acpi_wake_init:
Evaluate _PRW and set the GPE type
acpi_wake_set_enable:
Enable or disable a device's GPE.
acpi_wake_sleep_prep:
Perform any last-minute changes to the device to prepare it for
entering the given sleep state.
Also, walk the entire namespace when transitioning to a sleep state,
disabling any GPEs which aren't appropriate for the given state. Transition
acpi_lid and acpi_button to the new API.
This clears the way for non-ACPI-aware devices to wake the system (i.e.
modems) and fixes a problem where systems power up after shutdown when a
GPE is triggered.
In particular, disabling it was likely to break configurations
involving ng_vlan(4) since the latter couldn't control
the parent's VLAN_MTU in the way vlan(4) did.
Pointed out by: ru
does not reliably prevent the triggering of interrupts for all supported
configurations. Thus, the FIFO size probe could cause an interrupt,
which could lead to an interrupt storm in the shared interrupt case.
To prevent this, change ns8250_bus_probe() to use the overflow bit in
the line status register instead of the RX ready bit in the interrupt
identification register to detect whether the FIFO has filled up.
This allows us to clear all bits in the interrupt enable register during
the probe, which should prevent interrupts reliably.
Additionally, the detected FIFO size may be a bit more accurate, because
the overflow bit is only set when the FIFO did actually fill up, while
interrupts would trigger a bit early.
Reviewed and tested on a lot of hardware by: marcel
This splits the driver into a bus-independant backend, plus bus-specific
frontends. The old pcf(4) (i386/ISA) frontend is now in pcf_isa.c, the
frontend in envctrl.c is for sparc64/Ebus2 (Sun device name: SUNW,envctrl
from Sun E450 machines). More frontends are expected to appear in future.
This is not yet ready for public consumption, but it basically works.
Nicolas will bring over his ISA-specific fixes soon.
Reviewed by: nsouch
* Add calls to AcpiSetGpeType. We use wake/run as the type for lid and
button switches since wake-only causes Thinkpads to immediately wake on
the second suspend. Note that with wake/run, some systems return both
wake and device-specific notifies so we don't register for system notifies
for lid and button switches.
* Remove the hw.acpi.osi_method tunable since it is not needed.
* Always print unknown notifies for all types.
* Add more cleanup for the EC if it fails to attach.
* Use the GPE handle now that we parse it. This allows GPEs to be defined
in AML GPE blocks.
* Always use ACPI_NOT_ISR since it's ok to acquire a mutex in our thread
which processes queued requests.
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
in all USB ethernet drivers. The qdat structure contains a pointer
to the interface's struct ifnet and is used to process incoming
packets, so simultaneous use of two similar devices caused crashes
and confusion.
The if_udav driver appeared in the tree since Daan's PR, so I made
similar changes to that driver too.
PR: kern/59290
Submitted by: Daan Vreeken <Danovitsch@Vitsch.net>
MFNetBSD 1.177; author: toshii
Use the correct wValue to get hub desriptors.
Also, make wValue checks of root hub codes less strict.
MFNetBSD 1.178: author: martin
Interrupt descriptors might become invalid while being processed in
uhci_check_intr - so remember their next pointer before calling it.
Patch provided by Matthew Orgass in PR kern/24542.
Obtained from: NetBSD
return value for BUS_READ_IVAR and thus don't generate the proper NULL
in cases where a device (i.e. on PCI) does not have a handle.
Found by: peadar, tjr
identifiers, to openfirmio.h as OFIOCMAXNAME, so programs can use it
for buffer sizes etc.
Note: Although this is only a rough upper limit to make the code more
robust and to prevent the allocation of ridiculous amounts of memory,
the current limit of one page (8191 + '\0' in openfirm_getstr()) still
appears a bit high. The maximum length of OFW property names is 31.
I didn't find a maximum length for the device identifiers in the OFW
documentation but it certainly is much smaller than 8191, too.
- Enable the OFIOCSET ioctl, i.e. move it out from under #if 0.
- Don't use openfirm_getstr() for the property value in OFIOCSET, there
are also properties whose values aren't strings and it makes sense to
use a different maximum length for property values than OFW_NAME_MAX/
OFIOCMAXNAME. The maximum accepted property value is defined in
openfirmio.h as OFIOCMAXVALUE (currently the maximum size of the value
of the nvramrc property).
- Make OFIOCSET not return EINVAL when OF_setprop() returns a different
length for the written value than it was told to write, this is normal
for the text string values of the properties in the OFW /options node.
Instead, only return EINVAL if OF_setprop() returned -1 (value could
not be written or property could not be created). Add a comment about
the specialty of the OFW /options node.
- Make OFIOCSET return the length of the written value returned by
OF_setprop(), just like OF_getprop() does. Quite useful, at least for
debugging.
Reviewed by: tmm
is being turned off, or else TCP/IP will keep assigning the job to us.
Drivers themselves should consult if_capenable, not if_hwassist--the
latter is for the TCP/IP stack.