freebsd-skq/sys/dev/pci/pci_pci.c

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/*-
* Copyright (c) 1994,1995 Stefan Esser, Wolfgang StanglMeier
* Copyright (c) 2000 Michael Smith <msmith@freebsd.org>
* Copyright (c) 2000 BSDi
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
* derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
/*
* PCI:PCI bridge support.
*/
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
#include "opt_pci.h"
#include <sys/param.h>
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#include <sys/bus.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/module.h>
#include <sys/rman.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#include <sys/systm.h>
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
#include <sys/taskqueue.h>
#include <dev/pci/pcivar.h>
#include <dev/pci/pcireg.h>
#include <dev/pci/pci_private.h>
#include <dev/pci/pcib_private.h>
#include "pcib_if.h"
static int pcib_probe(device_t dev);
static int pcib_suspend(device_t dev);
static int pcib_resume(device_t dev);
static int pcib_power_for_sleep(device_t pcib, device_t dev,
int *pstate);
static int pcib_ari_get_id(device_t pcib, device_t dev,
enum pci_id_type type, uintptr_t *id);
static uint32_t pcib_read_config(device_t dev, u_int b, u_int s,
u_int f, u_int reg, int width);
static void pcib_write_config(device_t dev, u_int b, u_int s,
u_int f, u_int reg, uint32_t val, int width);
static int pcib_ari_maxslots(device_t dev);
static int pcib_ari_maxfuncs(device_t dev);
static int pcib_try_enable_ari(device_t pcib, device_t dev);
static int pcib_ari_enabled(device_t pcib);
static void pcib_ari_decode_rid(device_t pcib, uint16_t rid,
int *bus, int *slot, int *func);
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
#ifdef PCI_HP
static void pcib_pcie_ab_timeout(void *arg);
static void pcib_pcie_cc_timeout(void *arg);
static void pcib_pcie_dll_timeout(void *arg);
#endif
static device_method_t pcib_methods[] = {
/* Device interface */
DEVMETHOD(device_probe, pcib_probe),
DEVMETHOD(device_attach, pcib_attach),
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
DEVMETHOD(device_detach, pcib_detach),
DEVMETHOD(device_shutdown, bus_generic_shutdown),
DEVMETHOD(device_suspend, pcib_suspend),
DEVMETHOD(device_resume, pcib_resume),
/* Bus interface */
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
DEVMETHOD(bus_child_present, pcib_child_present),
DEVMETHOD(bus_read_ivar, pcib_read_ivar),
DEVMETHOD(bus_write_ivar, pcib_write_ivar),
DEVMETHOD(bus_alloc_resource, pcib_alloc_resource),
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#ifdef NEW_PCIB
DEVMETHOD(bus_adjust_resource, pcib_adjust_resource),
DEVMETHOD(bus_release_resource, pcib_release_resource),
#else
DEVMETHOD(bus_adjust_resource, bus_generic_adjust_resource),
DEVMETHOD(bus_release_resource, bus_generic_release_resource),
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#endif
DEVMETHOD(bus_activate_resource, bus_generic_activate_resource),
DEVMETHOD(bus_deactivate_resource, bus_generic_deactivate_resource),
DEVMETHOD(bus_setup_intr, bus_generic_setup_intr),
DEVMETHOD(bus_teardown_intr, bus_generic_teardown_intr),
/* pcib interface */
DEVMETHOD(pcib_maxslots, pcib_ari_maxslots),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_maxfuncs, pcib_ari_maxfuncs),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_read_config, pcib_read_config),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_write_config, pcib_write_config),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_route_interrupt, pcib_route_interrupt),
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
DEVMETHOD(pcib_alloc_msi, pcib_alloc_msi),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_release_msi, pcib_release_msi),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_alloc_msix, pcib_alloc_msix),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_release_msix, pcib_release_msix),
Revamp the MSI/MSI-X code a bit to achieve two main goals: - Simplify the amount of work that has be done for each architecture by pushing more of the truly MI code down into the PCI bus driver. - Don't bind MSI-X indicies to IRQs so that we can allow a driver to map multiple MSI-X messages into a single IRQ when handling a message shortage. The changes include: - Add a new pcib_if method: PCIB_MAP_MSI() which is called by the PCI bus to calculate the address and data values for a given MSI/MSI-X IRQ. The x86 nexus drivers map this into a call to a new 'msi_map()' function in msi.c that does the mapping. - Retire the pcib_if method PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() and remove the 'index' parameter from PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX(). MD code no longer has any knowledge of the MSI-X index for a given MSI-X IRQ. - The PCI bus driver now stores more MSI-X state in a child's ivars. Specifically, it now stores an array of IRQs (called "message vectors" in the code) that have associated address and data values, and a small virtual version of the MSI-X table that specifies the message vector that a given MSI-X table entry uses. Sparse mappings are permitted in the virtual table. - The PCI bus driver now configures the MSI and MSI-X address/data registers directly via custom bus_setup_intr() and bus_teardown_intr() methods. pci_setup_intr() invokes PCIB_MAP_MSI() to determine the address and data values for a given message as needed. The MD code no longer has to call back down into the PCI bus code to set these values from the nexus' bus_setup_intr() handler. - The PCI bus code provides a callout (pci_remap_msi_irq()) that the MD code can call to force the PCI bus to re-invoke PCIB_MAP_MSI() to get new values of the address and data fields for a given IRQ. The x86 MSI code uses this when an MSI IRQ is moved to a different CPU, requiring a new value of the 'address' field. - The x86 MSI psuedo-driver loses a lot of code, and in fact the separate MSI/MSI-X pseudo-PICs are collapsed down into a single MSI PIC driver since the only remaining diff between the two is a substring in a bootverbose printf. - The PCI bus driver will now restore MSI-X state (including programming entries in the MSI-X table) on device resume. - The interface for pci_remap_msix() has changed. Instead of accepting indices for the allocated vectors, it accepts a mini-virtual table (with a new length parameter). This table is an array of u_ints, where each value specifies which allocated message vector to use for the corresponding MSI-X message. A vector of 0 forces a message to not have an associated IRQ. The device may choose to only use some of the IRQs assigned, in which case the unused IRQs must be at the "end" and will be released back to the system. This allows a driver to use the same remap table for different shortage values. For example, if a driver wants 4 messages, it can use the same remap table (which only uses the first two messages) for the cases when it only gets 2 or 3 messages and in the latter case the PCI bus will release the 3rd IRQ back to the system. MFC after: 1 month
2007-05-02 17:50:36 +00:00
DEVMETHOD(pcib_map_msi, pcib_map_msi),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_power_for_sleep, pcib_power_for_sleep),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_get_id, pcib_ari_get_id),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_try_enable_ari, pcib_try_enable_ari),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_ari_enabled, pcib_ari_enabled),
DEVMETHOD(pcib_decode_rid, pcib_ari_decode_rid),
DEVMETHOD_END
};
static devclass_t pcib_devclass;
DEFINE_CLASS_0(pcib, pcib_driver, pcib_methods, sizeof(struct pcib_softc));
DRIVER_MODULE(pcib, pci, pcib_driver, pcib_devclass, NULL, NULL);
#if defined(NEW_PCIB) || defined(PCI_HP)
SYSCTL_DECL(_hw_pci);
#endif
#ifdef NEW_PCIB
static int pci_clear_pcib;
SYSCTL_INT(_hw_pci, OID_AUTO, clear_pcib, CTLFLAG_RDTUN, &pci_clear_pcib, 0,
"Clear firmware-assigned resources for PCI-PCI bridge I/O windows.");
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
/*
* Is a resource from a child device sub-allocated from one of our
* resource managers?
*/
static int
pcib_is_resource_managed(struct pcib_softc *sc, int type, struct resource *r)
{
switch (type) {
#ifdef PCI_RES_BUS
case PCI_RES_BUS:
return (rman_is_region_manager(r, &sc->bus.rman));
#endif
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
case SYS_RES_IOPORT:
return (rman_is_region_manager(r, &sc->io.rman));
case SYS_RES_MEMORY:
/* Prefetchable resources may live in either memory rman. */
if (rman_get_flags(r) & RF_PREFETCHABLE &&
rman_is_region_manager(r, &sc->pmem.rman))
return (1);
return (rman_is_region_manager(r, &sc->mem.rman));
}
return (0);
}
static int
pcib_is_window_open(struct pcib_window *pw)
{
return (pw->valid && pw->base < pw->limit);
}
/*
* XXX: If RF_ACTIVE did not also imply allocating a bus space tag and
* handle for the resource, we could pass RF_ACTIVE up to the PCI bus
* when allocating the resource windows and rely on the PCI bus driver
* to do this for us.
*/
static void
pcib_activate_window(struct pcib_softc *sc, int type)
{
PCI_ENABLE_IO(device_get_parent(sc->dev), sc->dev, type);
}
static void
pcib_write_windows(struct pcib_softc *sc, int mask)
{
device_t dev;
uint32_t val;
dev = sc->dev;
if (sc->io.valid && mask & WIN_IO) {
val = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEL_1, 1);
if ((val & PCIM_BRIO_MASK) == PCIM_BRIO_32) {
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEH_1,
sc->io.base >> 16, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOLIMITH_1,
sc->io.limit >> 16, 2);
}
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEL_1, sc->io.base >> 8, 1);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOLIMITL_1, sc->io.limit >> 8, 1);
}
if (mask & WIN_MEM) {
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_MEMBASE_1, sc->mem.base >> 16, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_MEMLIMIT_1, sc->mem.limit >> 16, 2);
}
if (sc->pmem.valid && mask & WIN_PMEM) {
val = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEL_1, 2);
if ((val & PCIM_BRPM_MASK) == PCIM_BRPM_64) {
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEH_1,
sc->pmem.base >> 32, 4);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMLIMITH_1,
sc->pmem.limit >> 32, 4);
}
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEL_1, sc->pmem.base >> 16, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMLIMITL_1, sc->pmem.limit >> 16, 2);
}
}
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
/*
* This is used to reject I/O port allocations that conflict with an
* ISA alias range.
*/
static int
pcib_is_isa_range(struct pcib_softc *sc, rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end,
rman_res_t count)
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
{
rman_res_t next_alias;
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
if (!(sc->bridgectl & PCIB_BCR_ISA_ENABLE))
return (0);
/* Only check fixed ranges for overlap. */
if (start + count - 1 != end)
return (0);
/* ISA aliases are only in the lower 64KB of I/O space. */
if (start >= 65536)
return (0);
/* Check for overlap with 0x000 - 0x0ff as a special case. */
if (start < 0x100)
goto alias;
/*
* If the start address is an alias, the range is an alias.
* Otherwise, compute the start of the next alias range and
* check if it is before the end of the candidate range.
*/
if ((start & 0x300) != 0)
goto alias;
next_alias = (start & ~0x3fful) | 0x100;
if (next_alias <= end)
goto alias;
return (0);
alias:
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(sc->dev,
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
"I/O range %#jx-%#jx overlaps with an ISA alias\n", start,
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
end);
return (1);
}
static void
pcib_add_window_resources(struct pcib_window *w, struct resource **res,
int count)
{
struct resource **newarray;
int error, i;
newarray = malloc(sizeof(struct resource *) * (w->count + count),
M_DEVBUF, M_WAITOK);
if (w->res != NULL)
bcopy(w->res, newarray, sizeof(struct resource *) * w->count);
bcopy(res, newarray + w->count, sizeof(struct resource *) * count);
free(w->res, M_DEVBUF);
w->res = newarray;
w->count += count;
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
for (i = 0; i < count; i++) {
error = rman_manage_region(&w->rman, rman_get_start(res[i]),
rman_get_end(res[i]));
if (error)
panic("Failed to add resource to rman");
}
}
typedef void (nonisa_callback)(rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end, void *arg);
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
static void
pcib_walk_nonisa_ranges(rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end, nonisa_callback *cb,
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
void *arg)
{
rman_res_t next_end;
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
/*
* If start is within an ISA alias range, move up to the start
* of the next non-alias range. As a special case, addresses
* in the range 0x000 - 0x0ff should also be skipped since
* those are used for various system I/O devices in ISA
* systems.
*/
if (start <= 65535) {
if (start < 0x100 || (start & 0x300) != 0) {
start &= ~0x3ff;
start += 0x400;
}
}
/* ISA aliases are only in the lower 64KB of I/O space. */
while (start <= MIN(end, 65535)) {
next_end = MIN(start | 0xff, end);
cb(start, next_end, arg);
start += 0x400;
}
if (start <= end)
cb(start, end, arg);
}
static void
count_ranges(rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end, void *arg)
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
{
int *countp;
countp = arg;
(*countp)++;
}
struct alloc_state {
struct resource **res;
struct pcib_softc *sc;
int count, error;
};
static void
alloc_ranges(rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end, void *arg)
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
{
struct alloc_state *as;
struct pcib_window *w;
int rid;
as = arg;
if (as->error != 0)
return;
w = &as->sc->io;
rid = w->reg;
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(as->sc->dev,
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
"allocating non-ISA range %#jx-%#jx\n", start, end);
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
as->res[as->count] = bus_alloc_resource(as->sc->dev, SYS_RES_IOPORT,
&rid, start, end, end - start + 1, 0);
if (as->res[as->count] == NULL)
as->error = ENXIO;
else
as->count++;
}
static int
pcib_alloc_nonisa_ranges(struct pcib_softc *sc, rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end)
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
{
struct alloc_state as;
int i, new_count;
/* First, see how many ranges we need. */
new_count = 0;
pcib_walk_nonisa_ranges(start, end, count_ranges, &new_count);
/* Second, allocate the ranges. */
as.res = malloc(sizeof(struct resource *) * new_count, M_DEVBUF,
M_WAITOK);
as.sc = sc;
as.count = 0;
as.error = 0;
pcib_walk_nonisa_ranges(start, end, alloc_ranges, &as);
if (as.error != 0) {
for (i = 0; i < as.count; i++)
bus_release_resource(sc->dev, SYS_RES_IOPORT,
sc->io.reg, as.res[i]);
free(as.res, M_DEVBUF);
return (as.error);
}
KASSERT(as.count == new_count, ("%s: count mismatch", __func__));
/* Third, add the ranges to the window. */
pcib_add_window_resources(&sc->io, as.res, as.count);
free(as.res, M_DEVBUF);
return (0);
}
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
static void
pcib_alloc_window(struct pcib_softc *sc, struct pcib_window *w, int type,
int flags, pci_addr_t max_address)
{
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
struct resource *res;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
char buf[64];
int error, rid;
2016-02-16 17:55:10 +00:00
if (max_address != (rman_res_t)max_address)
max_address = ~0;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
w->rman.rm_start = 0;
w->rman.rm_end = max_address;
w->rman.rm_type = RMAN_ARRAY;
snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "%s %s window",
device_get_nameunit(sc->dev), w->name);
w->rman.rm_descr = strdup(buf, M_DEVBUF);
error = rman_init(&w->rman);
if (error)
panic("Failed to initialize %s %s rman",
device_get_nameunit(sc->dev), w->name);
if (!pcib_is_window_open(w))
return;
if (w->base > max_address || w->limit > max_address) {
device_printf(sc->dev,
"initial %s window has too many bits, ignoring\n", w->name);
return;
}
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
if (type == SYS_RES_IOPORT && sc->bridgectl & PCIB_BCR_ISA_ENABLE)
(void)pcib_alloc_nonisa_ranges(sc, w->base, w->limit);
else {
rid = w->reg;
res = bus_alloc_resource(sc->dev, type, &rid, w->base, w->limit,
w->limit - w->base + 1, flags);
if (res != NULL)
pcib_add_window_resources(w, &res, 1);
}
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
if (w->res == NULL) {
device_printf(sc->dev,
"failed to allocate initial %s window: %#jx-%#jx\n",
w->name, (uintmax_t)w->base, (uintmax_t)w->limit);
w->base = max_address;
w->limit = 0;
pcib_write_windows(sc, w->mask);
return;
}
pcib_activate_window(sc, type);
}
/*
* Initialize I/O windows.
*/
static void
pcib_probe_windows(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
pci_addr_t max;
device_t dev;
uint32_t val;
dev = sc->dev;
if (pci_clear_pcib) {
pcib_bridge_init(dev);
}
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
/* Determine if the I/O port window is implemented. */
val = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEL_1, 1);
if (val == 0) {
/*
* If 'val' is zero, then only 16-bits of I/O space
* are supported.
*/
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEL_1, 0xff, 1);
if (pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEL_1, 1) != 0) {
sc->io.valid = 1;
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEL_1, 0, 1);
}
} else
sc->io.valid = 1;
/* Read the existing I/O port window. */
if (sc->io.valid) {
sc->io.reg = PCIR_IOBASEL_1;
sc->io.step = 12;
sc->io.mask = WIN_IO;
sc->io.name = "I/O port";
if ((val & PCIM_BRIO_MASK) == PCIM_BRIO_32) {
sc->io.base = PCI_PPBIOBASE(
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEH_1, 2), val);
sc->io.limit = PCI_PPBIOLIMIT(
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_IOLIMITH_1, 2),
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_IOLIMITL_1, 1));
max = 0xffffffff;
} else {
sc->io.base = PCI_PPBIOBASE(0, val);
sc->io.limit = PCI_PPBIOLIMIT(0,
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_IOLIMITL_1, 1));
max = 0xffff;
}
pcib_alloc_window(sc, &sc->io, SYS_RES_IOPORT, 0, max);
}
/* Read the existing memory window. */
sc->mem.valid = 1;
sc->mem.reg = PCIR_MEMBASE_1;
sc->mem.step = 20;
sc->mem.mask = WIN_MEM;
sc->mem.name = "memory";
sc->mem.base = PCI_PPBMEMBASE(0,
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_MEMBASE_1, 2));
sc->mem.limit = PCI_PPBMEMLIMIT(0,
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_MEMLIMIT_1, 2));
pcib_alloc_window(sc, &sc->mem, SYS_RES_MEMORY, 0, 0xffffffff);
/* Determine if the prefetchable memory window is implemented. */
val = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEL_1, 2);
if (val == 0) {
/*
* If 'val' is zero, then only 32-bits of memory space
* are supported.
*/
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEL_1, 0xffff, 2);
if (pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEL_1, 2) != 0) {
sc->pmem.valid = 1;
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEL_1, 0, 2);
}
} else
sc->pmem.valid = 1;
/* Read the existing prefetchable memory window. */
if (sc->pmem.valid) {
sc->pmem.reg = PCIR_PMBASEL_1;
sc->pmem.step = 20;
sc->pmem.mask = WIN_PMEM;
sc->pmem.name = "prefetch";
if ((val & PCIM_BRPM_MASK) == PCIM_BRPM_64) {
sc->pmem.base = PCI_PPBMEMBASE(
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEH_1, 4), val);
sc->pmem.limit = PCI_PPBMEMLIMIT(
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PMLIMITH_1, 4),
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PMLIMITL_1, 2));
max = 0xffffffffffffffff;
} else {
sc->pmem.base = PCI_PPBMEMBASE(0, val);
sc->pmem.limit = PCI_PPBMEMLIMIT(0,
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PMLIMITL_1, 2));
max = 0xffffffff;
}
pcib_alloc_window(sc, &sc->pmem, SYS_RES_MEMORY,
RF_PREFETCHABLE, max);
}
}
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
static void
pcib_release_window(struct pcib_softc *sc, struct pcib_window *w, int type)
{
device_t dev;
int error, i;
if (!w->valid)
return;
dev = sc->dev;
error = rman_fini(&w->rman);
if (error) {
device_printf(dev, "failed to release %s rman\n", w->name);
return;
}
free(__DECONST(char *, w->rman.rm_descr), M_DEVBUF);
for (i = 0; i < w->count; i++) {
error = bus_free_resource(dev, type, w->res[i]);
if (error)
device_printf(dev,
"failed to release %s resource: %d\n", w->name,
error);
}
free(w->res, M_DEVBUF);
}
static void
pcib_free_windows(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
pcib_release_window(sc, &sc->pmem, SYS_RES_MEMORY);
pcib_release_window(sc, &sc->mem, SYS_RES_MEMORY);
pcib_release_window(sc, &sc->io, SYS_RES_IOPORT);
}
#ifdef PCI_RES_BUS
/*
* Allocate a suitable secondary bus for this bridge if needed and
* initialize the resource manager for the secondary bus range. Note
* that the minimum count is a desired value and this may allocate a
* smaller range.
*/
void
pcib_setup_secbus(device_t dev, struct pcib_secbus *bus, int min_count)
{
char buf[64];
int error, rid, sec_reg;
switch (pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_HDRTYPE, 1) & PCIM_HDRTYPE) {
case PCIM_HDRTYPE_BRIDGE:
sec_reg = PCIR_SECBUS_1;
bus->sub_reg = PCIR_SUBBUS_1;
break;
case PCIM_HDRTYPE_CARDBUS:
sec_reg = PCIR_SECBUS_2;
bus->sub_reg = PCIR_SUBBUS_2;
break;
default:
panic("not a PCI bridge");
}
bus->sec = pci_read_config(dev, sec_reg, 1);
bus->sub = pci_read_config(dev, bus->sub_reg, 1);
bus->dev = dev;
bus->rman.rm_start = 0;
bus->rman.rm_end = PCI_BUSMAX;
bus->rman.rm_type = RMAN_ARRAY;
snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "%s bus numbers", device_get_nameunit(dev));
bus->rman.rm_descr = strdup(buf, M_DEVBUF);
error = rman_init(&bus->rman);
if (error)
panic("Failed to initialize %s bus number rman",
device_get_nameunit(dev));
/*
* Allocate a bus range. This will return an existing bus range
* if one exists, or a new bus range if one does not.
*/
rid = 0;
bus->res = bus_alloc_resource_anywhere(dev, PCI_RES_BUS, &rid,
min_count, 0);
if (bus->res == NULL) {
/*
* Fall back to just allocating a range of a single bus
* number.
*/
bus->res = bus_alloc_resource_anywhere(dev, PCI_RES_BUS, &rid,
1, 0);
} else if (rman_get_size(bus->res) < min_count)
/*
* Attempt to grow the existing range to satisfy the
* minimum desired count.
*/
(void)bus_adjust_resource(dev, PCI_RES_BUS, bus->res,
rman_get_start(bus->res), rman_get_start(bus->res) +
min_count - 1);
/*
* Add the initial resource to the rman.
*/
if (bus->res != NULL) {
error = rman_manage_region(&bus->rman, rman_get_start(bus->res),
rman_get_end(bus->res));
if (error)
panic("Failed to add resource to rman");
bus->sec = rman_get_start(bus->res);
bus->sub = rman_get_end(bus->res);
}
}
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
void
pcib_free_secbus(device_t dev, struct pcib_secbus *bus)
{
int error;
error = rman_fini(&bus->rman);
if (error) {
device_printf(dev, "failed to release bus number rman\n");
return;
}
free(__DECONST(char *, bus->rman.rm_descr), M_DEVBUF);
error = bus_free_resource(dev, PCI_RES_BUS, bus->res);
if (error)
device_printf(dev,
"failed to release bus numbers resource: %d\n", error);
}
static struct resource *
pcib_suballoc_bus(struct pcib_secbus *bus, device_t child, int *rid,
rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end, rman_res_t count, u_int flags)
{
struct resource *res;
res = rman_reserve_resource(&bus->rman, start, end, count, flags,
child);
if (res == NULL)
return (NULL);
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(bus->dev,
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
"allocated bus range (%ju-%ju) for rid %d of %s\n",
rman_get_start(res), rman_get_end(res), *rid,
pcib_child_name(child));
rman_set_rid(res, *rid);
return (res);
}
/*
* Attempt to grow the secondary bus range. This is much simpler than
* for I/O windows as the range can only be grown by increasing
* subbus.
*/
static int
pcib_grow_subbus(struct pcib_secbus *bus, rman_res_t new_end)
{
rman_res_t old_end;
int error;
old_end = rman_get_end(bus->res);
KASSERT(new_end > old_end, ("attempt to shrink subbus"));
error = bus_adjust_resource(bus->dev, PCI_RES_BUS, bus->res,
rman_get_start(bus->res), new_end);
if (error)
return (error);
if (bootverbose)
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
device_printf(bus->dev, "grew bus range to %ju-%ju\n",
rman_get_start(bus->res), rman_get_end(bus->res));
error = rman_manage_region(&bus->rman, old_end + 1,
rman_get_end(bus->res));
if (error)
panic("Failed to add resource to rman");
bus->sub = rman_get_end(bus->res);
pci_write_config(bus->dev, bus->sub_reg, bus->sub, 1);
return (0);
}
struct resource *
pcib_alloc_subbus(struct pcib_secbus *bus, device_t child, int *rid,
rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end, rman_res_t count, u_int flags)
{
struct resource *res;
rman_res_t start_free, end_free, new_end;
/*
* First, see if the request can be satisified by the existing
* bus range.
*/
res = pcib_suballoc_bus(bus, child, rid, start, end, count, flags);
if (res != NULL)
return (res);
/*
* Figure out a range to grow the bus range. First, find the
* first bus number after the last allocated bus in the rman and
* enforce that as a minimum starting point for the range.
*/
if (rman_last_free_region(&bus->rman, &start_free, &end_free) != 0 ||
end_free != bus->sub)
start_free = bus->sub + 1;
if (start_free < start)
start_free = start;
new_end = start_free + count - 1;
/*
* See if this new range would satisfy the request if it
* succeeds.
*/
if (new_end > end)
return (NULL);
/* Finally, attempt to grow the existing resource. */
if (bootverbose) {
device_printf(bus->dev,
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
"attempting to grow bus range for %ju buses\n", count);
printf("\tback candidate range: %ju-%ju\n", start_free,
new_end);
}
if (pcib_grow_subbus(bus, new_end) == 0)
return (pcib_suballoc_bus(bus, child, rid, start, end, count,
flags));
return (NULL);
}
#endif
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#else
/*
* Is the prefetch window open (eg, can we allocate memory in it?)
*/
static int
pcib_is_prefetch_open(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
return (sc->pmembase > 0 && sc->pmembase < sc->pmemlimit);
}
/*
* Is the nonprefetch window open (eg, can we allocate memory in it?)
*/
static int
pcib_is_nonprefetch_open(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
return (sc->membase > 0 && sc->membase < sc->memlimit);
}
/*
* Is the io window open (eg, can we allocate ports in it?)
*/
static int
pcib_is_io_open(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
return (sc->iobase > 0 && sc->iobase < sc->iolimit);
}
/*
* Get current I/O decode.
*/
static void
pcib_get_io_decode(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
device_t dev;
uint32_t iolow;
dev = sc->dev;
iolow = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEL_1, 1);
if ((iolow & PCIM_BRIO_MASK) == PCIM_BRIO_32)
sc->iobase = PCI_PPBIOBASE(
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEH_1, 2), iolow);
else
sc->iobase = PCI_PPBIOBASE(0, iolow);
iolow = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_IOLIMITL_1, 1);
if ((iolow & PCIM_BRIO_MASK) == PCIM_BRIO_32)
sc->iolimit = PCI_PPBIOLIMIT(
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_IOLIMITH_1, 2), iolow);
else
sc->iolimit = PCI_PPBIOLIMIT(0, iolow);
}
/*
* Get current memory decode.
*/
static void
pcib_get_mem_decode(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
device_t dev;
pci_addr_t pmemlow;
dev = sc->dev;
sc->membase = PCI_PPBMEMBASE(0,
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_MEMBASE_1, 2));
sc->memlimit = PCI_PPBMEMLIMIT(0,
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_MEMLIMIT_1, 2));
pmemlow = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEL_1, 2);
if ((pmemlow & PCIM_BRPM_MASK) == PCIM_BRPM_64)
sc->pmembase = PCI_PPBMEMBASE(
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEH_1, 4), pmemlow);
else
sc->pmembase = PCI_PPBMEMBASE(0, pmemlow);
pmemlow = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PMLIMITL_1, 2);
if ((pmemlow & PCIM_BRPM_MASK) == PCIM_BRPM_64)
sc->pmemlimit = PCI_PPBMEMLIMIT(
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PMLIMITH_1, 4), pmemlow);
else
sc->pmemlimit = PCI_PPBMEMLIMIT(0, pmemlow);
}
/*
* Restore previous I/O decode.
*/
static void
pcib_set_io_decode(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
device_t dev;
uint32_t iohi;
dev = sc->dev;
iohi = sc->iobase >> 16;
if (iohi > 0)
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEH_1, iohi, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEL_1, sc->iobase >> 8, 1);
iohi = sc->iolimit >> 16;
if (iohi > 0)
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOLIMITH_1, iohi, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOLIMITL_1, sc->iolimit >> 8, 1);
}
/*
* Restore previous memory decode.
*/
static void
pcib_set_mem_decode(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
device_t dev;
pci_addr_t pmemhi;
dev = sc->dev;
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_MEMBASE_1, sc->membase >> 16, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_MEMLIMIT_1, sc->memlimit >> 16, 2);
pmemhi = sc->pmembase >> 32;
if (pmemhi > 0)
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEH_1, pmemhi, 4);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEL_1, sc->pmembase >> 16, 2);
pmemhi = sc->pmemlimit >> 32;
if (pmemhi > 0)
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMLIMITH_1, pmemhi, 4);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMLIMITL_1, sc->pmemlimit >> 16, 2);
}
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#endif
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
#ifdef PCI_HP
/*
* PCI-express HotPlug support.
*/
static int pci_enable_pcie_hp = 1;
SYSCTL_INT(_hw_pci, OID_AUTO, enable_pcie_hp, CTLFLAG_RDTUN,
&pci_enable_pcie_hp, 0,
"Enable support for native PCI-express HotPlug.");
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
static void
pcib_probe_hotplug(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
device_t dev;
uint16_t link_sta, slot_sta;
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
if (!pci_enable_pcie_hp)
return;
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
dev = sc->dev;
if (pci_find_cap(dev, PCIY_EXPRESS, NULL) != 0)
return;
if (!(pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_FLAGS, 2) & PCIEM_FLAGS_SLOT))
return;
sc->pcie_link_cap = pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_LINK_CAP, 4);
sc->pcie_slot_cap = pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_SLOT_CAP, 4);
if ((sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_HPC) == 0)
return;
/*
* Some devices report that they have an MRL when they actually
* do not. Since they always report that the MRL is open, child
* devices would be ignored. Try to detect these devices and
* ignore their claim of HotPlug support.
*
* If there is an open MRL but the Data Link Layer is active,
* the MRL is not real.
*/
if ((sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_MRLSP) != 0 &&
(sc->pcie_link_cap & PCIEM_LINK_CAP_DL_ACTIVE) != 0) {
link_sta = pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_LINK_STA, 2);
slot_sta = pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_SLOT_STA, 2);
if ((slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_MRLSS) != 0 &&
(link_sta & PCIEM_LINK_STA_DL_ACTIVE) != 0) {
return;
}
}
sc->flags |= PCIB_HOTPLUG;
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
}
/*
* Send a HotPlug command to the slot control register. If this slot
* uses command completion interrupts and a previous command is still
* in progress, then the command is dropped. Once the previous
* command completes or times out, pcib_pcie_hotplug_update() will be
* invoked to post a new command based on the slot's state at that
* time.
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
*/
static void
pcib_pcie_hotplug_command(struct pcib_softc *sc, uint16_t val, uint16_t mask)
{
device_t dev;
uint16_t ctl, new;
dev = sc->dev;
if (sc->flags & PCIB_HOTPLUG_CMD_PENDING)
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
return;
ctl = pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_SLOT_CTL, 2);
new = (ctl & ~mask) | val;
if (new == ctl)
return;
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(dev, "HotPlug command: %04x -> %04x\n", ctl, new);
pcie_write_config(dev, PCIER_SLOT_CTL, new, 2);
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
if (!(sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_NCCS) &&
(ctl & new) & PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_CCIE) {
sc->flags |= PCIB_HOTPLUG_CMD_PENDING;
if (!cold)
callout_reset(&sc->pcie_cc_timer, hz,
pcib_pcie_cc_timeout, sc);
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
}
}
static void
pcib_pcie_hotplug_command_completed(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
device_t dev;
dev = sc->dev;
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(dev, "Command Completed\n");
if (!(sc->flags & PCIB_HOTPLUG_CMD_PENDING))
return;
callout_stop(&sc->pcie_cc_timer);
sc->flags &= ~PCIB_HOTPLUG_CMD_PENDING;
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
wakeup(sc);
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
}
/*
* Returns true if a card is fully inserted from the user's
* perspective. It may not yet be ready for access, but the driver
* can now start enabling access if necessary.
*/
static bool
pcib_hotplug_inserted(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
/* Pretend the card isn't present if a detach is forced. */
if (sc->flags & PCIB_DETACHING)
return (false);
/* Card must be present in the slot. */
if ((sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_PDS) == 0)
return (false);
/* A power fault implicitly turns off power to the slot. */
if (sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_PFD)
return (false);
/* If the MRL is disengaged, the slot is powered off. */
if (sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_MRLSP &&
(sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_MRLSS) != 0)
return (false);
return (true);
}
/*
* Returns -1 if the card is fully inserted, powered, and ready for
* access. Otherwise, returns 0.
*/
static int
pcib_hotplug_present(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
/* Card must be inserted. */
if (!pcib_hotplug_inserted(sc))
return (0);
/*
* Require the Electromechanical Interlock to be engaged if
* present.
*/
if (sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_EIP &&
(sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_EIS) == 0)
return (0);
/* Require the Data Link Layer to be active. */
if (sc->pcie_link_cap & PCIEM_LINK_CAP_DL_ACTIVE) {
if (!(sc->pcie_link_sta & PCIEM_LINK_STA_DL_ACTIVE))
return (0);
}
return (-1);
}
static void
pcib_pcie_hotplug_update(struct pcib_softc *sc, uint16_t val, uint16_t mask,
bool schedule_task)
{
bool card_inserted, ei_engaged;
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
/* Clear DETACHING if Presence Detect has cleared. */
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
if ((sc->pcie_slot_sta & (PCIEM_SLOT_STA_PDC | PCIEM_SLOT_STA_PDS)) ==
PCIEM_SLOT_STA_PDC)
sc->flags &= ~PCIB_DETACHING;
card_inserted = pcib_hotplug_inserted(sc);
/* Turn the power indicator on if a card is inserted. */
if (sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_PIP) {
mask |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PIC;
if (card_inserted)
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PI_ON;
else if (sc->flags & PCIB_DETACH_PENDING)
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PI_BLINK;
else
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PI_OFF;
}
/* Turn the power on via the Power Controller if a card is inserted. */
if (sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_PCP) {
mask |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PCC;
if (card_inserted)
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PC_ON;
else
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PC_OFF;
}
/*
* If a card is inserted, enable the Electromechanical
* Interlock. If a card is not inserted (or we are in the
* process of detaching), disable the Electromechanical
* Interlock.
*/
if (sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_EIP) {
mask |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_EIC;
ei_engaged = (sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_EIS) != 0;
if (card_inserted != ei_engaged)
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_EIC;
}
/*
* Start a timer to see if the Data Link Layer times out.
* Note that we only start the timer if Presence Detect or MRL Sensor
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
* changed on this interrupt. Stop any scheduled timer if
* the Data Link Layer is active.
*/
if (sc->pcie_link_cap & PCIEM_LINK_CAP_DL_ACTIVE) {
if (card_inserted &&
!(sc->pcie_link_sta & PCIEM_LINK_STA_DL_ACTIVE) &&
sc->pcie_slot_sta &
(PCIEM_SLOT_STA_MRLSC | PCIEM_SLOT_STA_PDC)) {
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
if (cold)
device_printf(sc->dev,
"Data Link Layer inactive\n");
else
callout_reset(&sc->pcie_dll_timer, hz,
pcib_pcie_dll_timeout, sc);
} else if (sc->pcie_link_sta & PCIEM_LINK_STA_DL_ACTIVE)
callout_stop(&sc->pcie_dll_timer);
}
pcib_pcie_hotplug_command(sc, val, mask);
/*
* During attach the child "pci" device is added synchronously;
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
* otherwise, the task is scheduled to manage the child
* device.
*/
if (schedule_task &&
(pcib_hotplug_present(sc) != 0) != (sc->child != NULL))
taskqueue_enqueue(taskqueue_thread, &sc->pcie_hp_task);
}
static void
pcib_pcie_intr(void *arg)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
device_t dev;
sc = arg;
dev = sc->dev;
sc->pcie_slot_sta = pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_SLOT_STA, 2);
/* Clear the events just reported. */
pcie_write_config(dev, PCIER_SLOT_STA, sc->pcie_slot_sta, 2);
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(dev, "HotPlug interrupt: %#x\n",
sc->pcie_slot_sta);
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
if (sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_ABP) {
if (sc->flags & PCIB_DETACH_PENDING) {
device_printf(dev,
"Attention Button Pressed: Detach Cancelled\n");
sc->flags &= ~PCIB_DETACH_PENDING;
callout_stop(&sc->pcie_ab_timer);
} else {
device_printf(dev,
"Attention Button Pressed: Detaching in 5 seconds\n");
sc->flags |= PCIB_DETACH_PENDING;
callout_reset(&sc->pcie_ab_timer, 5 * hz,
pcib_pcie_ab_timeout, sc);
}
}
if (sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_PFD)
device_printf(dev, "Power Fault Detected\n");
if (sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_MRLSC)
device_printf(dev, "MRL Sensor Changed to %s\n",
sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_MRLSS ? "open" :
"closed");
if (bootverbose && sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_PDC)
device_printf(dev, "Presence Detect Changed to %s\n",
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_PDS ? "card present" :
"empty");
if (sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_CC)
pcib_pcie_hotplug_command_completed(sc);
if (sc->pcie_slot_sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_DLLSC) {
sc->pcie_link_sta = pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_LINK_STA, 2);
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(dev,
"Data Link Layer State Changed to %s\n",
sc->pcie_link_sta & PCIEM_LINK_STA_DL_ACTIVE ?
"active" : "inactive");
}
pcib_pcie_hotplug_update(sc, 0, 0, true);
}
static void
pcib_pcie_hotplug_task(void *context, int pending)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
device_t dev;
sc = context;
mtx_lock(&Giant);
dev = sc->dev;
if (pcib_hotplug_present(sc) != 0) {
if (sc->child == NULL) {
sc->child = device_add_child(dev, "pci", -1);
bus_generic_attach(dev);
}
} else {
if (sc->child != NULL) {
if (device_delete_child(dev, sc->child) == 0)
sc->child = NULL;
}
}
mtx_unlock(&Giant);
}
static void
pcib_pcie_ab_timeout(void *arg)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
device_t dev;
sc = arg;
dev = sc->dev;
mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_OWNED);
if (sc->flags & PCIB_DETACH_PENDING) {
sc->flags |= PCIB_DETACHING;
sc->flags &= ~PCIB_DETACH_PENDING;
pcib_pcie_hotplug_update(sc, 0, 0, true);
}
}
static void
pcib_pcie_cc_timeout(void *arg)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
device_t dev;
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
uint16_t sta;
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
sc = arg;
dev = sc->dev;
mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_OWNED);
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
sta = pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_SLOT_STA, 2);
if (!(sta & PCIEM_SLOT_STA_CC)) {
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
device_printf(dev,
"HotPlug Command Timed Out - forcing detach\n");
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
sc->flags &= ~(PCIB_HOTPLUG_CMD_PENDING | PCIB_DETACH_PENDING);
sc->flags |= PCIB_DETACHING;
pcib_pcie_hotplug_update(sc, 0, 0, true);
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
} else {
device_printf(dev,
"Missed HotPlug interrupt waiting for Command Completion\n");
pcib_pcie_intr(sc);
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
}
}
static void
pcib_pcie_dll_timeout(void *arg)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
device_t dev;
uint16_t sta;
sc = arg;
dev = sc->dev;
mtx_assert(&Giant, MA_OWNED);
sta = pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_LINK_STA, 2);
if (!(sta & PCIEM_LINK_STA_DL_ACTIVE)) {
device_printf(dev,
"Timed out waiting for Data Link Layer Active\n");
sc->flags |= PCIB_DETACHING;
pcib_pcie_hotplug_update(sc, 0, 0, true);
} else if (sta != sc->pcie_link_sta) {
device_printf(dev,
"Missed HotPlug interrupt waiting for DLL Active\n");
pcib_pcie_intr(sc);
}
}
static int
pcib_alloc_pcie_irq(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
device_t dev;
int count, error, rid;
rid = -1;
dev = sc->dev;
/*
* For simplicity, only use MSI-X if there is a single message.
* To support a device with multiple messages we would have to
* use remap intr if the MSI number is not 0.
*/
count = pci_msix_count(dev);
if (count == 1) {
error = pci_alloc_msix(dev, &count);
if (error == 0)
rid = 1;
}
if (rid < 0 && pci_msi_count(dev) > 0) {
count = 1;
error = pci_alloc_msi(dev, &count);
if (error == 0)
rid = 1;
}
if (rid < 0)
rid = 0;
sc->pcie_irq = bus_alloc_resource_any(dev, SYS_RES_IRQ, &rid,
RF_ACTIVE);
if (sc->pcie_irq == NULL) {
device_printf(dev,
"Failed to allocate interrupt for PCI-e events\n");
if (rid > 0)
pci_release_msi(dev);
return (ENXIO);
}
error = bus_setup_intr(dev, sc->pcie_irq, INTR_TYPE_MISC,
NULL, pcib_pcie_intr, sc, &sc->pcie_ihand);
if (error) {
device_printf(dev, "Failed to setup PCI-e interrupt handler\n");
bus_release_resource(dev, SYS_RES_IRQ, rid, sc->pcie_irq);
if (rid > 0)
pci_release_msi(dev);
return (error);
}
return (0);
}
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
static int
pcib_release_pcie_irq(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
device_t dev;
int error;
dev = sc->dev;
error = bus_teardown_intr(dev, sc->pcie_irq, sc->pcie_ihand);
if (error)
return (error);
error = bus_free_resource(dev, SYS_RES_IRQ, sc->pcie_irq);
if (error)
return (error);
return (pci_release_msi(dev));
}
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
static void
pcib_setup_hotplug(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
device_t dev;
uint16_t mask, val;
dev = sc->dev;
callout_init(&sc->pcie_ab_timer, 0);
callout_init(&sc->pcie_cc_timer, 0);
callout_init(&sc->pcie_dll_timer, 0);
TASK_INIT(&sc->pcie_hp_task, 0, pcib_pcie_hotplug_task, sc);
/* Allocate IRQ. */
if (pcib_alloc_pcie_irq(sc) != 0)
return;
sc->pcie_link_sta = pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_LINK_STA, 2);
sc->pcie_slot_sta = pcie_read_config(dev, PCIER_SLOT_STA, 2);
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
/* Clear any events previously pending. */
pcie_write_config(dev, PCIER_SLOT_STA, sc->pcie_slot_sta, 2);
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
/* Enable HotPlug events. */
mask = PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_DLLSCE | PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_HPIE |
PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_CCIE | PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PDCE | PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_MRLSCE |
PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PFDE | PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_ABPE;
val = PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PDCE | PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_HPIE;
if (sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_APB)
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_ABPE;
if (sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_PCP)
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PFDE;
if (sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_MRLSP)
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_MRLSCE;
if (!(sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_NCCS))
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_CCIE;
if (sc->pcie_link_cap & PCIEM_LINK_CAP_DL_ACTIVE)
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_DLLSCE;
/* Turn the attention indicator off. */
if (sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_AIP) {
mask |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_AIC;
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_AI_OFF;
}
pcib_pcie_hotplug_update(sc, val, mask, false);
}
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
static int
pcib_detach_hotplug(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
uint16_t mask, val;
int error;
/* Disable the card in the slot and force it to detach. */
if (sc->flags & PCIB_DETACH_PENDING) {
sc->flags &= ~PCIB_DETACH_PENDING;
callout_stop(&sc->pcie_ab_timer);
}
sc->flags |= PCIB_DETACHING;
if (sc->flags & PCIB_HOTPLUG_CMD_PENDING) {
callout_stop(&sc->pcie_cc_timer);
tsleep(sc, 0, "hpcmd", hz);
sc->flags &= ~PCIB_HOTPLUG_CMD_PENDING;
}
/* Disable HotPlug events. */
mask = PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_DLLSCE | PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_HPIE |
PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_CCIE | PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PDCE | PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_MRLSCE |
PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_PFDE | PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_ABPE;
val = 0;
/* Turn the attention indicator off. */
if (sc->pcie_slot_cap & PCIEM_SLOT_CAP_AIP) {
mask |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_AIC;
val |= PCIEM_SLOT_CTL_AI_OFF;
}
pcib_pcie_hotplug_update(sc, val, mask, false);
error = pcib_release_pcie_irq(sc);
if (error)
return (error);
taskqueue_drain(taskqueue_thread, &sc->pcie_hp_task);
callout_drain(&sc->pcie_ab_timer);
callout_drain(&sc->pcie_cc_timer);
callout_drain(&sc->pcie_dll_timer);
return (0);
}
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
#endif
/*
* Get current bridge configuration.
*/
static void
pcib_cfg_save(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
#ifndef NEW_PCIB
device_t dev;
uint16_t command;
dev = sc->dev;
command = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_COMMAND, 2);
if (command & PCIM_CMD_PORTEN)
pcib_get_io_decode(sc);
if (command & PCIM_CMD_MEMEN)
pcib_get_mem_decode(sc);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#endif
}
/*
* Restore previous bridge configuration.
*/
static void
pcib_cfg_restore(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
device_t dev;
#ifndef NEW_PCIB
uint16_t command;
#endif
dev = sc->dev;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#ifdef NEW_PCIB
pcib_write_windows(sc, WIN_IO | WIN_MEM | WIN_PMEM);
#else
command = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_COMMAND, 2);
if (command & PCIM_CMD_PORTEN)
pcib_set_io_decode(sc);
if (command & PCIM_CMD_MEMEN)
pcib_set_mem_decode(sc);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#endif
}
/*
* Generic device interface
*/
static int
pcib_probe(device_t dev)
{
if ((pci_get_class(dev) == PCIC_BRIDGE) &&
(pci_get_subclass(dev) == PCIS_BRIDGE_PCI)) {
device_set_desc(dev, "PCI-PCI bridge");
return(-10000);
}
return(ENXIO);
}
void
pcib_attach_common(device_t dev)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
struct sysctl_ctx_list *sctx;
struct sysctl_oid *soid;
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
int comma;
sc = device_get_softc(dev);
sc->dev = dev;
/*
* Get current bridge configuration.
*/
sc->domain = pci_get_domain(dev);
#if !(defined(NEW_PCIB) && defined(PCI_RES_BUS))
sc->bus.sec = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_SECBUS_1, 1);
sc->bus.sub = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_SUBBUS_1, 1);
#endif
sc->bridgectl = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_BRIDGECTL_1, 2);
pcib_cfg_save(sc);
/*
* The primary bus register should always be the bus of the
* parent.
*/
sc->pribus = pci_get_bus(dev);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PRIBUS_1, sc->pribus, 1);
/*
* Setup sysctl reporting nodes
*/
sctx = device_get_sysctl_ctx(dev);
soid = device_get_sysctl_tree(dev);
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(sctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(soid), OID_AUTO, "domain",
CTLFLAG_RD, &sc->domain, 0, "Domain number");
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(sctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(soid), OID_AUTO, "pribus",
CTLFLAG_RD, &sc->pribus, 0, "Primary bus number");
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(sctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(soid), OID_AUTO, "secbus",
CTLFLAG_RD, &sc->bus.sec, 0, "Secondary bus number");
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(sctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(soid), OID_AUTO, "subbus",
CTLFLAG_RD, &sc->bus.sub, 0, "Subordinate bus number");
/*
* Quirk handling.
*/
switch (pci_get_devid(dev)) {
#if !(defined(NEW_PCIB) && defined(PCI_RES_BUS))
case 0x12258086: /* Intel 82454KX/GX (Orion) */
{
uint8_t supbus;
supbus = pci_read_config(dev, 0x41, 1);
if (supbus != 0xff) {
sc->bus.sec = supbus + 1;
sc->bus.sub = supbus + 1;
}
break;
}
#endif
/*
* The i82380FB mobile docking controller is a PCI-PCI bridge,
* and it is a subtractive bridge. However, the ProgIf is wrong
* so the normal setting of PCIB_SUBTRACTIVE bit doesn't
* happen. There are also Toshiba and Cavium ThunderX bridges
* that behave this way.
*/
case 0xa002177d: /* Cavium ThunderX */
case 0x124b8086: /* Intel 82380FB Mobile */
case 0x060513d7: /* Toshiba ???? */
sc->flags |= PCIB_SUBTRACTIVE;
break;
#if !(defined(NEW_PCIB) && defined(PCI_RES_BUS))
/* Compaq R3000 BIOS sets wrong subordinate bus number. */
case 0x00dd10de:
{
char *cp;
if ((cp = kern_getenv("smbios.planar.maker")) == NULL)
break;
if (strncmp(cp, "Compal", 6) != 0) {
freeenv(cp);
break;
}
freeenv(cp);
if ((cp = kern_getenv("smbios.planar.product")) == NULL)
break;
if (strncmp(cp, "08A0", 4) != 0) {
freeenv(cp);
break;
}
freeenv(cp);
if (sc->bus.sub < 0xa) {
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_SUBBUS_1, 0xa, 1);
sc->bus.sub = pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_SUBBUS_1, 1);
}
break;
}
#endif
}
if (pci_msi_device_blacklisted(dev))
sc->flags |= PCIB_DISABLE_MSI;
if (pci_msix_device_blacklisted(dev))
sc->flags |= PCIB_DISABLE_MSIX;
/*
* Intel 815, 845 and other chipsets say they are PCI-PCI bridges,
* but have a ProgIF of 0x80. The 82801 family (AA, AB, BAM/CAM,
* BA/CA/DB and E) PCI bridges are HUB-PCI bridges, in Intelese.
* This means they act as if they were subtractively decoding
* bridges and pass all transactions. Mark them and real ProgIf 1
* parts as subtractive.
*/
if ((pci_get_devid(dev) & 0xff00ffff) == 0x24008086 ||
pci_read_config(dev, PCIR_PROGIF, 1) == PCIP_BRIDGE_PCI_SUBTRACTIVE)
sc->flags |= PCIB_SUBTRACTIVE;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
#ifdef PCI_HP
pcib_probe_hotplug(sc);
#endif
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#ifdef NEW_PCIB
#ifdef PCI_RES_BUS
pcib_setup_secbus(dev, &sc->bus, 1);
#endif
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
pcib_probe_windows(sc);
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
#endif
#ifdef PCI_HP
if (sc->flags & PCIB_HOTPLUG)
pcib_setup_hotplug(sc);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#endif
if (bootverbose) {
device_printf(dev, " domain %d\n", sc->domain);
device_printf(dev, " secondary bus %d\n", sc->bus.sec);
device_printf(dev, " subordinate bus %d\n", sc->bus.sub);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#ifdef NEW_PCIB
if (pcib_is_window_open(&sc->io))
device_printf(dev, " I/O decode 0x%jx-0x%jx\n",
(uintmax_t)sc->io.base, (uintmax_t)sc->io.limit);
if (pcib_is_window_open(&sc->mem))
device_printf(dev, " memory decode 0x%jx-0x%jx\n",
(uintmax_t)sc->mem.base, (uintmax_t)sc->mem.limit);
if (pcib_is_window_open(&sc->pmem))
device_printf(dev, " prefetched decode 0x%jx-0x%jx\n",
(uintmax_t)sc->pmem.base, (uintmax_t)sc->pmem.limit);
#else
if (pcib_is_io_open(sc))
device_printf(dev, " I/O decode 0x%x-0x%x\n",
sc->iobase, sc->iolimit);
if (pcib_is_nonprefetch_open(sc))
device_printf(dev, " memory decode 0x%jx-0x%jx\n",
(uintmax_t)sc->membase, (uintmax_t)sc->memlimit);
if (pcib_is_prefetch_open(sc))
device_printf(dev, " prefetched decode 0x%jx-0x%jx\n",
(uintmax_t)sc->pmembase, (uintmax_t)sc->pmemlimit);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#endif
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
if (sc->bridgectl & (PCIB_BCR_ISA_ENABLE | PCIB_BCR_VGA_ENABLE) ||
sc->flags & PCIB_SUBTRACTIVE) {
device_printf(dev, " special decode ");
comma = 0;
if (sc->bridgectl & PCIB_BCR_ISA_ENABLE) {
printf("ISA");
comma = 1;
}
if (sc->bridgectl & PCIB_BCR_VGA_ENABLE) {
printf("%sVGA", comma ? ", " : "");
comma = 1;
}
if (sc->flags & PCIB_SUBTRACTIVE)
printf("%ssubtractive", comma ? ", " : "");
printf("\n");
}
}
/*
* Always enable busmastering on bridges so that transactions
* initiated on the secondary bus are passed through to the
* primary bus.
*/
pci_enable_busmaster(dev);
}
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
#ifdef PCI_HP
static int
pcib_present(struct pcib_softc *sc)
{
if (sc->flags & PCIB_HOTPLUG)
return (pcib_hotplug_present(sc) != 0);
return (1);
}
#endif
int
pcib_attach_child(device_t dev)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
sc = device_get_softc(dev);
if (sc->bus.sec == 0) {
/* no secondary bus; we should have fixed this */
return(0);
}
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
#ifdef PCI_HP
if (!pcib_present(sc)) {
/* An empty HotPlug slot, so don't add a PCI bus yet. */
return (0);
}
#endif
sc->child = device_add_child(dev, "pci", -1);
return (bus_generic_attach(dev));
}
int
pcib_attach(device_t dev)
{
pcib_attach_common(dev);
return (pcib_attach_child(dev));
}
Implement a proper detach method for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. - Add a pcib_detach() function for the PCI-PCI bridge driver. It tears down the NEW_PCIB and hotplug state including destroying resource managers, deleting child devices, and disabling hotplug events. - Add a detach method to the ACPI PCI-PCI bridge driver which calls pcib_detach() and then frees the copy of the _PRT interrupt routing table. - Add a detach method to the PCI-Cardbus bridge driver which frees the PCI bus resources in addition to calling cbb_detach(). - Explicitly clear any pending hotplug events during attach to ensure future events will generate an interrupt. - If a the Command Completed bit is set in the slot status register when the command completion timeout fires, treat it as if the command completed and the completion interrupt was just lost rather than forcing a detach. - Don't wait for a Command Completed notification if Command Completion interrupts are disabled. The spec explicitly says no interrupt is enabled when clearing CCIE, and on my T400 no interrupt is generated when CCIE is changed from cleared to set, either. In addition, the T400 doesn't appear to set the Command Completed bit in the cases where it doesn't generate an interrupt, so don't schedule the timer either. (If the CC bit were always set, one could always set the timer and rely on the logic of treating CC set as a missed interrupt.) Reviewed by: imp (older version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6424
2016-05-20 00:03:22 +00:00
int
pcib_detach(device_t dev)
{
#if defined(PCI_HP) || defined(NEW_PCIB)
struct pcib_softc *sc;
#endif
int error;
#if defined(PCI_HP) || defined(NEW_PCIB)
sc = device_get_softc(dev);
#endif
error = bus_generic_detach(dev);
if (error)
return (error);
#ifdef PCI_HP
if (sc->flags & PCIB_HOTPLUG) {
error = pcib_detach_hotplug(sc);
if (error)
return (error);
}
#endif
error = device_delete_children(dev);
if (error)
return (error);
#ifdef NEW_PCIB
pcib_free_windows(sc);
#ifdef PCI_RES_BUS
pcib_free_secbus(dev, &sc->bus);
#endif
#endif
return (0);
}
int
pcib_suspend(device_t dev)
{
pcib_cfg_save(device_get_softc(dev));
return (bus_generic_suspend(dev));
}
int
pcib_resume(device_t dev)
{
pcib_cfg_restore(device_get_softc(dev));
return (bus_generic_resume(dev));
}
void
pcib_bridge_init(device_t dev)
{
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEL_1, 0xff, 1);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOBASEH_1, 0xffff, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOLIMITL_1, 0, 1);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_IOLIMITH_1, 0, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_MEMBASE_1, 0xffff, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_MEMLIMIT_1, 0, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEL_1, 0xffff, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMBASEH_1, 0xffffffff, 4);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMLIMITL_1, 0, 2);
pci_write_config(dev, PCIR_PMLIMITH_1, 0, 4);
}
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
int
pcib_child_present(device_t dev, device_t child)
{
#ifdef PCI_HP
struct pcib_softc *sc = device_get_softc(dev);
int retval;
retval = bus_child_present(dev);
if (retval != 0 && sc->flags & PCIB_HOTPLUG)
retval = pcib_hotplug_present(sc);
return (retval);
#else
return (bus_child_present(dev));
#endif
}
int
pcib_read_ivar(device_t dev, device_t child, int which, uintptr_t *result)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc = device_get_softc(dev);
switch (which) {
case PCIB_IVAR_DOMAIN:
*result = sc->domain;
return(0);
case PCIB_IVAR_BUS:
*result = sc->bus.sec;
return(0);
}
return(ENOENT);
}
int
pcib_write_ivar(device_t dev, device_t child, int which, uintptr_t value)
{
switch (which) {
case PCIB_IVAR_DOMAIN:
return(EINVAL);
case PCIB_IVAR_BUS:
return(EINVAL);
}
return(ENOENT);
}
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#ifdef NEW_PCIB
/*
* Attempt to allocate a resource from the existing resources assigned
* to a window.
*/
static struct resource *
pcib_suballoc_resource(struct pcib_softc *sc, struct pcib_window *w,
device_t child, int type, int *rid, rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end,
rman_res_t count, u_int flags)
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
{
struct resource *res;
if (!pcib_is_window_open(w))
return (NULL);
res = rman_reserve_resource(&w->rman, start, end, count,
flags & ~RF_ACTIVE, child);
if (res == NULL)
return (NULL);
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(sc->dev,
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
"allocated %s range (%#jx-%#jx) for rid %x of %s\n",
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
w->name, rman_get_start(res), rman_get_end(res), *rid,
pcib_child_name(child));
rman_set_rid(res, *rid);
/*
* If the resource should be active, pass that request up the
* tree. This assumes the parent drivers can handle
* activating sub-allocated resources.
*/
if (flags & RF_ACTIVE) {
if (bus_activate_resource(child, type, *rid, res) != 0) {
rman_release_resource(res);
return (NULL);
}
}
return (res);
}
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
/* Allocate a fresh resource range for an unconfigured window. */
static int
pcib_alloc_new_window(struct pcib_softc *sc, struct pcib_window *w, int type,
rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end, rman_res_t count, u_int flags)
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
{
struct resource *res;
rman_res_t base, limit, wmask;
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
int rid;
/*
* If this is an I/O window on a bridge with ISA enable set
* and the start address is below 64k, then try to allocate an
* initial window of 0x1000 bytes long starting at address
* 0xf000 and walking down. Note that if the original request
* was larger than the non-aliased range size of 0x100 our
* caller would have raised the start address up to 64k
* already.
*/
if (type == SYS_RES_IOPORT && sc->bridgectl & PCIB_BCR_ISA_ENABLE &&
start < 65536) {
for (base = 0xf000; (long)base >= 0; base -= 0x1000) {
limit = base + 0xfff;
/*
* Skip ranges that wouldn't work for the
* original request. Note that the actual
* window that overlaps are the non-alias
* ranges within [base, limit], so this isn't
* quite a simple comparison.
*/
if (start + count > limit - 0x400)
continue;
if (base == 0) {
/*
* The first open region for the window at
* 0 is 0x400-0x4ff.
*/
if (end - count + 1 < 0x400)
continue;
} else {
if (end - count + 1 < base)
continue;
}
if (pcib_alloc_nonisa_ranges(sc, base, limit) == 0) {
w->base = base;
w->limit = limit;
return (0);
}
}
return (ENOSPC);
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
}
2016-02-16 17:55:10 +00:00
wmask = ((rman_res_t)1 << w->step) - 1;
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
if (RF_ALIGNMENT(flags) < w->step) {
flags &= ~RF_ALIGNMENT_MASK;
flags |= RF_ALIGNMENT_LOG2(w->step);
}
start &= ~wmask;
end |= wmask;
2016-02-16 17:55:10 +00:00
count = roundup2(count, (rman_res_t)1 << w->step);
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
rid = w->reg;
res = bus_alloc_resource(sc->dev, type, &rid, start, end, count,
flags & ~RF_ACTIVE);
if (res == NULL)
return (ENOSPC);
pcib_add_window_resources(w, &res, 1);
pcib_activate_window(sc, type);
w->base = rman_get_start(res);
w->limit = rman_get_end(res);
return (0);
}
/* Try to expand an existing window to the requested base and limit. */
static int
pcib_expand_window(struct pcib_softc *sc, struct pcib_window *w, int type,
rman_res_t base, rman_res_t limit)
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
{
struct resource *res;
int error, i, force_64k_base;
KASSERT(base <= w->base && limit >= w->limit,
("attempting to shrink window"));
/*
* XXX: pcib_grow_window() doesn't try to do this anyway and
* the error handling for all the edge cases would be tedious.
*/
KASSERT(limit == w->limit || base == w->base,
("attempting to grow both ends of a window"));
/*
* Yet more special handling for requests to expand an I/O
* window behind an ISA-enabled bridge. Since I/O windows
* have to grow in 0x1000 increments and the end of the 0xffff
* range is an alias, growing a window below 64k will always
* result in allocating new resources and never adjusting an
* existing resource.
*/
if (type == SYS_RES_IOPORT && sc->bridgectl & PCIB_BCR_ISA_ENABLE &&
(limit <= 65535 || (base <= 65535 && base != w->base))) {
KASSERT(limit == w->limit || limit <= 65535,
("attempting to grow both ends across 64k ISA alias"));
if (base != w->base)
error = pcib_alloc_nonisa_ranges(sc, base, w->base - 1);
else
error = pcib_alloc_nonisa_ranges(sc, w->limit + 1,
limit);
if (error == 0) {
w->base = base;
w->limit = limit;
}
return (error);
}
/*
* Find the existing resource to adjust. Usually there is only one,
* but for an ISA-enabled bridge we might be growing the I/O window
* above 64k and need to find the existing resource that maps all
* of the area above 64k.
*/
for (i = 0; i < w->count; i++) {
if (rman_get_end(w->res[i]) == w->limit)
break;
}
KASSERT(i != w->count, ("did not find existing resource"));
res = w->res[i];
/*
* Usually the resource we found should match the window's
* existing range. The one exception is the ISA-enabled case
* mentioned above in which case the resource should start at
* 64k.
*/
if (type == SYS_RES_IOPORT && sc->bridgectl & PCIB_BCR_ISA_ENABLE &&
w->base <= 65535) {
KASSERT(rman_get_start(res) == 65536,
("existing resource mismatch"));
force_64k_base = 1;
} else {
KASSERT(w->base == rman_get_start(res),
("existing resource mismatch"));
force_64k_base = 0;
}
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
error = bus_adjust_resource(sc->dev, type, res, force_64k_base ?
rman_get_start(res) : base, limit);
if (error)
return (error);
/* Add the newly allocated region to the resource manager. */
if (w->base != base) {
error = rman_manage_region(&w->rman, base, w->base - 1);
w->base = base;
} else {
error = rman_manage_region(&w->rman, w->limit + 1, limit);
w->limit = limit;
}
if (error) {
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(sc->dev,
"failed to expand %s resource manager\n", w->name);
(void)bus_adjust_resource(sc->dev, type, res, force_64k_base ?
rman_get_start(res) : w->base, w->limit);
}
return (error);
}
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
/*
* Attempt to grow a window to make room for a given resource request.
*/
static int
pcib_grow_window(struct pcib_softc *sc, struct pcib_window *w, int type,
rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end, rman_res_t count, u_int flags)
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
{
rman_res_t align, start_free, end_free, front, back, wmask;
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
int error;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
/*
* Clamp the desired resource range to the maximum address
* this window supports. Reject impossible requests.
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
*
* For I/O port requests behind a bridge with the ISA enable
* bit set, force large allocations to start above 64k.
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
*/
if (!w->valid)
return (EINVAL);
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
if (sc->bridgectl & PCIB_BCR_ISA_ENABLE && count > 0x100 &&
start < 65536)
start = 65536;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
if (end > w->rman.rm_end)
end = w->rman.rm_end;
if (start + count - 1 > end || start + count < start)
return (EINVAL);
2016-02-16 17:55:10 +00:00
wmask = ((rman_res_t)1 << w->step) - 1;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
/*
* If there is no resource at all, just try to allocate enough
* aligned space for this resource.
*/
if (w->res == NULL) {
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
error = pcib_alloc_new_window(sc, w, type, start, end, count,
flags);
if (error) {
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(sc->dev,
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
"failed to allocate initial %s window (%#jx-%#jx,%#jx)\n",
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
w->name, start, end, count);
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
return (error);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
}
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(sc->dev,
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
"allocated initial %s window of %#jx-%#jx\n",
w->name, (uintmax_t)w->base, (uintmax_t)w->limit);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
goto updatewin;
}
/*
* See if growing the window would help. Compute the minimum
* amount of address space needed on both the front and back
* ends of the existing window to satisfy the allocation.
*
* For each end, build a candidate region adjusting for the
* required alignment, etc. If there is a free region at the
* edge of the window, grow from the inner edge of the free
* region. Otherwise grow from the window boundary.
*
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
* Growing an I/O window below 64k for a bridge with the ISA
* enable bit doesn't require any special magic as the step
* size of an I/O window (1k) always includes multiple
* non-alias ranges when it is grown in either direction.
*
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
* XXX: Special case: if w->res is completely empty and the
* request size is larger than w->res, we should find the
* optimal aligned buffer containing w->res and allocate that.
*/
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(sc->dev,
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
"attempting to grow %s window for (%#jx-%#jx,%#jx)\n",
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
w->name, start, end, count);
2016-02-16 17:55:10 +00:00
align = (rman_res_t)1 << RF_ALIGNMENT(flags);
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
if (start < w->base) {
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
if (rman_first_free_region(&w->rman, &start_free, &end_free) !=
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
0 || start_free != w->base)
end_free = w->base;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
if (end_free > end)
end_free = end + 1;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
/* Move end_free down until it is properly aligned. */
end_free &= ~(align - 1);
end_free--;
front = end_free - (count - 1);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
/*
* The resource would now be allocated at (front,
* end_free). Ensure that fits in the (start, end)
* bounds. end_free is checked above. If 'front' is
* ok, ensure it is properly aligned for this window.
* Also check for underflow.
*/
if (front >= start && front <= end_free) {
if (bootverbose)
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
printf("\tfront candidate range: %#jx-%#jx\n",
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
front, end_free);
front &= ~wmask;
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
front = w->base - front;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
} else
front = 0;
} else
front = 0;
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
if (end > w->limit) {
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
if (rman_last_free_region(&w->rman, &start_free, &end_free) !=
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
0 || end_free != w->limit)
start_free = w->limit + 1;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
if (start_free < start)
start_free = start;
/* Move start_free up until it is properly aligned. */
start_free = roundup2(start_free, align);
back = start_free + count - 1;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
/*
* The resource would now be allocated at (start_free,
* back). Ensure that fits in the (start, end)
* bounds. start_free is checked above. If 'back' is
* ok, ensure it is properly aligned for this window.
* Also check for overflow.
*/
if (back <= end && start_free <= back) {
if (bootverbose)
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
printf("\tback candidate range: %#jx-%#jx\n",
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
start_free, back);
back |= wmask;
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
back -= w->limit;
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
} else
back = 0;
} else
back = 0;
/*
* Try to allocate the smallest needed region first.
* If that fails, fall back to the other region.
*/
error = ENOSPC;
while (front != 0 || back != 0) {
if (front != 0 && (front <= back || back == 0)) {
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
error = pcib_expand_window(sc, w, type, w->base - front,
w->limit);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
if (error == 0)
break;
front = 0;
} else {
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
error = pcib_expand_window(sc, w, type, w->base,
w->limit + back);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
if (error == 0)
break;
back = 0;
}
}
if (error)
return (error);
if (bootverbose)
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
device_printf(sc->dev, "grew %s window to %#jx-%#jx\n",
w->name, (uintmax_t)w->base, (uintmax_t)w->limit);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
updatewin:
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
/* Write the new window. */
KASSERT((w->base & wmask) == 0, ("start address is not aligned"));
KASSERT((w->limit & wmask) == wmask, ("end address is not aligned"));
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
pcib_write_windows(sc, w->mask);
return (0);
}
/*
* We have to trap resource allocation requests and ensure that the bridge
* is set up to, or capable of handling them.
*/
struct resource *
pcib_alloc_resource(device_t dev, device_t child, int type, int *rid,
rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end, rman_res_t count, u_int flags)
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
struct resource *r;
sc = device_get_softc(dev);
/*
* VGA resources are decoded iff the VGA enable bit is set in
* the bridge control register. VGA resources do not fall into
* the resource windows and are passed up to the parent.
*/
if ((type == SYS_RES_IOPORT && pci_is_vga_ioport_range(start, end)) ||
(type == SYS_RES_MEMORY && pci_is_vga_memory_range(start, end))) {
if (sc->bridgectl & PCIB_BCR_VGA_ENABLE)
return (bus_generic_alloc_resource(dev, child, type,
rid, start, end, count, flags));
else
return (NULL);
}
switch (type) {
#ifdef PCI_RES_BUS
case PCI_RES_BUS:
return (pcib_alloc_subbus(&sc->bus, child, rid, start, end,
count, flags));
#endif
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
case SYS_RES_IOPORT:
Properly handle I/O windows in bridges with the ISA enable bit set. These beasts still exist unfortunately. More details can be found in other references, but the short version is that bridges with this bit set ignore I/O port ranges that alias to valid ISA I/O port ranges. In the driver this requires not allocating these alias regions from the parent device (so they are free to be acquired by ISA devices), and ensuring no child devices use resources from these alias regions. - Change the pcib_window structure to allow for an array of backing resources rather than a single resource and update the existing code to cope with this. Some of the coping requires using the saved base and limit values in pcib_window instead of using rman operations on the backing resource. - Add special handling for allocating and adjusting the I/O port window of an ISA-enabled bridge to only allocate the non-alias ranges and add those to the associated resource manager. - Reject I/O port allocations for a fixed request that conflicts with an ISA alias range. - Remove the "no prefected decode" verbose printf during boot. The absence of a "prefetched decode" line is sufficient. - Replace the "subtractively decoded bridge" verbose printf with a single printf that lists all the "special" decoding modes of a bridge: ISA, subtractive, and VGA. - Add a custom bus_release_resource() method to the PCI bus driver so that it can properly free resources for I/O windows of PCI-PCI bridges. (These resources are not stored in the bridge device's resource list.) PR: misc/179033 MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-07-18 15:17:11 +00:00
if (pcib_is_isa_range(sc, start, end, count))
return (NULL);
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
r = pcib_suballoc_resource(sc, &sc->io, child, type, rid, start,
end, count, flags);
if (r != NULL || (sc->flags & PCIB_SUBTRACTIVE) != 0)
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
break;
if (pcib_grow_window(sc, &sc->io, type, start, end, count,
flags) == 0)
r = pcib_suballoc_resource(sc, &sc->io, child, type,
rid, start, end, count, flags);
break;
case SYS_RES_MEMORY:
/*
* For prefetchable resources, prefer the prefetchable
* memory window, but fall back to the regular memory
* window if that fails. Try both windows before
* attempting to grow a window in case the firmware
* has used a range in the regular memory window to
* map a prefetchable BAR.
*/
if (flags & RF_PREFETCHABLE) {
r = pcib_suballoc_resource(sc, &sc->pmem, child, type,
rid, start, end, count, flags);
if (r != NULL)
break;
}
r = pcib_suballoc_resource(sc, &sc->mem, child, type, rid,
start, end, count, flags);
if (r != NULL || (sc->flags & PCIB_SUBTRACTIVE) != 0)
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
break;
if (flags & RF_PREFETCHABLE) {
if (pcib_grow_window(sc, &sc->pmem, type, start, end,
count, flags) == 0) {
r = pcib_suballoc_resource(sc, &sc->pmem, child,
type, rid, start, end, count, flags);
if (r != NULL)
break;
}
}
if (pcib_grow_window(sc, &sc->mem, type, start, end, count,
flags & ~RF_PREFETCHABLE) == 0)
r = pcib_suballoc_resource(sc, &sc->mem, child, type,
rid, start, end, count, flags);
break;
default:
return (bus_generic_alloc_resource(dev, child, type, rid,
start, end, count, flags));
}
/*
* If attempts to suballocate from the window fail but this is a
* subtractive bridge, pass the request up the tree.
*/
if (sc->flags & PCIB_SUBTRACTIVE && r == NULL)
return (bus_generic_alloc_resource(dev, child, type, rid,
start, end, count, flags));
return (r);
}
int
pcib_adjust_resource(device_t bus, device_t child, int type, struct resource *r,
rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end)
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
sc = device_get_softc(bus);
if (pcib_is_resource_managed(sc, type, r))
return (rman_adjust_resource(r, start, end));
return (bus_generic_adjust_resource(bus, child, type, r, start, end));
}
int
pcib_release_resource(device_t dev, device_t child, int type, int rid,
struct resource *r)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
int error;
sc = device_get_softc(dev);
if (pcib_is_resource_managed(sc, type, r)) {
if (rman_get_flags(r) & RF_ACTIVE) {
error = bus_deactivate_resource(child, type, rid, r);
if (error)
return (error);
}
return (rman_release_resource(r));
}
return (bus_generic_release_resource(dev, child, type, rid, r));
}
#else
/*
* We have to trap resource allocation requests and ensure that the bridge
* is set up to, or capable of handling them.
*/
struct resource *
pcib_alloc_resource(device_t dev, device_t child, int type, int *rid,
rman_res_t start, rman_res_t end, rman_res_t count, u_int flags)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc = device_get_softc(dev);
const char *name, *suffix;
int ok;
/*
* Fail the allocation for this range if it's not supported.
*/
name = device_get_nameunit(child);
if (name == NULL) {
name = "";
suffix = "";
} else
suffix = " ";
switch (type) {
case SYS_RES_IOPORT:
ok = 0;
if (!pcib_is_io_open(sc))
break;
ok = (start >= sc->iobase && end <= sc->iolimit);
/*
* Make sure we allow access to VGA I/O addresses when the
* bridge has the "VGA Enable" bit set.
*/
if (!ok && pci_is_vga_ioport_range(start, end))
ok = (sc->bridgectl & PCIB_BCR_VGA_ENABLE) ? 1 : 0;
if ((sc->flags & PCIB_SUBTRACTIVE) == 0) {
if (!ok) {
if (start < sc->iobase)
start = sc->iobase;
if (end > sc->iolimit)
end = sc->iolimit;
if (start < end)
ok = 1;
}
} else {
ok = 1;
#if 0
/*
* If we overlap with the subtractive range, then
* pick the upper range to use.
*/
if (start < sc->iolimit && end > sc->iobase)
start = sc->iolimit + 1;
#endif
}
if (end < start) {
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
device_printf(dev, "ioport: end (%jx) < start (%jx)\n",
end, start);
start = 0;
end = 0;
ok = 0;
}
if (!ok) {
device_printf(dev, "%s%srequested unsupported I/O "
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
"range 0x%jx-0x%jx (decoding 0x%x-0x%x)\n",
name, suffix, start, end, sc->iobase, sc->iolimit);
return (NULL);
}
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(dev,
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
"%s%srequested I/O range 0x%jx-0x%jx: in range\n",
name, suffix, start, end);
break;
case SYS_RES_MEMORY:
ok = 0;
if (pcib_is_nonprefetch_open(sc))
ok = ok || (start >= sc->membase && end <= sc->memlimit);
if (pcib_is_prefetch_open(sc))
ok = ok || (start >= sc->pmembase && end <= sc->pmemlimit);
/*
* Make sure we allow access to VGA memory addresses when the
* bridge has the "VGA Enable" bit set.
*/
if (!ok && pci_is_vga_memory_range(start, end))
ok = (sc->bridgectl & PCIB_BCR_VGA_ENABLE) ? 1 : 0;
if ((sc->flags & PCIB_SUBTRACTIVE) == 0) {
if (!ok) {
ok = 1;
if (flags & RF_PREFETCHABLE) {
if (pcib_is_prefetch_open(sc)) {
if (start < sc->pmembase)
start = sc->pmembase;
if (end > sc->pmemlimit)
end = sc->pmemlimit;
} else {
ok = 0;
}
} else { /* non-prefetchable */
if (pcib_is_nonprefetch_open(sc)) {
if (start < sc->membase)
start = sc->membase;
if (end > sc->memlimit)
end = sc->memlimit;
} else {
ok = 0;
}
}
}
} else if (!ok) {
ok = 1; /* subtractive bridge: always ok */
#if 0
if (pcib_is_nonprefetch_open(sc)) {
if (start < sc->memlimit && end > sc->membase)
start = sc->memlimit + 1;
}
if (pcib_is_prefetch_open(sc)) {
if (start < sc->pmemlimit && end > sc->pmembase)
start = sc->pmemlimit + 1;
}
#endif
}
if (end < start) {
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
device_printf(dev, "memory: end (%jx) < start (%jx)\n",
end, start);
start = 0;
end = 0;
ok = 0;
}
if (!ok && bootverbose)
device_printf(dev,
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
"%s%srequested unsupported memory range %#jx-%#jx "
"(decoding %#jx-%#jx, %#jx-%#jx)\n",
name, suffix, start, end,
(uintmax_t)sc->membase, (uintmax_t)sc->memlimit,
(uintmax_t)sc->pmembase, (uintmax_t)sc->pmemlimit);
if (!ok)
return (NULL);
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(dev,"%s%srequested memory range "
Use uintmax_t (typedef'd to rman_res_t type) for rman ranges. On some architectures, u_long isn't large enough for resource definitions. Particularly, powerpc and arm allow 36-bit (or larger) physical addresses, but type `long' is only 32-bit. This extends rman's resources to uintmax_t. With this change, any resource can feasibly be placed anywhere in physical memory (within the constraints of the driver). Why uintmax_t and not something machine dependent, or uint64_t? Though it's possible for uintmax_t to grow, it's highly unlikely it will become 128-bit on 32-bit architectures. 64-bit architectures should have plenty of RAM to absorb the increase on resource sizes if and when this occurs, and the number of resources on memory-constrained systems should be sufficiently small as to not pose a drastic overhead. That being said, uintmax_t was chosen for source clarity. If it's specified as uint64_t, all printf()-like calls would either need casts to uintmax_t, or be littered with PRI*64 macros. Casts to uintmax_t aren't horrible, but it would also bake into the API for resource_list_print_type() either a hidden assumption that entries get cast to uintmax_t for printing, or these calls would need the PRI*64 macros. Since source code is meant to be read more often than written, I chose the clearest path of simply using uintmax_t. Tested on a PowerPC p5020-based board, which places all device resources in 0xfxxxxxxxx, and has 8GB RAM. Regression tested on qemu-system-i386 Regression tested on qemu-system-mips (malta profile) Tested PAE and devinfo on virtualbox (live CD) Special thanks to bz for his testing on ARM. Reviewed By: bz, jhb (previous) Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4544
2016-03-18 01:28:41 +00:00
"0x%jx-0x%jx: good\n",
name, suffix, start, end);
break;
default:
break;
}
/*
* Bridge is OK decoding this resource, so pass it up.
*/
return (bus_generic_alloc_resource(dev, child, type, rid, start, end,
count, flags));
}
Reimplement how PCI-PCI bridges manage their I/O windows. Previously the driver would verify that requests for child devices were confined to any existing I/O windows, but the driver relied on the firmware to initialize the windows and would never grow the windows for new requests. Now the driver actively manages the I/O windows. This is implemented by allocating a bus resource for each I/O window from the parent PCI bus and suballocating that resource to child devices. The suballocations are managed by creating an rman for each I/O window. The suballocated resources are mapped by passing the bus_activate_resource() call up to the parent PCI bus. Windows are grown when needed by using bus_adjust_resource() to adjust the resource allocated from the parent PCI bus. If the adjust request succeeds, the window is adjusted and the suballocation request for the child device is retried. When growing a window, the rman_first_free_region() and rman_last_free_region() routines are used to determine if the front or end of the existing I/O window is free. From using that, the smallest ranges that need to be added to either the front or back of the window are computed. The driver will first try to grow the window in whichever direction requires the smallest growth first followed by the other direction if that fails. Subtractive bridges will first attempt to satisfy requests for child resources from I/O windows (including attempts to grow the windows). If that fails, the request is passed up to the parent PCI bus directly however. The PCI-PCI bridge driver will try to use firmware-assigned ranges for child BARs first and only allocate a "fresh" range if that specific range cannot be accommodated in the I/O window. This allows systems where the firmware assigns resources during boot but later wipes the I/O windows (some ACPI BIOSen are known to do this) to "rediscover" the original I/O window ranges. The ACPI Host-PCI bridge driver has been adjusted to correctly honor hw.acpi.host_mem_start and the I/O port equivalent when a PCI-PCI bridge makes a wildcard request for an I/O window range. The new PCI-PCI bridge driver is only enabled if the NEW_PCIB kernel option is enabled. This is a transition aide to allow platforms that do not yet support bus_activate_resource() and bus_adjust_resource() in their Host-PCI bridge drivers (and possibly other drivers as needed) to use the old driver for now. Once all platforms support the new driver, the kernel option and old driver will be removed. PR: kern/143874 kern/149306 Tested by: mav
2011-05-03 17:37:24 +00:00
#endif
/*
* If ARI is enabled on this downstream port, translate the function number
* to the non-ARI slot/function. The downstream port will convert it back in
* hardware. If ARI is not enabled slot and func are not modified.
*/
static __inline void
pcib_xlate_ari(device_t pcib, int bus, int *slot, int *func)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
int ari_func;
sc = device_get_softc(pcib);
ari_func = *func;
if (sc->flags & PCIB_ENABLE_ARI) {
KASSERT(*slot == 0,
("Non-zero slot number with ARI enabled!"));
*slot = PCIE_ARI_SLOT(ari_func);
*func = PCIE_ARI_FUNC(ari_func);
}
}
static void
pcib_enable_ari(struct pcib_softc *sc, uint32_t pcie_pos)
{
uint32_t ctl2;
ctl2 = pci_read_config(sc->dev, pcie_pos + PCIER_DEVICE_CTL2, 4);
ctl2 |= PCIEM_CTL2_ARI;
pci_write_config(sc->dev, pcie_pos + PCIER_DEVICE_CTL2, ctl2, 4);
sc->flags |= PCIB_ENABLE_ARI;
}
/*
* PCIB interface.
*/
int
pcib_maxslots(device_t dev)
{
return (PCI_SLOTMAX);
}
static int
pcib_ari_maxslots(device_t dev)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
sc = device_get_softc(dev);
if (sc->flags & PCIB_ENABLE_ARI)
return (PCIE_ARI_SLOTMAX);
else
return (PCI_SLOTMAX);
}
static int
pcib_ari_maxfuncs(device_t dev)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
sc = device_get_softc(dev);
if (sc->flags & PCIB_ENABLE_ARI)
return (PCIE_ARI_FUNCMAX);
else
return (PCI_FUNCMAX);
}
static void
pcib_ari_decode_rid(device_t pcib, uint16_t rid, int *bus, int *slot,
int *func)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
sc = device_get_softc(pcib);
*bus = PCI_RID2BUS(rid);
if (sc->flags & PCIB_ENABLE_ARI) {
*slot = PCIE_ARI_RID2SLOT(rid);
*func = PCIE_ARI_RID2FUNC(rid);
} else {
*slot = PCI_RID2SLOT(rid);
*func = PCI_RID2FUNC(rid);
}
}
/*
* Since we are a child of a PCI bus, its parent must support the pcib interface.
*/
static uint32_t
pcib_read_config(device_t dev, u_int b, u_int s, u_int f, u_int reg, int width)
{
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
#ifdef PCI_HP
struct pcib_softc *sc;
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
sc = device_get_softc(dev);
if (!pcib_present(sc)) {
switch (width) {
case 2:
return (0xffff);
case 1:
return (0xff);
default:
return (0xffffffff);
}
}
#endif
pcib_xlate_ari(dev, b, &s, &f);
return(PCIB_READ_CONFIG(device_get_parent(device_get_parent(dev)), b, s,
f, reg, width));
}
static void
pcib_write_config(device_t dev, u_int b, u_int s, u_int f, u_int reg, uint32_t val, int width)
{
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
#ifdef PCI_HP
struct pcib_softc *sc;
Native PCI-express HotPlug support. PCI-express HotPlug support is implemented via bits in the slot registers of the PCI-express capability of the downstream port along with an interrupt that triggers when bits in the slot status register change. This is implemented for FreeBSD by adding HotPlug support to the PCI-PCI bridge driver which attaches to the virtual PCI-PCI bridges representing downstream ports on HotPlug slots. The PCI-PCI bridge driver registers an interrupt handler to receive HotPlug events. It also uses the slot registers to determine the current HotPlug state and drive an internal HotPlug state machine. For simplicty of implementation, the PCI-PCI bridge device detaches and deletes the child PCI device when a card is removed from a slot and creates and attaches a PCI child device when a card is inserted into the slot. The PCI-PCI bridge driver provides a bus_child_present which claims that child devices are present on HotPlug-capable slots only when a card is inserted. Rather than requiring a timeout in the RC for config accesses to not-present children, the pcib_read/write_config methods fail all requests when a card is not present (or not yet ready). These changes include support for various optional HotPlug capabilities such as a power controller, mechanical latch, electro-mechanical interlock, indicators, and an attention button. It also includes support for devices which require waiting for command completion events before initiating a subsequent HotPlug command. However, it has only been tested on ExpressCard systems which support surprise removal and have none of these optional capabilities. PCI-express HotPlug support is conditional on the PCI_HP option which is enabled by default on arm64, x86, and powerpc. Reviewed by: adrian, imp, vangyzen (older versions) Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6136
2016-05-05 22:26:23 +00:00
sc = device_get_softc(dev);
if (!pcib_present(sc))
return;
#endif
pcib_xlate_ari(dev, b, &s, &f);
PCIB_WRITE_CONFIG(device_get_parent(device_get_parent(dev)), b, s, f,
reg, val, width);
}
/*
* Route an interrupt across a PCI bridge.
*/
int
pcib_route_interrupt(device_t pcib, device_t dev, int pin)
{
device_t bus;
int parent_intpin;
int intnum;
/*
*
* The PCI standard defines a swizzle of the child-side device/intpin to
* the parent-side intpin as follows.
*
* device = device on child bus
* child_intpin = intpin on child bus slot (0-3)
* parent_intpin = intpin on parent bus slot (0-3)
*
* parent_intpin = (device + child_intpin) % 4
*/
parent_intpin = (pci_get_slot(dev) + (pin - 1)) % 4;
/*
* Our parent is a PCI bus. Its parent must export the pcib interface
* which includes the ability to route interrupts.
*/
bus = device_get_parent(pcib);
intnum = PCIB_ROUTE_INTERRUPT(device_get_parent(bus), pcib, parent_intpin + 1);
if (PCI_INTERRUPT_VALID(intnum) && bootverbose) {
device_printf(pcib, "slot %d INT%c is routed to irq %d\n",
pci_get_slot(dev), 'A' + pin - 1, intnum);
}
return(intnum);
}
Revamp the MSI/MSI-X code a bit to achieve two main goals: - Simplify the amount of work that has be done for each architecture by pushing more of the truly MI code down into the PCI bus driver. - Don't bind MSI-X indicies to IRQs so that we can allow a driver to map multiple MSI-X messages into a single IRQ when handling a message shortage. The changes include: - Add a new pcib_if method: PCIB_MAP_MSI() which is called by the PCI bus to calculate the address and data values for a given MSI/MSI-X IRQ. The x86 nexus drivers map this into a call to a new 'msi_map()' function in msi.c that does the mapping. - Retire the pcib_if method PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() and remove the 'index' parameter from PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX(). MD code no longer has any knowledge of the MSI-X index for a given MSI-X IRQ. - The PCI bus driver now stores more MSI-X state in a child's ivars. Specifically, it now stores an array of IRQs (called "message vectors" in the code) that have associated address and data values, and a small virtual version of the MSI-X table that specifies the message vector that a given MSI-X table entry uses. Sparse mappings are permitted in the virtual table. - The PCI bus driver now configures the MSI and MSI-X address/data registers directly via custom bus_setup_intr() and bus_teardown_intr() methods. pci_setup_intr() invokes PCIB_MAP_MSI() to determine the address and data values for a given message as needed. The MD code no longer has to call back down into the PCI bus code to set these values from the nexus' bus_setup_intr() handler. - The PCI bus code provides a callout (pci_remap_msi_irq()) that the MD code can call to force the PCI bus to re-invoke PCIB_MAP_MSI() to get new values of the address and data fields for a given IRQ. The x86 MSI code uses this when an MSI IRQ is moved to a different CPU, requiring a new value of the 'address' field. - The x86 MSI psuedo-driver loses a lot of code, and in fact the separate MSI/MSI-X pseudo-PICs are collapsed down into a single MSI PIC driver since the only remaining diff between the two is a substring in a bootverbose printf. - The PCI bus driver will now restore MSI-X state (including programming entries in the MSI-X table) on device resume. - The interface for pci_remap_msix() has changed. Instead of accepting indices for the allocated vectors, it accepts a mini-virtual table (with a new length parameter). This table is an array of u_ints, where each value specifies which allocated message vector to use for the corresponding MSI-X message. A vector of 0 forces a message to not have an associated IRQ. The device may choose to only use some of the IRQs assigned, in which case the unused IRQs must be at the "end" and will be released back to the system. This allows a driver to use the same remap table for different shortage values. For example, if a driver wants 4 messages, it can use the same remap table (which only uses the first two messages) for the cases when it only gets 2 or 3 messages and in the latter case the PCI bus will release the 3rd IRQ back to the system. MFC after: 1 month
2007-05-02 17:50:36 +00:00
/* Pass request to alloc MSI/MSI-X messages up to the parent bridge. */
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
int
pcib_alloc_msi(device_t pcib, device_t dev, int count, int maxcount, int *irqs)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc = device_get_softc(pcib);
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
device_t bus;
if (sc->flags & PCIB_DISABLE_MSI)
return (ENXIO);
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
bus = device_get_parent(pcib);
return (PCIB_ALLOC_MSI(device_get_parent(bus), dev, count, maxcount,
irqs));
}
Revamp the MSI/MSI-X code a bit to achieve two main goals: - Simplify the amount of work that has be done for each architecture by pushing more of the truly MI code down into the PCI bus driver. - Don't bind MSI-X indicies to IRQs so that we can allow a driver to map multiple MSI-X messages into a single IRQ when handling a message shortage. The changes include: - Add a new pcib_if method: PCIB_MAP_MSI() which is called by the PCI bus to calculate the address and data values for a given MSI/MSI-X IRQ. The x86 nexus drivers map this into a call to a new 'msi_map()' function in msi.c that does the mapping. - Retire the pcib_if method PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() and remove the 'index' parameter from PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX(). MD code no longer has any knowledge of the MSI-X index for a given MSI-X IRQ. - The PCI bus driver now stores more MSI-X state in a child's ivars. Specifically, it now stores an array of IRQs (called "message vectors" in the code) that have associated address and data values, and a small virtual version of the MSI-X table that specifies the message vector that a given MSI-X table entry uses. Sparse mappings are permitted in the virtual table. - The PCI bus driver now configures the MSI and MSI-X address/data registers directly via custom bus_setup_intr() and bus_teardown_intr() methods. pci_setup_intr() invokes PCIB_MAP_MSI() to determine the address and data values for a given message as needed. The MD code no longer has to call back down into the PCI bus code to set these values from the nexus' bus_setup_intr() handler. - The PCI bus code provides a callout (pci_remap_msi_irq()) that the MD code can call to force the PCI bus to re-invoke PCIB_MAP_MSI() to get new values of the address and data fields for a given IRQ. The x86 MSI code uses this when an MSI IRQ is moved to a different CPU, requiring a new value of the 'address' field. - The x86 MSI psuedo-driver loses a lot of code, and in fact the separate MSI/MSI-X pseudo-PICs are collapsed down into a single MSI PIC driver since the only remaining diff between the two is a substring in a bootverbose printf. - The PCI bus driver will now restore MSI-X state (including programming entries in the MSI-X table) on device resume. - The interface for pci_remap_msix() has changed. Instead of accepting indices for the allocated vectors, it accepts a mini-virtual table (with a new length parameter). This table is an array of u_ints, where each value specifies which allocated message vector to use for the corresponding MSI-X message. A vector of 0 forces a message to not have an associated IRQ. The device may choose to only use some of the IRQs assigned, in which case the unused IRQs must be at the "end" and will be released back to the system. This allows a driver to use the same remap table for different shortage values. For example, if a driver wants 4 messages, it can use the same remap table (which only uses the first two messages) for the cases when it only gets 2 or 3 messages and in the latter case the PCI bus will release the 3rd IRQ back to the system. MFC after: 1 month
2007-05-02 17:50:36 +00:00
/* Pass request to release MSI/MSI-X messages up to the parent bridge. */
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
int
pcib_release_msi(device_t pcib, device_t dev, int count, int *irqs)
{
device_t bus;
bus = device_get_parent(pcib);
return (PCIB_RELEASE_MSI(device_get_parent(bus), dev, count, irqs));
}
/* Pass request to alloc an MSI-X message up to the parent bridge. */
int
Revamp the MSI/MSI-X code a bit to achieve two main goals: - Simplify the amount of work that has be done for each architecture by pushing more of the truly MI code down into the PCI bus driver. - Don't bind MSI-X indicies to IRQs so that we can allow a driver to map multiple MSI-X messages into a single IRQ when handling a message shortage. The changes include: - Add a new pcib_if method: PCIB_MAP_MSI() which is called by the PCI bus to calculate the address and data values for a given MSI/MSI-X IRQ. The x86 nexus drivers map this into a call to a new 'msi_map()' function in msi.c that does the mapping. - Retire the pcib_if method PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() and remove the 'index' parameter from PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX(). MD code no longer has any knowledge of the MSI-X index for a given MSI-X IRQ. - The PCI bus driver now stores more MSI-X state in a child's ivars. Specifically, it now stores an array of IRQs (called "message vectors" in the code) that have associated address and data values, and a small virtual version of the MSI-X table that specifies the message vector that a given MSI-X table entry uses. Sparse mappings are permitted in the virtual table. - The PCI bus driver now configures the MSI and MSI-X address/data registers directly via custom bus_setup_intr() and bus_teardown_intr() methods. pci_setup_intr() invokes PCIB_MAP_MSI() to determine the address and data values for a given message as needed. The MD code no longer has to call back down into the PCI bus code to set these values from the nexus' bus_setup_intr() handler. - The PCI bus code provides a callout (pci_remap_msi_irq()) that the MD code can call to force the PCI bus to re-invoke PCIB_MAP_MSI() to get new values of the address and data fields for a given IRQ. The x86 MSI code uses this when an MSI IRQ is moved to a different CPU, requiring a new value of the 'address' field. - The x86 MSI psuedo-driver loses a lot of code, and in fact the separate MSI/MSI-X pseudo-PICs are collapsed down into a single MSI PIC driver since the only remaining diff between the two is a substring in a bootverbose printf. - The PCI bus driver will now restore MSI-X state (including programming entries in the MSI-X table) on device resume. - The interface for pci_remap_msix() has changed. Instead of accepting indices for the allocated vectors, it accepts a mini-virtual table (with a new length parameter). This table is an array of u_ints, where each value specifies which allocated message vector to use for the corresponding MSI-X message. A vector of 0 forces a message to not have an associated IRQ. The device may choose to only use some of the IRQs assigned, in which case the unused IRQs must be at the "end" and will be released back to the system. This allows a driver to use the same remap table for different shortage values. For example, if a driver wants 4 messages, it can use the same remap table (which only uses the first two messages) for the cases when it only gets 2 or 3 messages and in the latter case the PCI bus will release the 3rd IRQ back to the system. MFC after: 1 month
2007-05-02 17:50:36 +00:00
pcib_alloc_msix(device_t pcib, device_t dev, int *irq)
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
{
struct pcib_softc *sc = device_get_softc(pcib);
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
device_t bus;
if (sc->flags & PCIB_DISABLE_MSIX)
return (ENXIO);
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
bus = device_get_parent(pcib);
Revamp the MSI/MSI-X code a bit to achieve two main goals: - Simplify the amount of work that has be done for each architecture by pushing more of the truly MI code down into the PCI bus driver. - Don't bind MSI-X indicies to IRQs so that we can allow a driver to map multiple MSI-X messages into a single IRQ when handling a message shortage. The changes include: - Add a new pcib_if method: PCIB_MAP_MSI() which is called by the PCI bus to calculate the address and data values for a given MSI/MSI-X IRQ. The x86 nexus drivers map this into a call to a new 'msi_map()' function in msi.c that does the mapping. - Retire the pcib_if method PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() and remove the 'index' parameter from PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX(). MD code no longer has any knowledge of the MSI-X index for a given MSI-X IRQ. - The PCI bus driver now stores more MSI-X state in a child's ivars. Specifically, it now stores an array of IRQs (called "message vectors" in the code) that have associated address and data values, and a small virtual version of the MSI-X table that specifies the message vector that a given MSI-X table entry uses. Sparse mappings are permitted in the virtual table. - The PCI bus driver now configures the MSI and MSI-X address/data registers directly via custom bus_setup_intr() and bus_teardown_intr() methods. pci_setup_intr() invokes PCIB_MAP_MSI() to determine the address and data values for a given message as needed. The MD code no longer has to call back down into the PCI bus code to set these values from the nexus' bus_setup_intr() handler. - The PCI bus code provides a callout (pci_remap_msi_irq()) that the MD code can call to force the PCI bus to re-invoke PCIB_MAP_MSI() to get new values of the address and data fields for a given IRQ. The x86 MSI code uses this when an MSI IRQ is moved to a different CPU, requiring a new value of the 'address' field. - The x86 MSI psuedo-driver loses a lot of code, and in fact the separate MSI/MSI-X pseudo-PICs are collapsed down into a single MSI PIC driver since the only remaining diff between the two is a substring in a bootverbose printf. - The PCI bus driver will now restore MSI-X state (including programming entries in the MSI-X table) on device resume. - The interface for pci_remap_msix() has changed. Instead of accepting indices for the allocated vectors, it accepts a mini-virtual table (with a new length parameter). This table is an array of u_ints, where each value specifies which allocated message vector to use for the corresponding MSI-X message. A vector of 0 forces a message to not have an associated IRQ. The device may choose to only use some of the IRQs assigned, in which case the unused IRQs must be at the "end" and will be released back to the system. This allows a driver to use the same remap table for different shortage values. For example, if a driver wants 4 messages, it can use the same remap table (which only uses the first two messages) for the cases when it only gets 2 or 3 messages and in the latter case the PCI bus will release the 3rd IRQ back to the system. MFC after: 1 month
2007-05-02 17:50:36 +00:00
return (PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX(device_get_parent(bus), dev, irq));
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
}
Revamp the MSI/MSI-X code a bit to achieve two main goals: - Simplify the amount of work that has be done for each architecture by pushing more of the truly MI code down into the PCI bus driver. - Don't bind MSI-X indicies to IRQs so that we can allow a driver to map multiple MSI-X messages into a single IRQ when handling a message shortage. The changes include: - Add a new pcib_if method: PCIB_MAP_MSI() which is called by the PCI bus to calculate the address and data values for a given MSI/MSI-X IRQ. The x86 nexus drivers map this into a call to a new 'msi_map()' function in msi.c that does the mapping. - Retire the pcib_if method PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() and remove the 'index' parameter from PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX(). MD code no longer has any knowledge of the MSI-X index for a given MSI-X IRQ. - The PCI bus driver now stores more MSI-X state in a child's ivars. Specifically, it now stores an array of IRQs (called "message vectors" in the code) that have associated address and data values, and a small virtual version of the MSI-X table that specifies the message vector that a given MSI-X table entry uses. Sparse mappings are permitted in the virtual table. - The PCI bus driver now configures the MSI and MSI-X address/data registers directly via custom bus_setup_intr() and bus_teardown_intr() methods. pci_setup_intr() invokes PCIB_MAP_MSI() to determine the address and data values for a given message as needed. The MD code no longer has to call back down into the PCI bus code to set these values from the nexus' bus_setup_intr() handler. - The PCI bus code provides a callout (pci_remap_msi_irq()) that the MD code can call to force the PCI bus to re-invoke PCIB_MAP_MSI() to get new values of the address and data fields for a given IRQ. The x86 MSI code uses this when an MSI IRQ is moved to a different CPU, requiring a new value of the 'address' field. - The x86 MSI psuedo-driver loses a lot of code, and in fact the separate MSI/MSI-X pseudo-PICs are collapsed down into a single MSI PIC driver since the only remaining diff between the two is a substring in a bootverbose printf. - The PCI bus driver will now restore MSI-X state (including programming entries in the MSI-X table) on device resume. - The interface for pci_remap_msix() has changed. Instead of accepting indices for the allocated vectors, it accepts a mini-virtual table (with a new length parameter). This table is an array of u_ints, where each value specifies which allocated message vector to use for the corresponding MSI-X message. A vector of 0 forces a message to not have an associated IRQ. The device may choose to only use some of the IRQs assigned, in which case the unused IRQs must be at the "end" and will be released back to the system. This allows a driver to use the same remap table for different shortage values. For example, if a driver wants 4 messages, it can use the same remap table (which only uses the first two messages) for the cases when it only gets 2 or 3 messages and in the latter case the PCI bus will release the 3rd IRQ back to the system. MFC after: 1 month
2007-05-02 17:50:36 +00:00
/* Pass request to release an MSI-X message up to the parent bridge. */
Expand the MSI/MSI-X API to address some deficiencies in the MSI-X support. - First off, device drivers really do need to know if they are allocating MSI or MSI-X messages. MSI requires allocating powerof2() messages for example where MSI-X does not. To address this, split out the MSI-X support from pci_msi_count() and pci_alloc_msi() into new driver-visible functions pci_msix_count() and pci_alloc_msix(). As a result, pci_msi_count() now just returns a count of the max supported MSI messages for the device, and pci_alloc_msi() only tries to allocate MSI messages. To get a count of the max supported MSI-X messages, use pci_msix_count(). To allocate MSI-X messages, use pci_alloc_msix(). pci_release_msi() still handles both MSI and MSI-X messages, however. As a result of this change, drivers using the existing API will only use MSI messages and will no longer try to use MSI-X messages. - Because MSI-X allows for each message to have its own data and address values (and thus does not require all of the messages to have their MD vectors allocated as a group), some devices allow for "sparse" use of MSI-X message slots. For example, if a device supports 8 messages but the OS is only able to allocate 2 messages, the device may make the best use of 2 IRQs if it enables the messages at slots 1 and 4 rather than default of using the first N slots (or indicies) at 1 and 2. To support this, add a new pci_remap_msix() function that a driver may call after a successful pci_alloc_msix() (but before allocating any of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources) to allow the allocated IRQ resources to be assigned to different message indices. For example, from the earlier example, after pci_alloc_msix() returned a value of 2, the driver would call pci_remap_msix() passing in array of integers { 1, 4 } as the new message indices to use. The rid's for the SYS_RES_IRQ resources will always match the message indices. Thus, after the call to pci_remap_msix() the driver would be able to access the first message in slot 1 at SYS_RES_IRQ rid 1, and the second message at slot 4 at SYS_RES_IRQ rid 4. Note that the message slots/indices are 1-based rather than 0-based so that they will always correspond to the rid values (SYS_RES_IRQ rid 0 is reserved for the legacy INTx interrupt). To support this API, a new PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() method was added to the pcib interface to change the message index for a single IRQ. Tested by: scottl
2007-01-22 21:48:44 +00:00
int
Revamp the MSI/MSI-X code a bit to achieve two main goals: - Simplify the amount of work that has be done for each architecture by pushing more of the truly MI code down into the PCI bus driver. - Don't bind MSI-X indicies to IRQs so that we can allow a driver to map multiple MSI-X messages into a single IRQ when handling a message shortage. The changes include: - Add a new pcib_if method: PCIB_MAP_MSI() which is called by the PCI bus to calculate the address and data values for a given MSI/MSI-X IRQ. The x86 nexus drivers map this into a call to a new 'msi_map()' function in msi.c that does the mapping. - Retire the pcib_if method PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() and remove the 'index' parameter from PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX(). MD code no longer has any knowledge of the MSI-X index for a given MSI-X IRQ. - The PCI bus driver now stores more MSI-X state in a child's ivars. Specifically, it now stores an array of IRQs (called "message vectors" in the code) that have associated address and data values, and a small virtual version of the MSI-X table that specifies the message vector that a given MSI-X table entry uses. Sparse mappings are permitted in the virtual table. - The PCI bus driver now configures the MSI and MSI-X address/data registers directly via custom bus_setup_intr() and bus_teardown_intr() methods. pci_setup_intr() invokes PCIB_MAP_MSI() to determine the address and data values for a given message as needed. The MD code no longer has to call back down into the PCI bus code to set these values from the nexus' bus_setup_intr() handler. - The PCI bus code provides a callout (pci_remap_msi_irq()) that the MD code can call to force the PCI bus to re-invoke PCIB_MAP_MSI() to get new values of the address and data fields for a given IRQ. The x86 MSI code uses this when an MSI IRQ is moved to a different CPU, requiring a new value of the 'address' field. - The x86 MSI psuedo-driver loses a lot of code, and in fact the separate MSI/MSI-X pseudo-PICs are collapsed down into a single MSI PIC driver since the only remaining diff between the two is a substring in a bootverbose printf. - The PCI bus driver will now restore MSI-X state (including programming entries in the MSI-X table) on device resume. - The interface for pci_remap_msix() has changed. Instead of accepting indices for the allocated vectors, it accepts a mini-virtual table (with a new length parameter). This table is an array of u_ints, where each value specifies which allocated message vector to use for the corresponding MSI-X message. A vector of 0 forces a message to not have an associated IRQ. The device may choose to only use some of the IRQs assigned, in which case the unused IRQs must be at the "end" and will be released back to the system. This allows a driver to use the same remap table for different shortage values. For example, if a driver wants 4 messages, it can use the same remap table (which only uses the first two messages) for the cases when it only gets 2 or 3 messages and in the latter case the PCI bus will release the 3rd IRQ back to the system. MFC after: 1 month
2007-05-02 17:50:36 +00:00
pcib_release_msix(device_t pcib, device_t dev, int irq)
Expand the MSI/MSI-X API to address some deficiencies in the MSI-X support. - First off, device drivers really do need to know if they are allocating MSI or MSI-X messages. MSI requires allocating powerof2() messages for example where MSI-X does not. To address this, split out the MSI-X support from pci_msi_count() and pci_alloc_msi() into new driver-visible functions pci_msix_count() and pci_alloc_msix(). As a result, pci_msi_count() now just returns a count of the max supported MSI messages for the device, and pci_alloc_msi() only tries to allocate MSI messages. To get a count of the max supported MSI-X messages, use pci_msix_count(). To allocate MSI-X messages, use pci_alloc_msix(). pci_release_msi() still handles both MSI and MSI-X messages, however. As a result of this change, drivers using the existing API will only use MSI messages and will no longer try to use MSI-X messages. - Because MSI-X allows for each message to have its own data and address values (and thus does not require all of the messages to have their MD vectors allocated as a group), some devices allow for "sparse" use of MSI-X message slots. For example, if a device supports 8 messages but the OS is only able to allocate 2 messages, the device may make the best use of 2 IRQs if it enables the messages at slots 1 and 4 rather than default of using the first N slots (or indicies) at 1 and 2. To support this, add a new pci_remap_msix() function that a driver may call after a successful pci_alloc_msix() (but before allocating any of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources) to allow the allocated IRQ resources to be assigned to different message indices. For example, from the earlier example, after pci_alloc_msix() returned a value of 2, the driver would call pci_remap_msix() passing in array of integers { 1, 4 } as the new message indices to use. The rid's for the SYS_RES_IRQ resources will always match the message indices. Thus, after the call to pci_remap_msix() the driver would be able to access the first message in slot 1 at SYS_RES_IRQ rid 1, and the second message at slot 4 at SYS_RES_IRQ rid 4. Note that the message slots/indices are 1-based rather than 0-based so that they will always correspond to the rid values (SYS_RES_IRQ rid 0 is reserved for the legacy INTx interrupt). To support this API, a new PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() method was added to the pcib interface to change the message index for a single IRQ. Tested by: scottl
2007-01-22 21:48:44 +00:00
{
device_t bus;
bus = device_get_parent(pcib);
Revamp the MSI/MSI-X code a bit to achieve two main goals: - Simplify the amount of work that has be done for each architecture by pushing more of the truly MI code down into the PCI bus driver. - Don't bind MSI-X indicies to IRQs so that we can allow a driver to map multiple MSI-X messages into a single IRQ when handling a message shortage. The changes include: - Add a new pcib_if method: PCIB_MAP_MSI() which is called by the PCI bus to calculate the address and data values for a given MSI/MSI-X IRQ. The x86 nexus drivers map this into a call to a new 'msi_map()' function in msi.c that does the mapping. - Retire the pcib_if method PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() and remove the 'index' parameter from PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX(). MD code no longer has any knowledge of the MSI-X index for a given MSI-X IRQ. - The PCI bus driver now stores more MSI-X state in a child's ivars. Specifically, it now stores an array of IRQs (called "message vectors" in the code) that have associated address and data values, and a small virtual version of the MSI-X table that specifies the message vector that a given MSI-X table entry uses. Sparse mappings are permitted in the virtual table. - The PCI bus driver now configures the MSI and MSI-X address/data registers directly via custom bus_setup_intr() and bus_teardown_intr() methods. pci_setup_intr() invokes PCIB_MAP_MSI() to determine the address and data values for a given message as needed. The MD code no longer has to call back down into the PCI bus code to set these values from the nexus' bus_setup_intr() handler. - The PCI bus code provides a callout (pci_remap_msi_irq()) that the MD code can call to force the PCI bus to re-invoke PCIB_MAP_MSI() to get new values of the address and data fields for a given IRQ. The x86 MSI code uses this when an MSI IRQ is moved to a different CPU, requiring a new value of the 'address' field. - The x86 MSI psuedo-driver loses a lot of code, and in fact the separate MSI/MSI-X pseudo-PICs are collapsed down into a single MSI PIC driver since the only remaining diff between the two is a substring in a bootverbose printf. - The PCI bus driver will now restore MSI-X state (including programming entries in the MSI-X table) on device resume. - The interface for pci_remap_msix() has changed. Instead of accepting indices for the allocated vectors, it accepts a mini-virtual table (with a new length parameter). This table is an array of u_ints, where each value specifies which allocated message vector to use for the corresponding MSI-X message. A vector of 0 forces a message to not have an associated IRQ. The device may choose to only use some of the IRQs assigned, in which case the unused IRQs must be at the "end" and will be released back to the system. This allows a driver to use the same remap table for different shortage values. For example, if a driver wants 4 messages, it can use the same remap table (which only uses the first two messages) for the cases when it only gets 2 or 3 messages and in the latter case the PCI bus will release the 3rd IRQ back to the system. MFC after: 1 month
2007-05-02 17:50:36 +00:00
return (PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX(device_get_parent(bus), dev, irq));
Expand the MSI/MSI-X API to address some deficiencies in the MSI-X support. - First off, device drivers really do need to know if they are allocating MSI or MSI-X messages. MSI requires allocating powerof2() messages for example where MSI-X does not. To address this, split out the MSI-X support from pci_msi_count() and pci_alloc_msi() into new driver-visible functions pci_msix_count() and pci_alloc_msix(). As a result, pci_msi_count() now just returns a count of the max supported MSI messages for the device, and pci_alloc_msi() only tries to allocate MSI messages. To get a count of the max supported MSI-X messages, use pci_msix_count(). To allocate MSI-X messages, use pci_alloc_msix(). pci_release_msi() still handles both MSI and MSI-X messages, however. As a result of this change, drivers using the existing API will only use MSI messages and will no longer try to use MSI-X messages. - Because MSI-X allows for each message to have its own data and address values (and thus does not require all of the messages to have their MD vectors allocated as a group), some devices allow for "sparse" use of MSI-X message slots. For example, if a device supports 8 messages but the OS is only able to allocate 2 messages, the device may make the best use of 2 IRQs if it enables the messages at slots 1 and 4 rather than default of using the first N slots (or indicies) at 1 and 2. To support this, add a new pci_remap_msix() function that a driver may call after a successful pci_alloc_msix() (but before allocating any of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources) to allow the allocated IRQ resources to be assigned to different message indices. For example, from the earlier example, after pci_alloc_msix() returned a value of 2, the driver would call pci_remap_msix() passing in array of integers { 1, 4 } as the new message indices to use. The rid's for the SYS_RES_IRQ resources will always match the message indices. Thus, after the call to pci_remap_msix() the driver would be able to access the first message in slot 1 at SYS_RES_IRQ rid 1, and the second message at slot 4 at SYS_RES_IRQ rid 4. Note that the message slots/indices are 1-based rather than 0-based so that they will always correspond to the rid values (SYS_RES_IRQ rid 0 is reserved for the legacy INTx interrupt). To support this API, a new PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() method was added to the pcib interface to change the message index for a single IRQ. Tested by: scottl
2007-01-22 21:48:44 +00:00
}
Revamp the MSI/MSI-X code a bit to achieve two main goals: - Simplify the amount of work that has be done for each architecture by pushing more of the truly MI code down into the PCI bus driver. - Don't bind MSI-X indicies to IRQs so that we can allow a driver to map multiple MSI-X messages into a single IRQ when handling a message shortage. The changes include: - Add a new pcib_if method: PCIB_MAP_MSI() which is called by the PCI bus to calculate the address and data values for a given MSI/MSI-X IRQ. The x86 nexus drivers map this into a call to a new 'msi_map()' function in msi.c that does the mapping. - Retire the pcib_if method PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() and remove the 'index' parameter from PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX(). MD code no longer has any knowledge of the MSI-X index for a given MSI-X IRQ. - The PCI bus driver now stores more MSI-X state in a child's ivars. Specifically, it now stores an array of IRQs (called "message vectors" in the code) that have associated address and data values, and a small virtual version of the MSI-X table that specifies the message vector that a given MSI-X table entry uses. Sparse mappings are permitted in the virtual table. - The PCI bus driver now configures the MSI and MSI-X address/data registers directly via custom bus_setup_intr() and bus_teardown_intr() methods. pci_setup_intr() invokes PCIB_MAP_MSI() to determine the address and data values for a given message as needed. The MD code no longer has to call back down into the PCI bus code to set these values from the nexus' bus_setup_intr() handler. - The PCI bus code provides a callout (pci_remap_msi_irq()) that the MD code can call to force the PCI bus to re-invoke PCIB_MAP_MSI() to get new values of the address and data fields for a given IRQ. The x86 MSI code uses this when an MSI IRQ is moved to a different CPU, requiring a new value of the 'address' field. - The x86 MSI psuedo-driver loses a lot of code, and in fact the separate MSI/MSI-X pseudo-PICs are collapsed down into a single MSI PIC driver since the only remaining diff between the two is a substring in a bootverbose printf. - The PCI bus driver will now restore MSI-X state (including programming entries in the MSI-X table) on device resume. - The interface for pci_remap_msix() has changed. Instead of accepting indices for the allocated vectors, it accepts a mini-virtual table (with a new length parameter). This table is an array of u_ints, where each value specifies which allocated message vector to use for the corresponding MSI-X message. A vector of 0 forces a message to not have an associated IRQ. The device may choose to only use some of the IRQs assigned, in which case the unused IRQs must be at the "end" and will be released back to the system. This allows a driver to use the same remap table for different shortage values. For example, if a driver wants 4 messages, it can use the same remap table (which only uses the first two messages) for the cases when it only gets 2 or 3 messages and in the latter case the PCI bus will release the 3rd IRQ back to the system. MFC after: 1 month
2007-05-02 17:50:36 +00:00
/* Pass request to map MSI/MSI-X message up to parent bridge. */
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
int
Revamp the MSI/MSI-X code a bit to achieve two main goals: - Simplify the amount of work that has be done for each architecture by pushing more of the truly MI code down into the PCI bus driver. - Don't bind MSI-X indicies to IRQs so that we can allow a driver to map multiple MSI-X messages into a single IRQ when handling a message shortage. The changes include: - Add a new pcib_if method: PCIB_MAP_MSI() which is called by the PCI bus to calculate the address and data values for a given MSI/MSI-X IRQ. The x86 nexus drivers map this into a call to a new 'msi_map()' function in msi.c that does the mapping. - Retire the pcib_if method PCIB_REMAP_MSIX() and remove the 'index' parameter from PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX(). MD code no longer has any knowledge of the MSI-X index for a given MSI-X IRQ. - The PCI bus driver now stores more MSI-X state in a child's ivars. Specifically, it now stores an array of IRQs (called "message vectors" in the code) that have associated address and data values, and a small virtual version of the MSI-X table that specifies the message vector that a given MSI-X table entry uses. Sparse mappings are permitted in the virtual table. - The PCI bus driver now configures the MSI and MSI-X address/data registers directly via custom bus_setup_intr() and bus_teardown_intr() methods. pci_setup_intr() invokes PCIB_MAP_MSI() to determine the address and data values for a given message as needed. The MD code no longer has to call back down into the PCI bus code to set these values from the nexus' bus_setup_intr() handler. - The PCI bus code provides a callout (pci_remap_msi_irq()) that the MD code can call to force the PCI bus to re-invoke PCIB_MAP_MSI() to get new values of the address and data fields for a given IRQ. The x86 MSI code uses this when an MSI IRQ is moved to a different CPU, requiring a new value of the 'address' field. - The x86 MSI psuedo-driver loses a lot of code, and in fact the separate MSI/MSI-X pseudo-PICs are collapsed down into a single MSI PIC driver since the only remaining diff between the two is a substring in a bootverbose printf. - The PCI bus driver will now restore MSI-X state (including programming entries in the MSI-X table) on device resume. - The interface for pci_remap_msix() has changed. Instead of accepting indices for the allocated vectors, it accepts a mini-virtual table (with a new length parameter). This table is an array of u_ints, where each value specifies which allocated message vector to use for the corresponding MSI-X message. A vector of 0 forces a message to not have an associated IRQ. The device may choose to only use some of the IRQs assigned, in which case the unused IRQs must be at the "end" and will be released back to the system. This allows a driver to use the same remap table for different shortage values. For example, if a driver wants 4 messages, it can use the same remap table (which only uses the first two messages) for the cases when it only gets 2 or 3 messages and in the latter case the PCI bus will release the 3rd IRQ back to the system. MFC after: 1 month
2007-05-02 17:50:36 +00:00
pcib_map_msi(device_t pcib, device_t dev, int irq, uint64_t *addr,
uint32_t *data)
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
{
device_t bus;
int error;
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
bus = device_get_parent(pcib);
error = PCIB_MAP_MSI(device_get_parent(bus), dev, irq, addr, data);
if (error)
return (error);
pci_ht_map_msi(pcib, *addr);
return (0);
First cut at MI support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI): - Add 3 new functions to the pci_if interface along with suitable wrappers to provide the device driver visible API: - pci_alloc_msi(dev, int *count) backed by PCI_ALLOC_MSI(). '*count' here is an in and out parameter. The driver stores the desired number of messages in '*count' before calling the function. On success, '*count' holds the number of messages allocated to the device. Also on success, the driver can access the messages as SYS_RES_IRQ resources starting at rid 1. Note that the legacy INTx interrupt resource will not be available when using MSI. Note that this function will allocate either MSI or MSI-X messages depending on the devices capabilities and the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. Also note that the driver should activate the memory resource that holds the MSI-X table and pending bit array (PBA) before calling this function if the device supports MSI-X. - pci_release_msi(dev) backed by PCI_RELEASE_MSI(). This function releases the messages allocated for this device. All of the SYS_RES_IRQ resources need to be released for this function to succeed. - pci_msi_count(dev) backed by PCI_MSI_COUNT(). This function returns the maximum number of MSI or MSI-X messages supported by this device. MSI-X is preferred if present, but this function will honor the 'hw.pci.enable_msix' and 'hw.pci.enable_msi' tunables. This function should return the largest value that pci_alloc_msi() can return (assuming the MD code is able to allocate sufficient backing resources for all of the messages). - Add default implementations for these 3 methods to the pci_driver generic PCI bus driver. (The various other PCI bus drivers such as for ACPI and OFW will inherit these default implementations.) This default implementation depends on 4 new pcib_if methods that bubble up through the PCI bridges to the MD code to allocate IRQ values and perform any needed MD setup code needed: - PCIB_ALLOC_MSI() attempts to allocate a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSI() releases a group of MSI messages. - PCIB_ALLOC_MSIX() attempts to allocate a single MSI-X message. - PCIB_RELEASE_MSIX() releases a single MSI-X message. - Add default implementations for these 4 methods that just pass the request up to the parent bus's parent bridge driver and use the default implementation in the various MI PCI bridge drivers. - Add MI functions for use by MD code when managing MSI and MSI-X interrupts: - pci_enable_msi(dev, address, data) programs the MSI capability address and data registers for a group of MSI messages - pci_enable_msix(dev, index, address, data) initializes a single MSI-X message in the MSI-X table - pci_mask_msix(dev, index) masks a single MSI-X message - pci_unmask_msix(dev, index) unmasks a single MSI-X message - pci_pending_msix(dev, index) returns true if the specified MSI-X message is currently pending - Save the MSI capability address and data registers in the pci_cfgreg block in a PCI devices ivars and restore the values when a device is resumed. Note that the MSI-X table is not currently restored during resume. - Add constants for MSI-X register offsets and fields. - Record interesting data about any MSI-X capability blocks we come across in the pci_cfgreg block in the ivars for PCI devices. Tested on: em (i386, MSI), bce (amd64/i386, MSI), mpt (amd64, MSI-X) Reviewed by: scottl, grehan, jfv MFC after: 2 months
2006-11-13 21:47:30 +00:00
}
/* Pass request for device power state up to parent bridge. */
int
pcib_power_for_sleep(device_t pcib, device_t dev, int *pstate)
{
device_t bus;
bus = device_get_parent(pcib);
return (PCIB_POWER_FOR_SLEEP(bus, dev, pstate));
}
static int
pcib_ari_enabled(device_t pcib)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
sc = device_get_softc(pcib);
return ((sc->flags & PCIB_ENABLE_ARI) != 0);
}
static int
pcib_ari_get_id(device_t pcib, device_t dev, enum pci_id_type type,
uintptr_t *id)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
device_t bus_dev;
uint8_t bus, slot, func;
if (type != PCI_ID_RID) {
bus_dev = device_get_parent(pcib);
return (PCIB_GET_ID(device_get_parent(bus_dev), dev, type, id));
}
sc = device_get_softc(pcib);
if (sc->flags & PCIB_ENABLE_ARI) {
bus = pci_get_bus(dev);
func = pci_get_function(dev);
*id = (PCI_ARI_RID(bus, func));
} else {
bus = pci_get_bus(dev);
slot = pci_get_slot(dev);
func = pci_get_function(dev);
*id = (PCI_RID(bus, slot, func));
}
return (0);
}
/*
* Check that the downstream port (pcib) and the endpoint device (dev) both
* support ARI. If so, enable it and return 0, otherwise return an error.
*/
static int
pcib_try_enable_ari(device_t pcib, device_t dev)
{
struct pcib_softc *sc;
int error;
uint32_t cap2;
int ari_cap_off;
uint32_t ari_ver;
uint32_t pcie_pos;
sc = device_get_softc(pcib);
/*
* ARI is controlled in a register in the PCIe capability structure.
* If the downstream port does not have the PCIe capability structure
* then it does not support ARI.
*/
error = pci_find_cap(pcib, PCIY_EXPRESS, &pcie_pos);
if (error != 0)
return (ENODEV);
/* Check that the PCIe port advertises ARI support. */
cap2 = pci_read_config(pcib, pcie_pos + PCIER_DEVICE_CAP2, 4);
if (!(cap2 & PCIEM_CAP2_ARI))
return (ENODEV);
/*
* Check that the endpoint device advertises ARI support via the ARI
* extended capability structure.
*/
error = pci_find_extcap(dev, PCIZ_ARI, &ari_cap_off);
if (error != 0)
return (ENODEV);
/*
* Finally, check that the endpoint device supports the same version
* of ARI that we do.
*/
ari_ver = pci_read_config(dev, ari_cap_off, 4);
if (PCI_EXTCAP_VER(ari_ver) != PCIB_SUPPORTED_ARI_VER) {
if (bootverbose)
device_printf(pcib,
"Unsupported version of ARI (%d) detected\n",
PCI_EXTCAP_VER(ari_ver));
return (ENXIO);
}
pcib_enable_ari(sc, pcie_pos);
return (0);
}