polarity. Some machines route PCI IRQs to an ISA IRQ but fail to include
an interrupt override entry to set the polarity and trigger of the given
ISA IRQ in their MADT table.
PR: usb/74989
Reported by: Julien Gabel jpeg at thilelli dot net
MFC after: 1 week
- Improve panic message if we fail to read the PCI bus number from a bridge
device.
- Don't try to lookup a BIOS IRQ for a link unless the link is routed via
an ISA IRQ since BIOSen currently only route PCI link devices via ISA
IRQs.
Tested by: Mathieu Prevot bsdhack at club-internet dot fr
MFC after: 1 week
Instead, re-evaluate _BIF only when we get a notify and use the cached
results. We also still evaluate _BIF once on boot. Also, optimize the
init loop a little by only querying for a particular info if it's not valid.
MFC after: 2 days
the IRQ set by the BIOS in existing devices to actually get the correct
bus number of the child PCI bus. I was not reading the bus number from
the bridge device correctly. The __BUS_ACCESSOR() macros (from which
pcib_get_bus() is built) assume that the passed in argument is a child
device. However, at the time I'm reading the bus there is no child
device yet, so I was passing in the pcib device as the child device.
The parent of the pcib device probably returned an error in the case of
a host bridge, thus resulting in random stack garbage for the bus number.
For PCI-PCI bridges, the bus number being used was actually the subvendor
of the PCI-PCI bridge device itself.
MFC after: 1 week
acpi_resource change was a minor nit offered as an early candidate for
the recent ACPICA import problem and the acpi.c change is one I need to
test still that makes the ordered probing of system devices actually work
as advertised (probe devices in order based on the type of device rather
than in the order we encounter them in the device tree).
entry that is not zero, assume that it is really a hard-wired IRQ (commonly
used for APIC routing) and not a source index. In practice, we've only
ever seen source indices of 0 for legitimate non-hard-wired _PRT entries.
Reviewed by: njl
Tested by: Alex Lyashkov shadow at psoft dot net
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Prefer '_' to ' ', as it results in more easily parsed results in
memory monitoring tools such as vmstat.
- Remove punctuation that is incompatible with using memory type names
as file names, such as '/' characters.
- Disambiguate some collisions by adding subsystem prefixes to some
memory types.
- Generally prefer lower case to upper case.
- If the same type is defined in multiple architecture directories,
attempt to use the same name in additional cases.
Not all instances were caught in this change, so more work is required to
finish this conversion. Similar changes are required for UMA zone names.
immediately, back off to the next higher Cx sleep state. Some machines
with a Via chipset report a valid C3 but a register read doesn't actually
halt the CPU. This would cause the machine to appear unresponsive as it
repeatedly called cpu_idle() which immediately returned. Causing interrupts
(i.e. by pressing the power button) would cause the system to make forward
progress, showing that it wasn't actually hung.
Also, enable interrupts a little earlier. We don't need them disabled
to calculate the delta time for the read.
Reported by: silby
MFC after: 2 weeks
is on AC power (i.e. not a laptop). This allows power_profile to run once
for desktop systems as well, for instance, to set C3 or CPU frequency.
MFC after: 2 weeks
support the CM-battery interface. Smart batteries can eventually be
supported without ACPI via a separate SMBus interface. The ACPI interface
uses the embedded controller for reading/writing to the SMBus, and normal
ASL definitions for locating the battery controller (since SMBus can't be
enumerated.) Also import definitions for the smart battery interface.
This was written by Hans Petter Selasky with minor cleanups from myself.
Submitted by: Hans Petter Selasky <hselasky / c2i.net>
* Use ACPI_BATT_UNKNOWN instead of constants
* Use maxunit instead of a count of devices since we may have sparse
battery devices in the future. Only userland should be using unit
numbers anyway, so provide a translation function. (Kernel use of
batteries should be restricted to looking up a device_t and calling
methods directly.
* Don't check acpi_BatteryIsPresent() in acpi_battery. Leave it up to
the hardware-specific driver (i.e. cmbat) since smart batteries seem
to not report the "battery present" flag.
* Convert mA to mW if the battery uses those units. CM-batteries only
used mW so this deficiency went unnoticed.
* Clean strings reported in the battery info from any control chars.
* Only dereference the unit from ioctl_arg if the full struct is present.
Unit wouldn't have been used later if it wasn't present but this is
cleaner. Translate the unit if it's not ACPI_BATTERY_ALL_UNITS.
* bzero structs before returning them to usermode for future compat.
Most of this work was submitted by Hans Petter Selasky and then majorly
reworked by myself.
Submitted by: Hans Petter Selasky <hselasky / c2i.net>
with some Dell servers that booted w/o a problem[*] on 5.4, but failed
with 6.0-BETA.
On the PCI bus, when we do lazy resource allocation, we narrow the
range requested as we pass through bridges to reflect how the bridges
are programmed and what addresses they pass. However, when we're
doing an allocation on a bus that's directly connected to a host
bridge, no such translation can take place. We already had a fallback
range for memory requests, but none for ioports. As such, provide a
fallback for I/O ports so we don't allocate location 0, which will
have undesired side effects when the resources are actually used.
This fixes a problem with booting a Dell server with usb in the
kernel. However, it is an unsatisfying solution. I don't like the
hard coded value, and I think we should start narrowing the resources
returned to not be in the so-called isa alias area (where the ranage &
0x0300 must be 0 iirc). Doing such filtering will have to wait for
another day.
This may be a good 6 candidate, maybe after its had a chance to be
refined.
Tested by: glebius@
cooling thread which refers psv, tc1, tc2 and tsp. The previous
code made the period where sc->tz_zone.tsp was zero, and it caused
panic at msleep().
Reported by: keramida
Tested by: keramida
effect. since CPU speed is restored by degrees, we cannot use
the facility of saving cpu speed by CPUFREQ_set() effectively.
so, we need to save the value when passive cooling is in effect.
Repoeted by: Kevin Oberman <oberman__at__es.net>
Previously, we used all info (including -1 or "not present") which would
keep the system from reaching 100% when charging.
Reported by: Eric Anderson
MFC after: 2 days
later sum capacities for all batteries, even those that weren't actually
present. We only need to do this for _BST but do it for all of them.
Reported by: Eric Anderson
MFC after: 1 day
(i.e., smart battery) and fix various bugs found during the cleanup.
API changes:
* kernel access:
Access to individual batteries is now via devclass_find("battery").
Introduce new methods ACPI_BATT_GET_STATUS (for _BST-formatted data) and
ACPI_BATT_GET_INFO (for _BIF-formatted data). The helper function
acpi_battery_get_battinfo() now takes a device_t instead of a unit #
argument. If dev is NULL, this signifies all batteries.
* ioctl access:
The ACPIIO_BATT_GET_TYPE and ACPIIO_BATT_GET_BATTDESC ioctls have been
removed. Since there is now no need for a mapping between "virtual" unit
and physical unit, usermode programs can just specify the unit directly and
skip the old translation steps. In fact, acpiconf(8) was actually already
doing this and virtual unit was the same as physical unit in all cases
since there was previously only one battery type (acpi_cmbat). Additionally,
we now map the ACPIIO_BATT_GET_BIF and ACPIIO_BATT_GET_BST ioctls for all
batteries, if they provide the associated methods.
* apm compatibility device/ioctls: no change
* sysctl: no change
Since most third-party applications use the apm(4) compat interface, there
should be very few affected applications (if any).
Reviewed by: bruno
MFC after: 5 days
the driver has unholy private knowledge of its great-*cgrandchildren.
The ACPI allocation routine lacked such knowledge when it tried to do
a default allocation for all descendants, rather than just its
immeidate children, so would access grandchild's ivar in an unsafe
way. This could lead to a panic when devices were present which had
no addresses setup by the BIOS, but which were later allocated in a
lazy manner via pci_alloc_map. As such, only do the default
allocation adjustments for immediate children. The manner that
acpi_sysres_find accesses the resource list, used later in
acpi_alloc_resource, is safe and proper so no additional test is
needed there.
This fixes a panic when probing an disabled ata controller on some
newer intel blades.
Reported by: dwhite
pointer. If kernel malloc(0) returns a valid pointer, it needs to be
freed. If it returns NULL, it's ok to free this also.
Submitted by: pjd
Reviewed by: imp, dfr
Obtained from: Coverity Prevent
of swi. This allows us to use the taskqueue_thread_* functions instead of
rolling our own. It also avoids a double trip through the queue.
Submitted by: njl
Reviewed by: sam
number of task threads to start on boot. Go back to a default of 3
threads to work around lost battery state problems. Users that need
a setting of 1 can set this via the tunable. I am investigating the
underlying issues and this tunable can be removed once they are solved.
MFC after: 2 days
we start turning any of them back on again. This works around a bug in
some BIOSen that alias two different link devices for APIC vs ATPIC modes
onto the same physical hardware link.
Submitted by: njl
Tested by: Antoine Brodin antoine dot brodin at laposte dot net
systems that boot with this value at the lowest setting. Change the
default boot config back to "leave frequency as BIOS set it". Also, fix
buglet where acpi_throttle wouldn't be used if p4tcc was present but
disabled by the user.
MFC after: 1 week