Change fhc(4) to use IRQ numbers instead of RIDs for allocating the
IRQs of children. This works similar to e.g. sbus(4), i.e. add the
IRQ resources as fully specified to the resource lists of the children,
allocate them like normal. When establishing the interrupt search the
interrupt maps of the children for a matching INO to determine which
map we need to write the fully specified interrupt number to and to
enable the mapping (before the RID was used to indicate which interrupt
map to use).
- dev/puc/puc.c:
Revert rev. 1.38, with the above change fhc(4) no longer needs special
treatment for allocating IRQs.
Thanks to: joerg for providing access to an E3500
both a scc(4) is under way and fhc(4) will be change to use INOs this
shouldn't stay in HEAD for too long but we need a MFC-able solution
for FreeBSD 5.4.
Discussed with: marcel
Tested by: hrs, kris
MFC after: 3 days
o Introduce PUC_PORT_TYPE_UART so that we can attach to uart(4),
o Introduce port sub-types (eg PUC_PORT_UART_NS8250, PUC_PORT_UART_Z8530)
to handle different hardware and determine resource sizes.
o Introduce two new IVARs: PUC_IVAR_SUBTYPE and PUC_IVAR_REGSHFT. Both
are used by uart(4) to get sufficient information to talk to the HW.
o Introduce PUC_FLAGS_ALTRES to tell puc(4) to try memory mapped I/O
if I/O port space cannot be allocated, or vice versa.
o Have ports of type PUC_PORT_TYPE_COM attach to uart(1) if attaching
to sio(4) fails (due to not having the sio driver).
o Put struct puc_device_description in struct puc_softc instead of
having a pointer to a device description in the softc. This allows
us to create device descriptions on the fly without having to use
malloc() or otherwise have them staticly defined.
o Move puc_find_description() from puc.c to puc_pci.c as it's specific
to PCI.
o Add EBUS and SBUS frontends for use on sparc64. Note that the P in
puc stands for PCI, so we kinda mess things up here. It's too soon
to worry about it though. We'll know what to do about it in time.
NOTE: This commit changes the behaviour of puc(4) to not quieten the
device probe and attach for child devices. The uart(4) driver provides
additional device description that is valuable to have.
- Move isa/ppc* to sys/dev/ppc (repo-copy)
- Add an attachment method to ppc for puc
- In puc we need to walk the chain of parents.
Still to do, is to make ppc(4) & puc(4) work on other platforms. Testers
wanted.
PR: 38372 (in spirit done differently)
Verified by: Make universe (if I messed up a platform please fix)
now unnecessary hack from the previous commit;
- Add support for Interrupt Latch Register (ILR) into puc(4). So far only
ILRs compatible with specifications from Digi International are supported.
Support for other types of ILRs could be easily added later;
- Correct clock frequency for IC Book Labs Dreadnought x16 Lite board;
- Enable ILR detection/usage for IC Book Labs Dreadnought x16 boards.
Sponsored by: IC Book Labs
MFC after: 2 weeks
yet that depend on it because sio(4) needs support for it before it
can be used. There's no reason why zs(4) couldn't attach to puc(4)
in the (near?) future (in principle), so don't make memory mapped I/O
support in sio(4) a precondition for this change.
PUC devices live on pccard or pci so INTR_FAST is never really an option.
Don't try to register the interrupt as fast and don't allow the children
to do so either.
right places, and so it's sorted consistently with how all the other N-hundreds
of files ding this do it.
Submitted by: Hiten Pandya <hiten@uk.FreeBSD.org>
Don't expect all RIDs to be PCI rids. The previous code made at
least 1 mistake, even for PCI.
Give the card definitions a chance to specify a init function.
Use this instead of the gross superio hack.
Move the win877 init function to puc_pci.c where it belongs.
RIDs can actually be zero, don't set badmuxed if so.
Set a less incorrect end for the construct SYS_RES_IOPORT entries,
I guess both sio and lpt happen to use 8 IO ports, but that shouldn't
really be hardcoded this way.
Fixup puc_pccard.c to match.
We're getting closer.
the structure definitions come from NetBSD to make it easier to share card
definitions. The driver only acts as a shim between the pci bus and the
sio driver. Later pci parallel ports could also be supported through this
driver. Support for most single and multiport pci serial cards should be
as simple as adding its definition to pucdata.c
Tested with the following pci cards:
Moxa Industio CP-114, 4 port RS-232,RS-422/485
Syba Tech Ltd. PCI-4S2P-550-ECP, 4 port RS-232 + 2 parallel ports
Netmos NM9835 PCI-2S-550, 2 port RS-232