and the functionality it provided into arm/exception.S. Rename the main
irq handling routine from arm_handler_execute() to arm_irq_handler() to
make it more congruent with how other exception handlers are named, and
also update its signature to reflect what has long been reality: it is
passed just a trapframe pointer, no interrupt number argument.
appropriate for each of the 'foo' in the tree. This will allow us to
compile them together (although symbol conflicts prevent us from doing
that today, this just fixes the file name collision).
implementation in arm/machdep.c. Most arm platforms either don't need to
do anything, or just need to call the standard eventtimer init routines.
A generic implementation that does that is now provided via weak linkage.
Any platform that needs to do something different can provide a its own
implementation to override the generic one.
- Don't use spaces or dots in the eventtimer or timecounter names.
They turn into sysctl node names, and it's just confusing.
- Use comparator #3 instead of #1 for one-shot events. There's an
extra 1-cycle penalty in the hardware for accessing the registers
for comparator 1, no point in paying that penalty.
- Lower the quality of the eventtimer from 1000 to 800, because the
device can't support PERCPU timers and some other device in the system
may be able to provide that.
The temperature monitor device is enabled to sample the die temperature at
16hz. The temperature is published via sysctl. A callout routine at 10hz
monitors the temperature and throttles back the cpu if the temperature
goes over a user-settable throttle point (by default 10C less than the
critical high-point temperature for the chip). The hardware is supposed
to be able to deliver an interrupt when the temperature exceeds a settable
limit, but the interrupt never arrives so for now a callout does the job.
At attach time we read the maximum cpu frequency the chip is allowed to run
at and the cpu is set to run at that speed. It's reported at attach time.
A sysctl variable reports the current speed when queried.
New sysctl values:
dev.imx6_anatop.0.cpu_mhz: 984
dev.imx6_anatop.0.temperature: 37.9C
dev.imx6_anatop.0.throttle_temperature: 95.0C
Steven Lawrance did the initial heavy lifting on this, but I changed
enough stuff that I'm the one to blame if anything breaks.
Submitted by: Steven Lawrance <stl@koffein.net>
is attached, by establishing a temporary mapping of the registers when
necessary. This is a temporary measure to keep progress moving; in the
long run we need better control over the order in which devices attach
(better than "the order they appear in the fdt dts source").
a sub-node of nexus (ofwbus) rather than direct attach under nexus. This
fixes FDT on x86 and will make coexistence with ACPI on ARM systems easier.
SPARC is unchanged.
Reviewed by: imp, ian
to check the status property in their probe routines.
Simplebus used to only instantiate its children whose status="okay"
but that was improper behavior, fixed in r261352. Now that it doesn't
check anymore and probes all its children; the children all have to
do the check because really only the children know how to properly
interpret their status property strings.
Right now all existing drivers only understand "okay" versus something-
that's-not-okay, so they all use the new ofw_bus_status_okay() helper.
shifts into the sign bit. Instead use (1U << 31) which gets the
expected result.
This fix is not ideal as it assumes a 32 bit int, but does fix the issue
for most cases.
A similar change was made in OpenBSD.
Discussed with: -arch, rdivacky
Reviewed by: cperciva
fdtbus in most cases. This brings ARM and MIPS more in line with existing
Open Firmware platforms like sparc64 and powerpc, as well as preventing
double-enumeration of the OF tree on embedded PowerPC (first through nexus,
then through fdtbus).
This change is also designed to simplify resource management on FDT platforms
by letting there exist a platform-defined root bus resource_activate() call
instead of replying on fdtbus to do the right thing through fdt_bs_tag.
The OFW_BUS_MAP_INTR() and OFW_BUS_CONFIG_INTR() kobj methods are also
available to implement for similar purposes.
Discussed on: -arm, -mips
Tested by: zbb, brooks, imp, and others
MFC after: 6 weeks
static device mappings, rather than as the first of the initializations
that a platform can hook into. This allows a platform to allocate KVA
from the top of the address space downwards for things like static device
mapping, and return the final "last usable address" result after that and
other early init work is done.
Because some platforms were doing work in initarm_lastaddr() that needs to
be done early, add a new initarm_early_init() routine and move the early
init code to that routine on those platforms.
Rename platform_devmap_init() to initarm_devmap_init() to match all the
other init routines called from initarm() that are designed to be
implemented by platform code.
Add a comment block that explains when these routines are called and the
type of work expected to be done in each of them.
new devmap.[ch] files. Emphasize the MD nature of these things by using
the prefix arm_devmap_ on the function and type names (already a few of
these things found their way into MI code, hopefully it will be harder to
do by accident in the future).
out common code related to mapping device memory into a new devmap.c file.
Remove the growing duplication of code that used pmap_devmap_find_pa() and
then did some math with the returned results to generate a virtual address,
and likewise in reverse to get a physical address. Now there are a pair
of functions, arm_devmap_vtop() and arm_devmap_ptov(), to do that. The
bus_space_map() implementations are rewritten in terms of these.