in the clocks=<...> properties of their FDT data. The clock properties
consist of 2-cell tuples, each containing a clock device node reference and
a clock number. A clock device driver can register itself as providing
this interface, then other drivers can turn the FDT clock node reference
into the corresponding device_t so that they can use the interface to query
and manipulate their clocks.
This provides convenience functions to enable or disable all the clocks
listed in the properties for a device, so most drivers will be able to
manage their clocks with a single call to fdt_clock_enable_all(dev).
platform code, it is expected these will be merged in the future when the
ARM code is more complete.
Until more boards can be tested only use this with the Raspberry Pi and
rrename the functions on the other SoCs.
Reviewed by: ian@
matching 'compatible' property. This probably has a short half-life (as
do most of the fdt_ functions), but it helps solve some near-term needs
until we work out the larger problems of device instantiation order
versus the order of things in the fdt data.
a sub-node of nexus (ofwbus) rather than direct attach under nexus. This
fixes FDT on x86 and will make coexistence with ACPI on ARM systems easier.
SPARC is unchanged.
Reviewed by: imp, ian
to check the status property in their probe routines.
Simplebus used to only instantiate its children whose status="okay"
but that was improper behavior, fixed in r261352. Now that it doesn't
check anymore and probes all its children; the children all have to
do the check because really only the children know how to properly
interpret their status property strings.
Right now all existing drivers only understand "okay" versus something-
that's-not-okay, so they all use the new ofw_bus_status_okay() helper.
get the Routerboard 800 up and running with the vendor device tree. This
does not implement some BERI-specific features (which hopefully won't be
necessary soon), so move the old code to mips/beri, with a higher attach
priority when built, until MIPS interrupt domain support is rearranged.
strings and include arbitrary information (IRQ line/domain/sense). When the
ofw_bus_map_intr() API was introduced, it assumed that, as on most systems,
these were either 1 cell, containing an interrupt line, or 2, containing
a line number plus a sense code. It turns out a non-negligible number of
ARM systems use 3 (or even 4!) cells for interrupts, so make this more
general.
related to setting up static device mappings. Since it was only used by
arm/mv/mv_pci.c, it's now just static functions within that file, plus
one public function that gets called only from arm/mv/mv_machdep.c.
obsolete. This involves the following pieces:
- Remove it entirely on PowerPC, where it is not used by MD code either
- Remove all references to machine/fdt.h in non-architecture-specific code
(aside from uart_cpu_fdt.c, shared by ARM and MIPS, and so is somewhat
non-arch-specific).
- Fix code relying on header pollution from machine/fdt.h includes
- Legacy fdtbus.c (still used on x86 FDT systems) now passes resource
requests to its parent (nexus). This allows x86 FDT devices to allocate
both memory and IO requests and removes the last notionally MI use of
fdtbus_bs_tag.
- On those architectures that retain a machine/fdt.h, unused bits like
FDT_MAP_IRQ and FDT_INTR_MAX have been removed.
fdtbus in most cases. This brings ARM and MIPS more in line with existing
Open Firmware platforms like sparc64 and powerpc, as well as preventing
double-enumeration of the OF tree on embedded PowerPC (first through nexus,
then through fdtbus).
This change is also designed to simplify resource management on FDT platforms
by letting there exist a platform-defined root bus resource_activate() call
instead of replying on fdtbus to do the right thing through fdt_bs_tag.
The OFW_BUS_MAP_INTR() and OFW_BUS_CONFIG_INTR() kobj methods are also
available to implement for similar purposes.
Discussed on: -arm, -mips
Tested by: zbb, brooks, imp, and others
MFC after: 6 weeks
new devmap.[ch] files. Emphasize the MD nature of these things by using
the prefix arm_devmap_ on the function and type names (already a few of
these things found their way into MI code, hopefully it will be harder to
do by accident in the future).
negative diff that should improve reliability somewhat. There should be
no differences in behavior -- please report any that crop up. This has been
tested on ARM and PPC systems.
Tested by: ray
230523, 1123614
Implement a driver for Robert Norton's PIC as an FDT interrupt
controller. Devices whose interrupt-parent property points to a beripic
device will have their interrupt allocation, activation , and setup
operations routed through the IC rather than down the traditional bus
hierarchy.
This driver largely abstracts the underlying CPU away allowing the
PIC to be implemented on CPU's other than BERI. Due to insufficient
abstractions a small amount of MIPS specific code is currently required
in fdt_mips.c and to implement counters.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA/AFRL
- Use bus reference phandles in place of FDT offsets as IRQ domain keys
- Unify the identical macio/fdt/mambo OpenPIC drivers into one
- Be more forgiving (following ePAPR) about what we need from the device
tree to identify an OpenPIC
- Correctly map all IRQs into an interrupt domain
- Set IRQ_*_CONFORM for interrupts on an unknown PIC type instead of
failing attachment for that device.
Implement support for interrupt-parent nodes in simplebus. The current
implementation requires that device declarations have an interrupt-parent
node and that it point to a device that has registered itself as a
interrupt controller in fdt_ic_list_head and implements the fdt_ic
interface.
Sponsored by: DARPA/AFRL
BUS_PROBE_DEFAULT, it would attach to them all, producing both many
fdtbus instances and preventing other devices from attaching. Instead
return BUS_PROBE_NOWILDCARD, which exists for exactly this purpose.
1. Common headers for fdt.h and ofw_machdep.h under x86/include
with indirections under i386/include and amd64/include.
2. New modinfo for loader provided FDT blob.
3. Common x86_init_fdt() called from hammer_time() on amd64 and
init386() on i386.
4. Split-off FDT specific low-level console functions from FDT
bus methods for the uart(4) driver. The low-level console
logic has been moved to uart_cpu_fdt.c and is used for arm,
mips & powerpc only. The FDT bus methods are shared across
all architectures.
5. Add dev/fdt/fdt_x86.c to hold the fdt_fixup_table[] and the
fdt_pic_table[] arrays. Both are empty right now.
FDT addresses are I/O ports on x86. Since the core FDT code does
not handle different address spaces, adding support for both I/O
ports and memory addresses requires some thought and discussion.
It may be better to use a compile-time option that controls this.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
first position of compatible property, so simplebus driver can be generic
driver for any bus listed as compatible with "simple-bus".
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Some hardware like DMA and GPIO controllers might require
more then 8 interrupts per device instance.
Submitted by: Daisuke Aoyama <aoyama at peach.ne.jp>
Discussed with: gber@, raj@
unmerged BERI DTS files) to head:
Use the OFW compatible string "mips,mips4k" rather than
"mips4k,cp0" for interrupt control using MIPS4k CP0.
Suggested by: thompsa
Implement a MIPS FDT PIC decode routine to use when no PIC has been
configured, which assumes a cascade back to the nexus bus (e.g.,
the on-board CP0 interrupt management parts on the MIPS). If the
soc bus in a MIPS DTS file is declared as "mips4k,cp0"-compatible,
then this will be enabled. This is sufficient to allow IRQs to be
configured on BERI.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
perhaps due to an interrupt configuration problem, do not try to free
device ivars that have not yet have been allocated.
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: gonzo
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
It returns memory regions restricted from being used by kernel. These
regions are dfined in "memreserve" property of root node in the same
format as "reg" property of /memory node