This adds a function to agp.c to set the aperture resource ID if it's
not the usual AGP_APBASE. Previously, agp.c had been assuming
AGP_APBASE, which resulted in incorrect agp_info, and contortions by
agp_i810.c to work around it.
This also adds functions to agp.c for default AGP_GET_APERTURE() and
AGP_SET_APERTURE(), which return the aperture resource size and disallow
aperture size changes. Moving to these for our AGP drivers will likely
result in stability improvements. This should fix 855-class aperture
size detection.
Additionally, refuse to attach agp_i810 when some RAM is above 4GB and
the GART can't reference memory that high. This should be very rare.
The correct solution would be bus_dma conversion for agp, which is
beyond the scope of this change. Other AGP drivers could likely use
this change as well.
G33/Q35/Q33 AGP support is also included, but disconnected by default
due to lack of testing.
PR: kern/109724 (855 aperture issue)
Submitted by: FUJIMOTO Kou<fujimoto@j.dendai.ac.jp>
Approved by: re (hrs)
- Rename confusing AGP_INTEL_I845_MCHCFG to AGP_INTEL_I845_AGPM.
- Move E7205 and E7505 from i8x5 to i8x0 family. It probably worked
because the actual offset is the same.
In fact, all three families have the bit at the exact same place. Only
differences are name and width of the registers, i.e., NBXCFG (0x50, dword),
RDCR (0x51, byte), AGPM (0x51, byte), MCHCFG (0x50, word) depending on
the family of the chipsets.
The key problem was that the aperture size detection using the MSAC bit
doesn't work -- the bit appears to be set even when it shouldn't be. Linux
takes a different approach, testing for a bit of the GMADR (PCIR_BAR(2)) being
set. However, as I don't think that's a safe way to test aperture size, we
just allocate the resource and check its size. This also pointed out that
agp_generic_attach hadn't been allocating our aperture resource, which may
have caused problems in some cases.
Also corrected is a minor copy-and-pasteo in an error case.
PR: kern/103079
Submitted by: mnag
Tested on: i945GM, i915GM
MFC after: 2 weeks
misc. control registers correctly and it is inconsistent with north bridge.
In fact, there are too many broken BIOS implementations out there and we
cannot fix every possible combination but at least it is consistent with
what we advertise with ioctl(2).
capability is present as not all devices supported by the agp_i810 driver
(such as i915) have the AGP capability. Instead, add an identify routine
to the agp_i810 driver that uses the PCI ID to determine if it should
create an agp child device.
the addition of pci_find_extcap().
- Change the drm drivers to attach to vgapci. This is #ifdef'd so the
code can be shared across branches.
- Use pci_find_extcap() to look for AGP and PCIE capabilities in drm.
- GC all the drmsub stuff for i810/i830/i915. The agp and drm devices are
now both children of vgapci.
attach to the hostb driver instead. This means that agp can now be loaded
at runtime (in theory at least). Also, the drivers no longer have to
explicity call device_verbose() to cancel out any earlier calls to
device_quiet() by the hostb(4) driver (this shows a limitation in new-bus,
drivers really shouldn't be doing device_quiet() until they know they are
going to drive that device, i.e. in attach).
drivers already map sections into KVA as needed anyway. Note that this
will probably break the nvidia driver, but I will coordinate to get that
fixed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
and some fixes from Motomichi Matsuzaki. Testing involved many people, but the
final, successful testing was from rwatson who endured several rounds of "it
crashes at XYZ stage" "oh, please correct this typo and try again." The Linux
driver, and to a small extent the limited specs, were both used as a reference
for how to program the chipset.
PR: kern/80396
Submitted by: Martin Mersberger
control register and AGP bridge seems to be inconsistent with some BIOS.
Instead of relying on BIOS settings, we just take the initial aperture size
and encode them for both miscellaneous control register and AGP bridge.
Some idea was borrowed from agp_nvidia.c.
- Add preliminary ULi M1689 chipset support. The idea was taken from Linux
because hardware and documentation are unavailable. Not tested.
- Add more VIA chipset PCI IDs taken from Linux driver.
Approved by: anholt (mentor)
Tested by: Adam Gregoire <ebola at psychoholics dot org>
Ganael Laplanche <ganael.laplanche at martymac dot com>
K Wieland <kwieland at wustl dot edu>
the Linux driver, since specs are unavailable. Many thanks to Adam Kirchhoff
for multiple useful testing cycles, and Ralf Wostrack for the final fix to get
it working.
PR: i386/75251
Submitted by: anholt
9200 according to one responder. The primary issue was not setting some bits
to say that the entries were active, but also fix one place where some memory
wasn't being used as volatile as it should. While here, change some use of ffs
to a relatively short case statement, to make it more obvious what's going on.
PR: kern/71638, kern/72372, kern/71547?
Submitted by: Andrew J. Caines <A.J.Caines@halplant.com>,
Robin Schoonover <end@endif.cjb.net>,
Jason Henson <jason@ec.rr.com>
generic bridge support was biting us more than it helped, whenever a new chipset
came out from a vendor and misprogramming it caused strange hangs or corruption.
[2] Add a large number of PCI IDs based on what the linux drivers support.
Note that the new PCI IDs haven't been tested, they're just *likely* to work.
In particular the VIA AGP 8x chipsets are concerning, due to lack of testing,
possible issues (kern/69953), and not having a nice "does this bridge say it
would do 8x" function. However, this shouldn't make the situation worse, since
these chips would have probed in the past anyway.
two loops in agp_generic_bind_memory(). As an intended side-effect, all
of the calls to vm_page_wakeup() are now performed with the containing
vm object lock held.
to check aperture size, avoiding hangs. Maintain the rest of the bits when
setting/unsetting ATTBASE. This essentially matches Linux's AGP driver as well.
PR: kern/70037
Submitted by: Mark Tinguely <tinguely at casselton dot net>
Obtained from: NetBSD