The bwn(4) driver requires a number of extensions to the bhnd(4) PMU
interface to support external configuration of PLLs, LDOs, and other
parameters that require chipset or PHY-specific workarounds.
These changes add support for:
- Writing raw voltage register values to PHY-specific LDO regulator
registers (required by LP-PHY).
- Enabling/disabling PHY-specific LDOs (required by LP-PHY)
- Writing to arbitrary PMU chipctrl registers (required for common PHY PLL
reset support).
- Requesting chipset/PLL-specific spurious signal avoidance modes.
- Querying clock frequency and latency.
Additionally, rather than updating legacy PWRCTL support to conform to the
new PMU interface:
- PWRCTL API is now provided by a bhnd_pwrctl_if.m interface.
- Since PWRCTL is only found in older SSB-based chipsets, translation from
bhnd(4) bus APIs to corresponding PWRCTL operations is now handled
entirely within the siba(4) driver.
- The PWRCTL-specific host bridge clock gating APIs in bhnd_bus_if.m have
been lifted out into a standalone bhnd_pwrctl_hostb_if.m interface.
Approved by: adrian (mentor, implicit)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12664
On BHND MIPS SoCs, this replaces the use of hard-coded MIPS IRQ#s in the
common bhnd(4) core drivers; we now register an INTRNG child PIC that
handles routing of backplane interrupt vectors via the MIPS core.
On BHND PCI devices, backplane interrupt vectors are now routed to the
PCI/PCIe host bridge core when bus_setup_intr() is called, where they are
dispatched by the PCI core via a host interrupt (e.g. INTx/MSI).
The bhndb(4) bridge driver tracks registered interrupt handlers for the
bridged bhnd(4) devices and manages backplane interrupt routing, while
delegating actual bus interrupt setup/teardown to the parent bus on behalf
of the bridged cores.
Approved by: adrian (mentor, implicit)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12518