blob: e6a1fdc2a19dd1e8015401dfc0feb15969e2cfda [file] [log] [blame]
/** @file
Deal with devices that just exist in memory space.
To follow the EFI driver model you need a root handle to start with. An
EFI driver will have a driver binding protocol (Supported, Start, Stop)
that is used to layer on top of a handle via a gBS->ConnectController.
The first handle has to just be in the system to make that work. For
PCI it is a PCI Root Bridge IO protocol that provides the root.
On an embedded system with MMIO device we need a handle to just
show up. That handle will have this protocol and a device path
protocol on it.
For an ethernet device the device path must contain a MAC address device path
node.
Copyright (c) 2008 - 2009, Apple Inc. All rights reserved.<BR>
SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause-Patent
**/
#ifndef __EMBEDDED_DEVICE_PROTOCOL_H__
#define __EMBEDDED_DEVICE_PROTOCOL_H__
//
// Protocol GUID
//
// BF4B9D10-13EC-43dd-8880-E90B718F27DE
#define EMBEDDED_DEVICE_PROTOCOL_GUID \
{ 0xbf4b9d10, 0x13ec, 0x43dd, { 0x88, 0x80, 0xe9, 0xb, 0x71, 0x8f, 0x27, 0xde } }
typedef struct {
UINT16 VendorId;
UINT16 DeviceId;
UINT16 RevisionId;
UINT16 SubsystemId;
UINT16 SubsystemVendorId;
UINT8 ClassCode[3];
UINT8 HeaderSize;
UINTN BaseAddress;
} EMBEDDED_DEVICE_PROTOCOL;
extern EFI_GUID gEmbeddedDeviceGuid;
#endif