Commit Graph

29 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ilya Bakulin
d91f1a1094 Rename sdhci_cam_start_slot() into sdhci_start_slot()
This change allows to just call sdhci_start_slot() in SDHCI drivers
and not to think about which stack handles the operation.

As a side effect, this will also fix MMCCAM with sdhci_acpi driver.

Approved by:	imp (mentor)
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12471
2017-09-24 09:05:35 +00:00
Marius Strobl
7fcf47802a - Check the slot type capability, set SDHCI_SLOT_{EMBEDDED,NON_REMOVABLE}
for embedded slots. Fail in the sdhci(4) initialization for slot type
  shared, which is completely unsupported by this driver at the moment. [1]
  For Intel eMMC controllers, taking the embedded slot type into account
  obsoltes setting SDHCI_QUIRK_ALL_SLOTS_NON_REMOVABLE so remove these quirk
  entries.
- Hide the 1.8 V VDD capability when the slot is detected as non-embedded,
  as the SDHCI specification explicitly states that 1.8 V VDD is applicable
  to embedded slots only. [2]
- Define some easy bits of the SDHCI specification v4.20. [3]
- Don't leak bus_dma(9) resources in failure paths of sdhci_init_slot().

Obtained from:	DragonFlyBSD 65704a46 [1], 7ba10b88 [2], 0df14648 [3]
2017-07-26 22:04:23 +00:00
Marius Strobl
aca38eab8a o Add support for eMMC HS200 and HS400 bus speed modes at 200 MHz to
sdhci(4), mmc(4) and mmcsd(4). For the most part, this consists of:
  - Correcting and extending the infrastructure for negotiating and
    enabling post-DDR52 modes already added as part of r315598. In
    fact, HS400ES now should work as well but hasn't been activated
    due to lack of corresponding hardware.
  - Adding support executing standard SDHCI initial tuning as well
    as re-tuning as required for eMMC HS200/HS400 and the fast UHS-I
    SD card modes. Currently, corresponding methods are only hooked
    up to the ACPI and PCI front-ends of sdhci(4), though. Moreover,
    sdhci(4) won't offer any modes requiring (re-)tuning to the MMC/SD
    layer in order to not break operations with other sdhci(4) front-
    ends. Likewise, sdhci(4) now no longer offers modes requiring the
    set_uhs_timing method introduced in r315598 to be implemented/
    hooked up (previously, this method was used with DDR52 only, which
    in turn is only available with Intel controllers so far, i. e. no
    such limitation was necessary before). Similarly for 1.2/1.8 V VCCQ
    support and the switch_vccq method.
  - Addition of locking to the IOCTL half of mmcsd(4) to prevent races
    with detachment and suspension, especially since it's required to
    immediately switch away from RPMB partitions again after an access
    to these (so re-tuning can take place anew, given that the current
    eMMC specification v5.1 doesn't allow tuning commands to be issued
    with a RPMB partition selected). Therefore, the existing part_mtx
    lock in the mmcsd(4) softc is additionally renamed to disk_mtx in
    order to denote that it only refers to the disk(9) half, likewise
    for corresponding macros.

  On the system where the addition of DDR52 support increased the read
  throughput to ~80 MB/s (from ~45 MB/s at high speed), HS200 yields
  ~154 MB/s and HS400 ~187 MB/s, i. e. performance now has more than
  quadrupled compared to pre-r315598.

  Also, with the advent of (re-)tuning support, most infrastructure
  necessary for SD card UHS-I modes up to SDR104 now is also in place.
  Note, though, that the standard SDHCI way of (re-)tuning is special
  in several ways, which also is why sending the actual tuning requests
  to the device is part of sdhci(4). SDHCI implementations not following
  the specification, MMC and non-SDHCI SD card controllers likely will
  use a generic implementation in the MMC/SD layer for executing tuning,
  which hasn't been written so far, though.

  However, in fact this isn't a feature-only change; there are boards
  based on Intel Bay Trail where DDR52 is problematic and the suggested
  workaround is to use HS200 mode instead. So far exact details are
  unknown, however, i. e. whether that's due to a defect in these SoCs
  or on the boards.

  Moreover, due to the above changes requiring to be aware of possible
  MMC siblings in the fast path of mmc(4), corresponding information
  now is cached in mmc_softc. As a side-effect, mmc_calculate_clock(),
  mmc_delete_cards(), mmc_discover_cards() and mmc_rescan_cards() now
  all are guaranteed to operate on the same set of devices as there no
  longer is any use of device_get_children(9), which can fail in low
  memory situations. Likewise, mmc_calculate_clock() now longer will
  trigger a panic due to the latter.

o Fix a bug in the failure reporting of mmcsd_delete(); in case of an
  error when the starting block of a previously stored erase request
  is used (in order to be able to erase a full erase sector worth of
  data), the starting block of the newly supplied bio_pblkno has to be
  returned for indicating no progress. Otherwise, upper layers might
  be told that a negative number of BIOs have been completed, leading
  to a panic.

o Fix 2 bugs on resume:
  - Things done in fork1(9) like the acquisition of an SX lock or the
    sleepable memory allocation are incompatible with a MTX_DEF taken.
    Thus, mmcsd_resume() must not call kproc_create(9), which in turn
    uses fork1(9), with the disk_mtx (formerly part_mtx) held.
  - In mmc_suspend(), the bus is powered down, which in the typical
    case of a device being selected at the time of suspension, causes
    the device deselection as part of the bus acquisition by mmc(4) in
    mmc_scan() to fail as the bus isn't powered up again before later
    in mmc_go_discovery(). Thus, power down with the bus acquired in
    mmc_suspend(), which will trigger the deselection up-front.

o Fix a memory leak in mmcsd_ioctl() in case copyin(9) fails. [1]

o Fix missing variable initialization in mmc_switch_status(). [2]

o Fix R1_SWITCH_ERROR detection in mmc_switch_status(). [3]

o Handle the case of device_add_child(9) failing, for example due to
  a memory shortage, gracefully in mmc(4) and sdhci(4), including not
  leaking memory for the instance variables in case of mmc(4) (which
  might or might not fix [4] as the latter problem has been discovered
  independently).

o Handle the case of an unknown SD CSD version in mmc_decode_csd_sd()
  gracefully instead of calling panic(9).

o Again, check and handle the return values of some additional function
  calls in mmc(4) instead of assuming that everything went right or mark
  non-fatal errors by casting the return value to void.

o Correct a typo in the Linux IOCTL compatibility; it should have been
  MMC_IOC_MULTI_CMD rather than MMC_IOC_CMD_MULTI.

o Now that we are reaching ever faster speeds (more improvement in this
  regard is to be expected when adding ADMA support to sdhci(4)), apply
  a few micro-optimizations like predicting mmc(4) and sdhci(4) debugging
  to be off or caching erase sector and maximum data sizes as well support
  of block addressing in mmsd(4) (instead of doing 2 indirections on every
  read/write request for determining the maximum data size for example).

Reported by:	Coverity
CID:		1372612 [1], 1372624 [2], 1372594 [3], 1007069 [4]
2017-07-23 16:11:47 +00:00
Warner Losh
a94a63f0a6 An MMC/SD/SDIO stack using CAM
Implement the MMC/SD/SDIO protocol within a CAM framework. CAM's
flexible queueing will make it easier to write non-storage drivers
than the legacy stack. SDIO drivers from both the kernel and as
userland daemons are possible, though much of that functionality will
come later.

Some of the CAM integration isn't complete (there are sleeps in the
device probe state machine, for example), but those minor issues can
be improved in-tree more easily than out of tree and shouldn't gate
progress on other fronts. Appologies to reviews if specific items
have been overlooked.

Submitted by: Ilya Bakulin
Reviewed by: emaste, imp, mav, adrian, ian
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4761

merge with first commit, various compile hacks.
2017-07-09 16:57:24 +00:00
Marius Strobl
806202b507 - Unlike as in the PCI case, when attached to ACPI, Intel Bay Trail
and Braswell eMMC and SDXC controllers share the same IDs. Like in
  the PCI case, Braswell eMMC needs the SDHCI_QUIRK_DATA_TIMEOUT_1MHZ
  quirk (see r311794 for the corresponding change to the sdhci(4) PCI
  PCI front-end), though. However, due to the shared ACPI IDs, this
  is trickier to do.
- Intel Apollo Lake eMMC and SDXC controllers are affected by the
  APL18 ("Using 32-bit Addressing Mode With SD/eMMC Controller May
  Lead to Unpredictable System Behavior") silicon bug [1]. When this
  erratum hits, typically both SDHCI and XHCI controllers wedge.
  According to Intel, using ADMA2 with 64-bit addressing and 96-bit
  descriptors serves as a workaround. Until such times when sdhci(4)
  has ADMA2 support, flag DMA as broken for affected interfaces.
  This turns out to work around the problem, too, at the cost of
  performance.
- In the sdhci(4) ACPI front-end, probe the Intel Apollo Lake eMMC
  and SDXC controllers, too.

1: http://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/specification-updates/pentium-celeron-n-series-j-series-datasheet-spec-update.pdf
2017-05-14 21:33:01 +00:00
Marius Strobl
0f34084f95 o Add support for eMMC DDR bus speed mode at 52 MHz to sdhci(4) and
mmc(4). For the most part, this consists of support for:
  - Switching the signal voltage (VCCQ) to 1.8 V or (if supported
    by the host controller) to 1.2 V,
  - setting the UHS mode as appropriate in the SDHCI_HOST_CONTROL2
    register,
  - setting the power class in the eMMC device according to the
    core supply voltage (VCC),
  - using different bits for enabling a bus width of 4 and 8 bits
    in the the eMMC device at DDR or higher timings respectively,
  - arbitrating timings faster than high speed if there actually
    are additional devices on the same MMC bus.

  Given that support for DDR52 is not denoted by SDHCI capability
  registers, availability of that timing is indicated by a new
  quirk SDHCI_QUIRK_MMC_DDR52 and only enabled for Intel SDHCI
  controllers so far. Generally, what it takes for a sdhci(4)
  front-end to enable support for DDR52 is to hook up the bridge
  method mmcbr_switch_vccq (which especially for 1.2 V signaling
  support is chip/board specific) and the sdhci_set_uhs_timing
  sdhci(4) method.

  As a side-effect, this change also fixes communication with
  some eMMC devices at SDR high speed mode with 52 MHz due to
  the signaling voltage and UHS bits in the SDHCI controller no
  longer being left in an inappropriate state.

  Compared to 52 MHz at SDR high speed which typically yields
  ~45 MB/s with the eMMC chips tested, throughput goes up to
  ~80 MB/s at DDR52.

  Additionally, this change already adds infrastructure and quite
  some code for modes up to HS400ES and SDR104 respectively (I did
  not want to add to much stuff at a time, though). Essentially,
  what is still missing in order to be able to activate support
  for these latter is is support for and handling of (re-)tuning.

o In sdhci(4), add two tunables hw.sdhci.quirk_clear as well as
  hw.sdhci.quirk_set, which (when hooked up in the front-end)
  allow to set/clear sdhci(4) quirks for debugging and testing
  purposes. However, especially for SDHCI controllers on the
  PCI bus which have no specific support code so far and, thus,
  are picked up as generic SDHCI controllers, hw.sdhci.quirk_set
  allows for setting the necessary quirks (if required).

o In mmc(4), check and handle the return values of some more
  function calls instead of assuming that everything went right.
  In case failures actually are not problematic, indicate that
  by casting the return value to void.

Reviewed by:	jmcneill
2017-03-19 23:27:17 +00:00
Marius Strobl
c11bbc7dab Again, fixes regarding style(4), to comments, includes and unused
parameters.
2017-03-17 22:57:37 +00:00
Marius Strobl
72dec0792a - Add support for eMMC "partitions". Besides the user data area, i. e.
the default partition, eMMC v4.41 and later devices can additionally
  provide up to:
  1 enhanced user data area partition
  2 boot partitions
  1 RPMB (Replay Protected Memory Block) partition
  4 general purpose partitions (optionally with a enhanced or extended
    attribute)

  Of these "partitions", only the enhanced user data area one actually
  slices the user data area partition and, thus, gets handled with the
  help of geom_flashmap(4). The other types of partitions have address
  space independent from the default partition and need to be switched
  to via CMD6 (SWITCH), i. e. constitute a set of additional "disks".

  The second kind of these "partitions" doesn't fit that well into the
  design of mmc(4) and mmcsd(4). I've decided to let mmcsd(4) hook all
  of these "partitions" up as disk(9)'s (except for the RPMB partition
  as it didn't seem to make much sense to be able to put a file-system
  there and may require authentication; therefore, RPMB partitions are
  solely accessible via the newly added IOCTL interface currently; see
  also below). This approach for one resulted in cleaner code. Second,
  it retains the notion of mmcsd(4) children corresponding to a single
  physical device each. With the addition of some layering violations,
  it also would have been possible for mmc(4) to add separate mmcsd(4)
  instances with one disk each for all of these "partitions", however.
  Still, both mmc(4) and mmcsd(4) share some common code now e. g. for
  issuing CMD6, which has been factored out into mmc_subr.c.

  Besides simply subdividing eMMC devices, some Intel NUCs having UEFI
  code in the boot partitions etc., another use case for the partition
  support is the activation of pseudo-SLC mode, which manufacturers of
  eMMC chips typically associate with the enhanced user data area and/
  or the enhanced attribute of general purpose partitions.

  CAVEAT EMPTOR: Partitioning eMMC devices is a one-time operation.

- Now that properly issuing CMD6 is crucial (so data isn't written to
  the wrong partition for example), make a step into the direction of
  correctly handling the timeout for these commands in the MMC layer.
  Also, do a SEND_STATUS when CMD6 is invoked with an R1B response as
  recommended by relevant specifications. However, quite some work is
  left to be done in this regard; all other R1B-type commands done by
  the MMC layer also should be followed by a SEND_STATUS (CMD13), the
  erase timeout calculations/handling as documented in specifications
  are entirely ignored so far, the MMC layer doesn't provide timeouts
  applicable up to the bridge drivers and at least sdhci(4) currently
  is hardcoding 1 s as timeout for all command types unconditionally.
  Let alone already available return codes often not being checked in
  the MMC layer ...

- Add an IOCTL interface to mmcsd(4); this is sufficiently compatible
  with Linux so that the GNU mmc-utils can be ported to and used with
  FreeBSD (note that due to the remaining deficiencies outlined above
  SANITIZE operations issued by/with `mmc` currently most likely will
  fail). These latter will be added to ports as sysutils/mmc-utils in
  a bit. Among others, the `mmc` tool of the GNU mmc-utils allows for
  partitioning eMMC devices (tested working).

- For devices following the eMMC specification v4.41 or later, year 0
  is 2013 rather than 1997; so correct this for assembling the device
  ID string properly.

- Let mmcsd.ko depend on mmc.ko. Additionally, bump MMC_VERSION as at
  least for some of the above a matching pair is required.

- In the ACPI front-end of sdhci(4) describe the Intel eMMC and SDXC
  controllers as such in order to match the PCI one.
  Additionally, in the entry for the 80860F14 SDXC controller remove
  the eMMC-only SDHCI_QUIRK_INTEL_POWER_UP_RESET.

OKed by:	imp
Submitted by:	ian (mmc_switch_status() implementation)
2017-03-16 22:23:04 +00:00
Marius Strobl
55dae242e6 Add and use a MMC_DECLARE_BRIDGE macro for declaring mmc(4) bridges
as kernel drivers and their dependency onto mmc(4); this allows for
incrementing the mmc(4) module version but also for entire omission
of these bridge declarations for mmccam(4) in a single place, i. e.
in dev/mmc/bridge.h.
2017-03-07 22:42:44 +00:00
Marius Strobl
b440e965da o Another round fixes for mmc(4), mmcsd(4) and sdhci(4) regarding
comments, marking unused parameters as such, style(9), whitespace,
  etc.
o In the mmc(4) bridges and sdhci(4) (bus) front-ends:
  - Remove redundant assignments of the default bus_generic_print_child
    device method (I've whipped these out of the tree as part of r227843
    once, but they keep coming back ...),
  - use DEVMETHOD_END,
  - use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
o Trim/adjust includes.
2017-03-06 23:47:59 +00:00
Marius Strobl
7e6ccea3b1 Fix some more overly long lines, whitespace and other bugs according to
style(9) as well as spelling in comments.
2017-02-04 19:35:38 +00:00
Marius Strobl
1bacf3be8c Fix overly long lines, whitespace and other bugs according to style(9). 2017-01-29 00:05:49 +00:00
Marius Strobl
a2832f9fce - Add support for Intel Apollo Lake and Bay Trail eMMC controllers.
Besides slots always having non-removable media, these HCIs require
  a custom hardware reset sequence after power-up.
- Flesh out the support for Intel Braswell eMMC controllers further.
  Apart from also requiring said reset code, the timeout clock needs to
  be hardcoded to 1 MHz for these.
  Both the special reset and timeout clock handlings are implemented as
  global sdhci(4) quirks as the same treatment will be necessary for
  Intel eMMC controllers attached via ACPI (once sdhci(4) grows such a
  front-end).
- In sdhci_init_slot(), use the right capability field for determining
  the announced bus width based on MMC_CAP_*_BIT_DATA.
- Correct inverted sdhci_pci_softc member comments added in r276469. [1]

Submitted by:	Anton Yuzhaninov [1]
MFC after:	5 days
2017-01-09 17:07:13 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
8aa3468624 Follow-up to r310340: Add missing "Intel" to description
Reported by:	rpokala@
2016-12-20 22:47:09 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
00eb880d20 Add Braswell PCI IDs for Intel Cherryview
Submitted by:	Johannes Lundberg <yohanesu75 at gmail.com>
Reviewed by:	jhb
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8861
2016-12-20 22:08:36 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
db6f80fd1c sdhci/mmc: Minor whitespace cleanups
No functional change.

Submitted by:	Johannes Lundberg <yohanesu75 at gmail.com>
2016-12-20 03:38:14 +00:00
Edward Tomasz Napierala
220adb0416 Make sdhci(4) work after suspend/resume for chipsets that require
the frequency quirk. This makes it work on eg ThinkPad T420.

Without it, after resume one can see this:

mmc0: ACMD42 failed, RESULT: 4
mmcsd0: Error indicated: 1 Timeout
mmcsd0: Error indicated: 2 Bad CRC
mmcsd0: Error indicated: 2 Bad CRC
mmcsd0: Error indicated: 2 Bad CRC
mmcsd0: Error indicated: 2 Bad CRC
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Got data interrupt 0x00200000, but there is no active command.
sdhci_pci0-slot0: ============== REGISTER DUMP ==============
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Sys addr: 0x06317200 | Version: 0x00000502
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Blk size: 0x00000200 | Blk cnt: 0x00000010
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Argument: 0x00000200 | Trn mode: 0x00000037
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Present: 0x01ff0000 | Host ctl: 0x00000007
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Power: 0x0000000f | Blk gap: 0x00000000
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Wake-up: 0x00000000 | Clock: 0x00000007
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Timeout: 0x0000000d | Int stat: 0x00000000
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Int enab: 0x01ff00fb | Sig enab: 0x01ff00fb
sdhci_pci0-slot0: AC12 err: 0x00000000 | Slot int: 0x00000000
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Caps: 0x21e8c8b2 | Max curr: 0x00000040
sdhci_pci0-slot0: ===========================================
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Got data interrupt 0x00200000, but there is no active command.
sdhci_pci0-slot0: ============== REGISTER DUMP ==============
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Sys addr: 0x06317200 | Version: 0x00000502
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Blk size: 0x00000200 | Blk cnt: 0x00000001
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Argument: 0x00000040 | Trn mode: 0x00000013
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Present: 0x01ff0000 | Host ctl: 0x00000007
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Power: 0x0000000f | Blk gap: 0x00000000
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Wake-up: 0x00000000 | Clock: 0x00000007
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Timeout: 0x0000000d | Int stat: 0x00000000
autofs_flush: /net flushed
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Int enab: 0x01ff00fb | Sig enab: 0x01ff00fb
autofs_flush: /media flushed
sdhci_pci0-slot0: AC12 err: 0x00000000 | Slot int: 0x00000000
sdhci_pci0-slot0: Caps: 0x21e8c8b2 | Max curr: 0x00000040
sdhci_pci0-slot0: ===========================================

Afterwards all operations on /dev/mmcsd0 fail with EIO.

Reviewed by:	jhb@
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6265
2016-05-11 07:50:35 +00:00
Ian Lepore
dec4873723 Fix fallout from r292180 (Dec 2015)... ensure that every driver which has
a DRIVER_MODULE() referencing mmc_driver has a MODULE_DEPEND() on mmc.  This
is because the kernel linker only searches for symbols in dependent modules,
so loading sdhci_pci (and other bus-flavors of sdhci) would fail when mmc
was not compiled into the kernel (even if you hand-loaded mmc first).

(Thanks to jilles@ for providing the vital clue about the kernel linker.)
2016-03-21 00:52:24 +00:00
Justin Hibbits
eff83876b6 Replace several bus_alloc_resource() calls with bus_alloc_resource_any()
Most of these are BARs, and we allocate them in their entirety.  The one outlier
in this is amdsbwd, which calls bus_set_resource() prior.

Reviewed by:	jhb
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5370 (partial)
2016-02-27 03:34:01 +00:00
Ian Lepore
3f62727443 Move the DRIVER_MODULE() statements that declare mmc(4) to be a child of
the various bridge drivers out of dev/mmc.c and into the bridge drivers.

Requested by:	   jhb (almost two years ago; better late than never)
2015-12-14 01:09:25 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
93efdc635d Add support for the BCM57765 card reader.
This patch adds support for the BCM57765[2] card reader function included in
Broadcom's BCM57766 ethernet/sd3.0 controller. This controller is commonly
found in laptops and Apple hardware (MBP, iMac, etc).

The BCM57765 chipset is almost fully compatible with the SD3.0 spec, but
does not support deriving a frequency below 781KHz from its default base
clock via the standard SD3.0-configured 10-bit clock divisor.

If such a divisor is set, card identification (which requires a 400KHz
clock frequency) will time out[1].

As a work-around, I've made use of an undocumented device-specific clock
control register to switch the controller to a 63MHz clock source when
targeting clock speeds below 781KHz; the clock source is likewise switched
back to the 200MHz clock when targeting speeds greater than 781KHz.

Additionally, this patch fixes a small sdhci_pci bug; the
sdhci_pci_softc->quirks flag was not copied to the sdhci_slot, resulting in
`quirk` behavior not being applied by sdhci.c.

[1] A number of Linux/FreeBSD users have noted that bringing up the chipsets'
associated ethernet interface will allow SD cards to enumerate (slowly).
This is a controller implementation side-effect triggered by the ethernet
driver's reading of the hardware statistics registers.

[2] This may also fix card detection when using the BCM57785 chipset, but I
don't have access to the BCM57785 chipset and can't verify.

I actually snagged some BCM57785 hardware recently (2012 Retina MacBook Pro)
and can confirm that this also fixes card enumeration with the BCM57785
chipset; with the patch, I can boot off of the internal sdcard reader.

PR:		kern/203385
Submitted by:	Landon Fuller <landon@landonf.org>
2015-10-15 04:22:56 +00:00
Marius Strobl
c22626471e - Switching the mode of Ricoh R5CE823 to SD2.0 causes their PCI device ID
to change to 0xe822, which may be persistent across reboots and, thus,
  confuse other OSes. Therefore, restore the original mode and frequency
  setting on detach and shutdown.
- Report Ricoh R5CE822 as such.
- According to Linux, Ricoh R5CE822 also need SDHCI_QUIRK_LOWER_FREQUENCY.
- Nuke an unused softc member.

MFC after:	3 days
2014-12-31 16:06:26 +00:00
Warner Losh
5df0ffc762 class, subclass and progif were never used, so don't bother setting
them.
2014-10-13 16:23:51 +00:00
Marius Strobl
f0d2731dd8 - Nuke unused sdhci_softc.
- Static'ize sdhci_debug local to sdhci.c.
- Const'ify PCI device description strings.
- Nuke redundant resource ID members from sdhci_pci_softc.
- Nuke unused hw.sdhci_pci.debug tunable.
- Add support for using MSI instead of INTx, controllable via the tunable
  hw.sdhci.enable_msi (defaulting to on) and tested with a RICOH R5CE823 SD
  controller.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.

MFC after:	3 days
2014-08-31 17:56:54 +00:00
Hans Petter Selasky
af3b2549c4 Pull in r267961 and r267973 again. Fix for issues reported will follow. 2014-06-28 03:56:17 +00:00
Glen Barber
37a107a407 Revert r267961, r267973:
These changes prevent sysctl(8) from returning proper output,
such as:

 1) no output from sysctl(8)
 2) erroneously returning ENOMEM with tools like truss(1)
    or uname(1)
 truss: can not get etype: Cannot allocate memory
2014-06-27 22:05:21 +00:00
Hans Petter Selasky
3da1cf1e88 Extend the meaning of the CTLFLAG_TUN flag to automatically check if
there is an environment variable which shall initialize the SYSCTL
during early boot. This works for all SYSCTL types both statically and
dynamically created ones, except for the SYSCTL NODE type and SYSCTLs
which belong to VNETs. A new flag, CTLFLAG_NOFETCH, has been added to
be used in the case a tunable sysctl has a custom initialisation
function allowing the sysctl to still be marked as a tunable. The
kernel SYSCTL API is mostly the same, with a few exceptions for some
special operations like iterating childrens of a static/extern SYSCTL
node. This operation should probably be made into a factored out
common macro, hence some device drivers use this. The reason for
changing the SYSCTL API was the need for a SYSCTL parent OID pointer
and not only the SYSCTL parent OID list pointer in order to quickly
generate the sysctl path. The motivation behind this patch is to avoid
parameter loading cludges inside the OFED driver subsystem. Instead of
adding special code to the OFED driver subsystem to post-load tunables
into dynamically created sysctls, we generalize this in the kernel.

Other changes:
- Corrected a possibly incorrect sysctl name from "hw.cbb.intr_mask"
to "hw.pcic.intr_mask".
- Removed redundant TUNABLE statements throughout the kernel.
- Some minor code rewrites in connection to removing not needed
TUNABLE statements.
- Added a missing SYSCTL_DECL().
- Wrapped two very long lines.
- Avoid malloc()/free() inside sysctl string handling, in case it is
called to initialize a sysctl from a tunable, hence malloc()/free() is
not ready when sysctls from the sysctl dataset are registered.
- Bumped FreeBSD version to indicate SYSCTL API change.

MFC after:	2 weeks
Sponsored by:	Mellanox Technologies
2014-06-27 16:33:43 +00:00
Sofian Brabez
61bfd86762 Use DEVMETHOD_END macro defined in sys/bus.h instead of {0, 0} sentinel on device_method_t arrays
Reviewed by:	cognet
Approved by:	cognet
2013-01-30 18:01:20 +00:00
Oleksandr Tymoshenko
d6b3aaf842 Split sdhci driver in two parts: sdhci and sdhci_pci.
sdchi encapsulates a generic SD Host Controller logic that relies on
actual hardware driver for register access.

sdhci_pci implements driver for PCI SDHC controllers using new SDHCI
interface

No kernel config modifications are required, but if you load sdhc
as a module you must switch to sdhci_pci instead.
2012-10-16 01:10:43 +00:00