PIF Message 
               Write-only 
               Each Message Queue gets 1 KB of 
             
             
               Queues 
                 
               address space. New messages must 
             
             
                 
                 
               start at offset 0 inside the 
             
             
                 
                 
               queue space. 
             
             
               PIF Registers 
               Read/Write 
               This space is used for all the 
             
             
                 
               (word) 
               PIF registers as defined in Table 
             
             
                 
                 
               VII. The PIF registers do not 
             
             
                 
                 
               support access via the cacheable 
             
             
                 
                 
               space. Most registers can be read 
             
             
                 
                 
               2 at a time using a 64-bit 
             
             
                 
                 
               load TIE instruction. 
             
             
               PIF DPDR 
               Read/Write 
               This space provides an internal 
             
             
                 
               (burst) 
               path to the DPDR without using 
             
             
                 
                 
               the Xtensa local Data RAM path. 
             
             
                 
                 
               This will be useful if a CPU 
             
             
                 
                 
               ever uses an MMU in which case 
             
             
                 
                 
               the local data RAM is not 
             
             
                 
                 
               supported. This path may also 
             
             
                 
                 
               be useful because it is not 
             
             
                 
                 
               subject to the collision 
             
             
                 
                 
               restrictions in place for DPDR 
             
             
                 
                 
               accesses through the local DPDR 
             
             
                 
                 
               space. 
             
             
               RAM Emulation 
               Read/Write 
               This space is used when using a 
             
             
                 
               (burst) 
               portion of the data cache to 
             
             
                 
                 
               emulate local RAM. Reads to this 
             
             
                 
                 
               space will return garbage. 
             
             
                 
                 
               Writes will be tossed without 
             
             
                 
                 
               side effects. 
             
             
                 
             
           
        
       
     
   
   PIF Message Queues. The bus/memory interface  110  message queues may be addressed the same way they are from an external address. Messages can be configured to be required to start at offset  0 . The first byte of the message can contain the length of the message in words. The message can be, e.g., up to 1K bytes and can, e.g., be delivered in multiple transactions. The message may be configured to not be delivered until the entire message has been written to the bus/memory interface  110  message queue. The format of the bus memory interface  110  message queue address is shown in Table VII. The bus memory interface  110  register addresses may be the same for all CPUs  102   0 – 102   6 . 
   
     
       
             
             
             
           
         
             
               TABLE VII 
             
             
                 
             
             
               Address 
               Register Name 
               Description 
             
             
                 
             
           
           
             
               0x1014_2000 
               CCR Indirect Command 0 
               Used to read/add to the CCR that 
             
             
                 
                 
               won arbitration. 
             
             
               0x1014_2010 
               CCR Indirect Command 1 
               Used to read/subtract from the 
             
             
                 
                 
               CCR that won notification 
             
             
                 
                 
               arbitration 
             
             
               0x1014_2020 
               CCR Indirect Command 2 
               Used to read-decrement/write from 
             
             
                 
                 
               the CCR that won notification 
             
             
                 
                 
               arbitration 
             
             
               0x1014_2030 
               CCR Indirect Command 3 
               Used to read-decrement- 
             
             
                 
                 
               lock/unlock the CCR that won 
             
             
                 
                 
               notification arbitration 
             
             
               0x1014_2040 
               NCR Indirect Command 0 
               Used to read/write to the NCR that 
             
             
                 
                 
               won notification arbitration 
             
             
               0x1014_2050 
               NCR Indirect Command 1 
               Used to read/write the notify_en 
             
             
                 
                 
               bit in the NCR that won 
             
             
                 
                 
               notification arbitration 
             
             
               0x1014_2080 
               Queue Vector Pointer Register 
               Contains the pointer to the queue 
             
             
                 
                 
               vector for the arbitration winner 
             
             
               0x1014_2084 
               Next Head Pointer 
               A read-only register that contains 
             
             
                 
                 
               the pointer to the head of the 
             
             
                 
                 
               message queue that is specified in 
             
             
                 
                 
               the arbitration results register. 
             
             
               0x1014_2090 
               Update Head Pointer 
               A write-only register that is used 
             
             
                 
                 
               to update the value of the head 
             
             
                 
                 
               pointer register for the message 
             
             
                 
                 
               queue specified in the arbitration 
             
             
                 
                 
               results register. 
             
             
               0x1014_2094 
               Arbitration Results 
               Identifies the current winner of 
             
             
                 
                 
               notification arbitration 
             
             
               0x1014_2098 
               Arbitration Group Enable 0 
               Enable Arbitration for Group 0 
             
             
               0x1014_209c 
               Arbitration Group Enable 1 
               Enable Arbitration for Group 1 
             
             
               0x1014_20a0 
               Arbitration Group Enable 2 
               Enable Arbitration for Group 2 
             
             
               0x1014_20a4 
               Arbitration Group Enable 3 
               Enable Arbitration for Group 3 
             
             
               0x1014_2110 
               Notification Poll (upper) 
               Identifies which of the CCRs are 
             
             
               0x1014_2114 
               Notification Poll (lower) 
               attempting notification 
             
             
               0x1014_2118 
               Notification Interrupt (upper) 
               Indicates which of the CCRs are 
             
             
               0x1014_211c 
               Notification Interrupt (lower) 
               currently issuing an interrupt 
             
             
               0x1016_0000 
               Log Message Data Register0 
               Used to write the contents of log 
             
             
               0x1016_0004 
               Log Message Data Register1 
               messages that do not include a 
             
             
               0x1016_0008 
               Log Message Data Register2 
               time stamp. 
             
             
               0x1016_000c 
               Log Message Data Register3 
             
             
               0x1016_0010 
               Log Message TS Data Register0 
               Used to write the contents of log 
             
             
               0x1016_0014 
               Log Message TS Data Register1 
               messages that do include a time 
             
             
               0x1016_0018 
               Log Message TS Data Register2 
               stamp 
             
             
               0x1016_001c 
               Log Message Time stamp Register 
               Contains a free-running counter 
             
             
                 
                 
               that is synchronized between all 
             
             
                 
                 
               CPUs. 
             
             
               0x1016_0100 
               CPU Command Register 
               This register is used when a 
             
             
                 
                 
               processor is in fatal mode to send a 
             
             
                 
                 
               command from another processor. 
             
             
                 
                 
               It is normally read-only from the 
             
             
                 
                 
               PIF. 
             
             
               0x1016_0104 
               CPU Command Response Register 
               This register is used when a 
             
             
                 
                 
               processor is in fatal mode to 
             
             
                 
                 
               respond to commands issued via 
             
             
                 
                 
               the cpu command register. It is 
             
             
                 
                 
               normally write-only from the PIF 
             
             
               0x1016_0108 
               CPU ID 
               Identifies which CPU this is 
             
             
               0x1016_010C 
               Scrub Lock Register 
               Used to lock the PLB when 
             
             
                 
                 
               scrubbing a DDR location 
             
             
               0x1016_0140 
               LDMA CRC0 Seed Register 
               Used to store the seed value for the 
             
             
               0x1016_0150 
               LDMA CRC1 Seed Register 
               CRC calculation and to read the 
             
             
               0x1016_0160 
               LDMA CRC2 Seed Register 
               result 
             
             
               0x1016_0170 
               LDMA CRC3 Seed Register 
             
             
               0x1016_0200 
               DCR Address 
               Used to store the address prior to 
             
             
                 
                 
               initiating a transaction on the 
             
             
                 
                 
               DCR. 
             
             
               0x1016_0204 
               DCR Data 
               Used to initiate a transaction on 
             
             
                 
                 
               the DCR. 
             
             
               0x1017_0000 
               LDMA PLB Address 
               Contains the local PLB address 
             
             
                 
                 
               field for local DMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_0004 
               LDMA Local Offset 
               Contains the local offset field for 
             
             
                 
                 
               local DMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_0008 
               LDMA Control 
               Contains the size, type, and notify 
             
             
                 
                 
               field for local DMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_000C 
               LDMA Message 
               Contains the data to be sent with 
             
             
                 
                 
               the completion message 
             
             
               0x1017_0010 
               LDMA Priority 
               Specifies the PLB arbitration 
             
             
                 
                 
               priority to use during the DMA 
             
             
                 
                 
               operation 
             
             
               0x1017_0014 
               LDMA Type 
               Contains the type field for local 
             
             
                 
                 
               DMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_0018 
               LDMA Size 
               Contains the size field for local 
             
             
                 
                 
               DMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_001C 
               LDMA Notify 
               Contains the notify field for local 
             
             
                 
                 
               DMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_0020 
               LDMA CCR Control Register 
               Controls CRC calculation during 
             
             
                 
                 
               local DMA transfers 
             
             
               0x1017_0040 
               ILDMA PLB Address 
               Contains the local PLB address 
             
             
                 
                 
               field for local IDMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_0044 
               ILDMA Local Offset 
               Contains the local offset field for 
             
             
                 
                 
               local DMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_0048 
               ILDMA Control 
               Contains the size, type, and notify 
             
             
                 
                 
               field for local DMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_004C 
               ILDMA Message 
               Contains the data to be sent with 
             
             
                 
                 
               the completion message 
             
             
               0x1017_0050 
               ILDMA Priority 
               Specifies the PLB arbitration 
             
             
                 
                 
               priority to use during the DMA 
             
             
                 
                 
               operation 
             
             
               0x1017_0054 
               ILDMA Type 
               Contains the type field for local 
             
             
                 
                 
               DMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_0058 
               ILDMA Size 
               Contains the size field for local 
             
             
                 
                 
               DMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_005C 
               ILDMA Notify 
               Contains the notify field for local 
             
             
                 
                 
               DMA operations 
             
             
               0x1017_0060 
               ILDMA CRC Control Register 
               Controls CRC calculation during 
             
             
                 
                 
               local DMA transfers 
             
             
               0x1017_0070 
               IDMA Status Register 
               Contains the completion status for 
             
             
                 
                 
               an immediate DMA operation 
             
             
                 
             
           
        
       
     
   
   The local CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  may be accessible from the bus memory interface  110 . These addresses may be the same for all CPUs  102   0 – 102   6 . The local notification control registers may be accessible from the bus/memory interface  110 . These addresses may be the same for all CPUs  102   0 – 102   6 . The DPDR  104  may be 20 KB in size. The DPDR may be mapped in a unique location for each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  and may be fully accessible from the bus/memory interface  110 . The composition of the PIF DPDR addresses includes a 13 bit offset value, dpdr_offset. 
   RAM Emulation Addresses. Each CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  can provide the ability to use some or all of the direct mapped data cache  106  to emulate local DPDR  104  RAM. This mechanism can allow things like the stack and local scratch RAM to be moved from the DPDR  104  to the data cache  106  without creating a large amount of write traffic on the PLB  20   0    20   1  and DDR  32  due to the local data cache  106  being a write-through cache. This mechanism should be used carefully because a data cache  106  miss to an address that overwrites a portion of the data cache  106  being used to emulate local DPDR  104  RAM will result in data corruption. For this reason the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  may provide error detection to insure that silent data corruption doesn&#39;t occur. The DPDR  104  RAM emulation error detection registers can include a size field size, that can be utilized to configure the size of the ram emulation address space in the cacheable memory. Read transactions issued to RAM emulation address space on the Xtensa&#39;s bus memory interface  110  can be configured to immediately return garbage data without initiating a transaction on the PLB  20   0 – 20   1 . Write transactions to this space will handshake properly but then discard the data without initiating a PLB  20   0 – 20   1  transaction. As a result, the firmware can treat the RAM emulation address space exactly like it does local data DPDR  104  RAM space without adversely impacting system performance, e.g., due to unnecessary traffic on the PLB  20   0 – 20   1  or worrying about data interference between processors  102   0 – 102   6 . The firmware should be configured to also guarantee that data cache  106  storage being used as local RAM emulation is never used by any other data accesses. One way to accomplish this can be to use the entire data cache  106  for local RAM and all external data accesses can then be done via non-cacheable address space. However, if some amount of data cache  106  is necessary, it is possible to use a portion of the storage for local RAM emulation and a portion for data cache  106  but the location of the data being cached must be carefully controlled so it doesn&#39;t overwrite the RAM emulation data. 
   One possible way to utilize this feature is, e.g., if one half of the data cache  106  was used for the cached literal pool and one half was to be used as local RAM emulation, e.g., for the stack and scratch memory. In this case the local RAM emulation address space can be located in the 2K of address space starting at 0x901c — 0000 and extending to 0x901c — 07ff. The literal pool could then be located anywhere in the DDR backed address space with the restriction that address bit  11  must be a 1. This can insure that the literal pool will never over write local RAM emulation data space when loaded into the data cache  106 . All other Xtensa data accesses should then be through the non-cacheable address space. Also, a 2 should be written to the RAM emulation error register, so that illegal accesses will be detected by hardware. The RAM emulation address space is defined to include a 12 bit offset field, ram_em_offset, e.g., in bits  11 : 0 . 
   It will be understood from the above description that the system  10  of the present invention may be operated to utilize the cache memory, e.g., the Dcache  106  as a RAM emulation memory space if extra local RAM above and beyond that provided for the DPDR  32  is needed. However, in order to avoid a loss in performance due to unnecessary traffic, e.g., reads and writes on the PLB bus, the operations of the processor and Dcache due to the write through nature of the Dcache  106 , must be taken into account. This may be done by assigning a special set of addresses in the cacheable portion of the memory space for each of the processors  102   0 – 102   6  to use as a cache RAM emulation memory space. When the processor  102   0 – 102   6  executes, e.g., a write/store operation in the Dcache  106  memory for the respective module  100   0 – 100   6 , there will normally be generated a bus transaction and a DDR transaction for every such operation in the cacheable address space for the processors  102   0 – 102   6 . When the cache RAM emulation is being employed to locally store such temporary data as data in the stack, literals, tables, scratch data, etc., then storage outside of the CPU module  100   0 – 100   6  is not needed or desirable. 
   The firmware may establish that only a portion of the direct mapped cache  106  space will be used for RAM emulation, e.g., 1K or 2K, with the remaining, e.g., 3K or 2K, still used as cache. In this event, the error generation will be applicable only to the portion so selected. During compilation also, this configuration may be accounted for by always assigning such things as literals to the lower portion to be utilized as RAM emulation. 
   The cache memory, e.g., the 4K of direct mapped cache in the Dcache  106  may be made to function exactly like the other local RAM, e.g., the DPDR  32  by designating a portion, e.g., a 4K portion of the cacheable address space used by all of the processors  102   0 – 102   6  as a RAM emulation block that is set aside and not otherwise utilized as memory, e.g., in the main memory space for the system  10 , and mapping the; e.g., 4K of, e.g., the Dcache to that space. The CPU bus/memory interface  110  may be configured to detect the CPU  102   0 – 102   6 , e.g., seeking to determine if an address line in that 4K space is in the Dcache, e.g., in preparation to doing a write/store to that address. On the first such attempt the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  will determine that the line is not there and perform a read to that location in main memory. The CPU bus/memory interface  110  will decode this read to the set aside RAM emulation memory space, i.e., this space is software visible just like the DPDR, and instead of executing a read to that memory space in main memory, over the PLB bus  20   0 – 20   1 , the bus/memory interface unit will provide bogus data to the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  and the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  will then write the bogus data to the mapped address line in the local DCache  106 . The processor  102   0 – 102   6  then can modify that data in this target address space in the local DCache  106  by a normal write/store command, and, subsequently, also can read and write to and from that location in the Dcache  106  local memory, which the CPU will continue to detect as in the Dcache  106  after this initialization process. It will be understood, that the system  10  might be configured to provide for the firmware to cause the CPU bus/memory interface  110  to place the bogus data in the mapped Dcache memory space. The CPU bus/memory interface unit  110  will continue to detect write/stores to this address location and abort the execution of the write/store over the PLB bus  20   0 – 20   1 . 
   Generally speaking the easiest way to set up this RAM emulation address space mapped to the local Dcache  106  is to use all of the Dcache available space, e.g., the full 4K in the embodiment described in this application. Care must be taken if the entire direct mapped cache is not all used for this local RAM emulation, as data at addresses that will not be stored in the RAM emulation portion of the cache array can be accessed via a cacheable access when operating in such a mode and result in data in the RAM emulation portion of the cache array being overwritten and lost forever. For this reason, the CPU bus/memory unit  110  may also be configured to detect cacheable read/write transactions in the cacheable memory space outside of the set aside 4K RAM emulation space, when RAM emulation is in operation (normally established by the firmware, e.g., at initialization/power up). Such read/write transactions will be flagged as errors, and may also be utilized to cause an interrupt. 
   It will also be understood from the above that the system  10  according to the embodiment described in this application may provide a very effective task scheduling and management system for the respective CPU  102   0 – 102   6 , e.g., by utilizing the DPDR  104  and hardware assisted task management and scheduling through, e.g., message tracking and task arbitration. Information about the various messages pending in the message queues  202   0 – 202   31  may be tracked, e.g., through the use of the associated CCRs  210   0 – 210   32 , and similar task performance information may be contained in the remaining CCRs  210   32 – 210   63 . Each of the CCRs  210   32 – 210   63  may be selected to participate in an arbitration process, e.g., by the firmware. In each of the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  notification control registers may be an indication that the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is notify enabled and arbitration enabled, in which event the firmware may include the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  in the arbitration process. Each such CCR  210   0 – 210   63  will participate in the arbitration process when so designated and when it has a non-negative value in its credit cnt field. The notification control register for each CCR  210   0 – 210   63  may also be utilized to indicate the group to which the CCR is assigned. The firmware assigns to each such group a priority class and a priority number. The firmware then utilizes the group information to arbitrate between CCRs that are active, i.e., have a non-negative, value for credit_cnt. 
   It will be understood that the credit count value may represent a number of messages waiting in a respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  or may represent some other task that needs to be scheduled for the processor  102   0 – 102   6 , e.g., the processing of a periodically received timing signal, or the fact that a DMA access transaction has been completed and the result is ready, or the like. It will be also understood that by not participating in arbitration the respective CCR may be idle, or associated with a task that never needs to be selected by arbitration and can, e.g., await the absence of any other CCR seeking arbitration or, alternatively, may be such that whenever active always goes ahead of whatever other CCRs may be selected in the current round of arbitration by the firmware. 
   The firmware will arbitrate by group first, i.e., if all CCRs CCR  210   0 – 210   63  that are active have the same group number, as indicated in the respective notification control registers, some equal selection algorithm, such as round robin selection, can be applied whenever multiple CCRs of the same group are active. Since in the embodiment disclosed each group is given the same class and the same priority value, the, e.g., round robin selection is all that is needed to arbitrate between CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  assigned the same group number. Since different groups, in the embodiment disclosed, are by definition each given their own unique class and priority number, the arbitration process is carried out by the hardware based on the priority number. It will be understood that other utilizations of the group, class and priority number may be utilized with other possible selection algorithms. 
   When CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  of different groups are active, the arbitration is based upon the value of the priority number count in the arbitration group control register which can be, e.g., decremented each time the group, i.e., all of the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  having the same group assignment, fails to win the selection process of the arbitration. That is, when some other group is selected. 
   When selected this groups priority number count is reset to its original value as contained in the arbitration group control register. This is done under the control of control logic that copies the value from the arbitration control register into an internal hardware temporary register for decrementing. Therefore, e.g., if a group has a priority value of 1 and another group has a priority value of 10, the former group will, ordinarily, be selected and reset to its value of 1 ten times before the other group is decremented to have the equal priority count number and be able, e.g., by round robin selection, to win the arbitration. 
   The identification of the CCR  210   0 – 210   31  that wins the arbitration is used by the firmware to identify, e.g., a location in a message queue  202   0 – 202   31  where the next message to be processed by the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  or the next task identified by some other CCR  210   32 – 210   63  is to be found. This address can be placed, e.g., in the next head pointer register  296   0 – 296   31  for the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . The CPU  102   0 – 102   6  may then read the content of the queue vector pointer register and the next header pointer register to obtain respectively a location for an instruction to begin processing what is contained in the message and the address of the next message to be processed itself. In this manner an essentially zero wait state memory management within each processor module  100   0 – 100   6 , with the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  essentially always having a next task to perform ready and waiting and, therefore, need not spend valuable CPU cycles in, e.g., an interrupt or stall while polling locations for the next task to perform and awaiting responses. 
   It will also be understood that the system  10  according to the embodiment disclosed can enable the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  to be doing tasks that are pre-prioritized for the CPU by the hardware and firmware and/or do useful work instead of, e.g., waiting for a DMA outside of the respective module  100   0 – 100   6  to occur. This can be especially beneficial in a system, such as a host bus adapter, where the application tends towards large numbers of tasks with relatively short execution times, e.g., 100 CPU cycles, and where the wait times for, e.g., ordinary DMA transactions may be in the order of 500 CPU cycles. 
   In operation then the hardware has the ability to do a prioritized selection of one of the, e.g., 64 different task identifiers that are requesting service. The firmware can do a single read of a local register to which the hardware returns a vector that points the firmware to a location where the next task to be serviced, e.g., a message in a message queue  202   0 – 202   31 , or a task identified by one of the other CCRs  210   32 – 210   63 , awaiting service. The firmware can make use of the pre-assigned class and priority of each of the task identifiers assigned, e.g., to one of a plurality of groups, each, e.g., having a class and a priority value, as the guide to selecting the winner of the arbitration. Each task can be associated with one of the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  and each CCR may have associated with it a number, which when non-negative, and arbitration is enabled, indicates that the CCR  210   0 – 210   63  is asserting a need for service by the respective processor  102   0 – 102   6 . The hardware can then perform the prioritization arbitration selection process among these CCRs with a non-negative value and report a winning task identifier, i.e., the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   63  and report the winning task identifier back to the firmware, e.g., via a register read. The firmware may also directly modify/manipulate the value of any task identifying CCR  210   0 – 210   63 . The hardware may also directly modify/manipulate the values for certain events, such as receiving a message, completing a DMA operation, receiving new credits, receiving an interrupt or the log message timestamp counter rolling over. 
   This is advantageous over the more traditional processing architecture where the CPU must, e.g., interrupt and/or poll to obtain the next task to perform, which is much more expensive to the overall efficiency in terms of wasted CPU cycles. Also an arbitration process implemented entirely in the firmware would take at least an order of magnitude more CPU instruction cycles to execute than the system of the present invention. 
   It will also be understood that the hardware can be configured by the firmware such that, e.g., different message queues may be assigned for different types of tasks/functionalities, e.g., message queue  202   0  always can be dedicated to the processing of new incoming fibre packets, such that, e.g., one CPU  102   0 – 102   6  sending a message to a second CPU  102   0 – 102   6  may direct that message to a particular message queue  202   0 – 202   31  according to the type of operation that the task relating to the message requires. This can simplify the receiving CPU  102   0 – 102   6  task management by, e.g., having a pointer to the functionality array associated with each message queue  202   0 – 202   31 , so that the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  can fetch the first instruction to perform the required functionality on the identified message in the identified message queue essentially at the same time as fetching the message. This can be done by reading the current content of the QVPR which is updated each time an arbitration is won to point to the place in the array  294  associated with the particular CCR  210   0 – 210   63 . It will also be understood, as noted above that the CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  may be utilized to perform other tasks as well, e.g., tracking the messages in a given queue  202   0 – 202   31  and indicating to a sending CPU  102   0 – 102   6  whether a receiving CPU  102   0 – 102   6  can receive a message of a given length from the sending CPU  102   0 – 102   6  in a given message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . 
   It will also be understood from the above, that the system of the present invention is particularly adapted to an architecture in which a plurality of processors, e.g., in a cascaded and/or parallel processing configuration are in need of passing tasks from one to another in as efficient a manner as possible. The tasks may be embodied, e.g., in special messages sent from one CPU to another, which may be, e.g., stored by the receiving CPU in one of a plurality of specifically identified and categorized message queues  202   0 – 202   23 , which usually represent in some fashion (by containing needed data) a particular task for the receiving CPU to perform, i.e., essentially a data pipeline. For example, a message could indicate that the sending CPU  102   0 – 102   6  is writing to the receiving CPU  102   0 – 102   6 , e.g., in a host bus adapter application, a message packed header that needs further processing, e.g., that the receiving processor may be specifically configured in firmware to perform. 
   Such messages may, e.g., have a maximum length, e.g., of 1K bytes may be stored in the FIFO message queues  202   0 – 202   31 , having also a maximum length, e.g., of 4K bytes. The message queues  202   0 – 202   31  and-other task identifiers, e.g., the remaining CCRs  210   32 – 210   63  may, e.g., be segregated by type of task, e.g., represented by the messages, e.g., one or more may be always for incoming new fibre channel packets. Messages and other tasks competing for processing service time will accumulate in the system, and the system will need to identify effectively and efficiently from among these the task(s) that most need to be done ahead of others. Rather than wasting time on polling and interrupts in the CPUs  102   0 – 102   6  themselves, the system is adapted to make the selections necessary in hardware prior to presenting the given tasks, in sequential order to the processor for processing. 
   The address space for the DPDR  32  is local and quickly accessible and also known to and visible to the firmware. The arbitration logic and registers may be in the CPU bus memory interface unit  110 , and be adapted to conduct, e.g., polling and prioritization apart from the CPU. The arbitration groups may mostly be of essentially the same value and one or more groups may be for ultra important tasks or ultra unimportant tasks, usually depending upon the message/task type. When arbitrating between different groups, the group of the higher class will win. In the specific embodiment disclosed each class has a particular prioritization value, so that effectively, it is the prioritization value of each class that determines the task that will win the arbitration selection process each time as between tasks in different groups. As noted the value is actually inverse of the priority, since each group will be selected once its stored priority value decrements to zero and be reset one selected, so that priority value 1 means, ordinarily that group will be selected to win the arbitration ten times before the group with the priority value of 10 is selected to win the arbitration. As one example a group may be selected to have a zero value and will, therefore always be selected until another group(s) reaches zero and then, e.g., a round robin selection algorithm may enable the other group(s) to be selected, e.g., in sequential order from the last group (queue/task identifier) selected to win the arbitration. 
   In the case where no task is selected, i.e., the QVPR  290  contains no pointer to the array  294  indication the processing required for the nest task and the NHPR  296  points to the location of the task message, e.g., in a message queue  202   0 – 202   31  or associated with a specific other CCR  210   32 – 210   63  next head, the QVPR can be configured to stall the processor, e.g., by not returning a data ready signal to the CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . The CPU  102   0 – 102   6  will then stall and await the presence of the data ready signal, and therefore, advantageously not be itself polling/interrupting looking for work to perform. The stall may also be advantageous from a power consumption standpoint. The QVPR  290 , when there is a winner in the arbitration process will always contain the pointer for the last winner, and may be configured to not drop this indicator until the CPU  102   0 – 102   6 , e.g., indicates that the processing of this task is complete, e.g., by attempting a read of the QVPR, in which event the hardware/firmware can be utilized to place the most recent new winner of the arbitration process in the NHPR  296 , along with its array  294  pointer in the QVPR  290 . 
   The CCRs, e.g., CCRs  210   0 – 210   31  may be used for other functions in addition to arbitration. The may also be utilized to, e.g., count the number of messages (message space utilized, for unequal length messages) in a given message queue and, e.g., indicating message wrapping has occurred and/or preventing queue overload. For example, the hardware may determine that a message has been received in a message queue  202   0 – 202   3 , and increment the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   31  and, similarly decrement the count in the respective CCR  210   0 – 210   31  when a message is processed by the CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . The CCRs  210   0 – 210   63  may in fact be incremented by any CPU  102   0 – 102   6  in the system  10 . Each CCR  210   0 – 210   63  can be directly linked by the firmware to functionality associated with a location in the array  294 . 
   It is also possible that the firmware may cause the processor  102   0 – 102   6  to perform tasks without the need for arbitration, e.g., to process all of the messages in a given queue  202   0 – 202   31 . In such a case, the CCRs, e.g., CCRs  210   0 – 210   31  may be utilized for the firmware to indicate to the CPU  102   0 – 102   6  that messages remain in the respective queue. 
   The CCRs, e.g., CCRs  210   0 – 210   31  may be utilized for message flow control between processors  102   0 – 102   6 . This may be done advantageously utilizing only writes and not reads, e.g., by the receiving CPU  102   0 – 102   6  writing “credits” into a CCR in the sending CPU  102   0 – 102   6 , e.g., indicating that a certain amount of message space has been opened up in a specific message queue by the CPU writing the credit having processed a message. As an example, the system  10  may be configured so that, e.g., CPUs  102   0 – 102   3  perform certain task on, e.g., incoming data packets, and always write particular messages types to a particular message queue(s)  202   0 – 202   31  in a particular one of the downstream CPUs  102   4 – 102   6 . In such an event, a CCR  210   0 – 210   31  may always be dedicated to tracking the content of a message queue  202   0 – 202   31 , with each upstream CPU  102   0 – 102   6 , with only, e.g., 64 CCRs, still having surplus CCRs for acting, e.g., as other task identifiers for the local CPU. In this manner the sending CPU can be in communication with the receiving CPU, using only writes from the receiving CPU to determine the status of a target message queue  202   0 – 202   31  in a particular one of the downstream CPUs  102   4 – 106   6 . Credits may be sent and received representing number of messages for fixed length messages and representing length of space occupied/freed up for messages of variable length. When the respective CCR  210   32 – 210   63  in the sending CPU  102   0 – 102   6  indicates that not enough credits are available in the target queue in the target CPU  102   0 – 102   6 , the sending CPU  102   0 – 102   6  can perform other tasks before coming back, when the appropriate number of credits are available to send the message to the target queue  202   0 – 202   31 . 
   Tasks may be selected to not participate in arbitration, e.g., by the associated local CCR  210   0 – 210   63  being set up to not be arbitration enabled, in which event the associated queue  202   0 – 202   31  or CCR  210   32 – 210   63  is active, i.e., asserting a task is ready for processing. The particular CCR address selected by the firmware in the writing CPU  102   0 – 102   6  can also serve to contain a command, e.g., write by adding or by subtracting. 
   The functionality of the maximum message size that the hardware/firmware will guarantee will not wrap is to eliminate the need for the CPU to check for wrapping for a message of a size less than this value, as indicated, e.g., by the first word of the message. This is at the expense of maintaining message queues that may not be of optimum size from a utilization standpoint, but if the firmware is set up to always use messages of less than this length, then the CPU never has to waste time checking message sizes and locations in the queues for a possible wrap condition and then retrieving the rest of the message if a wrap has occurred. 
   The present invention is particularly useful in a networked environment, e.g., in a Fibre Channel communication network. There are generally three ways to deploy a Fibre Channel network: simple point-to-point connections; arbitrated loops; and switched fabrics. The simplest topology is the point-to-point configuration, which simply connects any two Fibre Channel systems directly. Arbitrated loops are Fibre Channel ring connections that provide shared access to bandwidth via arbitration. Switched Fibre Channel networks, called “fabrics”, yield the highest performance by leveraging the benefits of cross-point switching. 
   The Fibre Channel fabric works something like a traditional phone system. The fabric can connect varied devices such as work stations, PCS, servers, routers, mainframes, and storage devices that have Fibre Channel interface ports. Each such device can have an origination port that “calls” the fabric by entering the address of a destination port in a header of a frame. The Fibre Channel specification defines the structure of this frame. (This frame structure raises data transfer issues that will be discussed below and addressed by the present invention). The Fibre Channel fabric does all the work of setting up the desired connection, hence the frame originator does not need to be concerned with complex routing algorithms. There are no complicated permanent virtual circuits (PVCs) to set up. Fibre Channel fabrics can handle more than 16 million addresses and thus, are capable of accommodating very large networks. The fabric can be enlarged by simply adding ports. The aggregate data rate of a fully configured Fibre Channel network can be in the tera-bit-per-second range. 
   Basic types of storage network connections  400  are shown in  FIG. 4 . In particular, a conventional user network  440  (e.g. a LAN, Ethernet, WAN or the Internet) enables remote laptop  448  and remote computers  450 ,  452  and  454  to communicate with servers  432 ,  436 ,  440 ,  422 , and  428 . Fibre channel storage network  408 , which may comprise a fabric of switches for connecting devices coupled to the fibre channel storage network, further enables servers  422  and  428  (via fibre channel HBAs  424  and  430 ) to communicate and share data with storage appliance  410  (e.g. a tape device) and RAID storage systems  412  and  416  (coupled to disk arrays  414  and  418 ). IP storage network  420 , which may comprise a fabric of switches for connecting devices coupled to the IP storage network, further enables servers  432 ,  436  and  440 , via IP HBAs  434 ,  438  and  442  (e.g. iSCSI HBAs), to interface with IP storage devices  402  and  404  (e.g. iSCSI storage devices). In addition, a switch  406  having a fibre channel port and an IP port enables devices connected to the IP storage network and the fibre channel storage network to interface with each other. The system  10  of the present invention may be included in the HBAs and the target devices (the storage devices connected to the IP and fibre channel networks) in  FIG. 4 . 
   It will also be understood from the above that in operation each of the CPUs e.g.,  102   0 – 102   6  may have its own local DMA engine including its own DMA controller  31  and DMAQ  320  which is primarily used, e.g., for moving data into and out of, e.g., the respective local DPDR  104   0 – 104   6 . The other port of the DPDR is connected directly to the respective local processor module  100   0 – 100   6  CPU  102   0 – 102   6  and can be directly accessed via load and store instructions from the respective CPU- 102   6 , as if the DPDR were a cache memory without introducing any processor wait states. The LDMA engines can provide a low-overhead method for initiating a local DMA operation. When a processor  102   0 – 102   6  needs some data it can initiate a local DMA operation to bring the data into the DPDR for use/manipulation by the CPU  102   0 – 102   6 . While the DMA transaction is being processed by the local DMA controller  310  the processor  102   0 – 102   6  is available for other useful work in parallel with the DMA transaction. Once the DMA transaction is completed by the DMA controller  310  the processor  102   0 – 102   6  can access the data directly from the DPDR  104  without incurring as much of a performance penalty as if a real cache memory were used and a cache miss occurred and was processed by typical DMA methods. In such a case in the prior art the processor would, e.g., execute a load instruction and the data not being in the cache would cause a cache miss and institute the process to bring the data into the cache. This would cause the CPU to be stalled for the duration of the processing of the cache miss, up to or exceeding  50  CPU cycles for each cacheline miss. Thus, when the processor  102   0 – 102   6  is processing data occupying many cache lines at the same time, the performance penalty is even further exacerbated. According to an embodiment of the present invention this situation is avoided by the processor  102   0 – 102   6  programming (writing) an LDMA descriptor to the firmware, which, depending upon which of the staging registers  360 ,  362 ,  364 ,  366 ,  368 ,  370  and  372  needs to by updated may take only 10–20 CPU cycles after which the processor  102   0 – 102   6  is available for other work and is not stalled waiting for a cache miss to be processed. Instead, the necessary data is loaded into the DPDR  104  and the processor  102  informed when it is available as indicated above, e.g., as a message ready for servicing is indicated to the processor  102  by the firmware, i.e., the hardware assisted firmware informs the processor when the LDMA transaction is complete and the needed data ready for the processor  102 , e.g. by incrementing an appropriate CCR  210   0 – 210   63  or otherwise sending a message to the CPU, e.g., from the message register  352 . 
   In operation the LDMA PLB address register being written can, e.g., cause a state machine in the firmware to read the contents of the staging registers and write them to the LDMAQ entry registers N 0 –N 3 . 
   The arrangement of an embodiment of the present invention is also well suited for so-called “fire-and-forget” transaction flow management by the hardware assisted firmware, e.g., by utilizing successive LDMAQ  320  entries. For example when a transaction has been initiated by the CPU and an LDMA transaction is being processed and a response message is required, e.g., somewhere outside of the respective module  1000 – 1006  then the content of the message register of the next succeeding entry  330  in the FIFO of the DMAQ  320  can, e.g., return a credit or the like operation. This is not limited to the DMAQ, but could be utilized with any similar hardware, e.g., some other FIFO to initiate a response or other “fire-and-forget” operation, e.g., where the CPU initiated the transaction but the respective CPU itself is not in need of being informed of the completion of the transaction while some other unit in the system is so in need. As explained the hardware assisted firmware can, e.g., give this notification independently of the respective CPU and without, e.g., occupying the respective DPDR, with the associated cycle time and flow management overhead to the performance of the local module  100   0 – 100   6 , thus avoiding unnecessary synchronized CPU and LDMA operations. 
   As an example, assuming that the processor  102  needed to perform an operation on a  512  bye block of data. The processor  102  would initiate the LDMA process to acquire this data if not already in the DPDR, consuming only 10–20 cycles, but if handled as a cache miss, with cache lines of, e.g., 64 bytes, the process would have involved 8 cache line misses, and e.g., some 400 CPU cycles or even more, e.g., depending upon other traffic on the pertinent bus(es). Having inqueued the descriptor after only 10–20 cycles the CPU can move on to other awaiting tasks. Once data manipulation is done the LDMA may also be used to move the manipulated data outside of the processor module  100   0 – 100   6 , e.g., to SRAM or to another module&#39;s DPDR  104 . It can be seen that the arrangement of an embodiment of the present invention is particularly well suited for applications that are repeatedly processing chunks of data that would occupy multiple cachelines, though even a single cache line miss if required to be repeatedly handled is processed with increased efficiency. The CPU, of course, must be efficiently pipelined by the firmware, lest it be stalled pending the completion of the LDMA operation in any event due to lack of useful work pending for servicing by the processor  102 . 
   It will also be understood that the disclosed embodiment of the present invention is well suited to avoiding needed overhead to track wrapping in, e.g., the respective message queues  202   0 – 202   31 . this may be accomplished by fixing a length of message which will be assured to never wrap, and also insuring that most if not all messages translating through the system are of this length or less (which may be done in a fixed length or variable length message system). This may be handled, e.g., utilizing the queue configuration register for each of the respective message queues  202   0 – 202   31 , part of the CPU configuration registers discussed above. The queue configuration register contains a field msg_size which is set to the size of a message that the system will guarantee never wraps. For fixed length messaging this, may also be the size of the fixed length messages. For variable length messaging the messages may have a header that indicates, e.g., the message size, as well as, e.g., the source and type of message. The size may be indicated by an eight bit field indicating the number of words of some length, e.g., 16 bytes that are in the message. As noted above the next head pointer is contained in the next head pointer register  296 , which is indicative of the point in the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  where the next message for the CPU to service is contained. Also as noted above the system includes a tail pointer register, the content of which is indicative of the place to start the loading of the next incoming message to the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . In order to prevent wrapping of any message of msg_size or less in length, the firmware may be configured to not allow the tail pointer register to contain the indication of a location within the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  that is within msg_size −1 of the end of the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31  and to instead point to the beginning of the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31 . That is, if the next message is up to msg_size the tail pointer will not be pointing to a location where wrapping would be necessary. It will be understood that if the next message is smaller in size that msg_size −1 it would still not be placed in the last msg_size −1 locations in the respective message queue  202   0 – 202   31 , since the tail pointer cannot be located there. Thus, effectively, the message queue  202   0 – 202   31  must be treated by the system, e.g., for credit allocation and use, as if it were actually of a length, e.g., 4K, minus (msg_size −1). Similarly, the system cannot allow the next head pointer to point into this prohibited space either. 
   It will be understood that if the system is not configured for fixed length and/or the messages are not guaranteed to be less than msg_size in length then wrapping may occur, e.g., if the tail pointer is at msg_size from the end of the respective queue  202   0 – 202   31 , and the incoming message is in fact greater in size than msg_size, if that is allowable in the configuration of the system. However, the system will only have to expend the overhead of checking if wrapping has occurred for message management and flow control purposes only when the incoming message is in fact greater in size than msg_size. In all other cases the hardware assisted firmware insures no wrapping has occurred or can occur. For a system configured for fixed length messages the hardware assisted firmware may rely on the message length field in the Queue configuration register and message headers to establish message size are not required. 
   The foregoing invention has been described in relation to a presently preferred embodiment thereof. The invention should not be considered limited to this embodiment. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that many variations and modifications to the presently preferred embodiment, many of which are specifically referenced above, may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the appended claims. The inventions should be measured in scope from the appended claims.