o when turning off the socket for a 16-bit card, write 0 to INTR register
rather than just tying to just clear the rest bit. this seems to fix
card insert detection after an eject on TI bridges (ricoh bridges work
either way, apparently). This is a MFp4.
o Cope better with TOPIC95 bridges on powerup. According to NetBSD driver,
these bridges don't set POWER_STATE, so cope accordingly in our power
code. They also need a little extra time to settle, so do that as well.
o It appears that we need to turn on/off one of the clocks to the card
when we power up/down that socket on a TOPIC97, also from NetBSD.
o TOPIC97 bridges need to specifically enable LV card support. Unconditionally
do this in the hopes that all laptops that have these chips support LV
voltages (they should, since they are required for CardBus).
o TOPIC register name regularization. Registers specific to models of TOPIC
are now called out as such.
# I need a machine with a TOPIC95 for testing.
o Don't busy wait on powerup. Instead, use the power up interrupt to wait
for the card to power up. Don't wait when we're turning the card off,
since no interrupt happens in that case.
o Convert many of the long DELAYs to tsleeps. We do not run before
the timer have stared, so DELAY isn't necessary. More DELAYs can likely
be eliminated in the future.
o When powering up the card, don't do anything if the card is already
powered up (before we'd power cycle it). This means that for most
cards we power them up once and then never change the power.
o On card eject, mask (by clearing) the CD bit. Before we set it, which
was wrong. We don't want to see any CD events past the first one since
they need to be debounced.
With these changes, I can insert/eject 16bit cards without glitching xmms'
sound output. Something very important to the development of better pccard
drivers :-)
pcib_route_interrupt interface. Since there's only one interrupt pin
in the CardBus form factor, everybody gets to share it. Implement
cbb_route_interrupt to return the interrupt we have.
Suggested by: bms