across system suspends on the Intel 82371AB PCI-ISA bridge. On a
Sony Vaio C1XD that I have, these registers are not set correctly
after an ACPI resume. The result is that after resuming, a shared
IRQ is left in edge-triggered mode so the interrupt can later become
jammed in a state where the line remains asserted, but the handler
is never called.
Reviewed by: jhb
supported option and it disabled a whole 2 lines of bootverbose messages.
I wanted to see 1 of the messages (about the latency timers). This
is a wrong place to decode pci configurations, but the code is already
here and handles more details than pciconf(8).
when the first PCI bus attaches.
- Create /dev/pci during MOD_LOAD as well.
- Destroy /dev/pci during MOD_UNLOAD (not that you can kldunload pci, but
might as well get the code right)
- Add an ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver (the previous driver just handled
Host-PCI bridges) that is a PCI driver that is a subclass of the generic
PCI-PCI bridge driver. It overrides probe, attach, read_ivar, and
pci_route_interrupt.
- The probe routine only succeeds if our parent is an ACPI PCI bus which
we test for by seeing if we can read our ACPI_HANDLE as an ivar.
- The attach routine saves a copy of our handle and calls the new
acpi_pcib_attach_common() function described below.
- The read_ivar routine handles normal PCI-PCI bridge ivars and adds an
ivar to return the ACPI_HANDLE of the bus this bridge represents.
- The route_interrupt routine fetches the _PRT (PCI Interrupt Routing
Table) from the bridge device's softc and passes it off to
acpi_pcib_route_interrupt() to route the interrupt.
- Split the old ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver into two pieces. Part of
the attach routine and most of the route_interrupt routine remain in
acpi_pcib.c and are shared by both ACPI PCI bridge drivers.
- The attach routine verifies the PCI bridge is present, reads in
the _PRT for the bridge, and attaches the child PCI bus.
- The route_interrupt routine uses the passed in _PRT to route a PCI
interrupt.
The rest of the driver is the ACPI Host-PCI bridge specific bits that
live in acpi_pcib_acpi.c.
- We no longer duplicate pcib_maxslots but use it directly.
- The driver now uses the pcib devclass instead of its own devclass.
This means that PCI busses are now only children of pcib devices.
- Allow the ACPI_HANDLE for the child PCI bus to be read as an ivar
of the child bus.
- Fetch the _PRT for routing PCI interrupts directly from our softc
instead of walking the devclass to find ourself and then fetch our
own softc.
With this change and the new ACPI PCI bus driver, ACPI can now properly
route interrupts for devices behind PCI-PCI bridges. That is, the
Itanium2 with like 10 PCI busses can now boot ok and route all the PCI
interrupts. Hopefully this will also fix problems people are having with
CardBus bridges behind PCI-PCI bridges not properly routing interrupts
when ACPI is used.
Tested on: i386, ia64
OOP speak, you would mark these as 'protected' members. Specifically:
- Make the pcib_softc struct public so it can be used by subclasses.
- Make pcib_{read,write}_ivar(), pcib_alloc_resource(), pcib_maxslots(),
and pcib_{read,write}_config() globals that can be used by subclasses.
- Make the pcib devclass a global variable.
- Move most of the pcib_attach() function into a global
pcib_attach_common() function that can be called by the attach routines
of subclasses.
Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64, ia64
- Make the pci devclass a global variable.
- Add child devices in pci_attach() instead of pci_probe(). Change
pci_probe() to just check for a valid bus number from the associated
bridge and return -1000 if successful. This allows subclasses of the
PCI bus driver to override the generic driver.
- Move the code to load the vendor data into its own public function.
Really though, doing this at attach is just plain wrong. This should
really be done in the module load routine instead. As a side effect,
the 'busno' variable in pci_attach() is now no longer static (minor
bug that was harmless so far.)
- Change pci_add_children() to take an extra argument that is the size of
the device info structure passed to pci_read_device() and make it public
so subclasses of the PCI bus can call it in their attach routines.
- Move the bits to attach a probed PCI child to a PCI bus into a global
pci_add_child() function. This will allow subclasses that can detect
a PCI device not found in the normal PCI probe to add those devices in
their own attach routine. (I have seen this in the ACPI tree on my
laptop for example.) As a side effect, change the static function
pci_add_resources() to get the busno, slot, and func from the passed
in dinfo structure instead of requiring them as function arguments.
Tested on: i386, alpha, ia64, sparc64
code into cardbus and s/pci/cardbus. This exposes a few pci_*
functions that are now static.
This work is similar to work Justin posted to the mobile list about a
year or two ago, which I have neglected since then.
This is a subset of his current work with the multiple inheritance
newbus architecutre. When completed, that will eliminate the need for
pci/pci_private.h.
Similar work is needed for the cardbus_cis and pccard_cis code as well.
of I/O in 1.5. It looks like I got it right only for some of the
cases. Instead, allow ISA addresses as a special case. Most PCI
bridges decode this range. I need to investigate PCI bridges better
to know if this is always true or not, but for now assume that it is
since that seems to be the most common case.
# We need to allocate addresses better for the pccard stuff...
Submitted by: phk, mitsunaga-san
request to one that's supported by the bridge. I'm not 100% sure this
is correct, but it makes it easier for the cardbus bridge to allocate
its memory.
Similar code is needed for the I/O range. Also, I'm not sure if I
should be doing this based on memory or pmemory (but likely should do
it based on some flag that tells us to prefetch or not).
Talked about a long time ago with: msmith
with weird PCI-PCI bridge configurations to work. Defining
PCI_ALLOW_UNSUPPORTED_IO_RANGE causes the sanity checks to pass even
with out of range values.
Reviewed by: msmith
Note ALL MODULES MUST BE RECOMPILED
make the kernel aware that there are smaller units of scheduling than the
process. (but only allow one thread per process at this time).
This is functionally equivalent to teh previousl -current except
that there is a thread associated with each process.
Sorry john! (your next MFC will be a doosie!)
Reviewed by: peter@freebsd.org, dillon@freebsd.org
X-MFC after: ha ha ha ha