This is mostly needed for a common arm64/amd64 iommu code.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26587
This function isn't ACPI dependent and we may use it on FDT systems
as well.
o Don't repeat the function declaration, include iommu.h instead.
Reviewed by: andrew, kib
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26584
Rescan a PCI bus when the ACPI_NOTIFY_BUS_CHECK event is posted to a
PCI bus.
Reviewed by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21948
Install ACPI notify handlers on PCI devices with an _EJ0 method. This
handler is invoked when devices are added or removed.
- When an ACPI_NOTIFY_DEVICE_CHECK event posts, rescan the parent bus
device. Note that strictly speaking we only need to rescan the
specified device, but BUS_RESCAN is what is available, so we rescan
the entire bus.
- When an ACPI_NOTIFY_EJECT_REQUEST event posts, detach the device
associated with the ACPI handle, invoke the _EJ0 method, and then
delete the device.
Eventually this might be changed to vector notify events to devd in
userspace where devctl can be used instead to permit more complex
actions such as graceful unmounting of filesystems.
Tested by: cperciva
Reviewed by: cperciva, imp, scottl
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21948
bus_get_cpus() returns a specified set of CPUs for a device. It accepts
an enum for the second parameter that indicates the type of cpuset to
request. Currently two valus are supported:
- LOCAL_CPUS (on x86 this returns all the CPUs in the package closest to
the device when DEVICE_NUMA is enabled)
- INTR_CPUS (like LOCAL_CPUS but only returns 1 SMT thread for each core)
For systems that do not support NUMA (or if it is not enabled in the kernel
config), LOCAL_CPUS fails with EINVAL. INTR_CPUS is mapped to 'all_cpus'
by default. The idea is that INTR_CPUS should always return a valid set.
Device drivers which want to use per-CPU interrupts should start using
INTR_CPUS instead of simply assigning interrupts to all available CPUs.
In the future we may wish to add tunables to control the policy of
INTR_CPUS (e.g. should it be local-only or global, should it ignore
SMT threads or not).
The x86 nexus driver exposes the internal set of interrupt CPUs from the
the x86 interrupt code via INTR_CPUS.
The ACPI bus driver and PCI bridge drivers use _PXM to return a suitable
LOCAL_CPUS set when _PXM exists and DEVICE_NUMA is enabled. They also and
the global INTR_CPUS set from the nexus driver with the per-domain set from
_PXM to generate a local INTR_CPUS set for child devices.
Compared to the r298933, this version uses 'struct _cpuset' in
<sys/bus.h> instead of 'cpuset_t' to avoid requiring <sys/param.h>
(<sys/_cpuset.h> still requires <sys/param.h> for MAXCPU even though
<sys/_bitset.h> does not after recent changes).
bus_get_cpus() returns a specified set of CPUs for a device. It accepts
an enum for the second parameter that indicates the type of cpuset to
request. Currently two valus are supported:
- LOCAL_CPUS (on x86 this returns all the CPUs in the package closest to
the device when DEVICE_NUMA is enabled)
- INTR_CPUS (like LOCAL_CPUS but only returns 1 SMT thread for each core)
For systems that do not support NUMA (or if it is not enabled in the kernel
config), LOCAL_CPUS fails with EINVAL. INTR_CPUS is mapped to 'all_cpus'
by default. The idea is that INTR_CPUS should always return a valid set.
Device drivers which want to use per-CPU interrupts should start using
INTR_CPUS instead of simply assigning interrupts to all available CPUs.
In the future we may wish to add tunables to control the policy of
INTR_CPUS (e.g. should it be local-only or global, should it ignore
SMT threads or not).
The x86 nexus driver exposes the internal set of interrupt CPUs from the
the x86 interrupt code via INTR_CPUS.
The ACPI bus driver and PCI bridge drivers use _PXM to return a suitable
LOCAL_CPUS set when _PXM exists and DEVICE_NUMA is enabled. They also and
the global INTR_CPUS set from the nexus driver with the per-domain set from
_PXM to generate a local INTR_CPUS set for child devices.
Reviewed by: wblock (manpage)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5519
The ACPI and OFW PCI bus drivers as well as CardBus override this to
allocate the larger ivars to hold additional info beyond the stock PCI ivars.
This removes the need to pass the size to functions like pci_add_iov_child()
and pci_read_device() simplifying IOV and bus rescanning implementations.
As a result of this and earlier changes, the ACPI PCI bus driver no longer
needs its own device_attach and pci_create_iov_child methods but can use
the methods in the stock PCI bus driver instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5891
Previously, the ACPI PCI bus driver did a single pass over the devices in
the namespace that were a child of a given PCI bus to associate the
PCI bus-enumerated device_t devices with the corresponding ACPI handles.
However, this meant that handles were only established at runtime for devices
found during the initial PCI bus scan.
PCI_IOV adds devices that show up after the initial PCI bus scan, and coming
changes to add a bus rescan can also add devices after the initial scan.
This change adds a pci_child_added() callback to the ACPI PCI bus that walks
the namespace to find the ACPI handle for each device that is added. Using
a callback means that the handle is correctly set for any device no matter
how it is added (initial scan, IOV, or a bus rescan).
Instead of providing a wrapper around device_delete_child() that the PCI
bus and child bus drivers must call explicitly, move the bulk of the logic
from pci_delete_child() into a bus_child_deleted() method
(pci_child_deleted()). This allows PCI devices to be safely deleted via
device_delete_child().
- Add a bus_child_deleted method to the ACPI PCI bus which clears the
device_t associated with the corresponding ACPI handle in addition to
the normal PCI bus cleanup.
- Change cardbus_detach_card to call device_delete_children() and move
CardBus-specific delete logic into a new cardbus_child_deleted() method.
- Use device_delete_child() instead of pci_delete_child() in the SRIOV code.
- Add a bus_child_deleted method to the OpenFirmware PCI bus drivers which
frees the OpenFirmware device info for each PCI device.
Reviewed by: imp
Tested on: amd64 (CardBus and PCI-e hotplug)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5831
Implement the interace to create SR-IOV Virtual Functions (VFs).
When a driver registers that they support SR-IOV by calling
pci_setup_iov(), the SR-IOV code creates a new node in /dev/iov
for that device. An ioctl can be invoked on that device to
create VFs and have the driver initialize them.
At this point, allocating memory I/O windows (BARs) is not
supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D76
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Sandvine Inc.
* Add a bus_if.m method - get_domain() - returning the VM domain or
ENOENT if the device isn't in a VM domain;
* Add bus methods to print out the domain of the device if appropriate;
* Add code in srat.c to save the PXM -> VM domain mapping that's done and
expose a function to translate VM domain -> PXM;
* Add ACPI and ACPI PCI methods to check if the bus has a _PXM attribute
and if so map it to the VM domain;
* (.. yes, this works recursively.)
* Have the pci bus glue print out the device VM domain if present.
Note: this is just the plumbing to start enumerating information -
it doesn't at all modify behaviour.
Differential Revision: D906
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: Norse Corp
This patch adds support for MSI interrupts when running on Xen. Apart
from adding the Xen related code needed in order to register MSI
interrupts this patch also makes the msi_init function a hook in
init_ops, so different MSI implementations can have different
initialization functions.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
xen/interface/physdev.h:
- Add the MAP_PIRQ_TYPE_MULTI_MSI to map multi-vector MSI to the Xen
public interface.
x86/include/init.h:
- Add a hook for setting custom msi_init methods.
amd64/amd64/machdep.c:
i386/i386/machdep.c:
- Set the default msi_init hook to point to the native MSI
initialization method.
x86/xen/pv.c:
- Set the Xen MSI init hook when running as a Xen guest.
x86/x86/local_apic.c:
- Call the msi_init hook instead of directly calling msi_init.
xen/xen_intr.h:
x86/xen/xen_intr.c:
- Introduce support for registering/releasing MSI interrupts with
Xen.
- The MSI interrupts will use the same PIC as the IO APIC interrupts.
xen/xen_msi.h:
x86/xen/xen_msi.c:
- Introduce a Xen MSI implementation.
x86/xen/xen_nexus.c:
- Overwrite the default MSI hooks in the Xen Nexus to use the Xen MSI
implementation.
x86/xen/xen_pci.c:
- Introduce a Xen specific PCI bus that inherits from the ACPI PCI
bus and overwrites the native MSI methods.
- This is needed because when running under Xen the MSI messages used
to configure MSI interrupts on PCI devices are written by Xen
itself.
dev/acpica/acpi_pci.c:
- Lower the quality of the ACPI PCI bus so the newly introduced Xen
PCI bus can take over when needed.
conf/files.i386:
conf/files.amd64:
- Add the newly created files to the build process.
1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture
Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are
not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which
implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments
for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services.
Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain
and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not
partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not
promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained
programmatically, and printed on the console.
Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids
bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver
bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild
DMA accesses.
By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel
but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is
written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and
driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on,
individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the
hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If
DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used,
otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed.
The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine,
Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4),
ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also
works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for
drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with
DMAR (yet).
Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration;
Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and
understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access
to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my
findings to somebody.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 month
The tag enforces a single restriction that all DMA transactions must not
cross a 4GB boundary. Note that while this restriction technically only
applies to PCI-express, this change applies it to all PCI devices as it
is simpler to implement that way and errs on the side of caution.
- Add a softc structure for PCI bus devices to hold the bus_dma tag and
a new pci_attach_common() routine that performs actions common to the
attach phase of all PCI bus drivers. Right now this only consists of
a bootverbose printf and the allocate of a bus_dma tag if necessary.
- Adjust all PCI bus drivers to allocate a PCI bus softc and to call
pci_attach_common() from their attach routines.
MFC after: 2 weeks
ACPI Device() objects that do not have any device IDs available via the
_HID or _CID methods. Without a device ID a device driver cannot attach
to the device anyway. Namespace objects that are devices but not of
type ACPI_TYPE_DEVICE are not affected.
A few BIOSes have also attached a _CRS method to a PCI device to
allocate resources that are not managed via a BAR. With the previous
code those resources are allocated from acpi0 directly which can interfere
with the new PCI-PCI bridge driver (since the PCI device in question may
be behind a bridge and its resources should be allocated from that
bridge's windows instead). The resources were also orphaned and
and would end up associated with some other random device whose device_t
reused the pointer of the original ACPI-enumerated device (after it was
free'd by the ACPI PCI bus driver) in devinfo output which was confusing.
If we want to handle _CRS on PCI devices we can adjust the ACPI PCI bus
driver to do that in the future and associate the resources with the
proper device object respecting PCI-PCI bridges, etc.
Note that with this change the ACPI PCI bus driver no longer has to
delete ACPI-enumerated device_t devices that mirror PCI devices since
they should in general not exist. There are rare cases when a BIOS
will give a PCI device a _HID (e.g. I've seen a PCI-ISA bridge given
a _HID for a system resource device). In that case we leave both the
ACPI and PCI-enumerated device_t objects around just as in the previous
code.
doesn't "fail", it may merely return garbage if it is not a valid ivar
for a given device. Our parent device must be a 'pcib' device, so we
can just assume it implements pcib IVARs, and all pcib devices have a
bus number.
Submitted by: clang via rdivacky
knowledges from the file. All PCI devices enumerated in ACPI tree must use
correct one from acpi_pci.c any way. Reduce duplicate codes as we did for
pci.c in r213905. Do not return ESRCH from PCIB_POWER_FOR_SLEEP method.
When the method is not found, just return zero without modifying the given
default value as it is completely optional. As a side effect, the return
state must not be NULL. Note there is actually no functional change by
removing ESRCH because acpi_pcib_power_for_sleep() always returns zero.
Adjust debugging messages and add new ones under bootverbose to help
debugging device power state related issues.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp (earlier versions)
handle to the PCI device_t if the ACPI device_t is already attached to a
driver. This happens on the Tablet TC1000 which for some reason includes
two PCI-ISA bridges and treats the second bridge as an ACPI system resource
device.
Reviewed by: njl (a while ago)
MFC after: 3 days
support machines having multiple independently numbered PCI domains
and don't support reenumeration without ambiguity amongst the
devices as seen by the OS and represented by PCI location strings.
This includes introducing a function pci_find_dbsf(9) which works
like pci_find_bsf(9) but additionally takes a domain number argument
and limiting pci_find_bsf(9) to only search devices in domain 0 (the
only domain in single-domain systems). Bge(4) and ofw_pcibus(4) are
changed to use pci_find_dbsf(9) instead of pci_find_bsf(9) in order
to no longer report false positives when searching for siblings and
dupe devices in the same domain respectively.
Along with this change the sole host-PCI bridge driver converted to
actually make use of PCI domain support is uninorth(4), the others
continue to use domain 0 only for now and need to be converted as
appropriate later on.
Note that this means that the format of the location strings as used
by pciconf(8) has been changed and that consumers of <sys/pciio.h>
potentially need to be recompiled.
Suggested by: jhb
Reviewed by: grehan, jhb, marcel
Approved by: re (kensmith), jhb (PCI maintainer hat)
to search for a specific extended capability. If the specified capability
is found for the given device, then the function returns success and
optionally returns the offset of that capability. If the capability is
not found, the function returns an error.
Unify the code to disable GPEs with the enable code. Shutdown is handled
the same way. ACPI now does all wake/sleep prep for child devices so
now they no longer need to call external functions in the suspend/resume
path. Add the flags to non-ACPI busses (i.e., pci).
device associated with any PCI devices that are enumerated in the ACPI
tree when adding children to an ACPI PCI bus and remove the duplicate
ACPI-only device_t and replace the device_t associated with the handle with
the ACPI and PCI aware device_t.
which doesn't support ACPI power states. Return AE_NOT_FOUND for these
cases and don't print the warning message. Also, print the name of the
handle instead of device when unable to switch states. The device is often
not attached at this point and so its name is NULL, which doesn't help
debugging.
1) In pci.c, we need to check the child device's state, not the parent
device's state.
2) In acpi_pci.c, we have to run the power state change after the acpi
method when the old_state is > new state, not the other way around.
Submitted by: Dmitry Remesov
PR: 65694
o Save and restore bars for suspend/resume as well as for D3->D0
transitions.
o preallocate resources that the PCI devices use to avoid resource
conflicts
o lazy allocation of resources not allocated by the BIOS.
o set unattached drivers to state D3. Set power state to D0
before probe/attach. Right now there's two special cases
for this (display and memory devices) that need work in other
areas of the tree.
Please report any bugs to me.
are enumerated in the ACPI device tree. In addition to the normal PCI
powerstate functionality, the ACPI _PSx methods are executed and ACPI
PowerResources are switched on and off via the acpi_pwr_switch_consumer()
function.
Glanced at by: imp, njl