entry that is not zero, assume that it is really a hard-wired IRQ (commonly
used for APIC routing) and not a source index. In practice, we've only
ever seen source indices of 0 for legitimate non-hard-wired _PRT entries.
Reviewed by: njl
Tested by: Alex Lyashkov shadow at psoft dot net
MFC after: 2 weeks
the driver has unholy private knowledge of its great-*cgrandchildren.
The ACPI allocation routine lacked such knowledge when it tried to do
a default allocation for all descendants, rather than just its
immeidate children, so would access grandchild's ivar in an unsafe
way. This could lead to a panic when devices were present which had
no addresses setup by the BIOS, but which were later allocated in a
lazy manner via pci_alloc_map. As such, only do the default
allocation adjustments for immediate children. The manner that
acpi_sysres_find accesses the resource list, used later in
acpi_alloc_resource, is safe and proper so no additional test is
needed there.
This fixes a panic when probing an disabled ata controller on some
newer intel blades.
Reported by: dwhite
pointer. If kernel malloc(0) returns a valid pointer, it needs to be
freed. If it returns NULL, it's ok to free this also.
Submitted by: pjd
Reviewed by: imp, dfr
Obtained from: Coverity Prevent
of swi. This allows us to use the taskqueue_thread_* functions instead of
rolling our own. It also avoids a double trip through the queue.
Submitted by: njl
Reviewed by: sam
we start turning any of them back on again. This works around a bug in
some BIOSen that alias two different link devices for APIC vs ATPIC modes
onto the same physical hardware link.
Submitted by: njl
Tested by: Antoine Brodin antoine dot brodin at laposte dot net
acpi_bus_alloc_gas() to delete the resource it set if alloc fails. Then,
change acpi_perf to delete the resource after releasing it if alloc fails.
This should make probe and attach both fully restartable if either fails.
type. This is needed if the resource is to be released later. The RID is
still also present, though less necessary since rman_get_rid() can be used
to obtain it from the resource.
place device objects in \ (in this case, PCI links.) Work around this by
starting our probe from \. To avoid attaching system scope objects,
explicitly skip them. (I think it's an ACPI-CA bug that \_SB and \_TZ have
device and thermal object types.) Thanks to pjd@ for testing.
MFC after: 2 weeks
If we are resuming non-MPSAFE drivers, they need Giant held for them.
This may fix some obscure suspend/resume problems. It has fixed keyrate
setting problems that were triggered by cardbus (MPSAFE) changing the
ordering for syscons resume (non-MPSAFE). Also, add some asserts that
Giant is held in our suspend/resume and shutdown methods.
Found by: iedowse
MFC after: 2 days
non-standard BIOSen. We used to implement this in local patches but
now that ACPI-CA has merged/re-implemented most of our fixes, they were
no longer needed and we just needed to turn this knob on. Also, remove
an unnecessary cast.
Tested by: phk
back on again in resume. Override the default of D3 with the value the
BIOS specifies in _SxD, if present. Skip serial devices (PNP05xx) since
they seem to hang when set to D3 and may require special driver support.
Also, skip non-type 0 PCI devices (i.e., bridges) since our we don't yet
save/restore their config space and that seems to be necessary.
If this gives you trouble with suspend/resume, you can disable the new
ACPI and PCI power behavior separately with these tunables & sysctls:
debug.acpi.do_powerstate
hw.pci.do_powerstate
Approved by: imp (pci)
Tested by: acpi@ (numerous)
hold its own values, pass them up to the parent (acpi0) and merge/uniq them
on the way. After the namespace evaluation, acpi will reserve these
resources and manage them via rman before bus_generic_probe() and
bus_generic_attach(). This is necessary because some systems specify
conflicting resources in separate sysresource objects. It's also cleaner
in that the interface between sysresource and acpi is now merely the parent's
resource list. This code handles the following cases:
1. Unique resource: add it to the parent via bus_set_resource().
2. New wholly contained in old: discard new.
3. New tail overlaps old head: grow old head downward.
AND/OR
4. New head overlaps old tail: grow old tail upward.
Tested by: Pawel Worach <sajd_at_telia.com>
Tested by: Radek Kozlowski <radek_at_raadradd.com>
MFC after: 5 days
callers. These ioctls attempted to enable and disable the ACPI
interpreter at runtime. In practice, it is not possible to boot with
ACPI and then disable it on many systems and trying to do so can cause
crashes, interrupt storms, etc. Binary compatibility with userland is
retained.
MFC after: 2 days
* Serialize calls to acpi_alloc_resource(), acpi_release_resource(),
acpi_Enable(), acpi_Disable(), and acpi_debug_sysctl().
* Acquire the ACPI mutex in acpi_register_ioctl(), acpi_deregister_ioctl(),
and acpiioctl().
* Acquire the mutex while disabling subsequent requests to enter a
sleep state in acpi_SetSleepState().
* Be sure to re-enable sleep requests and don't run resume methods when
the current request fails.
* Don't check if sleep requests are disabled in the ACPIIO_SETSLPSTATE
ioctl. acpi_SetSleepState() does this for us.
* Remove the acquisition of Giant from the struct cdevsw.
* Remove the ACPI_USE_THREADS option.
ACPI_DEBUG. This upset the ordering that acpi_probe_order() was meant to
provide, causing devices to attach before the sysresource object. This
debugging feature has been unnecessary for a while so just remove it.
Testing by: marcel
allows a bus to re-enumerate its child handles and optionally replace
them with new children, arranged to the bus's liking. (The current device
space is flat with all devices immediately under acpi0). Add comments
for each interface.
needed so that sysresource objects are created first to reserve all regions,
then other devices can allocate from them. Otherwise, acpi_timer (the only
ACPI device with an identify routine), would allocate its resources from
the nexus, causing the later sysresource reserve to fail.
Debugging by: Taku YAMAMOTO, Andrea Campi
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).
code that was never really used. Print a message when disabling ACPI via
a quirk. Allow the user to override the blacklist decision by setting
hint.acpi.0.disabled="0". Add missing AcpiTerminate() calls; they are
needed to clean up if bailing out after AcpiInitializeSubsystem().