It is belived that that pass s not needed anymore.
Specifically it is not required now for the reasons that were given
in the removed comment.
Discussed with: jhb
MFC after: 4 weeks
Some current systems dynamically load SSDT(s) when _PDC/_OSC method
of Processor is evaluated. Other devices in ACPI namespace may access
objects defined in the dynamic SSDT. Drivers for such devices might
have to have a rather high priority, because of other dependencies.
Good example is acpi_ec driver for EC.
Thus we attach to Processors as early as possible to load the SSDTs
before any other drivers may try to evaluate control methods.
It also seems to be a natural order for a processor in a device
hierarchy.
On the other hand, some child devices on acpi cpu bus need to access
other system resources like PCI configuration space of chipset devices,
so they need to be probed and attached rather late.
For this reason we probe and attach the cpu bus at
SI_SUB_CONFIGURE:SI_ORDER_MIDDLE SYSINIT level.
In the future this could be done more elegantly via multipass.
Please note that acpi drivers that might access ACPI namespace from
device_identify will do that before _PDC/_OSC of Processors are evaluated.
Legacy cpu driver is not affected by this change.
PR: kern/142561 (in part)
Reviewed by: jhb
Silence from: acpi@
MFC after: 5 weeks
_PDC was deprecated in favor of _OSC long time ago, but it
seems that they still peacefully coexist and in some case
only _PDC is present.
Still _OSC provides a reacher interface and is capable to
report back its status.
If the status is non-zero, then report it, we may find
it useful to understand what firmware expects from OS.
Also clean up some comments that became less useful over time.
Reviewed by: njl, jhb, rpaulo
MFC after: 3 weeks
Also, account for a quirk of AMD/ATI HPET which reports number of timers
instead of id of the last timer as manadated by the specification.
Currently this has no effect on functionality but in the future we may
make actual use of the HPET timers, not only of its timecounter.
MFC after: 2 weeks
This is not only a prudent thing to do, but also makes sure that probe
method is not confused by non-NULL 'private', if the previous attach
attempt fails for any reason.
PR: kern/142561
Tested by: Alex Goncharov <alex-goncharov@comcast.net>
MFC after: 4 days
o acpi_hpet: auto-added 'wildcard' devices can be identified by
non-NULL handle attribute.
o acpi_ec: auto-add 'wildcard' devices can be identified by
unset (NULL) private attribute.
o acpi_cpu: use private instead of magic to store cpu id.
Reviewed by: jhb
Silence from: acpi@
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC-Note: perhaps the ivar should stay for ABI stability
sysctl lock. The 'video' lock now protects the 'bus' of video output
devices attached to a graphics adapter. It is used when iterating over
the list of outputs, etc. The 'video_output' lock is used to lock the
output-specific data similar to a driver lock for the individual video
outputs.
MFC after: 2 weeks
startup and genericize it so it can be reused to map other tables as well:
- Add a routine to walk a list of ACPI subtables such as those used in the
APIC and SRAT tables in the MI acpi(4) driver.
- Move the routines for mapping and unmapping an ACPI table as well as
mapping the RSDT or XSDT and searching for a table with a given signature
out into acpica_machdep.c for both amd64 and i386.
BIOS-enumerated devices:
- Assume a device is a match if the memory and I/O ports match even if the
IRQ or DRQ is wrong or missing. Some BIOSes don't include an IRQ for
the atrtc device for example.
- Add a hack to better match floppy controller devices. Many BIOSes do not
include the starting port of the floppy controller listed in the hints
(0x3f0) in the resources for the device. So far, however, all the BIOS
variations encountered do include the 'port + 2' resource (0x3f2), so
adjust the matching for "fdc" devices to look for 'port + 2'.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 3 days
The newbus lock is responsible for protecting newbus internIal structures,
device states and devclass flags. It is necessary to hold it when all
such datas are accessed. For the other operations, softc locking should
ensure enough protection to avoid races.
Newbus lock is automatically held when virtual operations on the device
and bus are invoked when loading the driver or when the suspend/resume
take place. For other 'spourious' operations trying to access/modify
the newbus topology, newbus lock needs to be automatically acquired and
dropped.
For the moment Giant is also acquired in some key point (modules subsystem)
in order to avoid problems before the 8.0 release as module handlers could
make assumptions about it. This Giant locking should go just after
the release happens.
Please keep in mind that the public interface can be expanded in order
to provide more support, if there are really necessities at some point
and also some bugs could arise as long as the patch needs a bit of
further testing.
Bump __FreeBSD_version in order to reflect the newbus lock introduction.
Reviewed by: ed, hps, jhb, imp, mav, scottl
No answer by: ariff, thompsa, yongari
Tested by: pho,
G. Trematerra <giovanni dot trematerra at gmail dot com>,
Brandon Gooch <jamesbrandongooch at gmail dot com>
Sponsored by: Yahoo! Incorporated
Approved by: re (ksmith)
- Preallocate some memory for ACPI tasks early enough. We cannot use
malloc(9) any more because spin mutex may be held here. The reserved
memory can be tuned via debug.acpi.max_tasks tunable or ACPI_MAX_TASKS
in kernel configuration. The default is 32 tasks.
- Implement a custom taskqueue_fast to wrap the new memory allocation.
This implementation is not the fastest in the world but we are being
conservative here.
a _BBN value of 0 if it was for the first bridge encountered since some
older systems returned _BBN of 0 for all bridges. However, some newer
systems enumerate bridges with non-zero _BBN before bus 0 which is
perfectly valid. Handle both cases by trusting the first bridge that has
a _BBN of 0 and falling back to reading from non-standard config registers
only for subsequent bridges with a _BBN of 0. We also only perform this
check for segment (domain) 0. We assume that _BBN is always correct
for segments other than 0.
Tested by: Josef Moellers josef.moellers at fujitsu
MFC after: 1 week
leading to a bug, when C-state does not decrease on sleep shorter then
declared transition latency. Fixing this deprecates workaround for broken
C-states on some hardware.
By the way, change state selecting logic a bit. Instead of last sleep
time use short-time average of it. Global interrupts rate in system is a
quite random value, to corellate subsequent sleeps so directly.
- Probe supported sleep states from acpi_attach() just once and do not
call AcpiGetSleepTypeData() again. It is redundant because
AcpiEnterSleepStatePrep() does it any way.
- Treat UNKNOWN sleep state as NONE, i.e., "do nothing", and remove obscure
NONE state (ACPI_S_STATES_MAX + 1) to avoid confusions.
- Do not set unsupported sleep states as default button/switch events.
If the default sleep state is not supported, just set it as UNKNOWN/NONE.
- Do not allow sleep state change if the system is not fully up and running.
This should prevent entering S5 state multiple times, which causes strange
behaviours later.
- Make sleep states case-insensitive when they are used with sysctl(8).
For example,
sysctl hw.acpi.lid_switch_state=s1
sysctl hw.acpi.sleep_button_state=none
are now legal and equivalent to the uppercase ones.
This change adds (possibly redundant) early check for invalid
state input parameter (including S0). Handling of S5 request
is reduced to simply calling shutdown_nice(). As a result
control flow of acpi_EnterSleepState is somewhat simplified
and resume/backout half of the function is not executed
for S5 (soft poweroff) request and invalid state requests.
Note: it seems that shutdown_nice may act as nop when initproc
is already initialized (to grab pid of 1), but init process is in
"pre-natal" state.
Tested by: Fabian Keil <fk@fabiankeil.de>
Reviewed by: njl, jkim
Approved by: rpaulo
into acpi_cpu_startup() which is where all the other code to update this
global variable lives. This fixes a bug where cpu_cx_count was not updated
correctly if acpi_cpu_generic_cx_probe() returned early.
PR: kern/108581
Debugged by: Bruce Cran
Reviewed by: avg, njl, sepotvin
MFC after: 3 days
This code is heavily inspired by Takanori Watanabe's experimental SMP patch
for i386 and large portion was shamelessly cut and pasted from Peter Wemm's
AP boot code.
This is triggered only if BIOS configures ACPI_BITREG_BUS_MASTER_RLD
aka BRLD_EN_BM to 1.
Rationale:
1. we do not support C3 on PIIX4E
2. bus master activity need not break out of C2 state
3. because of CPU_QUIRK_NO_BM_CTRL quirk we may reset bus master
status which would result in immediate break out from C2
So if you have seen
cpu0: too many short sleeps, backing off to C1
with this chipset before you may want to try cx_lowest of C2 again.
Reviewed by: rpaulo (mentor), njl
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
if (batt_sleep_ms)
AcpiOsSleep(1);
where the rest are all:
if (batt_sleep_ms)
AcpiOsSleep(batt_sleep_ms);
I can't recall why that one was different, so change it
to match the rest.
Pointed out by: Christoph Mallon
MFC after: 2 weeks
On some laptops with smart batteries, enabling battery monitoring
software causes keystrokes from atkbd to be lost. This has also been
reported on Linux, and is apparently due to the keyboard and I2C line
for the battery being routed through the same chip. Whether that's
accurate or not, adding extra sleeps to the status checking code
causes the problem to go away.
I've been running this for nearly six months now on my laptop,
it works like a charm.
Reviewed by: Nate Lawson (in a previous revision)
MFC after: 2 weeks