giant, which implies that we need to take out giant it we're NOT
MPSAFE.
# I can't believe the number of people that looked at this failed to
# detect this.
CB710, CB720, CB1211, CB1225, CB1410 and CB1420
These are likely licensed designed from TI, and the Linux PCMCIA code
treats them as TI chips.
Add comment, but no ID for the 711E1 from O2Micro.
present, and non-zero when it is (or may be) absent. The test
cbb_child_present was backwards. However, typical usage in the tree
would cause it to do the right thing because the card really wasn't
there the OK flag would be turned on.
Also, assume that if any of these bits are turned on we don't have a
card, rather than requiring both of them in the suspend/resume
routines.
Noticed by: cognet
the time the card is inserted and the time that the card is
configured. This can lead to interrupt storms. The O2Micro suggested
workaround is to route the card function interrupt to IRQ1. It
appears from my testing that this is an acceptable workaround for most
chipsets (there's still some issue with the ricoh chipset).
Also, only look at the NOT_A_CARD bit when the bridge tells us there's
a card present. At least one test caused this to be true after the
card was removed, but the author couldn't recreate it with the
workaround in place. The change is more conservative than the
previous code, but still has the work around that wasn't present in
the older code.
the standard.
1) When the bridge tells us that we have a card that isn't recognized, we
use the force register to force the CV_TEST to run. This test causes the
bridge to re-evaluate the card. Once this re-evaluation process happens,
we get a new interrupt that may say it is ready to process. We try this up
to 20 times. Tests have shown that this appears to correctly reset the
'Unknown card type' problem that I saw on my Sony PCG-505TS.
2) Take a page from OLDCARD and always read the CSC register in the ISR.
Some TI (and it seems maybe Ricoh) chipsets require this to behave
properly. This work around appears to work due to some power management
protocols that were improperly implemented. Maybe it can be removed when
this driver supports the full PME# protocol described in the standards.
3) Minor additional debug printf when debugging is enabled.
4) Minor additional commentary for things that are obvious only after study.
# I'm committing this from my Sony PCG-505TS using shared PCI interrupts
# and NEWCARD, but there are some issues with the Ricoh bridge still, but
# at least now I can boot with the card inserted and have it work.
However, they are presently necessary due to bigger bogusness in the
pci bus layer not doing the right thing on suspend/resume or on
initial device probe. This is exactly the sort of thing that the
BURN_BRIDGES option was invented for. Mark all of them as
BURN_BRIDGES. As soon as I have the powerstate stuff properly
integrated into the pci bus code, I intend to remove all these
workarounds.
o Register ISR INTR_MPSAFE.
o Loop on KTHREAD_DONE == 0 in the thread.
o Safe the INTR_MPSAFE flag for client drivers (don't know if there are any
CardBus/PCI drivers that are INTR_MPSAFE)
o Read status after acquiring mtx_lock(Giant) rather than before so that we
catch state changes that happen while Giant is being acquired.
o Turn off the CD bit when we see a CD interrupt, and turn it back on after
we've attached/detached the card.
o On suspend, actually set the CBB_SOCKET_MASK to zero rather than oring
in '0' to turn it off on suspend.
o If the ISR that's registerd is MPSAFE, don't acquire Giant around call to
client ISR.
o Fix comments to reflect these changes.
obtained from o2micro. These should only be needed for 'older'
o2micro bridges (anything before the 7xxx series of bridges), but will
work with the new bridges.
# I don't plan on porting it to oldcard, but will happily commit to
# oldcard if someone else needs them.
o Only complain about detached children that aren't pccard/cardbus.
o Don't NULL out the pccarddev and cbdev devices. detach just
disassociates the device and driver. It doesn't delete the child.
o on driver added, just probe_and_attach the children. If there's
any children attached, wakeup the device add/delete thread.
o wakeup the add/delete thread with the correct cv_signal() rather
than the bogus wakeup(sc). It used to be that we did a tsleep on
sc in this thread, but switched to the more reliable cv stuff a while
ago w/o changing this.
o Remove bogus checks when reallocating memory for the registers. They
weren't needed and turned out to be completely bogus.
This lets me load/unload pccard with a pccard in a slot and have the
child correctly detach/attach. This should help people that have wi
in their kernel, but that kldload cbb and pccard, for example.
we can have additional different types of bridges.
o remove now bogus comment.
o Don't clear CARD_OK when we can't attach a card.
o minor style nits
# this make kldload of cardbus drivers work for me when the card is
# present on boot.
o Always release the resources on device detach.
o Attach resources the same with driver added as we do we do in the insert
case (maybe this should be a routine).
o signal the wakeup of the thread on resume instead of trying to force an
interrupt.
o Minor debug hacks.
o use 0xffffffff instead of -1 for uint32_t items.
o Don't complain when we're asked to detach no cards. This is normal.
o Eliminate the now worthless second parameter to card_detach_card.
o minor style(9)isms
Some of these patches may be from: iwasaki-san, jhb, iadowse
clear the bit. This allows ata driver to attach its children because
it needs the interrupts enabled to succeed.
Submitted by: iwasaki-san
o Spell CardBus as CardBus, not Cardbus or CardBUS while I'm here.
o Implement the thread killing interlock as described by jhb in arch@
while talking to markm.
o Hold Giant around cbb_insert()/cbb_remove(). Deep in the belly of
the vm code we panic if we don't hold this when we activate the memory
for reading the CIS.
o If we had to do the kludge alloc, then do a kludge free.
o Better resume code. Move the comments around. Force the socket state to
be querried. Ack the interrupts properly.
o Intercept the interrupt requests and keep a list of interrupts to service
ourselves. When the card attaches, set its OK bit. When we get a card
status change interrupt for that card, clear the OK bit. Don't call the
ISR if the OK bit is cleared. Iwasaki-san and yamamoto-san have both
sent me patches that fix the same problem this fixes, but at the pccard
level.
o Try to get the signalling of the thread to actually die. This might not be
100% right, but it is less wrong than before.
o Add a SIC next to a TI type that looks like it could be wrong, but isn't.
doesn't give them enough stack to do much before blowing away the pcb.
This adds MI and MD code to allow the allocation of an alternate kstack
who's size can be speficied when calling kthread_create. Passing the
value 0 prevents the alternate kstack from being created. Note that the
ia64 MD code is missing for now, and PowerPC was only partially written
due to the pmap.c being incomplete there.
Though this patch does not modify anything to make use of the alternate
kstack, acpi and usb are good candidates.
Reviewed by: jake, peter, jhb
code to do it when the bios doesn't do it for us, flag it. Then, when
we dealloc, do an equal kludge to get rid of the address. This should
address the can't get IRQ and panic bug in a more graceful way.
# really should write a dealloc routine and just call it instead, since
# this might not fix things in the kldunload case.