Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
John Baldwin
f9a9473702 Retire isa_setup_intr() and isa_teardown_intr() and use the generic bus
versions instead.  They were never needed as bus_generic_intr() and
bus_teardown_intr() had been changed to pass the original child device up
in 42734, but the ISA bus was not converted to new-bus until 45720.
2011-05-06 13:48:53 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
6d2d7b8c0d Fix the interrupt code, broken 7 months ago. The interrupt framework
already supported nested PICs, but was limited to having a nested
AT-PIC only. With G5 support the need for nested OpenPIC controllers
needed to be added. This was done the wrong way and broke the MPC8555
eval system in the process.

OFW, as well as FDT, describe the interrupt routing in terms of a
controller and an interrupt pin on it. This needs to be mapped to a
flat and global resource: the IRQ. The IRQ is the same as the PCI
intline and as such needs to be representable in 8 bits. Secondly,
ISA support pretty much dictates that IRQ 0-15 should be reserved
for ISA interrupts, because of the internal workins of south bridges.
Both were broken.

This change reverts revision 209298 for a big part and re-implements
it simpler. In particular:
o   The id() method of the PIC I/F is removed again. It's not needed.
o   The openpic_attach() function has been changed to take the OFW
    or FDT phandle of the controller as a second argument. All bus
    attachments that previously used openpic_attach() as the attach
    method of the device I/F now implement as bus-specific method
    and pass the phandle_t to the renamed openpic_attach().
o   Change powerpc_register_pic() to take a few more arguments. In
    particular:
    -   Pass the number of IPIs specificly. The number of IRQs carved
	out for a PIC is the sum of the number of int. pins and IPIs.
    -   Pass a flag indicating whether the PIC is an AT-PIC or not.
	This tells the interrupt framework whether to assign IRQ 0-15
	or some other range.
o   Until we implement proper multi-pass bus enumeration, we have to
    handle the case where we need to map from PIC+pin to IRQ *before*
    the PIC gets registered. This is done in a similar way as before,
    but rather than carving out 256 IRQs per PIC, we carve out 128
    IRQs (124 pins + 4 IPIs). This is supposed to handle the G5 case,
    but should really be fixed properly using multiple passes.
o   Have the interrupt framework set root_pic in most cases and not
    put that burden in PIC drivers (for the most part).
o   Remove powerpc_ign_lookup() and replace it with powerpc_get_irq().
    Remove IGN_SHIFT, INTR_INTLINE and INTR_IGN.

Related to the above, fix the Freescale PCI controller driver, broken
by the FDT code. Besides not attaching properly, bus numbers were
assigned improperly and enumeration was broken in general. This
prevented the AT PIC from being discovered and interrupt routing to
work properly. Consequently, the ata(4) controller stopped functioning.

Fix the driver, and FDT PCI support, enough to get the MPC8555CDS
going again. The FDT PCI code needs a whole lot more work.

No breakages are expected, but lackiong G5 hardware, it's possible
that there are unpleasant side-effects. At least MPC85xx support is
back to where it was 7 months ago -- it's amazing how badly support
can be broken in just 7 months...

Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
2011-01-29 20:58:38 +00:00
Nathan Whitehorn
eaef5f0af8 Provide for multiple, cascaded PICs on PowerPC systems, and extend the
OFW interrupt map interface to also return the device's interrupt parent.

MFC after:	8.1-RELEASE
2010-06-18 14:06:27 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
ac741ae511 Add suppport for ISA and ISA interrupts to make the ATA
controller in the VIA southbridge functional in the CDS
(Configurable Development System) for MPC85XX.
The embedded USB controllers look operational but the
interrupt steering is still wrong.
2009-04-24 03:51:11 +00:00