last in the list rather than first.
This makes the resouces print in the 4.x order rather than the 5.x order
(eg fdc0 at 0x3f0-0x3f5,0x3f7 is 4.x, but 0x3f7,0x3f0-0x3f5 is 5.x). This
also means that the pci code will once again print the resources in BAR
ascending order.
like a valid range. We already do this in the memory case (although
the code there is somewhat different than the I/o case because we have
to deal with different kinds of memory). Since most laptops don't
have non-subtractive bridges, this wasn't seen in practice.
Evidentally the Compaq R3000 hits this problem with PC Cards.
Some minor style fixes while I'm here.
Submitted by: Jung-uk Kim
suggested by Peter Edwards. This seems to fix my fxp problems and
likely will fix his as well. Use DELAY rather than *sleep because we
can be called from any context.
the PCI bus. We presently have no drivers for these devices, so they
are powered down. This is undesirable behavior since it breaks the
system when the base peripherals go away suddenly in the middle of
boot.
# if we ever get generic drivers for memory and/or base peripherals, then
# we can remove the tests here.
back on again in resume. Override the default of D3 with the value the
BIOS specifies in _SxD, if present. Skip serial devices (PNP05xx) since
they seem to hang when set to D3 and may require special driver support.
Also, skip non-type 0 PCI devices (i.e., bridges) since our we don't yet
save/restore their config space and that seems to be necessary.
If this gives you trouble with suspend/resume, you can disable the new
ACPI and PCI power behavior separately with these tunables & sysctls:
debug.acpi.do_powerstate
hw.pci.do_powerstate
Approved by: imp (pci)
Tested by: acpi@ (numerous)
control the number of lines per page rather than a constant. The variable
can be examined and changed in ddb as '$lines'. Setting the variable to
0 will effectively turn off paging.
- Change db_putchar() to force out pending whitespace before outputting
newlines and carriage returns so that one can rub out content on the
current line via '\r \r' type strings.
- Change the simple pager to rub out the --More-- prompt explicitly when
the routine exits.
- Add some aliases to the simple pager to make it more compatible with
more(1): 'e' and 'j' do a single line. 'd' does half a page, and
'f' does a full page.
MFC after: 1 month
Inspired by: kris
PCI native addressing. That means that if the HW says that using "real"
addresses instead of the hardwired legacy compat ones is allowed, we will
use them.
in the various pci specifications as readonly. vendor, subvendor,
device and subdevice are required to be loaded in hardware by some
means that isn't the system BIOS or other system software (although
some devices do have ways of accomplishing this). class and subclass
are defined to be read-only in section 6.2.1 (v2.2). Apart from the
status register, which we weren't touching, these are the only
read-only registers I could find in the 2.2 spec.
progif is also defined as being read-only in section 6.2.1. However,
the PCI IDE programming document specifically states that some of the
bits are read/write. Since we may have to restore registers before we
have a driver attached, go ahead and restore this one byte when
transitioning between D3 and D0.
The PCI spec also says that writes to reserved and unimplemented
registers must be completed normally. It makes no statements about
writes to read-only registers, so be as conservative as possible,
while covering the exception to the rule that is documented in a
subpart of the standard.
Requested by: socttl
Split the baby. For idepci devices, now both legacy mode bits need
not be set. We can run an idepci in a split mode. However, it only
works better than before, not works. It works better in that when one
device is legacy and the other isn't and disabled, we now operate
correctly.
sos submitted a version of this patch.
subclass, progif and revid. While these are typically read
only fields, they aren't always read-only. progif is writable
for ata devices, for example. It does no harm when they are
read only, and helps when they aren't.
chattiness was left in for debugging, but now that nearly all of the
problems relating to the changes have been fixed, it is only annoying. It
is still available via bootverbose.
Prodded by: jhb
1) In pci.c, we need to check the child device's state, not the parent
device's state.
2) In acpi_pci.c, we have to run the power state change after the acpi
method when the old_state is > new state, not the other way around.
Submitted by: Dmitry Remesov
PR: 65694
resource pre-allocation. The problem is that the BARs of the EBus bridges
contain the ranges for the resources for the EBus devices beyond the bridge.
So when the EBus code tries to allocate the resource for an EBus device
it's already allocated by the PCI code.
To be removed again as soon as we have a proper solution in the EBus Code.
Reviewed by: tmm
Approved by: marcel (mentor)
While I would have prefered to have a solution that didn't move
knowledge of this into the pci layer. However, this is literally the
only exception that's listed in the PCI standard to the usual way of
decoding BARs. atapci devices in legacy mode now ignore the first 4
bars and hard code the values to the legacy ide values (well, for each
of the controllers that are in legacy mode). The 5th bar is handled
normally.
Remove the zero bar handling. zero bars should be ignored at all
other times, and since we handle that specially, we don't need the
older workaround.