freebsd-dev/sys/contrib/dev/acpica/CHANGES.txt
2003-07-13 22:44:13 +00:00

3800 lines
139 KiB
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19 June 2003. Summary of changes for version 20030619:
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fix To/FromBCD, eliminating the need for an arch-specific
#define.
Do not acquire a semaphore in the S5 shutdown path.
Fix ex_digits_needed for 0. (Takayoshi Kochi)
Fix sleep/stall code reversal. (Andi Kleen)
Revert a change having to do with control method calling
semantics.
2) Linux:
acpiphp update (Takayoshi Kochi)
Export acpi_disabled for sonypi (Stelian Pop)
Mention acpismp=force in config help
Re-add acpitable.c and acpismp=force. This improves backwards
compatibility and also cleans up the code to a significant
degree.
Add ASUS Value-add driver (Karol Kozimor and Julien Lerouge)
----------------------------------------
22 May 2003. Summary of changes for version 20030522:
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Found and fixed a reported problem where an AE_NOT_FOUND error
occurred occasionally during _BST evaluation. This turned out to
be an Owner ID allocation issue where a called method did not get
a new ID assigned to it. Eventually, (after 64k calls), the
Owner ID UINT16 would wraparound so that the ID would be the same
as the caller's and the called method would delete the caller's
namespace.
Implemented extended error reporting for control methods that are
aborted due to a run-time exception. Output includes the exact
AML instruction that caused the method abort, a dump of the
method locals and arguments at the time of the abort, and a trace
of all nested control method calls.
Modified the interpreter to allow the creation of buffers of zero
length from the AML code. Implemented new code to ensure that no
attempt is made to actually allocate a memory buffer (of length
zero) - instead, a simple buffer object with a NULL buffer
pointer and length zero is created. A warning is no longer
issued when the AML attempts to create a zero-length buffer.
Implemented a workaround for the "leading asterisk issue" in
_HIDs, _UIDs, and _CIDs in the AML interpreter. One leading
asterisk is automatically removed if present in any HID, UID, or
CID strings. The iASL compiler will still flag this asterisk as
an error, however.
Implemented full support for _CID methods that return a package
of multiple CIDs (Compatible IDs). The AcpiGetObjectInfo()
interface now additionally returns a device _CID list if present.
This required a change to the external interface in order to pass
an ACPI_BUFFER object as a parameter since the _CID list is of
variable length.
Fixed a problem with the new AE_SAME_HANDLER exception where
handler initialization code did not know about this exception.
Code and Data Size: Current and previous core subsystem library
sizes are shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a much larger code and data size. Note that
these values will vary depending on the efficiency of the
compiler and the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release (20030509):
Non-Debug Version: 73.4K Code, 9.7K Data, 83.1K Total
Debug Version: 156.1K Code, 63.9K Data, 220.0K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 73.7K Code, 9.7K Data, 83.4K Total
Debug Version: 156.9K Code, 64.2K Data, 221.1K Total
2) Linux:
Fixed a bug in which we would reinitialize the ACPI interrupt
after it was already working, thus disabling all ACPI and the
IRQs for any other device sharing the interrupt. (Thanks to Stian
Jordet)
Toshiba driver update (John Belmonte)
Return only 0 or 1 for our interrupt handler status (Andrew
Morton)
3) iASL Compiler:
Fixed a reported problem where multiple (nested) ElseIf()
statements were not handled correctly by the compiler, resulting
in incorrect warnings and incorrect AML code. This was a problem
in both the ASL parser and the code generator.
4) Documentation:
Added changes to existing interfaces, new exception codes, and
new text concerning reference count object management versus
garbage collection.
----------------------------------------
09 May 2003. Summary of changes for version 20030509.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Changed the subsystem initialization sequence to hold off
installation of address space handlers until the hardware has
been initialized and the system has entered ACPI mode. This is
because the installation of space handlers can cause _REG methods
to be run. Previously, the _REG methods could potentially be run
before ACPI mode was enabled.
Fixed some memory leak issues related to address space handler
and notify handler installation. There were some problems with
the reference count mechanism caused by the fact that the handler
objects are shared across several namespace objects.
Fixed a reported problem where reference counts within the
namespace were not properly updated when named objects created by
method execution were deleted.
Fixed a reported problem where multiple SSDTs caused a deletion
issue during subsystem termination. Restructured the table data
structures to simplify the linked lists and the related code.
Fixed a problem where the table ID associated with secondary
tables (SSDTs) was not being propagated into the namespace
objects created by those tables. This would only present a
problem for tables that are unloaded at run-time, however.
Updated AcpiOsReadable and AcpiOsWritable to use the ACPI_SIZE
type as the length parameter (instead of UINT32).
Solved a long-standing problem where an ALREADY_EXISTS error
appears on various systems. This problem could happen when there
are multiple PCI_Config operation regions under a single PCI root
bus. This doesn't happen very frequently, but there are some
systems that do this in the ASL.
Fixed a reported problem where the internal DeleteNode function
was incorrectly handling the case where a namespace node was the
first in the parent's child list, and had additional peers (not
the only child, but first in the list of children.)
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a much larger code and data size. Note that
these values will vary depending on the efficiency of the
compiler and the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 73.7K Code, 9.5K Data, 83.2K Total
Debug Version: 156.1K Code, 63.6K Data, 219.7K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 73.4K Code, 9.7K Data, 83.1K Total
Debug Version: 156.1K Code, 63.9K Data, 220.0K Total
2) Linux:
Allow ":" in OS override string (Ducrot Bruno)
Kobject fix (Greg KH)
3 iASL Compiler/Disassembler:
Fixed a problem in the generation of the C source code files (AML
is emitted in C source statements for BIOS inclusion) where the
Ascii dump that appears within a C comment at the end of each
line could cause a compile time error if the AML sequence happens
to have an open comment or close comment sequence embedded.
----------------------------------------
24 April 2003. Summary of changes for version 20030424.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Support for big-endian systems has been implemented. Most of the
support has been invisibly added behind big-endian versions of
the ACPI_MOVE_* macros.
Fixed a problem in AcpiHwDisableGpeBlock() and
AcpiHwClearGpeBlock() where an incorrect offset was passed to the
low level hardware write routine. The offset parameter was
actually eliminated from the low level read/write routines
because they had become obsolete.
Fixed a problem where a handler object was deleted twice during
the removal of a fixed event handler.
2) Linux:
A fix for SMP systems with link devices was contributed by
Compaq's Dan Zink.
(2.5) Return whether we handled the interrupt in our IRQ handler.
(Linux ISRs no longer return void, so we can propagate the
handler return value from the ACPI CA core back to the OS.)
3) Documentation:
The ACPI CA Programmer Reference has been updated to reflect new
interfaces and changes to existing interfaces.
----------------------------------------
28 March 2003. Summary of changes for version 20030328.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
The GPE Block Device support has been completed. New interfaces
are AcpiInstallGpeBlock and AcpiRemoveGpeBlock. The Event
interfaces (enable, disable, clear, getstatus) have been split
into separate interfaces for Fixed Events and General Purpose
Events (GPEs) in order to support GPE Block Devices properly.
Fixed a problem where the error message "Failed to acquire
semaphore" would appear during operations on the embedded
controller (EC).
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a much larger code and data size. Note that
these values will vary depending on the efficiency of the
compiler and the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 72.3K Code, 9.5K Data, 81.8K Total
Debug Version: 154.0K Code, 63.4K Data, 217.4K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 73.7K Code, 9.5K Data, 83.2K Total
Debug Version: 156.1K Code, 63.6K Data, 219.7K Total
----------------------------------------
28 February 2003. Summary of changes for version 20030228.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
The GPE handling and dispatch code has been completely overhauled
in preparation for support of GPE Block Devices (ID ACPI0006).
This affects internal data structures and code only; there should
be no differences visible externally. One new file has been
added, evgpeblk.c
The FADT fields GPE0_BLK_LEN and GPE1_BLK_LEN are now the only
fields that are used to determine the GPE block lengths. The
REGISTER_BIT_WIDTH field of the X_GPEx_BLK extended address
structures are ignored. This is per the ACPI specification but
it isn't very clear. The full 256 Block 0/1 GPEs are now
supported (the use of REGISTER_BIT_WIDTH limited the number of
GPEs to 128).
In the SCI interrupt handler, removed the read of the PM1_CONTROL
register to look at the SCI_EN bit. On some machines, this read
causes an SMI event and greatly slows down SCI events. (This may
in fact be the cause of slow battery status response on some
systems.)
Fixed a problem where a store of a NULL string to a package
object could cause the premature deletion of the object. This
was seen during execution of the battery _BIF method on some
systems, resulting in no battery data being returned.
Added AcpiWalkResources interface to simplify parsing of resource
lists.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a much larger code and data size. Note that
these values will vary depending on the efficiency of the
compiler and the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 72.0K Code, 9.5K Data, 81.5K Total
Debug Version: 153.0K Code, 62.9K Data, 215.9K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 72.3K Code, 9.5K Data, 81.8K Total
Debug Version: 154.0K Code, 63.4K Data, 217.4K Total
2) Linux
S3 fixes (Ole Rohne)
Update ACPI PHP driver with to use new acpi_walk_resource API
(Bjorn Helgaas)
Add S4BIOS support (Pavel Machek)
Map in entire table before performing checksum (John Stultz)
Expand the mem= cmdline to allow the specification of reserved
and ACPI DATA blocks (Pavel Machek)
Never use ACPI on VISWS
Fix derive_pci_id (Ducrot Bruno, Alvaro Lopez)
Revert a change that allowed P_BLK lengths to be 4 or 5. This is
causing us to think that some systems support C2 when they really
don't.
Do not count processor objects for non-present CPUs (Thanks to
Dominik Brodowski)
3) iASL Compiler:
Fixed a problem where ASL include files could not be found and
opened.
Added support for the _PDC reserved name.
----------------------------------------
22 January 2003. Summary of changes for version 20030122.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Added a check for constructs of the form: Store (Local0, Local0)
where Local0 is not initialized. Apparently, some BIOS
programmers believe that this is a NOOP. Since this store
doesn't do anything anyway, the new prototype behavior will
ignore this error. This is a case where we can relax the strict
checking in the interpreter in the name of compatibility.
2) Linux
The AcpiSrc Source Conversion Utility has been released with the
Linux package for the first time. This is the utility that is
used to convert the ACPI CA base source code to the Linux
version.
(Both) Handle P_BLK lengths shorter than 6 more gracefully
(Both) Move more headers to include/acpi, and delete an unused
header.
(Both) Move drivers/acpi/include directory to include/acpi
(Both) Boot functions don't use cmdline, so don't pass it around
(Both) Remove include of unused header (Adrian Bunk)
(Both) acpiphp.h includes both linux/acpi.h and acpi_bus.h. Since
the
former now also includes the latter, acpiphp.h only needs the
one, now.
(2.5) Make it possible to select method of bios restoring after
S3
resume. [=> no more ugly ifdefs] (Pavel Machek)
(2.5) Make proc write interfaces work (Pavel Machek)
(2.5) Properly init/clean up in cpufreq/acpi (Dominik Brodowski)
(2.5) Break out ACPI Perf code into its own module, under cpufreq
(Dominik Brodowski)
(2.4) S4BIOS support (Ducrot Bruno)
(2.4) Fix acpiphp_glue.c for latest ACPI struct changes (Sergio
Visinoni)
3) iASL Compiler:
Added support to disassemble SSDT and PSDTs.
Implemented support to obtain SSDTs from the Windows registry if
available.
----------------------------------------
09 January 2003. Summary of changes for version 20030109.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Changed the behavior of the internal Buffer-to-String conversion
function. The current ACPI specification states that the
contents of the buffer are "converted to a string of two-
character hexadecimal numbers, each separated by a space".
Unfortunately, this definition is not backwards compatible with
existing ACPI 1.0 implementations (although the behavior was not
defined in the ACPI 1.0 specification). The new behavior simply
copies data from the buffer to the string until a null character
is found or the end of the buffer is reached. The new String
object is always null terminated. This problem was seen during
the generation of _BIF battery data where incorrect strings were
returned for battery type, etc. This will also require an errata
to the ACPI specification.
Renamed all instances of NATIVE_UINT and NATIVE_INT to
ACPI_NATIVE_UINT and ACPI_NATIVE_INT, respectively.
Copyright in all module headers (both Linux and non-Linux) has be
updated to 2003.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a much larger code and data size. Note that
these values will vary depending on the efficiency of the
compiler and the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 72.0K Code, 9.5K Data, 81.5K Total
Debug Version: 153.0K Code, 62.9K Data, 215.9K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 72.0K Code, 9.5K Data, 81.5K Total
Debug Version: 153.0K Code, 62.9K Data, 215.9K Total
2) Linux
Fixed an oops on module insertion/removal (Matthew Tippett)
(2.4) Fix to handle dynamic size of mp_irqs (Joerg Prante)
(2.5) Replace pr_debug (Randy Dunlap)
(2.5) Remove usage of CPUFREQ_ALL_CPUS (Dominik Brodowski)
(Both) Eliminate spawning of thread from timer callback, in favor
of schedule_work()
(Both) Show Lid status in /proc (Zdenek OGAR Skalak)
(Both) Added define for Fixed Function HW region (Matthew Wilcox)
(Both) Add missing statics to button.c (Pavel Machek)
Several changes have been made to the source code translation
utility that generates the Linux Code in order to make the code
more "Linux-like":
All typedefs on structs and unions have been removed in keeping
with the Linux coding style.
Removed the non-Linux SourceSafe module revision number from each
module header.
Completed major overhaul of symbols to be lowercased for linux.
Doubled the number of symbols that are lowercased.
Fixed a problem where identifiers within procedure headers and
within quotes were not fully lower cased (they were left with a
starting capital.)
Some C macros whose only purpose is to allow the generation of 16-
bit code are now completely removed in the Linux code, increasing
readability and maintainability.
----------------------------------------
12 December 2002. Summary of changes for version 20021212.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fixed a problem where the creation of a zero-length AML Buffer
would cause a fault.
Fixed a problem where a Buffer object that pointed to a static
AML buffer (in an ACPI table) could inadvertently be deleted,
causing memory corruption.
Fixed a problem where a user buffer (passed in to the external
ACPI CA interfaces) could be overwritten if the buffer was too
small to complete the operation, causing memory corruption.
Fixed a problem in the Buffer-to-String conversion code where a
string of length one was always returned, regardless of the size
of the input Buffer object.
Removed the NATIVE_CHAR data type across the entire source due to
lack of need and lack of consistent use.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a much larger code and data size. Note that
these values will vary depending on the efficiency of the
compiler and the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 72.1K Code, 9.5K Data, 81.6K Total
Debug Version: 152.7K Code, 62.7K Data, 215.4K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 72.0K Code, 9.5K Data, 81.5K Total
Debug Version: 153.0K Code, 62.9K Data, 215.9K Total
----------------------------------------
05 December 2002. Summary of changes for version 20021205.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fixed a problem where a store to a String or Buffer object could
cause corruption of the DSDT if the object type being stored was
the same as the target object type and the length of the object
being stored was equal to or smaller than the original (existing)
target object. This was seen to cause corruption of battery _BIF
buffers if the _BIF method modified the buffer on the fly.
Fixed a problem where an internal error was generated if a
control method invocation was used in an OperationRegion, Buffer,
or Package declaration. This was caused by the deferred parsing
of the control method and thus the deferred creation of the
internal method object. The solution to this problem was to
create the internal method object at the moment the method is
encountered in the first pass - so that subsequent references to
the method will able to obtain the required parameter count and
thus properly parse the method invocation. This problem
presented itself as an AE_AML_INTERNAL during the pass 1 parse
phase during table load.
Fixed a problem where the internal String object copy routine did
not always allocate sufficient memory for the target String
object and caused memory corruption. This problem was seen to
cause "Allocation already present in list!" errors as memory
allocation became corrupted.
Implemented a new function for the evaluation of namespace
objects that allows the specification of the allowable return
object types. This simplifies a lot of code that checks for a
return object of one or more specific objects returned from the
evaluation (such as _STA, etc.) This may become and external
function if it would be useful to ACPI-related drivers.
Completed another round of prefixing #defines with "ACPI_" for
clarity.
Completed additional code restructuring to allow more modular
linking for iASL compiler and AcpiExec. Several files were split
creating new files. New files: nsparse.c dsinit.c evgpe.c
Implemented an abort mechanism to terminate an executing control
method via the AML debugger. This feature is useful for
debugging control methods that depend (wait) for specific
hardware responses.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a much larger code and data size. Note that
these values will vary depending on the efficiency of the
compiler and the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 71.4K Code, 9.0K Data, 80.4K Total
Debug Version: 152.9K Code, 63.3K Data, 216.2K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 72.1K Code, 9.5K Data, 81.6K Total
Debug Version: 152.7K Code, 62.7K Data, 215.4K Total
2) iASL Compiler/Disassembler
Fixed a compiler code generation problem for "Interrupt" Resource
Descriptors. If specified in the ASL, the optional "Resource
Source Index" and "Resource Source" fields were not inserted into
the correct location within the AML resource descriptor, creating
an invalid descriptor.
Fixed a disassembler problem for "Interrupt" resource
descriptors. The optional "Resource Source Index" and "Resource
Source" fields were ignored.
----------------------------------------
22 November 2002. Summary of changes for version 20021122.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fixed a reported problem where an object stored to a Method Local
or Arg was not copied to a new object during the store - the
object pointer was simply copied to the Local/Arg. This caused
all subsequent operations on the Local/Arg to also affect the
original source of the store operation.
Fixed a problem where a store operation to a Method Local or Arg
was not completed properly if the Local/Arg contained a reference
(from RefOf) to a named field. The general-purpose store-to-
namespace-node code is now used so that this case is handled
automatically.
Fixed a problem where the internal object copy routine would
cause a protection fault if the object being copied was a Package
and contained either 1) a NULL package element or 2) a nested sub-
package.
Fixed a problem with the GPE initialization that resulted from an
ambiguity in the ACPI specification. One section of the
specification states that both the address and length of the GPE
block must be zero if the block is not supported. Another
section implies that only the address need be zero if the block
is not supported. The code has been changed so that both the
address and the length must be non-zero to indicate a valid GPE
block (i.e., if either the address or the length is zero, the GPE
block is invalid.)
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a much larger code and data size. Note that
these values will vary depending on the efficiency of the
compiler and the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 71.3K Code, 9.0K Data, 80.3K Total
Debug Version: 152.7K Code, 63.2K Data, 215.5K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 71.4K Code, 9.0K Data, 80.4K Total
Debug Version: 152.9K Code, 63.3K Data, 216.2K Total
2) Linux
Cleaned up EC driver. Exported an external EC read/write
interface. By going through this, other drivers (most notably
sonypi) will be able to serialize access to the EC.
3) iASL Compiler/Disassembler
Implemented support to optionally generate include files for both
ASM and C (the -i switch). This simplifies BIOS development by
automatically creating include files that contain external
declarations for the symbols that are created within the
(optionally generated) ASM and C AML source files.
----------------------------------------
15 November 2002. Summary of changes for version 20021115.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fixed a memory leak problem where an error during resolution of
method arguments during a method invocation from another method
failed to cleanup properly by deleting all successfully resolved
argument objects.
Fixed a problem where the target of the Index() operator was not
correctly constructed if the source object was a package. This
problem has not been detected because the use of a target operand
with Index() is very rare.
Fixed a problem with the Index() operator where an attempt was
made to delete the operand objects twice.
Fixed a problem where an attempt was made to delete an operand
twice during execution of the CondRefOf() operator if the target
did not exist.
Implemented the first of perhaps several internal create object
functions that create and initialize a specific object type.
This consolidates duplicated code wherever the object is created,
thus shrinking the size of the subsystem.
Implemented improved debug/error messages for errors that occur
during nested method invocations. All executing method pathnames
are displayed (with the error) as the call stack is unwound -
thus simplifying debug.
Fixed a problem introduced in the 10/02 release that caused
premature deletion of a buffer object if a buffer was used as an
ASL operand where an integer operand is required (Thus causing an
implicit object conversion from Buffer to Integer.) The change
in the 10/02 release was attempting to fix a memory leak (albeit
incorrectly.)
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a much larger code and data size. Note that
these values will vary depending on the efficiency of the
compiler and the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 71.9K Code, 9.1K Data, 81.0K Total
Debug Version: 153.1K Code, 63.3K Data, 216.4K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 71.3K Code, 9.0K Data, 80.3K Total
Debug Version: 152.7K Code, 63.2K Data, 215.5K Total
2) Linux
Changed the implementation of the ACPI semaphores to use down()
instead of down_interruptable(). It is important that the
execution of ACPI control methods not be interrupted by signals.
Methods must run to completion, or the system may be left in an
unknown/unstable state.
Fixed a compilation error when CONFIG_SOFTWARE_SUSPEND is not
set. (Shawn Starr)
3) iASL Compiler/Disassembler
Changed the default location of output files. All output files
are now placed in the current directory by default instead of in
the directory of the source file. This change may affect some
existing makefiles, but it brings the behavior of the compiler in
line with other similar tools. The location of the output files
can be overridden with the -p command line switch.
----------------------------------------
11 November 2002. Summary of changes for version 20021111.
0) ACPI Specification 2.0B is released and is now available at:
http://www.acpi.info/index.html
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Implemented support for the ACPI 2.0 SMBus Operation Regions.
This includes the early detection and handoff of the request to
the SMBus region handler (avoiding all of the complex field
support code), and support for the bidirectional return packet
from an SMBus write operation. This paves the way for the
development of SMBus drivers in each host operating system.
Fixed a problem where the semaphore WAIT_FOREVER constant was
defined as 32 bits, but must be 16 bits according to the ACPI
specification. This had the side effect of causing ASL
Mutex/Event timeouts even though the ASL code requested a wait
forever. Changed all internal references to the ACPI timeout
parameter to 16 bits to prevent future problems. Changed the
name of WAIT_FOREVER to ACPI_WAIT_FOREVER.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a much larger code and data size. Note that
these values will vary depending on the efficiency of the
compiler and the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 71.4K Code, 9.0K Data, 80.4K Total
Debug Version: 152.3K Code, 63.0K Data, 215.3K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 71.9K Code, 9.1K Data, 81.0K Total
Debug Version: 153.1K Code, 63.3K Data, 216.4K Total
2) Linux
Module loading/unloading fixes (John Cagle)
3) iASL Compiler/Disassembler
Added support for the SMBBlockProcessCall keyword (ACPI 2.0)
Implemented support for the disassembly of all SMBus protocol
keywords (SMBQuick, SMBWord, etc.)
----------------------------------------
01 November 2002. Summary of changes for version 20021101.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fixed a problem where platforms that have a GPE1 block but no
GPE0 block were not handled correctly. This resulted in a "GPE
overlap" error message. GPE0 is no longer required.
Removed code added in the previous release that inserted nodes
into the namespace in alphabetical order. This caused some side-
effects on various machines. The root cause of the problem is
still under investigation since in theory, the internal ordering
of the namespace nodes should not matter.
Enhanced error reporting for the case where a named object is not
found during control method execution. The full ACPI namepath
(name reference) of the object that was not found is displayed in
this case.
Note: as a result of the overhaul of the namespace object types
in the previous release, the namespace nodes for the predefined
scopes (_TZ, _PR, etc.) are now of the type ACPI_TYPE_LOCAL_SCOPE
instead of ACPI_TYPE_ANY. This simplifies the namespace
management code but may affect code that walks the namespace tree
looking for specific object types.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a much larger code and data size. Note that
these values will vary depending on the efficiency of the
compiler and the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 70.7K Code, 8.6K Data, 79.3K Total
Debug Version: 151.7K Code, 62.4K Data, 214.1K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 71.4K Code, 9.0K Data, 80.4K Total
Debug Version: 152.3K Code, 63.0K Data, 215.3K Total
2) Linux
Fixed a problem introduced in the previous release where the
Processor and Thermal objects were not recognized and installed
in /proc. This was related to the scope type change described
above.
3) iASL Compiler/Disassembler
Implemented the -g option to get all of the required ACPI tables
from the registry and save them to files (Windows version of the
compiler only.) The required tables are the FADT, FACS, and
DSDT.
Added ACPI table checksum validation during table disassembly in
order to catch corrupted tables.
----------------------------------------
22 October 2002. Summary of changes for version 20021022.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Implemented a restriction on the Scope operator that the target
must already exist in the namespace at the time the operator is
encountered (during table load or method execution). In other
words, forward references are not allowed and Scope() cannot
create a new object. This changes the previous behavior where the
interpreter would create the name if not found. This new
behavior correctly enables the search-to-root algorithm during
namespace lookup of the target name. Because of this upsearch,
this fixes the known Compaq _SB_.OKEC problem and makes both the
AML interpreter and iASL compiler compatible with other ACPI
implementations.
Completed a major overhaul of the internal ACPI object types for
the ACPI Namespace and the associated operand objects. Many of
these types had become obsolete with the introduction of the two-
pass namespace load. This cleanup simplifies the code and makes
the entire namespace load mechanism much clearer and easier to
understand.
Improved debug output for tracking scope opening/closing to help
diagnose scoping issues. The old scope name as well as the new
scope name are displayed. Also improved error messages for
problems with ASL Mutex objects and error messages for GPE
problems.
Cleaned up the namespace dump code, removed obsolete code.
All string output (for all namespace/object dumps) now uses the
common ACPI string output procedure which handles escapes
properly and does not emit non-printable characters.
Fixed some issues with constants in the 64-bit version of the
local C library (utclib.c)
2) Linux
EC Driver: No longer attempts to acquire the Global Lock at
interrupt level.
3) iASL Compiler/Disassembler
Implemented ACPI 2.0B grammar change that disallows all Type 1
and 2 opcodes outside of a control method. This means that the
"executable" operators (versus the "namespace" operators) cannot
be used at the table level; they can only be used within a
control method.
Implemented the restriction on the Scope() operator where the
target must already exist in the namespace at the time the
operator is encountered (during ASL compilation). In other words,
forward references are not allowed and Scope() cannot create a
new object. This makes the iASL compiler compatible with other
ACPI implementations and makes the Scope() implementation adhere
to the ACPI specification.
Fixed a problem where namepath optimization for the Alias
operator was optimizing the wrong path (of the two namepaths.)
This caused a "Missing alias link" error message.
Fixed a problem where an "unknown reserved name" warning could be
incorrectly generated for names like "_SB" when the trailing
underscore is not used in the original ASL.
Fixed a problem where the reserved name check did not handle
NamePaths with multiple NameSegs correctly. The first nameseg of
the NamePath was examined instead of the last NameSeg.
----------------------------------------
02 October 2002. Summary of changes for this release.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem version 20021002:
Fixed a problem where a store/copy of a string to an existing
string did not always set the string length properly in the
String object.
Fixed a reported problem with the ToString operator where the
behavior was identical to the ToHexString operator instead of
just simply converting a raw buffer to a string data type.
Fixed a problem where CopyObject and the other "explicit"
conversion operators were not updating the internal namespace
node type as part of the store operation.
Fixed a memory leak during implicit source operand conversion
where the original object was not deleted if it was converted to
a new object of a different type.
Enhanced error messages for all problems associated with
namespace lookups. Common procedure generates and prints the
lookup name as well as the formatted status.
Completed implementation of a new design for the Alias support
within the namespace. The existing design did not handle the
case where a new object was assigned to one of the two names due
to the use of an explicit conversion operator, resulting in the
two names pointing to two different objects. The new design
simply points the Alias name to the original name node - not to
the object. This results in a level of indirection that must be
handled in the name resolution mechanism.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a larger code and data size. Note that these
values will vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and
the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 69.6K Code, 8.3K Data, 77.9K Total
Debug Version: 150.0K Code, 61.7K Data, 211.7K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 70.7K Code, 8.6K Data, 79.3K Total
Debug Version: 151.7K Code, 62.4K Data, 214.1K Total
2) Linux
Initialize thermal driver's timer before it is used. (Knut
Neumann)
Allow handling negative celsius values. (Kochi Takayoshi)
Fix thermal management and make trip points. R/W (Pavel Machek)
Fix /proc/acpi/sleep. (P. Christeas)
IA64 fixes. (David Mosberger)
Fix reversed logic in blacklist code. (Sergio Monteiro Basto)
Replace ACPI_DEBUG define with ACPI_DEBUG_OUTPUT. (Dominik
Brodowski)
3) iASL Compiler/Disassembler
Clarified some warning/error messages.
----------------------------------------
18 September 2002. Summary of changes for this release.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem version 20020918:
Fixed a reported problem with reference chaining (via the Index()
and RefOf() operators) in the ObjectType() and SizeOf()
operators. The definition of these operators includes the
dereferencing of all chained references to return information on
the base object.
Fixed a problem with stores to indexed package elements - the
existing code would not complete the store if an "implicit
conversion" was not performed. In other words, if the existing
object (package element) was to be replaced completely, the code
didn't handle this case.
Relaxed typechecking on the ASL "Scope" operator to allow the
target name to refer to an object of type Integer, String, or
Buffer, in addition to the scoping object types (Device,
predefined Scopes, Processor, PowerResource, and ThermalZone.)
This allows existing AML code that has workarounds for a bug in
Windows to function properly. A warning is issued, however.
This affects both the AML interpreter and the iASL compiler.
Below is an example of this type of ASL code:
Name(DEB,0x00)
Scope(DEB)
{
Fixed some reported problems with 64-bit integer support in the
local implementation of C library functions (clib.c)
2) Linux
Use ACPI fix map region instead of IOAPIC region, since it is
undefined in non-SMP.
Ensure that the SCI has the proper polarity and trigger, even on
systems that do not have an interrupt override entry in the MADT.
2.5 big driver reorganization (Pat Mochel)
Use early table mapping code from acpitable.c (Andi Kleen)
New blacklist entries (Andi Kleen)
Blacklist improvements. Split blacklist code out into a separate
file. Move checking the blacklist to very early. Previously, we
would use ACPI tables, and then halfway through init, check the
blacklist -- too late. Now, it's early enough to completely fall-
back to non-ACPI.
3) iASL Compiler/Disassembler version 20020918:
Fixed a problem where the typechecking code didn't know that an
alias could point to a method. In other words, aliases were not
being dereferenced during typechecking.
----------------------------------------
29 August 2002. Summary of changes for this release.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem Version 20020829:
If the target of a Scope() operator already exists, it must be an
object type that actually opens a scope -- such as a Device,
Method, Scope, etc. This is a fatal runtime error. Similar
error check has been added to the iASL compiler also.
Tightened up the namespace load to disallow multiple names in the
same scope. This previously was allowed if both objects were of
the same type. (i.e., a lookup was the same as entering a new
name).
2) Linux
Ensure that the ACPI interrupt has the proper trigger and
polarity.
local_irq_disable is extraneous. (Matthew Wilcox)
Make "acpi=off" actually do what it says, and not use the ACPI
interpreter *or* the tables.
Added arch-neutral support for parsing SLIT and SRAT tables
(Kochi Takayoshi)
3) iASL Compiler/Disassembler Version 20020829:
Implemented namepath optimization for name declarations. For
example, a declaration like "Method (\_SB_.ABCD)" would get
optimized to "Method (ABCD)" if the declaration is within the
\_SB_ scope. This optimization is in addition to the named
reference path optimization first released in the previous
version. This would seem to complete all possible optimizations
for namepaths within the ASL/AML.
If the target of a Scope() operator already exists, it must be an
object type that actually opens a scope -- such as a Device,
Method, Scope, etc.
Implemented a check and warning for unreachable code in the same
block below a Return() statement.
Fixed a problem where the listing file was not generated if the
compiler aborted if the maximum error count was exceeded (200).
Fixed a problem where the typechecking of method return values
was broken. This includes the check for a return value when the
method is invoked as a TermArg (a return value is expected.)
Fixed a reported problem where EOF conditions during a quoted
string or comment caused a fault.
----------------------------------------
15 August 2002. Summary of changes for this release.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem Version 20020815:
Fixed a reported problem where a Store to a method argument that
contains a reference did not perform the indirect store
correctly. This problem was created during the conversion to the
new reference object model - the indirect store to a method
argument code was not updated to reflect the new model.
Reworked the ACPI mode change code to better conform to ACPI 2.0,
handle corner cases, and improve code legibility (Kochi
Takayoshi)
Fixed a problem with the pathname parsing for the carat (^)
prefix. The heavy use of the carat operator by the new namepath
optimization in the iASL compiler uncovered a problem with the
AML interpreter handling of this prefix. In the case where one
or more carats precede a single nameseg, the nameseg was treated
as standalone and the search rule (to root) was inadvertently
applied. This could cause both the iASL compiler and the
interpreter to find the wrong object or to miss the error that
should occur if the object does not exist at that exact pathname.
Found and fixed the problem where the HP Pavilion DSDT would not
load. This was a relatively minor tweak to the table loading
code (a problem caused by the unexpected encounter with a method
invocation not within a control method), but it does not solve
the overall issue of the execution of AML code at the table
level. This investigation is still ongoing.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a larger code and data size. Note that these
values will vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and
the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 69.1K Code, 8.2K Data, 77.3K Total
Debug Version: 149.4K Code, 61.6K Data, 211.0K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 69.6K Code, 8.3K Data, 77.9K Total
Debug Version: 150.0K Code, 61.7K Data, 211.7K Total
2) Linux
Remove redundant slab.h include (Brad Hards)
Fix several bugs in thermal.c (Herbert Nachtnebel)
Make CONFIG_ACPI_BOOT work properly (Pavel Machek)
Change acpi_system_suspend to use updated irq functions (Pavel
Machek)
Export acpi_get_firmware_table (Matthew Wilcox)
Use proper root proc entry for ACPI (Kochi Takayoshi)
Fix early-boot table parsing (Bjorn Helgaas)
3) iASL Compiler/Disassembler
Reworked the compiler options to make them more consistent and to
use two-letter options where appropriate. We were running out of
sensible letters. This may break some makefiles, so check the
current options list by invoking the compiler with no parameters.
Completed the design and implementation of the ASL namepath
optimization option for the compiler. This option optimizes all
references to named objects to the shortest possible path. The
first attempt tries to utilize a single nameseg (4 characters)
and the "search-to-root" algorithm used by the interpreter. If
that cannot be used (because either the name is not in the search
path or there is a conflict with another object with the same
name), the pathname is optimized using the carat prefix (usually
a shorter string than specifying the entire path from the root.)
Implemented support to obtain the DSDT from the Windows registry
(when the disassembly option is specified with no input file).
Added this code as the implementation for AcpiOsTableOverride in
the Windows OSL. Migrated the 16-bit code (used in the AcpiDump
utility) to scan memory for the DSDT to the AcpiOsTableOverride
function in the DOS OSL to make the disassembler truly OS
independent.
Implemented a new option to disassemble and compile in one step.
When used without an input filename, this option will grab the
DSDT from the local machine, disassemble it, and compile it in
one step.
Added a warning message for invalid escapes (a backslash followed
by any character other than the allowable escapes). This catches
the quoted string error "\_SB_" (which should be "\\_SB_" ).
Also, there are numerous instances in the ACPI specification
where this error occurs.
Added a compiler option to disable all optimizations. This is
basically the "compatibility mode" because by using this option,
the AML code will come out exactly the same as other ASL
compilers.
Added error messages for incorrectly ordered dependent resource
functions. This includes: missing EndDependentFn macro at end of
dependent resource list, nested dependent function macros (both
start and end), and missing StartDependentFn macro. These are
common errors that should be caught at compile time.
Implemented _OSI support for the disassembler and compiler. _OSI
must be included in the namespace for proper disassembly (because
the disassembler must know the number of arguments.)
Added an "optimization" message type that is optional (off by
default). This message is used for all optimizations - including
constant folding, integer optimization, and namepath
optimization.
----------------------------------------
25 July 2002. Summary of changes for this release.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem Version 20020725:
The AML Disassembler has been enhanced to produce compilable ASL
code and has been integrated into the iASL compiler (see below)
as well as the single-step disassembly for the AML debugger and
the disassembler for the AcpiDump utility. All ACPI 2.0A
opcodes, resource templates and macros are fully supported. The
disassembler has been tested on over 30 different AML files,
producing identical AML when the resulting disassembled ASL file
is recompiled with the same ASL compiler.
Modified the Resource Manager to allow zero interrupts and zero
dma channels during the GetCurrentResources call. This was
causing problems on some platforms.
Added the AcpiOsRedirectOutput interface to the OSL to simplify
output redirection for the AcpiOsPrintf and AcpiOsVprintf
interfaces.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a larger code and data size. Note that these
values will vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and
the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 68.7K Code, 7.4K Data, 76.1K Total
Debug Version: 142.9K Code, 58.7K Data, 201.6K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 69.1K Code, 8.2K Data, 77.3K Total
Debug Version: 149.4K Code, 61.6K Data, 211.0K Total
2) Linux
Fixed a panic in the EC driver (Dominik Brodowski)
Implemented checksum of the R/XSDT itself during Linux table scan
(Richard Schaal)
3) iASL compiler
The AML disassembler is integrated into the compiler. The "-d"
option invokes the disassembler to completely disassemble an
input AML file, producing as output a text ASL file with the
extension ".dsl" (to avoid name collisions with existing .asl
source files.) A future enhancement will allow the disassembler
to obtain the BIOS DSDT from the registry under Windows.
Fixed a problem with the VendorShort and VendorLong resource
descriptors where an invalid AML sequence was created.
Implemented a fix for BufferData term in the ASL parser. It was
inadvertently defined twice, allowing invalid syntax to pass and
causing reduction conflicts.
Fixed a problem where the Ones opcode could get converted to a
value of zero if "Ones" was used where a byte, word or dword
value was expected. The 64-bit value is now truncated to the
correct size with the correct value.
----------------------------------------
02 July 2002. Summary of changes for this release.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem Version 20020702:
The Table Manager code has been restructured to add several new
features. Tables that are not required by the core subsystem
(other than the FADT, DSDT, FACS, PSDTs, etc.) are no longer
validated in any way and are returned from AcpiGetFirmwareTable
if requested. The AcpiOsTableOverride interface is now called
for each table that is loaded by the subsystem in order to allow
the host to override any table it chooses. Previously, only the
DSDT could be overridden. Added one new files, tbrsdt.c and
tbgetall.c.
Fixed a problem with the conversion of internal package objects
to external objects (when a package is returned from a control
method.) The return buffer length was set to zero instead of the
proper length of the package object.
Fixed a reported problem with the use of the RefOf and DeRefOf
operators when passing reference arguments to control methods. A
new type of Reference object is used internally for references
produced by the RefOf operator.
Added additional error messages in the Resource Manager to
explain AE_BAD_DATA errors when they occur during resource
parsing.
Split the AcpiEnableSubsystem into two primitives to enable a
finer granularity initialization sequence. These two calls
should be called in this order: AcpiEnableSubsystem (flags),
AcpiInitializeObjects (flags). The flags parameter remains the
same.
2) Linux
Updated the ACPI utilities module to understand the new style of
fully resolved package objects that are now returned from the
core subsystem. This eliminates errors of the form:
ACPI: PCI Interrupt Routing Table [\_SB_.PCI0.PPB_._PRT]
acpi_utils-0430 [145] acpi_evaluate_reference:
Invalid element in package (not a device reference)
The method evaluation utility uses the new buffer allocation
scheme instead of calling AcpiEvaluate Object twice.
Added support for ECDT. This allows the use of the Embedded
Controller before the namespace has been fully initialized, which
is necessary for ACPI 2.0 support, and for some laptops to
initialize properly. (Laptops using ECDT are still rare, so only
limited testing was performed of the added functionality.)
Fixed memory leaks in the EC driver.
Eliminated a brittle code structure in acpi_bus_init().
Eliminated the acpi_evaluate() helper function in utils.c. It is
no longer needed since acpi_evaluate_object can optionally
allocate memory for the return object.
Implemented fix for keyboard hang when getting battery readings
on some systems (Stephen White)
PCI IRQ routing update (Dominik Brodowski)
Fix an ifdef to allow compilation on UP with LAPIC but no IOAPIC
support
----------------------------------------
11 June 2002. Summary of changes for this release.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem Version 20020611:
Fixed a reported problem where constants such as Zero and One
appearing within _PRT packages were not handled correctly within
the resource manager code. Originally reported against the ASL
compiler because the code generator now optimizes integers to
their minimal AML representation (i.e. AML constants if
possible.) The _PRT code now handles all AML constant opcodes
correctly (Zero, One, Ones, Revision).
Fixed a problem with the Concatenate operator in the AML
interpreter where a buffer result object was incorrectly marked
as not fully evaluated, causing a run-time error of
AE_AML_INTERNAL.
All package sub-objects are now fully resolved before they are
returned from the external ACPI interfaces. This means that name
strings are resolved to object handles, and constant operators
(Zero, One, Ones, Revision) are resolved to Integers.
Implemented immediate resolution of the AML Constant opcodes
(Zero, One, Ones, Revision) to Integer objects upon detection
within the AML stream. This has simplified and reduced the
generated code size of the subsystem by eliminating about 10
switch statements for these constants (which previously were
contained in Reference objects.) The complicating issues are
that the Zero opcode is used as a "placeholder" for unspecified
optional target operands and stores to constants are defined to
be no-ops.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the acpica.lib
produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and these
values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The debug
version of the code includes the debug output trace mechanism and
has a larger code and data size. Note that these values will
vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and the compiler
options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 69.3K Code, 7.4K Data, 76.7K Total
Debug Version: 143.8K Code, 58.8K Data, 202.6K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 68.7K Code, 7.4K Data, 76.1K Total
Debug Version: 142.9K Code, 58.7K Data, 201.6K Total
2) Linux
Added preliminary support for obtaining _TRA data for PCI root
bridges (Bjorn Helgaas).
3) iASL Compiler Version X2046:
Fixed a problem where the "_DDN" reserved name was defined to be
a control method with one argument. There are no arguments, and
_DDN does not have to be a control method.
Fixed a problem with the Linux version of the compiler where the
source lines printed with error messages were the wrong lines.
This turned out to be the "LF versus CR/LF" difference between
Windows and Unix. This appears to be the longstanding issue
concerning listing output and error messages.
Fixed a problem with the Linux version of compiler where opcode
names within error messages were wrong. This was caused by a
slight difference in the output of the Flex tool on Linux versus
Windows.
Fixed a problem with the Linux compiler where the hex output
files contained some garbage data caused by an internal buffer
overrun.
----------------------------------------
17 May 2002. Summary of changes for this release.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem Version 20020517:
Implemented a workaround to an BIOS bug discovered on the HP
OmniBook where the FADT revision number and the table size are
inconsistent (ACPI 2.0 revision vs. ACPI 1.0 table size). The
new behavior is to fallback to using only the ACPI 1.0 fields of
the FADT if the table is too small to be a ACPI 2.0 table as
claimed by the revision number. Although this is a BIOS bug,
this is a case where the workaround is simple enough and with no
side effects, so it seemed prudent to add it. A warning message
is issued, however.
Implemented minimum size checks for the fixed-length ACPI tables
-- the FADT and FACS, as well as consistency checks between the
revision number and the table size.
Fixed a reported problem in the table override support where the
new table pointer was incorrectly treated as a physical address
instead of a logical address.
Eliminated the use of the AE_AML_ERROR exception and replaced it
with more descriptive codes.
Fixed a problem where an exception would occur if an ASL Field
was defined with no named Field Units underneath it (used by some
index fields).
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a larger code and data size. Note that these
values will vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and
the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 68.8K Code, 7.1K Data, 75.9K Total
Debug Version: 142.9K Code, 58.4K Data, 201.3K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 69.3K Code, 7.4K Data, 76.7K Total
Debug Version: 143.8K Code, 58.8K Data, 202.6K Total
2) Linux
Much work done on ACPI init (MADT and PCI IRQ routing support).
(Paul D. and Dominik Brodowski)
Fix PCI IRQ-related panic on boot (Sam Revitch)
Set BM_ARB_DIS when entering a sleep state (Ducrot Bruno)
Fix "MHz" typo (Dominik Brodowski)
Fix RTC year 2000 issue (Dominik Brodowski)
Preclude multiple button proc entries (Eric Brunet)
Moved arch-specific code out of include/platform/aclinux.h
3) iASL Compiler Version X2044:
Implemented error checking for the string used in the EISAID
macro (Usually used in the definition of the _HID object.) The
code now strictly enforces the PnP format - exactly 7 characters,
3 uppercase letters and 4 hex digits.
If a raw string is used in the definition of the _HID object
(instead of the EISAID macro), the string must contain all
alphanumeric characters (e.g., "*PNP0011" is not allowed because
of the asterisk.)
Implemented checking for invalid use of ACPI reserved names for
most of the name creation operators (Name, Device, Event, Mutex,
OperationRegion, PowerResource, Processor, and ThermalZone.)
Previously, this check was only performed for control methods.
Implemented an additional check on the Name operator to emit an
error if a reserved name that must be implemented in ASL as a
control method is used. We know that a reserved name must be a
method if it is defined with input arguments.
The warning emitted when a namespace object reference is not
found during the cross reference phase has been changed into an
error. The "External" directive should be used for names defined
in other modules.
4) Tools and Utilities
The 16-bit tools (adump16 and aexec16) have been regenerated and
tested.
Fixed a problem with the output of both acpidump and adump16
where the indentation of closing parentheses and brackets was not
aligned properly with the parent block.
----------------------------------------
03 May 2002. Summary of changes for this release.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem Version 20020503:
Added support a new OSL interface that allows the host operating
system software to override the DSDT found in the firmware -
AcpiOsTableOverride. With this interface, the OSL can examine
the version of the firmware DSDT and replace it with a different
one if desired.
Added new external interfaces for accessing ACPI registers from
device drivers and other system software - AcpiGetRegister and
AcpiSetRegister. This was simply an externalization of the
existing AcpiHwBitRegister interfaces.
Fixed a regression introduced in the previous build where the
ASL/AML CreateField operator always returned an error,
"destination must be a NS Node".
Extended the maximum time (before failure) to successfully enable
ACPI mode to 3 seconds.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a larger code and data size. Note that these
values will vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and
the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 68.5K Code, 7.0K Data, 75.5K Total
Debug Version: 142.4K Code, 58.3K Data, 200.7K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 68.8K Code, 7.1K Data, 75.9K Total
Debug Version: 142.9K Code, 58.4K Data, 201.3K Total
2) Linux
Enhanced ACPI init code for SMP. We are now fully MPS and $PIR-
free. While 3 out of 4 of our in-house systems work fine, the
last one still hangs when testing the LAPIC timer.
Renamed many files in 2.5 kernel release to omit "acpi_" from the
name.
Added warning on boot for Presario 711FR.
Sleep improvements (Pavel Machek)
ACPI can now be built without CONFIG_PCI enabled.
IA64: Fixed memory map functions (JI Lee)
3) iASL Compiler Version X2043:
Added support to allow the compiler to be integrated into the MS
VC++ development environment for one-button compilation of single
files or entire projects -- with error-to-source-line mapping.
Implemented support for compile-time constant folding for the
Type3, Type4, and Type5 opcodes first defined in the ACPI 2.0
specification. This allows the ASL writer to use expressions
instead of Integer/Buffer/String constants in terms that must
evaluate to constants at compile time and will also simplify the
emitted AML in any such sub-expressions that can be folded
(evaluated at compile-time.) This increases the size of the
compiler significantly because a portion of the ACPI CA AML
interpreter is included within the compiler in order to pre-
evaluate constant expressions.
Fixed a problem with the "Unicode" ASL macro that caused the
compiler to fault. (This macro is used in conjunction with the
_STR reserved name.)
Implemented an AML opcode optimization to use the Zero, One, and
Ones opcodes where possible to further reduce the size of integer
constants and thus reduce the overall size of the generated AML
code.
Implemented error checking for new reserved terms for ACPI
version 2.0A.
Implemented the -qr option to display the current list of ACPI
reserved names known to the compiler.
Implemented the -qc option to display the current list of ASL
operators that are allowed within constant expressions and can
therefore be folded at compile time if the operands are
constants.
4) Documentation
Updated the Programmer's Reference for new interfaces, data
types, and memory allocation model options.
Updated the iASL Compiler User Reference to apply new format and
add information about new features and options.
----------------------------------------
19 April 2002. Summary of changes for this release.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem Version 20020419:
The source code base for the Core Subsystem has been completely
cleaned with PC-lint (FlexLint) for both 32-bit and 64-bit
versions. The Lint option files used are included in the
/acpi/generate/lint directory.
Implemented enhanced status/error checking across the entire
Hardware manager subsystem. Any hardware errors (reported from
the OSL) are now bubbled up and will abort a running control
method.
Fixed a problem where the per-ACPI-table integer width (32 or 64)
was stored only with control method nodes, causing a fault when
non-control method code was executed during table loading. The
solution implemented uses a global variable to indicate table
width across the entire ACPI subsystem. Therefore, ACPI CA does
not support mixed integer widths across different ACPI tables
(DSDT, SSDT).
Fixed a problem where NULL extended fields (X fields) in an ACPI
2.0 ACPI FADT caused the table load to fail. Although the
existing ACPI specification is a bit fuzzy on this topic, the new
behavior is to fall back on a ACPI 1.0 field if the corresponding
ACPI 2.0 X field is zero (even though the table revision
indicates a full ACPI 2.0 table.) The ACPI specification will be
updated to clarify this issue.
Fixed a problem with the SystemMemory operation region handler
where memory was always accessed byte-wise even if the AML-
specified access width was larger than a byte. This caused
problems on systems with memory-mapped I/O. Memory is now
accessed with the width specified. On systems that do not
support non-aligned transfers, a check is made to guarantee
proper address alignment before proceeding in order to avoid an
AML-caused alignment fault within the kernel.
Fixed a problem with the ExtendedIrq resource where only one byte
of the 4-byte Irq field was extracted.
Fixed the AcpiExDigitsNeeded() procedure to support _UID. This
function was out of date and required a rewrite.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a larger code and data size. Note that these
values will vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and
the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 66.6K Code, 6.5K Data, 73.1K Total
Debug Version: 139.8K Code, 57.4K Data, 197.2K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 68.5K Code, 7.0K Data, 75.5K Total
Debug Version: 142.4K Code, 58.3K Data, 200.7K Total
2) Linux
PCI IRQ routing fixes (Dominik Brodowski)
3) iASL Compiler Version X2042:
Implemented an additional compile-time error check for a field
unit whose size + minimum access width would cause a run-time
access beyond the end-of-region. Previously, only the field size
itself was checked.
The Core subsystem and iASL compiler now share a common parse
object in preparation for compile-time evaluation of the type
3/4/5 ASL operators.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this release: 03_29_02
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem Version 20020329:
Implemented support for late evaluation of TermArg operands to
Buffer and Package objects. This allows complex expressions to
be used in the declarations of these object types.
Fixed an ACPI 1.0 compatibility issue when reading Fields. In
ACPI 1.0, if the field was larger than 32 bits, it was returned
as a buffer - otherwise it was returned as an integer. In ACPI
2.0, the field is returned as a buffer only if the field is
larger than 64 bits. The TableRevision is now considered when
making this conversion to avoid incompatibility with existing ASL
code.
Implemented logical addressing for AcpiOsGetRootPointer. This
allows an RSDP with either a logical or physical address. With
this support, the host OS can now override all ACPI tables with
one logical RSDP. Includes implementation of "typed" pointer
support to allow a common data type for both physical and logical
pointers internally. This required a change to the
AcpiOsGetRootPointer interface.
Implemented the use of ACPI 2.0 Generic Address Structures for
all GPE, Fixed Event, and PM Timer I/O. This allows the use of
memory mapped I/O for these ACPI features.
Initialization now ignores not only non-required tables (All
tables other than the FADT, FACS, DSDT, and SSDTs), but also does
not validate the table headers of unrecognized tables.
Fixed a problem where a notify handler could only be
installed/removed on an object of type Device. All "notify"
objects are now supported -- Devices, Processor, Power, and
Thermal.
Removed most verbosity from the ACPI_DB_INFO debug level. Only
critical information is returned when this debug level is
enabled.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a larger code and data size. Note that these
values will vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and
the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release
Non-Debug Version: 65.4K Code, 6.2K Data, 71.6K Total
Debug Version: 138.0K Code, 56.6K Data, 194.6K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 66.6K Code, 6.5K Data, 73.1K Total
Debug Version: 139.8K Code, 57.4K Data, 197.2K Total
2) Linux:
The processor driver (acpi_processor.c) now fully supports ACPI
2.0-based processor performance control (e.g. Intel(R)
SpeedStep(TM) technology) Note that older laptops that only have
the Intel "applet" interface are not supported through this. The
'limit' and 'performance' interface (/proc) are fully functional.
[Note that basic policy for controlling performance state
transitions will be included in the next version of ospmd.] The
idle handler was modified to more aggressively use C2, and PIIX4
errata handling underwent a complete overhaul (big thanks to
Dominik Brodowski).
Added support for ACPI-PCI device binding (acpi_pci_root.c). _ADR-
based devices in the ACPI namespace are now dynamically bound
(associated) with their PCI counterparts (e.g. PCI1->01:00.0).
This allows, among other things, ACPI to resolve bus numbers for
subordinate PCI bridges.
Enhanced PCI IRQ routing to get the proper bus number for _PRT
entries defined underneath PCI bridges.
Added IBM 600E to bad bios list due to invalid _ADR value for
PIIX4 PCI-ISA bridge, resulting in improper PCI IRQ routing.
In the process of adding full MADT support (e.g. IOAPIC) for IA32
(acpi.c, mpparse.c) -- stay tuned.
Added back visual differentiation between fixed-feature and
control-method buttons in dmesg. Buttons are also subtyped (e.g.
button/power/PWRF) to simplify button identification.
We no longer use -Wno-unused when compiling debug. Please ignore
any "_THIS_MODULE defined but not used" messages.
Can now shut down the system using "magic sysrq" key.
3) iASL Compiler version 2041:
Fixed a problem where conversion errors for hex/octal/decimal
constants were not reported.
Implemented a fix for the General Register template Address
field. This field was 8 bits when it should be 64.
Fixed a problem where errors/warnings were no longer being
emitted within the listing output file.
Implemented the ACPI 2.0A restriction on ACPI Table Signatures to
exactly 4 characters, alphanumeric only.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this release: 03_08_02
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem Version 20020308:
Fixed a problem with AML Fields where the use of the "AccessAny"
keyword could cause an interpreter error due to attempting to
read or write beyond the end of the parent Operation Region.
Fixed a problem in the SystemMemory Operation Region handler
where an attempt was made to map memory beyond the end of the
region. This was the root cause of the "AE_ERROR" and
"AE_NO_MEMORY" errors on some Linux systems.
Fixed a problem where the interpreter/namespace "search to root"
algorithm was not functioning for some object types. Relaxed the
internal restriction on the search to allow upsearches for all
external object types as well as most internal types.
2) Linux:
We now use safe_halt() macro versus individual calls to sti |
hlt.
Writing to the processor limit interface should now work. "echo
1" will increase the limit, 2 will decrease, and 0 will reset to
the default.
3) ASL compiler:
Fixed segfault on Linux version.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this release: 02_25_02
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fixed a problem where the GPE bit masks were not initialized
properly, causing erratic GPE behavior.
Implemented limited support for multiple calling conventions.
The code can be generated with either the VPL (variable parameter
list, or "C") convention, or the FPL (fixed parameter list, or
"Pascal") convention. The core subsystem is about 3.4% smaller
when generated with FPL.
2) Linux
Re-add some /proc/acpi/event functionality that was lost during
the rewrite
Resolved issue with /proc events for fixed-feature buttons
showing up as the system device.
Fixed checks on C2/C3 latencies to be inclusive of maximum
values.
Replaced AE_ERRORs in acpi_osl.c with more specific error codes.
Changed ACPI PRT option from "pci=noacpi-routing" to "pci=noacpi"
Fixed limit interface & usage to fix bugs with passive cooling
hysterisis.
Restructured PRT support.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 02_14_02
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Implemented support in AcpiLoadTable to allow loading of FACS and
FADT tables.
Suport for the now-obsolete interim 0.71 64-bit ACPI tables has
been removed. All 64-bit platforms should be migrated to the
ACPI 2.0 tables. The actbl71.h header has been removed from the
source tree.
All C macros defined within the subsystem have been prefixed with
"ACPI_" to avoid collision with other system include files.
Removed the return value for the two AcpiOsPrint interfaces,
since it is never used and causes lint warnings for ignoring the
return value.
Added error checking to all internal mutex acquire and release
calls. Although a failure from one of these interfaces is
probably a fatal system error, these checks will cause the
immediate abort of the currently executing method or interface.
Fixed a problem where the AcpiSetCurrentResources interface could
fault. This was a side effect of the deployment of the new
memory allocation model.
Fixed a couple of problems with the Global Lock support
introduced in the last major build. The "common" (1.0/2.0)
internal FACS was being overwritten with the FACS signature and
clobbering the Global Lock pointer. Also, the actual firmware
FACS was being unmapped after construction of the "common" FACS,
preventing access to the actual Global Lock field within it. The
"common" internal FACS is no longer installed as an actual ACPI
table; it is used simply as a global.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the
acpica.lib produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and
these values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The
debug version of the code includes the debug output trace
mechanism and has a larger code and data size. Note that these
values will vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and
the compiler options used during generation.
Previous Release (02_07_01)
Non-Debug Version: 65.2K Code, 6.2K Data, 71.4K Total
Debug Version: 136.9K Code, 56.4K Data, 193.3K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 65.4K Code, 6.2K Data, 71.6K Total
Debug Version: 138.0K Code, 56.6K Data, 194.6K Total
2) Linux
Updated Linux-specific code for core macro and OSL interface
changes described above.
Improved /proc/acpi/event. It now can be opened only once and has
proper poll functionality.
Fixed and restructured power management (acpi_bus).
Only create /proc "view by type" when devices of that class
exist.
Fixed "charging/discharging" bug (and others) in acpi_battery.
Improved thermal zone code.
3) ASL Compiler, version X2039:
Implemented the new compiler restriction on ASL String hex/octal
escapes to non-null, ASCII values. An error results if an
invalid value is used. (This will require an ACPI 2.0
specification change.)
AML object labels that are output to the optional C and ASM
source are now prefixed with both the ACPI table signature and
table ID to help guarantee uniqueness within a large BIOS
project.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 02_01_02
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
ACPI 2.0 support is complete in the entire Core Subsystem and the
ASL compiler. All new ACPI 2.0 operators are implemented and all
other changes for ACPI 2.0 support are complete. With
simultaneous code and data optimizations throughout the
subsystem, ACPI 2.0 support has been implemented with almost no
additional cost in terms of code and data size.
Implemented a new mechanism for allocation of return buffers. If
the buffer length is set to ACPI_ALLOCATE_BUFFER, the buffer will
be allocated on behalf of the caller. Consolidated all return
buffer validation and allocation to a common procedure. Return
buffers will be allocated via the primary OSL allocation
interface since it appears that a separate pool is not needed by
most users. If a separate pool is required for these buffers,
the caller can still use the original mechanism and pre-allocate
the buffer(s).
Implemented support for string operands within the DerefOf
operator.
Restructured the Hardware and Event managers to be table driven,
simplifying the source code and reducing the amount of generated
code.
Split the common read/write low-level ACPI register bitfield
procedure into a separate read and write, simplifying the code
considerably.
Obsoleted the AcpiOsCallocate OSL interface. This interface was
used only a handful of times and didn't have enough critical mass
for a separate interface. Replaced with a common calloc
procedure in the core.
Fixed a reported problem with the GPE number mapping mechanism
that allows GPE1 numbers to be non-contiguous with GPE0.
Reorganized the GPE information and shrunk a large array that was
originally large enough to hold info for all possible GPEs (256)
to simply large enough to hold all GPEs up to the largest GPE
number on the machine.
Fixed a reported problem with resource structure alignment on 64-
bit platforms.
Changed the AcpiEnableEvent and AcpiDisableEvent external
interfaces to not require any flags for the common case of
enabling/disabling a GPE.
Implemented support to allow a "Notify" on a Processor object.
Most TBDs in comments within the source code have been resolved
and eliminated.
Fixed a problem in the interpreter where a standalone parent
prefix (^) was not handled correctly in the interpreter and
debugger.
Removed obsolete and unnecessary GPE save/restore code.
Implemented Field support in the ASL Load operator. This allows
a table to be loaded from a named field, in addition to loading a
table directly from an Operation Region.
Implemented timeout and handle support in the external Global
Lock interfaces.
Fixed a problem in the AcpiDump utility where pathnames were no
longer being generated correctly during the dump of named
objects.
Modified the AML debugger to give a full display of if/while
predicates instead of just one AML opcode at a time. (The
predicate can have several nested ASL statements.) The old
method was confusing during single stepping.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the acpica.lib
produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and these
values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The debug
version of the code includes the debug output trace mechanism and
has a larger code and data size. Note that these values will
vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and the compiler
options used during generation.
Previous Release (12_18_01)
Non-Debug Version: 66.1K Code, 5.5K Data, 71.6K Total
Debug Version: 138.3K Code, 55.9K Data, 194.2K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 65.2K Code, 6.2K Data, 71.4K Total
Debug Version: 136.9K Code, 56.4K Data, 193.3K Total
2) Linux
Implemented fix for PIIX reverse throttling errata (Processor
driver)
Added new Limit interface (Processor and Thermal drivers)
New thermal policy (Thermal driver)
Many updates to /proc
Battery "low" event support (Battery driver)
Supports ACPI PCI IRQ routing (PCI Link and PCI root drivers)
IA32 - IA64 initialization unification, no longer experimental
Menuconfig options redesigned
3) ASL Compiler, version X2037:
Implemented several new output features to simplify integration
of AML code into firmware: 1) Output the AML in C source code
with labels for each named ASL object. The original ASL
source code is interleaved as C comments. 2) Output the AML in
ASM source code with labels and interleaved ASL source. 3)
Output the AML in raw hex table form, in either C or ASM.
Implemented support for optional string parameters to the
LoadTable operator.
Completed support for embedded escape sequences within string
literals. The compiler now supports all single character escapes
as well as the Octal and Hex escapes. Note: the insertion of a
null byte into a string literal (via the hex/octal escape) causes
the string to be immediately terminated. A warning is issued.
Fixed a problem where incorrect AML was generated for the case
where an ASL namepath consists of a single parent prefix (
) with no trailing name segments.
The compiler has been successfully generated with a 64-bit C
compiler.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 12_18_01
1) Linux
Enhanced blacklist with reason and severity fields. Any table's
signature may now be used to identify a blacklisted system.
Call _PIC control method to inform the firmware which interrupt
model the OS is using. Turn on any disabled link devices.
Cleaned up busmgr /proc error handling (Andreas Dilger)
2) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Implemented ACPI 2.0 semantics for the "Break" operator (Exit
from while loop)
Completed implementation of the ACPI 2.0 "Continue",
"ConcatenateResTemplate", "DataTableRegion", and "LoadTable"
operators. All new ACPI 2.0 operators are now implemented in
both the ASL compiler and the AML interpreter. The only
remaining ACPI 2.0 task is support for the String data type in
the DerefOf operator. Fixed a problem with AcquireMutex where
the status code was lost if the caller had to actually wait for
the mutex.
Increased the maximum ASL Field size from 64K bits to 4G bits.
Completed implementation of the external Global Lock interfaces -
- AcpiAcquireGlobalLock and AcpiReleaseGlobalLock. The Timeout
and Handler parameters were added.
Completed another pass at removing warnings and issues when
compiling with 64-bit compilers. The code now compiles cleanly
with the Intel 64-bit C/C++ compiler. Most notably, the pointer
add and subtract (diff) macros have changed considerably.
Created and deployed a new ACPI_SIZE type that is 64-bits wide on
64-bit platforms, 32-bits on all others. This type is used
wherever memory allocation and/or the C sizeof() operator is
used, and affects the OSL memory allocation interfaces
AcpiOsAllocate and AcpiOsCallocate.
Implemented sticky user breakpoints in the AML debugger.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the acpica.lib
produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and these
values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The debug
version of the code includes the debug output trace mechanism and
has a larger code and data size. Note that these values will vary
depending on the efficiency of the compiler and the compiler
options used during generation.
Previous Release (12_05_01)
Non-Debug Version: 64.7K Code, 5.3K Data, 70.0K Total
Debug Version: 136.2K Code, 55.6K Data, 191.8K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 66.1K Code, 5.5K Data, 71.6K Total
Debug Version: 138.3K Code, 55.9K Data, 194.2K Total
3) ASL Compiler, version X2034:
Now checks for (and generates an error if detected) the use of a
Break or Continue statement without an enclosing While statement.
Successfully generated the compiler with the Intel 64-bit C
compiler.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 12_05_01
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
The ACPI 2.0 CopyObject operator is fully implemented. This
operator creates a new copy of an object (and is also used to
bypass the "implicit conversion" mechanism of the Store
operator.)
The ACPI 2.0 semantics for the SizeOf operator are fully
implemented. The change is that performing a SizeOf on a
reference object causes an automatic dereference of the object to
tha actual value before the size is evaluated. This behavior was
undefined in ACPI 1.0.
The ACPI 2.0 semantics for the Extended IRQ resource descriptor
have been implemented. The interrupt polarity and mode are now
independently set.
Fixed a problem where ASL Constants (Zero, One, Ones, Revision)
appearing in Package objects were not properly converted to
integers when the internal Package was converted to an external
object (via the AcpiEvaluateObject interface.)
Fixed a problem with the namespace object deletion mechanism for
objects created by control methods. There were two parts to this
problem: 1) Objects created during the initialization phase
method parse were not being deleted, and 2) The object owner ID
mechanism to track objects was broken.
Fixed a problem where the use of the ASL Scope operator within a
control method would result in an invalid opcode exception.
Fixed a problem introduced in the previous label where the buffer
length required for the _PRT structure was not being returned
correctly.
Code and Data Size: Current core subsystem library sizes are
shown below. These are the code and data sizes for the acpica.lib
produced by the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and these
values do not include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The debug
version of the code includes the debug output trace mechanism and
has a larger code and data size. Note that these values will
vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and the compiler
options used during generation.
Previous Release (11_20_01)
Non-Debug Version: 64.1K Code, 5.3K Data, 69.4K Total
Debug Version: 135.1K Code, 55.4K Data, 190.5K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 64.7K Code, 5.3K Data, 70.0K Total
Debug Version: 136.2K Code, 55.6K Data, 191.8K Total
2) Linux:
Updated all files to apply cleanly against 2.4.16.
Added basic PCI Interrupt Routing Table (PRT) support for IA32
(acpi_pci.c), and unified the PRT code for IA32 and IA64. This
version supports both static and dyanmic PRT entries, but dynamic
entries are treated as if they were static (not yet
reconfigurable). Architecture- specific code to use this data is
absent on IA32 but should be available shortly.
Changed the initialization sequence to start the ACPI interpreter
(acpi_init) prior to initialization of the PCI driver (pci_init)
in init/main.c. This ordering is required to support PRT and
facilitate other (future) enhancement. A side effect is that the
ACPI bus driver and certain device drivers can no longer be
loaded as modules.
Modified the 'make menuconfig' options to allow PCI Interrupt
Routing support to be included without the ACPI Bus and other
device drivers.
3) ASL Compiler, version X2033:
Fixed some issues with the use of the new CopyObject and
DataTableRegion operators. Both are fully functional.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 11_20_01
20 November 2001. Summary of changes for this release.
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Updated Index support to match ACPI 2.0 semantics. Storing a
Integer, String, or Buffer to an Index of a Buffer will store
only the least-significant byte of the source to the Indexed
buffer byte. Multiple writes are not performed.
Fixed a problem where the access type used in an AccessAs ASL
operator was not recorded correctly into the field object.
Fixed a problem where ASL Event objects were created in a
signalled state. Events are now created in an unsignalled state.
The internal object cache is now purged after table loading and
initialization to reduce the use of dynamic kernel memory -- on
the assumption that object use is greatest during the parse phase
of the entire table (versus the run-time use of individual
control methods.)
ACPI 2.0 variable-length packages are now fully operational.
Code and Data Size: Code and Data optimizations have permitted
new feature development with an actual reduction in the library
size. Current core subsystem library sizes are shown below.
These are the code and data sizes for the acpica.lib produced by
the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and these values do not
include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The debug version of the
code includes the debug output trace mechanism and has a larger
code and data size. Note that these values will vary depending
on the efficiency of the compiler and the compiler options used
during generation.
Previous Release (11_09_01):
Non-Debug Version: 63.7K Code, 5.2K Data, 68.9K Total
Debug Version: 134.5K Code, 55.4K Data, 189.9K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 64.1K Code, 5.3K Data, 69.4K Total
Debug Version: 135.1K Code, 55.4K Data, 190.5K Total
2) Linux:
Enhanced the ACPI boot-time initialization code to allow the use
of Local APIC tables for processor enumeration on IA-32, and to
pave the way for a fully MPS-free boot (on SMP systems) in the
near future. This functionality replaces
arch/i386/kernel/acpitables.c, which was introduced in an earlier
2.4.15-preX release. To enable this feature you must add
"acpi_boot=on" to the kernel command line -- see the help entry
for CONFIG_ACPI_BOOT for more information. An IA-64 release is
in the works...
Restructured the configuration options to allow boot-time table
parsing support without inclusion of the ACPI Interpreter (and
other) code.
NOTE: This release does not include fixes for the reported
events, power-down, and thermal passive cooling issues (coming
soon).
3) ASL Compiler:
Added additional typechecking for Fields within restricted access
Operation Regions. All fields within EC and CMOS regions must be
declared with ByteAcc. All fields withing SMBus regions must be
declared with the BufferAcc access type.
Fixed a problem where the listing file output of control methods
no longer interleaved the actual AML code with the ASL source
code.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 11_09_01
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Implemented ACPI 2.0-defined support for writes to fields with a
Buffer, String, or Integer source operand that is smaller than
the target field. In these cases, the source operand is zero-
extended to fill the target field.
Fixed a problem where a Field starting bit offset (within the
parent operation region) was calculated incorrectly if the
alignment of the field differed from the access width. This
affected CreateWordField, CreateDwordField, CreateQwordField, and
possibly other fields that use the "AccessAny" keyword.
Fixed a problem introduced in the 11_02_01 release where indirect
stores through method arguments did not operate correctly.
2) Linux:
Implemented boot-time ACPI table parsing support
(CONFIG_ACPI_BOOT) for IA32 and IA64 UP/SMP systems. This code
facilitates the use of ACPI tables (e.g. MADT, SRAT) rather than
legacy BIOS interfaces (e.g. MPS) for the configuration of system
processors, memory, and interrupts during setup_arch(). Note
that this patch does not include the required architecture-
specific changes required to apply this information -- subsequent
patches will be posted for both IA32 and IA64 to achieve this.
Added low-level sleep support for IA32 platforms, courtesy of Pat
Mochel. This allows IA32 systems to transition to/from various
sleeping states (e.g. S1, S3), although the lack of a centralized
driver model and power-manageable drivers will prevent its
(successful) use on most systems.
Revamped the ACPI 'menuconfig' layout: created new "ACPI Support"
submenu, unified IA32 and IA64 options, added new "Boot using
ACPI tables" option, etc.
Increased the default timeout for the EC driver from 1ms to 10ms
(1000 cycles of 10us) to try to address AE_TIME errors during EC
transactions.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 11_02_01
1) ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
ACPI 2.0 Support: Implemented ACPI 2.0 64-bit Field access
(QWordAcc keyword). All ACPI 2.0 64-bit support is now
implemented.
OSL Interfaces: Several of the OSL (AcpiOs*) interfaces required
changes to support ACPI 2.0 Qword field access. Read/Write
PciConfiguration(), Read/Write Memory(), and Read/Write Port()
now accept an ACPI_INTEGER (64 bits) as the value parameter.
Also, the value parameter for the address space handler interface
is now an ACPI_INTEGER. OSL implementations of these interfaces
must now handle the case where the Width parameter is 64.
Index Fields: Fixed a problem where unaligned bit assembly and
disassembly for IndexFields was not supported correctly.
Index and Bank Fields: Nested Index and Bank Fields are now
supported. During field access, a check is performed to ensure
that the value written to an Index or Bank register is not out of
the range of the register. The Index (or Bank) register is
written before each access to the field data. Future support will
include allowing individual IndexFields to be wider than the
DataRegister width.
Fields: Fixed a problem where the AML interpreter was incorrectly
attempting to write beyond the end of a Field/OpRegion. This was
a boundary case that occurred when a DWORD field was written to a
BYTE access OpRegion, forcing multiple writes and causing the
interpreter to write one datum too many.
Fields: Fixed a problem with Field/OpRegion access where the
starting bit address of a field was incorrectly calculated if the
current access type was wider than a byte (WordAcc, DwordAcc, or
QwordAcc).
Fields: Fixed a problem where forward references to individual
FieldUnits (individual Field names within a Field definition)
were not resolved during the AML table load.
Fields: Fixed a problem where forward references from a Field
definition to the parent Operation Region definition were not
resolved during the AML table load.
Fields: Duplicate FieldUnit names within a scope are now detected
during AML table load.
Acpi Interfaces: Fixed a problem where the AcpiGetName()
interface returned an incorrect name for the root node.
Code and Data Size: Code and Data optimizations have permitted
new feature development with an actual reduction in the library
size. Current core subsystem library sizes are shown below.
These are the code and data sizes for the acpica.lib produced by
the Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and these values do not
include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The debug version of the
code includes the debug output trace mechanism and has a larger
code and data size. Note that these values will vary depending
on the efficiency of the compiler and the compiler options used
during generation.
Previous Release (10_18_01):
Non-Debug Version: 63.9K Code, 5.1K Data, 69.0K Total
Debug Version: 136.7K Code, 57.4K Data, 194.2K Total
Current Release:
Non-Debug Version: 63.7K Code, 5.2K Data, 68.9K Total
Debug Version: 134.5K Code, 55.4K Data, 189.9K Total
2) Linux:
Improved /proc processor output (Pavel Machek) Re-added
MODULE_LICENSE("GPL") to all modules.
3) ASL Compiler version X2030:
Duplicate FieldUnit names within a scope are now detected and
flagged as errors.
4) Documentation:
Programmer Reference updated to reflect OSL and address space
handler interface changes described above.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 10_18_01
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fixed a problem with the internal object reference count
mechanism that occasionally caused premature object deletion.
This resolves all of the outstanding problem reports where an
object is deleted in the middle of an interpreter evaluation.
Although this problem only showed up in rather obscure cases, the
solution to the problem involved an adjustment of all reference
counts involving objects attached to namespace nodes.
Fixed a problem with Field support in the interpreter where
writing to an aligned field whose length is an exact multiple (2
or greater) of the field access granularity would cause an
attempt to write beyond the end of the field.
The top level AML opcode execution functions within the
interpreter have been renamed with a more meaningful and
consistent naming convention. The modules exmonad.c and
exdyadic.c were eliminated. New modules are exoparg1.c,
exoparg2.c, exoparg3.c, and exoparg6.c.
Support for the ACPI 2.0 "Mid" ASL operator has been implemented.
Fixed a problem where the AML debugger was causing some internal
objects to not be deleted during subsystem termination.
Fixed a problem with the external AcpiEvaluateObject interface
where the subsystem would fault if the named object to be
evaluated refered to a constant such as Zero, Ones, etc.
Fixed a problem with IndexFields and BankFields where the
subsystem would fault if the index, data, or bank registers were
not defined in the same scope as the field itself.
Added printf format string checking for compilers that support
this feature. Corrected more than 50 instances of issues with
format specifiers within invocations of ACPI_DEBUG_PRINT
throughout the core subsystem code.
The ASL "Revision" operator now returns the ACPI support level
implemented in the core - the value "2" since the ACPI 2.0
support is more than 50% implemented.
Enhanced the output of the AML debugger "dump namespace" command
to output in a more human-readable form.
Current core subsystem library code sizes are shown below. These
are the code and data sizes for the acpica.lib produced by the
Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and these values do not
include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The debug version of the
code includes the full debug trace mechanism -- leading to a much
larger code and data size. Note that these values will vary
depending on the efficiency of the compiler and the compiler
options used during generation.
Previous Label (09_20_01):
Non-Debug Version: 65K Code, 5K Data, 70K Total
Debug Version: 138K Code, 58K Data, 196K Total
This Label:
Non-Debug Version: 63.9K Code, 5.1K Data, 69.0K Total
Debug Version: 136.7K Code, 57.4K Data, 194.2K Total
Linux:
Implemented a "Bad BIOS Blacklist" to track machines that have
known ASL/AML problems.
Enhanced the /proc interface for the thermal zone driver and
added support for _HOT (the critical suspend trip point). The
'info' file now includes threshold/policy information, and allows
setting of _SCP (cooling preference) and _TZP (polling frequency)
values to the 'info' file. Examples: "echo tzp=5 > info" sets the
polling frequency to 5 seconds, and "echo scp=1 > info" sets the
cooling preference to the passive/quiet mode (if supported by the
ASL).
Implemented a workaround for a gcc bug that resuted in an OOPs
when loading the control method battery driver.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 09_20_01
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
The AcpiEnableEvent and AcpiDisableEvent interfaces have been
modified to allow individual GPE levels to be flagged as wake-
enabled (i.e., these GPEs are to remain enabled when the platform
sleeps.)
The AcpiEnterSleepState and AcpiLeaveSleepState interfaces now
support wake-enabled GPEs. This means that upon entering the
sleep state, all GPEs that are not wake-enabled are disabled.
When leaving the sleep state, these GPEs are reenabled.
A local double-precision divide/modulo module has been added to
enhance portability to OS kernels where a 64-bit math library is
not available. The new module is "utmath.c".
Several optimizations have been made to reduce the use of CPU
stack. Originally over 2K, the maximum stack usage is now below
2K at 1860 bytes (1.82k)
Fixed a problem with the AcpiGetFirmwareTable interface where the
root table pointer was not mapped into a logical address
properly.
Fixed a problem where a NULL pointer was being dereferenced in
the interpreter code for the ASL Notify operator.
Fixed a problem where the use of the ASL Revision operator
returned an error. This operator now returns the current version
of the ACPI CA core subsystem.
Fixed a problem where objects passed as control method parameters
to AcpiEvaluateObject were always deleted at method termination.
However, these objects may end up being stored into the namespace
by the called method. The object reference count mechanism was
applied to these objects instead of a force delete.
Fixed a problem where static strings or buffers (contained in the
AML code) that are declared as package elements within the ASL
code could cause a fault because the interpreter would attempt to
delete them. These objects are now marked with the "static
object" flag to prevent any attempt to delete them.
Implemented an interpreter optimization to use operands directly
from the state object instead of extracting the operands to local
variables. This reduces stack use and code size, and improves
performance.
The module exxface.c was eliminated as it was an unnecessary
extra layer of code.
Current core subsystem library code sizes are shown below. These
are the code and data sizes for the acpica.lib produced by the
Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and these values do not
include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The debug version of the
code includes the full debug trace mechanism -- leading to a much
larger code and data size. Note that these values will vary
depending on the efficiency of the compiler and the compiler
options used during generation.
Non-Debug Version: 65K Code, 5K Data, 70K Total
(Previously 69K) Debug Version: 138K Code, 58K Data, 196K
Total (Previously 195K)
Linux:
Support for ACPI 2.0 64-bit integers has been added. All ACPI
Integer objects are now 64 bits wide
All Acpi data types and structures are now in lower case. Only
Acpi macros are upper case for differentiation.
Documentation:
Changes to the external interfaces as described above.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 08_31_01
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
A bug with interpreter implementation of the ASL Divide operator
was found and fixed. The implicit function return value (not the
explicit store operands) was returning the remainder instead of
the quotient. This was a longstanding bug and it fixes several
known outstanding issues on various platforms.
The ACPI_DEBUG_PRINT and function trace entry/exit macros have
been further optimized for size. There are 700 invocations of
the DEBUG_PRINT macro alone, so each optimization reduces the
size of the debug version of the subsystem significantly.
A stack trace mechanism has been implemented. The maximum stack
usage is about 2K on 32-bit platforms. The debugger command
"stat stack" will display the current maximum stack usage.
All public symbols and global variables within the subsystem are
now prefixed with the string "Acpi". This keeps all of the
symbols grouped together in a kernel map, and avoids conflicts
with other kernel subsystems.
Most of the internal fixed lookup tables have been moved into the
code segment via the const operator.
Several enhancements have been made to the interpreter to both
reduce the code size and improve performance.
Current core subsystem library code sizes are shown below. These
are the code and data sizes for the acpica.lib produced by the
Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 compiler, and these values do not
include any ACPI driver or OSPM code. The debug version of the
code includes the full debug trace mechanism which contains over
700 invocations of the DEBUG_PRINT macro, 500 function entry
macro invocations, and over 900 function exit macro invocations -
- leading to a much larger code and data size. Note that these
values will vary depending on the efficiency of the compiler and
the compiler options used during generation.
Non-Debug Version: 64K Code, 5K Data, 69K Total
Debug Version: 137K Code, 58K Data, 195K Total
Linux:
Implemented wbinvd() macro, pending a kernel-wide definition.
Fixed /proc/acpi/event to handle poll() and short reads.
ASL Compiler, version X2026:
Fixed a problem introduced in the previous label where the AML
code emitted for package objects produced packages with zero
length.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 08_16_01
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
The following ACPI 2.0 ASL operators have been implemented in the
AML interpreter (These are already supported by the Intel ASL
compiler): ToDecimalString, ToHexString, ToString, ToInteger,
and ToBuffer. Support for 64-bit AML constants is implemented in
the AML parser, debugger, and disassembler.
The internal memory tracking mechanism (leak detection code) has
been upgraded to reduce the memory overhead (a separate tracking
block is no longer allocated for each memory allocation), and now
supports all of the internal object caches.
The data structures and code for the internal object caches have
been coelesced and optimized so that there is a single cache and
memory list data structure and a single group of functions that
implement generic cache management. This has reduced the code
size in both the debug and release versions of the subsystem.
The DEBUG_PRINT macro(s) have been optimized for size and
replaced by ACPI_DEBUG_PRINT. The syntax for this macro is
slightly different, because it generates a single call to an
internal function. This results in a savings of about 90 bytes
per invocation, resulting in an overall code and data savings of
about 16% in the debug version of the subsystem.
Linux:
Fixed C3 disk corruption problems and re-enabled C3 on supporting
machines.
Integrated low-level sleep code by Patrick Mochel.
Further tweaked source code Linuxization.
Other minor fixes.
ASL Compiler:
Support for ACPI 2.0 variable length packages is fixed/completed.
Fixed a problem where the optional length parameter for the ACPI
2.0 ToString operator.
Fixed multiple extraneous error messages when a syntax error is
detected within the declaration line of a control method.
----------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 07_17_01
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Added a new interface named AcpiGetFirmwareTable to obtain any
ACPI table via the ACPI signature. The interface can be called
at any time during kernel initialization, even before the kernel
virtual memory manager is initialized and paging is enabled.
This allows kernel subsystems to obtain ACPI tables very early,
even before the ACPI CA subsystem is initialized.
Fixed a problem where Fields defined with the AnyAcc attribute
could be resolved to the incorrect address under the following
conditions: 1) the field width is larger than 8 bits and 2) the
parent operation region is not defined on a DWORD boundary.
Fixed a problem where the interpreter is not being locked during
namespace initialization (during execution of the _INI control
methods), causing an error when an attempt is made to release it
later.
ACPI 2.0 support in the AML Interpreter has begun and will be
ongoing throughout the rest of this year. In this label, The Mod
operator is implemented.
Added a new data type to contain full PCI addresses named
ACPI_PCI_ID. This structure contains the PCI Segment, Bus,
Device, and Function values.
Linux:
Enhanced the Linux version of the source code to change most
capitalized ACPI type names to lowercase. For example, all
instances of ACPI_STATUS are changed to acpi_status. This will
result in a large diff, but the change is strictly cosmetic and
aligns the CA code closer to the Linux coding standard.
OSL Interfaces:
The interfaces to the PCI configuration space have been changed
to add the PCI Segment number and to split the single 32-bit
combined DeviceFunction field into two 16-bit fields. This was
accomplished by moving the four values that define an address in
PCI configuration space (segment, bus, device, and function) to
the new ACPI_PCI_ID structure.
The changes to the PCI configuration space interfaces led to a
reexamination of the complete set of address space access
interfaces for PCI, I/O, and Memory. The previously existing 18
interfaces have proven difficult to maintain (any small change
must be propagated across at least 6 interfaces) and do not
easily allow for future expansion to 64 bits if necessary. Also,
on some systems, it would not be appropriate to demultiplex the
access width (8, 16, 32,or 64) before calling the OSL if the
corresponding native OS interfaces contain a similar access width
parameter. For these reasons, the 18 address space interfaces
have been replaced by these 6 new ones:
AcpiOsReadPciConfiguration
AcpiOsWritePciConfiguration
AcpiOsReadMemory
AcpiOsWriteMemory
AcpiOsReadPort
AcpiOsWritePort
Added a new interface named AcpiOsGetRootPointer to allow the OSL
to perform the platform and/or OS-specific actions necessary to
obtain the ACPI RSDP table pointer. On IA-32 platforms, this
interface will simply call down to the CA core to perform the low-
memory search for the table. On IA-64, the RSDP is obtained from
EFI. Migrating this interface to the OSL allows the CA core to
remain OS and platform independent.
Added a new interface named AcpiOsSignal to provide a generic
"function code and pointer" interface for various miscellaneous
signals and notifications that must be made to the host OS. The
first such signals are intended to support the ASL Fatal and
Breakpoint operators. In the latter case, the AcpiOsBreakpoint
interface has been obsoleted.
The definition of the AcpiFormatException interface has been
changed to simplify its use. The caller no longer must supply a
buffer to the call; A pointer to a const string is now returned
directly. This allows the call to be easily used in printf
statements, etc. since the caller does not have to manage a local
buffer.
ASL Compiler, Version X2025:
The ACPI 2.0 Switch/Case/Default operators have been implemented
and are fully functional. They will work with all ACPI 1.0
interpreters, since the operators are simply translated to
If/Else pairs.
The ACPI 2.0 ElseIf operator is implemented and will also work
with 1.0 interpreters, for the same reason.
Implemented support for ACPI 2.0 variable-length packages. These
packages have a separate opcode, and their size is determined by
the interpreter at run-time.
Documentation The ACPI CA Programmer Reference has been updated
to reflect the new interfaces and changes to existing interfaces.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 06_15_01
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fixed a problem where a DWORD-accessed field within a Buffer
object would get its byte address inadvertently rounded down to
the nearest DWORD. Buffers are always Byte-accessible.
ASL Compiler, version X2024:
Fixed a problem where the Switch() operator would either fault or
hang the compiler. Note however, that the AML code for this ACPI
2.0 operator is not yet implemented.
Compiler uses the new AcpiOsGetTimer interface to obtain compile
timings.
Implementation of the CreateField operator automatically converts
a reference to a named field within a resource descriptor from a
byte offset to a bit offset if required.
Added some missing named fields from the resource descriptor
support. These are the names that are automatically created by
the compiler to reference fields within a descriptor. They are
only valid at compile time and are not passed through to the AML
interpreter.
Resource descriptor named fields are now typed as Integers and
subject to compile-time typechecking when used in expressions.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 05_18_01
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fixed a couple of problems in the Field support code where bits
from adjacent fields could be returned along with the proper
field bits. Restructured the field support code to improve
performance, readability and maintainability.
New DEBUG_PRINTP macro automatically inserts the procedure name
into the output, saving hundreds of copies of procedure name
strings within the source, shrinking the memory footprint of the
debug version of the core subsystem.
Source Code Structure:
The source code directory tree was restructured to reflect the
current organization of the component architecture. Some files
and directories have been moved and/or renamed.
Linux:
Fixed leaking kacpidpc processes.
Fixed queueing event data even when /proc/acpi/event is not
opened.
ASL Compiler, version X2020:
Memory allocation performance enhancement - over 24X compile time
improvement on large ASL files. Parse nodes and namestring
buffers are now allocated from a large internal compiler buffer.
The temporary .SRC file is deleted unless the "-s" option is
specified
The "-d" debug output option now sends all output to the .DBG
file instead of the console.
"External" second parameter is now optional
"ElseIf" syntax now properly allows the predicate
Last operand to "Load" now recognized as a Target operand
Debug object can now be used anywhere as a normal object.
ResourceTemplate now returns an object of type BUFFER
EISAID now returns an object of type INTEGER
"Index" now works with a STRING operand
"LoadTable" now accepts optional parameters
"ToString" length parameter is now optional
"Interrupt (ResourceType," parse error fixed.
"Register" with a user-defined region space parse error fixed
Escaped backslash at the end of a string ("\\") scan/parse error
fixed
"Revision" is now an object of type INTEGER.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 05_02_01
Linux:
/proc/acpi/event now blocks properly.
Removed /proc/sys/acpi. You can still dump your DSDT from
/proc/acpi/dsdt.
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fixed a problem introduced in the previous label where some of
the "small" resource descriptor types were not recognized.
Improved error messages for the case where an ASL Field is
outside the range of the parent operation region.
ASL Compiler, version X2018:
Added error detection for ASL Fields that extend beyond the
length of the parent operation region (only if the length of the
region is known at compile time.) This includes fields that have
a minimum access width that is smaller than the parent region,
and individual field units that are partially or entirely beyond
the extent of the parent.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 04_27_01
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Fixed a problem where the namespace mutex could be released at
the wrong time during execution of AcpiRemoveAddressSpaceHandler.
Added optional thread ID output for debug traces, to simplify
debugging of multiple threads. Added context switch notification
when the debug code realizes that a different thread is now
executing ACPI code.
Some additional external data types have been prefixed with the
string "ACPI_" for consistency. This may effect existing code.
The data types affected are the external callback typedefs -
e.g., WALK_CALLBACK becomes ACPI_WALK_CALLBACK.
Linux:
Fixed an issue with the OSL semaphore implementation where a
thread was waking up with an error from receiving a SIGCHLD
signal.
Linux version of ACPI CA now uses the system C library for string
manipulation routines instead of a local implementation.
Cleaned up comments and removed TBDs.
ASL Compiler, version X2017:
Enhanced error detection and reporting for all file I/O
operations.
Documentation:
Programmer Reference updated to version 1.06.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 04_13_01
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Restructured support for BufferFields and RegionFields.
BankFields support is now fully operational. All known 32-bit
limitations on field sizes have been removed. Both BufferFields
and (Operation) RegionFields are now supported by the same field
management code.
Resource support now supports QWORD address and IO resources. The
16/32/64 bit address structures and the Extended IRQ structure
have been changed to properly handle Source Resource strings.
A ThreadId of -1 is now used to indicate a "mutex not acquired"
condition internally and must never be returned by
AcpiOsThreadId. This reserved value was changed from 0 since Unix
systems allow a thread ID of 0.
Linux:
Driver code reorganized to enhance portability
Added a kernel configuration option to control ACPI_DEBUG
Fixed the EC driver to honor _GLK.
ASL Compiler, version X2016:
Fixed support for the "FixedHw" keyword. Previously, the FixedHw
address space was set to 0, not 0x7f as it should be.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 03_13_01
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
During ACPI initialization, the _SB_._INI method is now run if
present.
Notify handler fix - notifies are deferred until the parent
method completes execution. This fixes the "mutex already
acquired" issue seen occasionally.
Part of the "implicit conversion" rules in ACPI 2.0 have been
found to cause compatibility problems with existing ASL/AML. The
convert "result-to-target-type" implementation has been removed
for stores to method Args and Locals. Source operand conversion
is still fully implemented. Possible changes to ACPI 2.0
specification pending.
Fix to AcpiRsCalculatePciRoutingTableLength to return correct
length.
Fix for compiler warnings for 64-bit compiles.
Linux:
/proc output aligned for easier parsing.
Release-version compile problem fixed.
New kernel configuration options documented in Configure.help.
IBM 600E - Fixed Sleep button may generate "Invalid <NULL>
context" message.
OSPM:
Power resource driver integrated with bus manager.
Fixed kernel fault during active cooling for thermal zones.
Source Code:
The source code tree has been restructured.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 03_02_01
Linux OS Services Layer (OSL):
Major revision of all Linux-specific code.
Modularized all ACPI-specific drivers.
Added new thermal zone and power resource drivers.
Revamped /proc interface (new functionality is under /proc/acpi).
New kernel configuration options.
Linux known issues:
New kernel configuration options not documented in Configure.help
yet.
Module dependencies not currently implemented. If used, they
should be loaded in this order: busmgr, power, ec, system,
processor, battery, ac_adapter, button, thermal.
Modules will not load if CONFIG_MODVERSION is set.
IBM 600E - entering S5 may reboot instead of shutting down.
IBM 600E - Sleep button may generate "Invalid <NULL> context"
message.
Some systems may fail with "execution mutex already acquired"
message.
ACPI CA Core Subsystem:
Added a new OSL Interface, AcpiOsGetThreadId. This was required
for the deadlock detection code. Defined to return a non-zero,
32-bit thread ID for the currently executing thread. May be a
non-zero constant integer on single-thread systems.
Implemented deadlock detection for internal subsystem mutexes.
We may add conditional compilation for this code (debug only)
later.
ASL/AML Mutex object semantics are now fully supported. This
includes multiple acquires/releases by owner and support for the
Mutex SyncLevel parameter.
A new "Force Release" mechanism automatically frees all ASL
Mutexes that have been acquired but not released when a thread
exits the interpreter. This forces conformance to the ACPI spec
("All mutexes must be released when an invocation exits") and
prevents deadlocked ASL threads. This mechanism can be expanded
(later) to monitor other resource acquisitions if OEM ASL code
continues to misbehave (which it will).
Several new ACPI exception codes have been added for the Mutex
support.
Recursive method calls are now allowed and supported (the ACPI
spec does in fact allow recursive method calls.) The number of
recursive calls is subject to the restrictions imposed by the
SERIALIZED method keyword and SyncLevel (ACPI 2.0) method
parameter.
Implemented support for the SyncLevel parameter for control
methods (ACPI 2.0 feature)
Fixed a deadlock problem when multiple threads attempted to use
the interpreter.
Fixed a problem where the string length of a String package
element was not always set in a package returned from
AcpiEvaluateObject.
Fixed a problem where the length of a String package element was
not always included in the length of the overall package returned
from AcpiEvaluateObject.
Added external interfaces (Acpi*) to the ACPI debug memory
manager. This manager keeps a list of all outstanding
allocations, and can therefore detect memory leaks and attempts
to free memory blocks more than once. Useful for code such as the
power manager, etc. May not be appropriate for device drivers.
Performance with the debug code enabled is slow.
The ACPI Global Lock is now an optional hardware element.
ASL Compiler Version X2015:
Integrated changes to allow the compiler to be generated on
multiple platforms.
Linux makefile added to generate the compiler on Linux
Source Code:
All platform-specific headers have been moved to their own
subdirectory, Include/Platform.
New source file added, Interpreter/ammutex.c
New header file, Include/acstruct.h
Documentation:
The programmer reference has been updated for the following new
interfaces: AcpiOsGetThreadId AcpiAllocate AcpiCallocate AcpiFree
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 02_08_01
Core ACPI CA Subsystem: Fixed a problem where an error was
incorrectly returned if the return resource buffer was larger
than the actual data (in the resource interfaces).
References to named objects within packages are resolved to the
full pathname string before packages are returned directly (via
the AcpiEvaluateObject interface) or indirectly via the resource
interfaces.
Linux OS Services Layer (OSL):
Improved /proc battery interface.
Added C-state debugging output and other miscellaneous fixes.
ASL Compiler Version X2014:
All defined method arguments can now be used as local variables,
including the ones that are not actually passed in as parameters.
The compiler tracks initialization of the arguments and issues an
exception if they are used without prior assignment (just like
locals).
The -o option now specifies a filename prefix that is used for
all output files, including the AML output file. Otherwise, the
default behavior is as follows: 1) the AML goes to the file
specified in the DSDT. 2) all other output files use the input
source filename as the base.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 01_25_01
Core ACPI CA Subsystem: Restructured the implementation of object
store support within the interpreter. This includes support for
the Store operator as well as any ASL operators that include a
target operand.
Partially implemented support for Implicit Result-to-Target
conversion. This is when a result object is converted on the fly
to the type of an existing target object. Completion of this
support is pending further analysis of the ACPI specification
concerning this matter.
CPU-specific code has been removed from the subsystem (hardware
directory).
New Power Management Timer functions added
Linux OS Services Layer (OSL): Moved system state transition code
to the core, fixed it, and modified Linux OSL accordingly.
Fixed C2 and C3 latency calculations.
We no longer use the compilation date for the version message on
initialization, but retrieve the version from
AcpiGetSystemInfo().
Incorporated for fix Sony VAIO machines.
Documentation: The Programmer Reference has been updated and
reformatted.
ASL Compiler: Version X2013: Fixed a problem where the line
numbering and error reporting could get out of sync in the
presence of multiple include files.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 01_15_01
Core ACPI CA Subsystem:
Implemented support for type conversions in the execution of the
ASL Concatenate operator (The second operand is converted to
match the type of the first operand before concatenation.)
Support for implicit source operand conversion is partially
implemented. The ASL source operand types Integer, Buffer, and
String are freely interchangeable for most ASL operators and are
converted by the interpreter on the fly as required. Implicit
Target operand conversion (where the result is converted to the
target type before storing) is not yet implemented.
Support for 32-bit and 64-bit BCD integers is implemented.
Problem fixed where a field read on an aligned field could cause
a read past the end of the field.
New exception, AE_AML_NO_RETURN_VALUE, is returned when a method
does not return a value, but the caller expects one. (The ASL
compiler flags this as a warning.)
ASL Compiler:
Version X2011:
1. Static typechecking of all operands is implemented. This
prevents the use of invalid objects (such as using a Package
where an Integer is required) at compile time instead of at
interpreter run-time.
2. The ASL source line is printed with ALL errors and warnings.
3. Bug fix for source EOF without final linefeed.
4. Debug option is split into a parse trace and a namespace
trace.
5. Namespace output option (-n) includes initial values for
integers and strings.
6. Parse-only option added for quick syntax checking.
7. Compiler checks for duplicate ACPI name declarations
Version X2012:
1. Relaxed typechecking to allow interchangeability between
strings, integers, and buffers. These types are now converted by
the interpreter at runtime.
2. Compiler reports time taken by each internal subsystem in the
debug output file.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 12_14_00
ASL Compiler:
This is the first official release of the compiler. Since the
compiler requires elements of the Core Subsystem, this label
synchronizes everything.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 12_08_00
Fixed a problem where named references within the ASL definition
of both OperationRegions and CreateXXXFields did not work
properly. The symptom was an AE_AML_OPERAND_TYPE during
initialization of the region/field. This is similar (but not
related internally) to the problem that was fixed in the last
label.
Implemented both 32-bit and 64-bit support for the BCD ASL
functions ToBCD and FromBCD.
Updated all legal headers to include "2000" in the copyright
years.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 12_01_00
Fixed a problem where method invocations within the ASL
definition of both OperationRegions and CreateXXXFields did not
work properly. The symptom was an AE_AML_OPERAND_TYPE during
initialization of the region/field:
nsinit-0209: AE_AML_OPERAND_TYPE while getting region arguments
[DEBG] ammonad-0284: Exec_monadic2_r/Not: bad operand(s)
(0x3005)
Fixed a problem where operators with more than one nested
subexpression would fail. The symptoms were varied, by mostly
AE_AML_OPERAND_TYPE errors. This was actually a rather serious
problem that has gone unnoticed until now.
Subtract (Add (1,2), Multiply (3,4))
Fixed a problem where AcpiGetHandle didn't quite get fixed in the
previous build (The prefix part of a relative path was handled
incorrectly).
Fixed a problem where Operation Region initialization failed if
the operation region name was a "namepath" instead of a simple
"nameseg". Symptom was an AE_NO_OPERAND error.
Fixed a problem where an assignment to a local variable via the
indirect RefOf mechanism only worked for the first such
assignment. Subsequent assignments were ignored.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 11_15_00
ACPI 2.0 table support with backwards support for ACPI 1.0 and
the 0.71 extensions. Note: although we can read ACPI 2.0 BIOS
tables, the AML interpreter does NOT have support for the new
2.0 ASL grammar terms at this time.
All ACPI hardware access is via the GAS structures in the ACPI
2.0 FADT.
All physical memory addresses across all platforms are now 64
bits wide. Logical address width remains dependent on the
platform (i.e., "void *").
AcpiOsMapMemory interface changed to a 64-bit physical address.
The AML interpreter integer size is now 64 bits, as per the ACPI
2.0 specification.
For backwards compatibility with ACPI 1.0, ACPI tables with a
revision number less than 2 use 32-bit integers only.
Fixed a problem where the evaluation of OpRegion operands did not
always resolve them to numbers properly.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 10_20_00
Fix for CBN_._STA issue. This fix will allow correct access to
CBN_ OpRegions when the _STA returns 0x8.
Support to convert ACPI constants (Ones, Zeros, One) to actual
values before a package object is returned
Fix for method call as predicate to if/while construct causing
incorrect if/while behavior
Fix for Else block package lengths sometimes calculated wrong (if
block > 63 bytes)
Fix for Processor object length field, was always zero
Table load abort if FACP sanity check fails
Fix for problem with Scope(name) if name already exists
Warning emitted if a named object referenced cannot be found
(resolved) during method execution.
------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 9_29_00
New table initialization interfaces: AcpiInitializeSubsystem no
longer has any parameters AcpiFindRootPointer - Find the RSDP (if
necessary) AcpiLoadTables (RSDP) - load all tables found at RSDP-
>RSDT Obsolete Interfaces AcpiLoadFirmwareTables - replaced by
AcpiLoadTables
Note: These interface changes require changes to all existing
OSDs
The PCI_Config default address space handler is always installed
at the root namespace object.
-------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 09_15_00
The new initialization architecture is implemented. New
interfaces are: AcpiInitializeSubsystem (replaces AcpiInitialize)
AcpiEnableSubsystem Obsolete Interfaces: AcpiLoadNamespace
(Namespace is automatically loaded when a table is loaded)
The ACPI_OPERAND_OBJECT has been optimized to shrink its size
from 52 bytes to 32 bytes. There is usually one of these for
every namespace object, so the memory savings is significant.
Implemented just-in-time evaluation of the CreateField operators.
Bug fixes for IA-64 support have been integrated.
Additional code review comments have been implemented
The so-called "third pass parse" has been replaced by a final
walk through the namespace to initialize all operation regions
(address spaces) and fields that have not yet been initialized
during the execution of the various _INI and REG methods.
New file - namespace/nsinit.c
-------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 09_01_00
Namespace manager data structures have been reworked to change
the primary object from a table to a single object. This has
resulted in dynamic memory savings of 3X within the namespace
and 2X overall in the ACPI CA subsystem.
Fixed problem where the call to AcpiEvFindPciRootBuses was
inadvertently left commented out.
Reduced the warning count when generating the source with the GCC
compiler.
Revision numbers added to each module header showing the
SourceSafe version of the file. Please refer to this version
number when giving us feedback or comments on individual modules.
The main object types within the subsystem have been renamed to
clarify their purpose:
ACPI_INTERNAL_OBJECT -> ACPI_OPERAND_OBJECT
ACPI_GENERIC_OP -> ACPI_PARSE_OBJECT
ACPI_NAME_TABLE_ENTRY -> ACPI_NAMESPACE_NODE
NOTE: no changes to the initialization sequence are included in
this label.
-------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 08_23_00
Fixed problem where TerminateControlMethod was being called
multiple times per method
Fixed debugger problem where single stepping caused a semaphore
to be oversignalled
Improved performance through additional parse object caching -
added ACPI_EXTENDED_OP type
-------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 08_10_00
Parser/Interpreter integration: Eliminated the creation of
complete parse trees for ACPI tables and control methods.
Instead, parse subtrees are created and then deleted as soon as
they are processed (Either entered into the namespace or
executed by the interpreter). This reduces the use of dynamic
kernel memory significantly. (about 10X)
Exception codes broken into classes and renumbered. Be sure to
recompile all code that includes acexcep.h. Hopefully we won't
have to renumber the codes again now that they are split into
classes (environment, programmer, AML code, ACPI table, and
internal).
Fixed some additional alignment issues in the Resource Manager
subcomponent
Implemented semaphore tracking in the AcpiExec utility, and fixed
several places where mutexes/semaphores were being unlocked
without a corresponding lock operation. There are no known
semaphore or mutex "leaks" at this time.
Fixed the case where an ASL Return operator is used to return an
unnamed package.
-------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 07_28_00
Fixed a problem with the way addresses were calculated in
AcpiAmlReadFieldData() and AcpiAmlWriteFieldData(). This problem
manifested itself when a Field was created with WordAccess or
DwordAccess, but the field unit defined within the Field was
less than a Word or Dword.
Fixed a problem in AmlDumpOperands() module's loop to pull
operands off of the operand stack to display information. The
problem manifested itself as a TLB error on 64-bit systems when
accessing an operand stack with two or more operands.
Fixed a problem with the PCI configuration space handlers where
context was getting confused between accesses. This required a
change to the generic address space handler and address space
setup definitions. Handlers now get both a global handler
context (this is the one passed in by the user when executing
AcpiInstallAddressSpaceHandler() and a specific region context
that is unique to each region (For example, the _ADR, _SEG and
_BBN values associated with a specific region). The generic
function definitions have changed to the following:
typedef ACPI_STATUS (*ADDRESS_SPACE_HANDLER) ( UINT32 Function,
UINT32 Address, UINT32 BitWidth, UINT32 *Value, void
*HandlerContext, // This used to be void *Context void
*RegionContext); // This is an additional parameter
typedef ACPI_STATUS (*ADDRESS_SPACE_SETUP) ( ACPI_HANDLE
RegionHandle, UINT32 Function, void *HandlerContext, void
**RegionContext); // This used to be **ReturnContext
-------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 07_21_00
Major file consolidation and rename. All files within the
interpreter have been renamed as well as most header files.
This was done to prevent collisions with existing files in the
host OSs -- filenames such as "config.h" and "global.h" seem to
be quite common. The VC project files have been updated. All
makefiles will require modification.
The parser/interpreter integration continues in Phase 5 with the
implementation of a complete 2-pass parse (the AML is parsed
twice) for each table; This avoids the construction of a huge
parse tree and therefore reduces the amount of dynamic memory
required by the subsystem. Greater use of the parse object cache
means that performance is unaffected.
Many comments from the two code reviews have been rolled in.
The 64-bit alignment support is complete.
-------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 06_30_00
With a nod and a tip of the hat to the technology of yesteryear,
we've added support in the source code for 80 column output
devices. The code is now mostly constrained to 80 columns or
less to support environments and editors that 1) cannot display
or print more than 80 characters on a single line, and 2) cannot
disable line wrapping.
A major restructuring of the namespace data structure has been
completed. The result is 1) cleaner and more
understandable/maintainable code, and 2) a significant reduction
in the dynamic memory requirement for each named ACPI object
(almost half).
-------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 06_23_00
Linux support has been added. In order to obtain approval to get
the ACPI CA subsystem into the Linux kernel, we've had to make
quite a few changes to the base subsystem that will affect all
users (all the changes are generic and OS- independent). The
effects of these global changes have been somewhat far reaching.
Files have been merged and/or renamed and interfaces have been
renamed. The major changes are described below.
Osd* interfaces renamed to AcpiOs* to eliminate namespace
pollution/confusion within our target kernels. All OSD
interfaces must be modified to match the new naming convention.
Files merged across the subsystem. A number of the smaller
source and header files have been merged to reduce the file
count and increase the density of the existing files. There are
too many to list here. In general, makefiles that call out
individual files will require rebuilding.
Interpreter files renamed. All interpreter files now have the
prefix am* instead of ie* and is*.
Header files renamed: The acapi.h file is now acpixf.h. The
acpiosd.h file is now acpiosxf.h. We are removing references to
the acronym "API" since it is somewhat windowsy. The new name is
"external interface" or xface or xf in the filenames.j
All manifest constants have been forced to upper case (some were
mixed case.) Also, the string "ACPI_" has been prepended to
many (not all) of the constants, typedefs, and structs.
The globals "DebugLevel" and "DebugLayer" have been renamed
"AcpiDbgLevel" and "AcpiDbgLayer" respectively.
All other globals within the subsystem are now prefixed with
"AcpiGbl_" Internal procedures within the subsystem are now
prefixed with "Acpi" (with only a few exceptions). The original
two-letter abbreviation for the subcomponent remains after
"Acpi" - for example, CmCallocate became AcpiCmCallocate.
Added a source code translation/conversion utility. Used to
generate the Linux source code, it can be modified to generate
other types of source as well. Can also be used to cleanup
existing source by removing extraneous spaces and blank lines.
Found in tools/acpisrc/*
OsdUnMapMemory was renamed to OsdUnmapMemory and then
AcpiOsUnmapMemory. (UnMap became Unmap).
A "MaxUnits" parameter has been added to AcpiOsCreateSemaphore.
When set to one, this indicates that the caller wants to use the
semaphore as a mutex, not a counting semaphore. ACPI CA uses
both types. However, implementers of this call may want to use
different OS primitives depending on the type of semaphore
requested. For example, some operating systems provide separate
"mutex" and "semaphore" interfaces - where the mutex interface
is much faster because it doesn't have all the overhead of a
full semaphore implementation.
Fixed a deadlock problem where a method that accesses the PCI
address space can block forever if it is the first access to the
space.
-------------------------------------------
Summary of changes for this label: 06_02_00
Support for environments that cannot handle unaligned data
accesses (e.g. firmware and OS environments devoid of alignment
handler technology namely SAL/EFI and the IA-64 Linux kernel)
has been added (via configurable macros) in these three areas: -
Transfer of data from the raw AML byte stream is done via byte
moves instead of word/dword/qword moves. - External objects
are aligned within the user buffer, including package elements
(sub-objects). - Conversion of name strings to UINT32 Acpi Names
is now done byte-wise.
The Store operator was modified to mimic Microsoft's
implementation when storing to a Buffer Field.
Added a check of the BM_STS bit before entering C3.
The methods subdirectory has been obsoleted and removed. A new
file, cmeval.c subsumes the functionality.
A 16-bit (DOS) version of AcpiExec has been developed. The
makefile is under the acpiexec directory.