Import portions of the PowerPC OF PCI implementation into new file
"ofwpci.c", common for other platforms. The files ofw_pci.c and ofw_pci.h
from sys/powerpc/ofw no longer exist. All required declarations are moved
to sys/dev/ofw/ofwpci.h. This creates a new ofw_pci_write_ivar() function
and modifies some others methods. Most functions contain existing ppc
implementations in the majority unchanged. Now there is no need to have
multiple identical copies of methods for various architectures.
Requested by: jhibbits
Reviewed by: jhibbits, marius
Submitted by: Marcin Mazurek <mma@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Annapurna Labs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4879
On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions.
Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but
type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With
this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory
(within the constraints of the driver).
Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's
possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on
32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb
the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of
resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not
pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source
clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either
need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t
aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for
resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to
uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since
source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest
path of simply using uintmax_t.
Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in
0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM.
Regression tested on qemu-system-i386
Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile)
Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD)
Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM.
Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous)
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
Extract common code from PowerPC's ofw_pci
Import portions of the PowerPC OF PCI implementation into
new file "ofw_pci.c", common for other platforms. The files ofw_pci.c and
ofw_pci.h from sys/powerpc/ofw no longer exist. All required declarations
are moved to sys/dev/ofw/ofw_pci.h.
This creates a new ofw_pci_write_ivar() function and modifies
ofw_pci_nranges(), ofw_pci_read_ivar(), ofw_pci_route_interrupt()
methods.
Most functions contain existing ppc implementations in the majority
unchanged. Now there is no need to have multiple identical copies
of methods for various architectures.
Submitted by: Marcin Mazurek <mma@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Annapurna Labs
Reviewed by: jhibbits, mmel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4879
This needs to return to the drawing board as it breaks both
PowerPC and Sparc64 build.
Pointed out by: jhibbits
Import portions of the PowerPC OF PCI implementation into
new file "ofw_pci.c", common for other platforms. The files ofw_pci.c and
ofw_pci.h from sys/powerpc/ofw no longer exist. All required declarations
are moved to sys/dev/ofw/ofw_pci.h.
This creates a new ofw_pci_write_ivar() function and modifies
ofw_pci_nranges(), ofw_pci_read_ivar(), ofw_pci_route_interrupt() methods.
Most functions contain existing ppc implementations in the majority
unchanged. Now there is no need to have multiple identical copies
of methods for various architectures.
Submitted by: Marcin Mazurek <mma@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Annapurna Labs
Reviewed by: jhibbits, mmel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4879
Summary:
Migrate to using the semi-opaque type rman_res_t to specify rman resources. For
now, this is still compatible with u_long.
This is step one in migrating rman to use uintmax_t for resources instead of
u_long.
Going forward, this could feasibly be used to specify architecture-specific
definitions of resource ranges, rather than baking a specific integer type into
the API.
This change has been broken out to facilitate MFC'ing drivers back to 10 without
breaking ABI.
Reviewed By: jhb
Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5075
OF_getprop() to get encode-int encoded values from the OF tree. This is
a no-op at present, since all existing PowerPC ports are big-endian, but
it is a correctness improvement and will be required if we have a
little-endian kernel at some future point.
Where it is totally impossible for the code ever to be used on a
little-endian system (much of powerpc/powermac, for instance), I have not
necessarily made the appropriate changes.
MFC after: 1 month
This is not complete yet: the gem(4) interface on my laptop seems to
disappear from the PCI bus as a result of quiescing Open Firmware in the
boot loader.
Summary:
Currently, fan control is linear between the target temperature and max
temperature, which is far from ideal. This changes it to be proportional to the
distance between the current temperature and the two endpoints (target and max
temp). This also adds a hysteresis, so that fans keep going when the
temperature drops, for about 10 seconds, before slowing down.
Reviewers: nwhitehorn
Reviewed By: nwhitehorn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1549
MFC after: 3 weeks
Some ATI-based PowerBooks use the string 'mnca' in the backlight controller
device tree entry, so account for this and don't use nVidia when it's not an
nVidia device.
MFC after: 3 weeks
- Wrong integer type was specified.
- Wrong or missing "access" specifier. The "access" specifier
sometimes included the SYSCTL type, which it should not, except for
procedural SYSCTL nodes.
- Logical OR where binary OR was expected.
- Properly assert the "access" argument passed to all SYSCTL macros,
using the CTASSERT macro. This applies to both static- and dynamically
created SYSCTLs.
- Properly assert the the data type for both static and dynamic
SYSCTLs. In the case of static SYSCTLs we only assert that the data
pointed to by the SYSCTL data pointer has the correct size, hence
there is no easy way to assert types in the C language outside a
C-function.
- Rewrote some code which doesn't pass a constant "access" specifier
when creating dynamic SYSCTL nodes, which is now a requirement.
- Updated "EXAMPLES" section in SYSCTL manual page.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
For compatibility, 'device windtunnel' is still supported, but one should use
'device adm1030' instead, and this has been updated in GENERIC and NOTES.
Summary:
If a user uses powerd, or doesn't want to use the cycles monitoring, they can
now suspend the monitoring thread.
While here, reorganize the added prototypes to match existing groupings.
Reviewers: nwhitehorn, #powerpc, rpaulo
Reviewed By: #powerpc, rpaulo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D944
X-MFC-with: r273009
MFC after: 3 weeks
Summary:
Add a polling loop (1Hz) to monitor the battery and AC status, to notify devd
like ACPI does for power monitoring. This allows /etc/rc.d/power_profile to
work on PowerPC laptops
Test Plan:
Tested on a Titanium PowerBook, configuring economy_cpu_freq and
performance_cpu_freq, disabling powerd.
Reviewers: #powerpc, nwhitehorn
Reviewed By: nwhitehorn
Subscribers: rpaulo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D937
with the ATI Radeon 9700 in the PowerBook G4 1.67GHz.
Code shamelessly taken in spirit from the radeonkms driver, which I hope will
make this driver redundant in the future.
MFC after: 2 weeks
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
This is the first step needed to get the snapper codec working on those
machines.
The second step is to enable the corresponding I2S device and its clock.
Tested on machines where the snapper codec was already working, a G4 PowerBook
and a PowerMac9,1 with a Shasta based macio.
The PowerMac7,2/7,3 with a K2 based macio can now also play sound.
MFC after: 1 month
This, and several subsequent commits, are suspend/resume for various PowerMac
drivers, which will include a change to the global suspend/resume code
eventually.
With this, also shut shut off the display (DPMS-style) and disable the clocking
when the backlight level is set to 0. This is taken from the radeonkms driver
(radeon_legacy_encoders.c) which doesn't yet support PowerPC, and won't for a
while, as it's missing full AGP support.
Open Firmware-centric:
- Keep the static list of regions in platform.c instead of ofw_machdep.c
- Move various merging and sorting operations to platform.c as well
- Move apple_hacks code out of ofw_machdep.c and into platform_powermac.c,
where it belongs
- Move CHRP-specific dynamic-reconfiguration memory parsing into
platform_chrp.c instead of pretending it is shared code
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
some comment I wrote about these values "lying" in the negative diff, which
referes to an earlier misunderstanding about which node to read them from.
This gets at least the PPC64 kernel booting in the mac99 system model in
QEMU after bypassing the MacIO ATA driver, which apparently still has
problems.
crazy readings occasionally. One wild reading should not be enough to
trigger a shutdown, so instead wait for several concerning readings in
a row.
PR: powerpc/180593
Submitted by: Julio Merino
MFC after: 1 week
- Use bus reference phandles in place of FDT offsets as IRQ domain keys
- Unify the identical macio/fdt/mambo OpenPIC drivers into one
- Be more forgiving (following ePAPR) about what we need from the device
tree to identify an OpenPIC
- Correctly map all IRQs into an interrupt domain
- Set IRQ_*_CONFORM for interrupts on an unknown PIC type instead of
failing attachment for that device.
section. This prevents a boot crash on nearly all iMacs and PowerMacs/Books.
The allocation in the probe section was working before because ata_probe was
returning 0 which did not invoke a second DEVICE_PROBE. Now it returns
a BUS_PROBE_DEFAULT which can invoke a second DEVICE_PROBE which results in
a "failed to reserve resource" exit.
PR: powerpc/182978
Discussed with: grehan@
MFC after: 1 Week
platform modules. Whether to call this function or not is highly machine
dependent: on some systems, it is required, while on others it breaks
everything. Platform modules are in a better position to figure this
out. This is required for POWER hypervisor SCSI to work correctly. There
are no functional changes on Powermac systems.
Approved by: re (kib)
option left but actually consumed by ada(4), so move it to opt_ada.h
and get rid of opt_ata.h.
- Fix stand-alone build of atacore(4) by adding opt_cam.h.
- Use __FBSDID.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
(PowerMac12,1), which have a mac-io MPIC cell that indifies itself
as the root PIC despite the actual root PIC being on the northbridge.
No CPC945 systems have a mac-io PIC that does anything so just don't
attach on CPC945 (U4) systems.
MFC after: 3 days