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
acpi_GetInteger() execution. Intel DMAR interrupt remapping code
needs to know UID of the HPET to properly route the FSB interrupts
from the HPET, even when interrupt remapping is disabled, and the code
is executed under some non-sleepable mutexes.
Cache HPET UIDs in the device softc at the attach time and provide
lock-less method to get UID, use the method from the dmar hpet
handling code instead of calling GetInteger().
Reported and tested by: Larry Rosenman <ler@lerctr.org>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
This simplifies checking for default resource range for bus_alloc_resource(),
and improves readability.
This is part of, and related to, the migration of rman_res_t from u_long to
uintmax_t.
Discussed with: jhb
Suggested by: marcel
Summary:
Migrate to using the semi-opaque type rman_res_t to specify rman resources. For
now, this is still compatible with u_long.
This is step one in migrating rman to use uintmax_t for resources instead of
u_long.
Going forward, this could feasibly be used to specify architecture-specific
definitions of resource ranges, rather than baking a specific integer type into
the API.
This change has been broken out to facilitate MFC'ing drivers back to 10 without
breaking ABI.
Reviewed By: jhb
Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5075
to shut down; close laptop lid" scenario which otherwise tended to end
with a laptop overheating or the battery dying.
The implementation uses a new sysctl, kern.suspend_blocked; init(8) sets
this while rc.suspend runs, and the ACPI sleep code ignores requests while
the sysctl is set.
Discussed on: freebsd-acpi (35 emails)
MFC after: 1 week
When the system has more than a single PCI domain, the bus numbers
are not unique, thus they cannot be used for "pci" device numbering.
Change bus numbers to -1 (i.e. to-be-determined automatically)
wherever the code did not care about domains.
Reviewed by: jhb
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3406
drivers, one for fdt, one for acpi. It then uses this to decide if it will
use fdt or acpi.
The GICv2 (interrupt controller) and Generic Timer drivers have been
updated to handle both cases.
As this is early code we still need FDT to find the kernel console, and
some parts are still missing, including PCI support.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2463
Reviewed by: jhb, jkim, emaste
Obtained from: ABT Systems Ltd
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
years for head. However, it is continuously misused as the mpsafe argument
for callout_init(9). Deprecate the flag and clean up callout_init() calls
to make them more consistent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2613
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
bridges only supported Intel Pentium and Pentium II era processors and there
is no reason for hardware virtualizations to emulate these quirks.
MFC after: 1 week
interacts with interrupts, query ACPI and use MWAIT for entrance into
Cx sleep states. Support C1 "I/O then halt" mode. See Intel'
document 302223-007 "Intelб╝ Processor Vendor-Specific ACPI Interface
Specification" for description.
Move the acpi_cpu_c1() function into x86/cpu_machdep.c and use
it instead of inlining "sti; hlt" sequence in several places.
In the acpi(4) man page, besides documenting the dev.cpu.N.cx_methods
sysctl, correct the names for dev.cpu.N.{cx_usage,cx_lowest,cx_supported}
sysctls.
Both jkim and avg have some other patches implementing the mwait
functionality; this work is unrelated. Linux does not rely on the
ACPI to provide correct tables describing Cx modes. Instead, the
driver has pre-defined knowledge of the CPU models, it was supplied by
Intel.
Tested by: pho (previous versions)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
its use in upcoming code.
This is inspired by something in jhb's NUMA IRQ allocation patchset.
However, the tricky bit here is that the PXM lookup for a node may
fail, requiring a lookup on the parent node. So if it doesn't
exist, don't fail - just go up to the parent. Only error out of the
lookup is the ACPI lookup returns an error.
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
"Intelб╝ Processor Vendor-Specific ACPI Interface Specification",
issied Dec 2014. Previous revision 005 was from Sep 2006.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
under bootverbose. Every example I've seen to date has been due to
an ACPI system resource device reserving a range that overlaps with
system memory (which ram0 attempts to reserve) or a local or I/O APIC
(which apic0 attempts to reserve). These are always harmless but look
scary to users.
MFC after: 1 week
Implement the interace to create SR-IOV Virtual Functions (VFs).
When a driver registers that they support SR-IOV by calling
pci_setup_iov(), the SR-IOV code creates a new node in /dev/iov
for that device. An ioctl can be invoked on that device to
create VFs and have the driver initialize them.
At this point, allocating memory I/O windows (BARs) is not
supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D76
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Sandvine Inc.
identifies the tested condition for _PRT as "BYTE value of 0", so the
remaining part of the conditionals is sufficient.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
allows the user to request administrative changes to individual devices
such as attach or detaching drivers or disabling and re-enabling devices.
- Add a new /dev/devctl2 character device which uses ioctls for device
requests. The ioctls use a common 'struct devreq' which is somewhat
similar to 'struct ifreq'.
- The ioctls identify the device to operate on via a string. This
string can either by the device's name, or it can be a bus-specific
address. (For unattached devices, a bus address is the only way to
locate a device.) Bus drivers register an eventhandler to claim
unrecognized device names that the driver recognizes as a valid address.
Two buses currently support addresses: ACPI recognizes any device
in the ACPI namespace via its full path starting with "\" and
the PCI bus driver recognizes an address specification of
'pci[<domain>:]<bus>:<slot>:<func>' (identical to the PCI selector
strings supported by pciconf).
- To make it easier to cut and paste, change the PnP location string
in the PCI bus driver to output a full PCI selector string rather
than 'slot=<slot> function=<func>'.
- Add a devctl(3) interface in libdevctl which provides a wrapper around
the ioctls and is the preferred interface for other userland code.
- Add a devctl(8) program which is a simple wrapper around the requests
supported by devctl(3).
- Add a device_is_suspended() function to check DF_SUSPENDED.
- Add a resource_unset_value() function that can be used to remove a
hint from the kernel environment. This is used to clear a
hint.<driver>.<unit>.disabled hint when re-enabling a boot-time
disabled device.
Reviewed by: imp (parts)
Requested by: imp (changing PCI location string)
Relnotes: yes
Also, split power_suspend into power_suspend and power_suspend_early.
power_suspend_early is called before the userland is frozen.
power_suspend is called after the userland is frozen.
Currently only VT switching is hooked to power_suspend_early.
This is needed because switching away from X server requires its
cooperation, so obviously X server must not be frozen when that happens.
Freezing userland during ACPI suspend is useful because not all drivers
correctly handle suspension concurrent with other activity. This is
especially applicable to drivers ported from other operating systems
that suspend all software activity between placing drivers and hardware
into suspended state.
In particular drm2/radeon (radeonkms) depends on the described
procedure. The driver does not have any internal synchronization
between suspension activities and processing of userland requests.
Many thanks to kib for the code that allows to freeze and thaw all
userland threads.
Note that ideally we also need to park / inhibit (non-special) kernel
threads as well to ensure that they do not call into drivers.
MFC after: 17 days
accidentally enable non-existent states.
This bug was triggered if ACPI advertises the presence of a C2 state
which we fail to parse via acpi_PkgGas due to our lack of support for
FFixedHW resources, and causes an immediate panic when an attempt is
made to enter the (NULL) state.
One affected platform is the EC2 c4.8xlarge VM instance type; there
may be others.
MFC after: 1 week
Thanks to: jkim, @_msw_
may also halt in C2 and not just C3 (it seems that in some cases the BIOS
advertises its C3 state as a C2 state in _CST). Just play it safe and
disable both C2 and C3 states if a user forces the use of the TSC as the
timecounter on such CPUs.
PR: 192316
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1441
No objection from: jkim
MFC after: 1 week
state said device should go into.
This was a snafu introduced in the ACPI/PCI awareness separation.
When putting a device into a power state, the bus (and thus firmware,
eg ACPI) should be asked before hand to check whether the device
can indeed go into that power state.
There's a set of nodes in ACPI under each device - the _SxD nodes - which
state which ACPI power state to put the device into when the system is
going into power save state 'x'. So when going into S3, the existence
of an _S3D node would override whatever the system was trying to do.
By default the PCI code wants to put devices into D3 before suspending.
I have a laptop here (Asus Zenbook - check the PR) whose EHCI controller
really wants to be in D2 during suspend, not D3. So if we put it into
D3 and then try to enter S3, everything hangs. The device itself
can go into D3 - it just can't be there when the call to ACPI to enter
S3 occurs. The PCI patch fixes this.
jkim@ noticed that the same is needed for the ACPI child device
enumeration.
Thankyou to Matt Dillon (the programmer, not the actor) for buying me
this particular laptop so I could debug the issues with the Atheros
AR9485 that is in it. It's his fault that I ended up with this
laptop and was sufficiently annoyed by the lack of USB suspend
to go down this rabbit hole.
Tested:
* Thinkpad T400
* Thinkpad X230
* Thinkpad T42
* Thinkpad T60
* Asus Zenbook (see PR)
* Asus EEEPC 701
* Asus EEEPC 1001PX
TODO:
* Figure out what we should do about devices we unload drivers for
that want to be in a specific state when entering S3 / S4 -
the "put devices into D3 if they're not bound to a driver" option
may also mess with things.
PR: kern/194884
Reviewed by: jhb, jkim
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Matt Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com> (hardware)
directly accessed. Although this will work on some platforms, it can
throw an exception if the pointer is invalid and then panic the kernel.
Add a missing SYSCTL_IN() of "SCTP_BASE_STATS" structure.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
It had two bugs: one where mmap was still allowed and another where
D_TRACKCLOSE doesn't handle all cases.
Thanks to jhb and kib for pointing them out.
MFC after: 1 week
In some cases, TSC is broken and special applications might benefit
from memory mapping HPET and reading the registers to count time.
Most often the main HPET counter is 32-bit only[1], so this only gives
the application a 300 second window based on the default HPET
interval.
Other applications, such as Intel's DPDK, expect /dev/hpet to be
present and use it to count time as well.
Although we have an almost userland version of gettimeofday() which
uses rdtsc in userland, it's not always possible to use it, depending
on how broken the multi-socket hardware is.
Install the acpi_hpet.h so that applications can use the HPET register
definitions.
[1] I haven't found a system where HPET's main counter uses more than
32 bit. There seems to be a discrepancy in the Intel documentation
(claiming it's a 64-bit counter) and the actual implementation (a
32-bit counter in a 64-bit memory area).
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
in userland rename in-kernel getenv()/setenv() to kern_setenv()/kern_getenv().
This fixes a namespace collision with libc symbols.
Submitted by: kmacy
Tested by: make universe
* Add a bus_if.m method - get_domain() - returning the VM domain or
ENOENT if the device isn't in a VM domain;
* Add bus methods to print out the domain of the device if appropriate;
* Add code in srat.c to save the PXM -> VM domain mapping that's done and
expose a function to translate VM domain -> PXM;
* Add ACPI and ACPI PCI methods to check if the bus has a _PXM attribute
and if so map it to the VM domain;
* (.. yes, this works recursively.)
* Have the pci bus glue print out the device VM domain if present.
Note: this is just the plumbing to start enumerating information -
it doesn't at all modify behaviour.
Differential Revision: D906
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: Norse Corp
This patch adds support for MSI interrupts when running on Xen. Apart
from adding the Xen related code needed in order to register MSI
interrupts this patch also makes the msi_init function a hook in
init_ops, so different MSI implementations can have different
initialization functions.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
xen/interface/physdev.h:
- Add the MAP_PIRQ_TYPE_MULTI_MSI to map multi-vector MSI to the Xen
public interface.
x86/include/init.h:
- Add a hook for setting custom msi_init methods.
amd64/amd64/machdep.c:
i386/i386/machdep.c:
- Set the default msi_init hook to point to the native MSI
initialization method.
x86/xen/pv.c:
- Set the Xen MSI init hook when running as a Xen guest.
x86/x86/local_apic.c:
- Call the msi_init hook instead of directly calling msi_init.
xen/xen_intr.h:
x86/xen/xen_intr.c:
- Introduce support for registering/releasing MSI interrupts with
Xen.
- The MSI interrupts will use the same PIC as the IO APIC interrupts.
xen/xen_msi.h:
x86/xen/xen_msi.c:
- Introduce a Xen MSI implementation.
x86/xen/xen_nexus.c:
- Overwrite the default MSI hooks in the Xen Nexus to use the Xen MSI
implementation.
x86/xen/xen_pci.c:
- Introduce a Xen specific PCI bus that inherits from the ACPI PCI
bus and overwrites the native MSI methods.
- This is needed because when running under Xen the MSI messages used
to configure MSI interrupts on PCI devices are written by Xen
itself.
dev/acpica/acpi_pci.c:
- Lower the quality of the ACPI PCI bus so the newly introduced Xen
PCI bus can take over when needed.
conf/files.i386:
conf/files.amd64:
- Add the newly created files to the build process.
resume that is a superset of a pcb. Move the FPU state out of the pcb and
into this new structure. As part of this, move the FPU resume code on
amd64 into a C function. This allows resumectx() to still operate only on
a pcb and more closely mirrors the i386 code.
Reviewed by: kib (earlier version)
Also disable a couple of ACPI devices that are not usable under Dom0.
To this end a couple of booleans are added that allow disabling ACPI
specific devices.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: jhb
x86/xen/xen_nexus.c:
- Return BUS_PROBE_SPECIFIC in the Xen Nexus attachement routine to
force the usage of the Xen Nexus.
- Attach the ACPI bus when running as Dom0.
dev/acpica/acpi_cpu.c:
dev/acpica/acpi_hpet.c:
dev/acpica/acpi_timer.c
- Add a variable that gates the addition of the devices.
x86/include/init.h:
- Declare variables that control the attachment of ACPI cpu, hpet and
timer devices.
This includes:
o All directories named *ia64*
o All files named *ia64*
o All ia64-specific code guarded by __ia64__
o All ia64-specific makefile logic
o Mention of ia64 in comments and documentation
This excludes:
o Everything under contrib/
o Everything under crypto/
o sys/xen/interface
o sys/sys/elf_common.h
Discussed at: BSDcan
These changes prevent sysctl(8) from returning proper output,
such as:
1) no output from sysctl(8)
2) erroneously returning ENOMEM with tools like truss(1)
or uname(1)
truss: can not get etype: Cannot allocate memory
there is an environment variable which shall initialize the SYSCTL
during early boot. This works for all SYSCTL types both statically and
dynamically created ones, except for the SYSCTL NODE type and SYSCTLs
which belong to VNETs. A new flag, CTLFLAG_NOFETCH, has been added to
be used in the case a tunable sysctl has a custom initialisation
function allowing the sysctl to still be marked as a tunable. The
kernel SYSCTL API is mostly the same, with a few exceptions for some
special operations like iterating childrens of a static/extern SYSCTL
node. This operation should probably be made into a factored out
common macro, hence some device drivers use this. The reason for
changing the SYSCTL API was the need for a SYSCTL parent OID pointer
and not only the SYSCTL parent OID list pointer in order to quickly
generate the sysctl path. The motivation behind this patch is to avoid
parameter loading cludges inside the OFED driver subsystem. Instead of
adding special code to the OFED driver subsystem to post-load tunables
into dynamically created sysctls, we generalize this in the kernel.
Other changes:
- Corrected a possibly incorrect sysctl name from "hw.cbb.intr_mask"
to "hw.pcic.intr_mask".
- Removed redundant TUNABLE statements throughout the kernel.
- Some minor code rewrites in connection to removing not needed
TUNABLE statements.
- Added a missing SYSCTL_DECL().
- Wrapped two very long lines.
- Avoid malloc()/free() inside sysctl string handling, in case it is
called to initialize a sysctl from a tunable, hence malloc()/free() is
not ready when sysctls from the sysctl dataset are registered.
- Bumped FreeBSD version to indicate SYSCTL API change.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
PCI root bridges except for the one known-valid case on x86 where bridges
claim the I/O port registers used for PCI config space access.
Tested by: Hilko Meyer <hilko.meyer@gmx.de>
MFC after: 1 week
instead of trying to cache it.
Previously, we only trusted the state if we did not have a cached state.
However, once a state was cached, the _STA method was always ignored.
Specifically, once a power resource had been turned on once (e.g.
during resume), the driver assumed it was always on even if _STA said it
was off and never turned it back on. This prevented the power resource
from being turned back on if a laptop was resumed twice, for example.
To fix, just remove the cached state entirely and always use the results
of _STA. The loops already skip any resources where _STA fails.
Submitted by: trasz (initial patch to invoke _ON)
MFC after: 1 week
that are being done by the OS.
For now this'll match up with the "wakeups"; although I'll dig deeper into
this to see if we can determine which sleep state the CPU managed to get
into. Most things I've seen these days only expose up to C2 or C3 via
ACPI even though the CPU goes all the way down to C6 or C7.
I/O windows, the default is to preserve the firmware-assigned resources.
PCI bus numbers are only managed if NEW_PCIB is enabled and the architecture
defines a PCI_RES_BUS resource type.
- Add a helper API to create top-level PCI bus resource managers for each
PCI domain/segment. Host-PCI bridge drivers use this API to allocate
bus numbers from their associated domain.
- Change the PCI bus and CardBus drivers to allocate a bus resource for
their bus number from the parent PCI bridge device.
- Change the PCI-PCI and PCI-CardBus bridge drivers to allocate the
full range of bus numbers from secbus to subbus from their parent bridge.
The drivers also always program their primary bus register. The bridge
drivers also support growing their bus range by extending the bus resource
and updating subbus to match the larger range.
- Add support for managing PCI bus resources to the Host-PCI bridge drivers
used for amd64 and i386 (acpi_pcib, mptable_pcib, legacy_pcib, and qpi_pcib).
- Define a PCI_RES_BUS resource type for amd64 and i386.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 1 month
the memory ranges that they decode for downstream devices rather than
creating ResourceProducer range resource entries. The result is that
we allocate the full range to the PCI root bridge device causing
allocations in child devices to all fail.
As a workaround, ignore any standard memory resources on a PCI root
bridge device. It is normal for a PCI root bridge to allocate an I/O
resource for the I/O ports used for PCI config access, but I have not
seen any PCI root bridges that legitimately allocate a memory resource.
Reviewed by: jkim
MFC after: 1 week
shifts into the sign bit. Instead use (1U << 31) which gets the
expected result.
This fix is not ideal as it assumes a 32 bit int, but does fix the issue
for most cases.
A similar change was made in OpenBSD.
Discussed with: -arch, rdivacky
Reviewed by: cperciva
resist easy conversion since they implement a great deal of their attach
logic inside probe(). Some of this could be fixed by moving it to attach(),
but some requires something more subtle than BUS_PROBE_NOWILDCARD.
1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture
Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are
not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which
implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments
for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services.
Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain
and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not
partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not
promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained
programmatically, and printed on the console.
Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids
bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver
bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild
DMA accesses.
By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel
but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is
written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and
driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on,
individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the
hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If
DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used,
otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed.
The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine,
Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4),
ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also
works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for
drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with
DMAR (yet).
Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration;
Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and
understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access
to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my
findings to somebody.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 month
Xen PVHVM guest.
Submitted by: Roger Pau Monné
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: gibbs
Approved by: re (blanket Xen)
MFC after: 2 weeks
sys/amd64/amd64/mp_machdep.c:
sys/i386/i386/mp_machdep.c:
- Make sure that are no MMU related IPIs pending on migration.
- Reset pending IPI_BITMAP on resume.
- Init vcpu_info on resume.
sys/amd64/include/intr_machdep.h:
sys/i386/include/intr_machdep.h:
sys/x86/acpica/acpi_wakeup.c:
sys/x86/x86/intr_machdep.c:
sys/x86/isa/atpic.c:
sys/x86/x86/io_apic.c:
sys/x86/x86/local_apic.c:
- Add a "suspend_cancelled" parameter to pic_resume(). For the
Xen PIC, restoration of interrupt services differs between
the aborted suspend and normal resume cases, so we must provide
this information.
sys/dev/acpica/acpi_timer.c:
sys/dev/xen/timer/timer.c:
sys/timetc.h:
- Don't swap out "suspend safe" timers across a suspend/resume
cycle. This includes the Xen PV and ACPI timers.
sys/dev/xen/control/control.c:
- Perform proper suspend/resume process for PVHVM:
- Suspend all APs before going into suspension, this allows us
to reset the vcpu_info on resume for each AP.
- Reset shared info page and callback on resume.
sys/dev/xen/timer/timer.c:
- Implement suspend/resume support for the PV timer. Since FreeBSD
doesn't perform a per-cpu resume of the timer, we need to call
smp_rendezvous in order to correctly resume the timer on each CPU.
sys/dev/xen/xenpci/xenpci.c:
- Don't reset the PCI interrupt on each suspend/resume.
sys/kern/subr_smp.c:
- When suspending a PVHVM domain make sure there are no MMU IPIs
in-flight, or we will get a lockup on resume due to the fact that
pending event channels are not carried over on migration.
- Implement a generic version of restart_cpus that can be used by
suspended and stopped cpus.
sys/x86/xen/hvm.c:
- Implement resume support for the hypercall page and shared info.
- Clear vcpu_info so it can be reset by APs when resuming from
suspension.
sys/dev/xen/xenpci/xenpci.c:
sys/x86/xen/hvm.c:
sys/x86/xen/xen_intr.c:
- Support UP kernel configurations.
sys/x86/xen/xen_intr.c:
- Properly rebind per-cpus VIRQs and IPIs on resume.
A warning is emitted again if the temperature became briefly valid
meanwhile. This avoids spamming the user when the sensor is broken.
Other values (ie. not _TMP) always raise a warning.
settings for ACPI-enumerated serial ports by forcing any IRQs that use
an ISA IRQ value with these settings to active-high instead of active-low.
This is known to occur with the BIOS on an Intel D2500CCE motherboard.
Tested by: Robert Ames <robertames@hotmail.com>, lev
Submitted by: Juergen Weiss weiss at uni-mainz.de (original patch)
we are probing a PCI-PCI bridge it is because we found one by enumerating
the devices on a PCI bus, so the bridge is definitely present. A few
BIOSes report incorrect status (_STA) for some bridges that claimed they
were not present when in fact they were.
While here, move this check earlier for Host-PCI bridges so attach fails
before doing any work that needs to be torn down.
PR: kern/91594
Tested by: Jack Vogel @ Intel
MFC after: 1 week
that uses non-ISA IRQs but use a plain IRQ resource in _CRS. However,
a non-ISA IRQ can't fit into a plain IRQ resource. If we encounter a
link like this, build the resource buffer from _PRS instead of _CRS.
- Set the correct size of the end tag in a resource buffer.
Tested by: Benjamin Lee <ben@b1c1l1.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Switch eventtimers(9) from using struct bintime to sbintime_t.
Even before this not a single driver really supported full dynamic range of
struct bintime even in theory, not speaking about practical inexpediency.
This change legitimates the status quo and cleans up the code.
When CPU becomes idle, cpu_idleclock() calculates time to the next timer
event in order to reprogram hw timer. Return that time in sbintime_t to
the caller and pass it to acpi_cpu_idle(), where it can be used as one
more factor (quite precise) to extimate furter sleep time and choose
optimal sleep state. This is a preparatory change for further callout
improvements will be committed in the next days.
The commmit is not targeted for MFC.
This hack is picked up from Linux, which claims that it follows
Windows behavior.
PR: amd64/174409
Tested by: Sergey V. Dyatko <sergey.dyatko@gmail.com>,
KAHO Toshikazu <kaho@elam.kais.kyoto-u.ac.jp>,
Slawa Olhovchenkov <slw@zxy.spb.ru>
MFC after: 13 days
ASUS P8Z77-V board reports _AC2, _AC3 and _AC4 setpoints as 0C. With active
cooling already automatically set to _AC2, that still caused driver to print
two useless lines about temperature above _AC3 and _AC4 every ten seconds.
Three setponts of 0C is probably a board bug, but the same spam could happen
also in correct case if system is runnign not with the lowest cooling level.