freebsd-nq/usr.sbin/pciconf/pciconf.8
Kenneth D. Merry 7f054c59a5 Modify pciconf(8) so that it will print out PCI devices that have no driver
configured in the kernel.  It gives them a device name of "none" and
monotonically incrementing unit numbers.  (starting at 0)  Before, pciconf
would just skip over unconfigured devices.  (unconfigured devices can be
detected because they have a null string for a device name)

Update the man page to reflect the new pciconf output.  Unfortunately, this
causes the sample 'pciconf -l' output lines to wrap, but I'm not sure what
to do about that really.

If anyone presents a reasonable case for printing out something other than
"none1" for unconfigured devices, I'm willing to listen.
1998-11-12 00:22:30 +00:00

194 lines
5.4 KiB
Groff

.\" $Id: pciconf.8,v 1.3 1997/10/06 11:38:29 charnier Exp $
.\" Copyright (c) 1997
.\" Stefan Esser <se@freebsd.org>. All rights reserved.
.\"
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.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
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.Dd February 7, 1997
.Dt PCICONF 8
.Os FreeBSD
.Sh NAME
.Nm pciconf
.Nd diagnostic utility for the PCI bus
.Sh SYNOPSIS
.Nm pciconf Fl l
.Nm pciconf Fl a Ar selector
.Nm pciconf Fl r Ar selector
.Op Fl b | Fl h
.Ar reg
.Nm pciconf Fl w Ar selector
.Op Fl b | Fl h
.Ar reg value
.Sh DESCRIPTION
The
.Nm
command provides a command line interface to the functionality provided by
.Pa /dev/pci Ns 's
.Xr ioctl 2
interface.
With the
.Fl l
option, it lists all devices found by the boot probe in the following format:
.Bd -literal
foo0@pci0:4:0: class=0x010000 card=0x00000000 chip=0x000f1000 rev=0x01 hdr=0x00
bar0@pci0:5:0: class=0x000100 card=0x00000000 chip=0x88c15333 rev=0x00 hdr=0x00
none0@pci0:6:0: class=0x020000 card=0x00000000 chip=0x802910ec rev=0x00 hdr=0x00
.Ed
.Pp
The first column gives the
device name, unit number, and
.Ar selector .
If there is no device configured in the kernel for the
.Tn PCI
device in question, the device name will be
.Dq none .
Unit numbers for unconfigured devices start at zero and are incremented for
each unconfigured device that is encountered. The
.Ar selector
is in a form which may directly be used for the other forms of the command.
The second column is the class code, with the class byte printed as two
hex digits, followed by the sub-class and the interface bytes.
The third column gives the contents of the subvendorid register, introduced
in revision 2.1 of the
.Tn PCI
standard. It is 0 for most current (2.0)
.Tn PCI
cards, but is supposed to be loaded with a unique card identification code
in newly developed
.Tn PCI
cards. The field consists of the card ID in the upper
half and the card vendor ID in the lower half of the value.
.Pp
The fourth column contains the chip device ID, which identifies the chip
this card is based on. It consists of two fields, identifying the chip and
its vendor, as above.
The fifth column prints the chip's revision.
The sixth column describes the header type.
Currently assigned header types are 0 for all devices except
.Tn PCI
to
.Tn PCI
bridges, and 1 for such bridge chips. If the most significant bit
of the header type register is set for
function 0 of a
.Tn PCI
device, it is a
.Em multi-function
device, which contains several (similar or independent) functions on
one chip.
.Pp
The
.Fl l
option is the only one available to non-root users.
All other invocations of
.Nm
require a
.Ar selector
of the form
.Li pci Ns Va bus Ns \&: Ns Va device
(optionally followed by
.Li \&: Ns Va function ) .
A final colon may be appended and
will be ignored; this is so that the first column in the output of
.Nm
.Fl l
can be used without modification. All numbers are base 10.
.Pp
With the
.Fl a
flag,
.Nm
determines whether any driver has been assigned to the device
identified by
.Ar selector .
An exit status of zero indicates that the device has a driver;
non-zero indicates that it does not.
.Pp
The
.Fl r
option reads a configuration space register at byte offset
.Ar reg
of device
.Ar selector
and prints out its value in hexadecimal.
The
.Fl w
option writes the
.Ar value
into a configuration space register at byte offset
.Ar reg
of device
.Ar selector .
For both operations, the flags
.Fl b
and
.Fl h
select the width of the operation;
.Fl b
indicates a byte operation, and
.Fl h
indicates a halfword (two-byte) operation. The default is to read or
write a longword (four bytes).
.Sh SEE ALSO
.Xr ioctl 2 ,
.\" .Xr pci 4 ,
.Xr modload 8
.Sh HISTORY
The
.Nm
command appeared first in
.Fx 2.2 .
The
.Fl a
option was added for
.Tn PCI
LKM support in
.Fx 3.0 .
.Sh AUTHORS
The
.Nm
facility was written by
.An Stefan Esser
and
.An Garrett Wollman .
.Sh BUGS
The
.Fl b
and
.Fl h
options are implemented in
.Nm pciconf ,
but not in the underlying
.Fn ioctl .
.Pp
It might be useful to give non-root users access to the
.Fl a
and
.Fl r
options. But only root will be able to execute a
.Nm modload
to provide the device with a driver LKM, and reading of configuration space
registers may cause a failure in badly designed
.Tn PCI
chips.