If the embedded controller exists before the sysresource devices, for
example, it will be attached first. Instead, let the normal device
order function work as we first desired. [1]
There still remained a problem where we couldn't allocate resources in
acpi0 that were passed up by the sysresource pseudo-devices. These
devices had to probe/attach first to give their resources to acpi, then
acpi would allocate them before probing/attaching other devices. To
work around this, we attach them from acpi_sysres_alloc(). A better
approach would be to implement multi-pass probe/attach in newbus but
that's a much bigger task.
Suggested by: jhb [1]
Hardware from: Centaur Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
acpi_resource change was a minor nit offered as an early candidate for
the recent ACPICA import problem and the acpi.c change is one I need to
test still that makes the ordered probing of system devices actually work
as advertised (probe devices in order based on the type of device rather
than in the order we encounter them in the device tree).
entry that is not zero, assume that it is really a hard-wired IRQ (commonly
used for APIC routing) and not a source index. In practice, we've only
ever seen source indices of 0 for legitimate non-hard-wired _PRT entries.
Reviewed by: njl
Tested by: Alex Lyashkov shadow at psoft dot net
MFC after: 2 weeks
producers rather than consumers as new-bus resources only handle consumed
resources. We already do this for the other ACPI resource types that
support the producer/consumer attribute.
hold its own values, pass them up to the parent (acpi0) and merge/uniq them
on the way. After the namespace evaluation, acpi will reserve these
resources and manage them via rman before bus_generic_probe() and
bus_generic_attach(). This is necessary because some systems specify
conflicting resources in separate sysresource objects. It's also cleaner
in that the interface between sysresource and acpi is now merely the parent's
resource list. This code handles the following cases:
1. Unique resource: add it to the parent via bus_set_resource().
2. New wholly contained in old: discard new.
3. New tail overlaps old head: grow old head downward.
AND/OR
4. New head overlaps old tail: grow old tail upward.
Tested by: Pawel Worach <sajd_at_telia.com>
Tested by: Radek Kozlowski <radek_at_raadradd.com>
MFC after: 5 days
systems that have overlapping regions specified in their sysresource
objects. This patch fixes ATA DMA and acpi_timer allocation for such
sysctems. It should eventually be moved to resource_list_add() if it is
a valid generalized approach. The minimal approach for 5.3 is:
"Loop through all current resources to see if the new one overlaps
any existing ones. If so, the old one always takes precedence and
the new one is adjusted (or rejected). We check for three cases:
1. Tail of new resource overlaps head of old resource: truncate the
new resource so it is contiguous with the start of the old.
2. New resource wholly contained within the old resource: error.
3. Head of new resource overlaps tail of old resource: truncate the
new resource so it is contiguous, following the old."
Tested by: Radek Kozlowski <radek_at_raadradd.com>
Discussed with: imp
MFC after: 4 days
actually used. For most ACPI devices this means deferring the call
until bus_alloc_resource().
- Add a function acpi_config_intr() to call BUS_CONFIG_INTR() for an
ACPI IRQ resource using the trigger mode and polarity information
stored in the ACPI resource object.
- Add a function acpi_lookup_irq_resource() to lookup the ACPI IRQ
resource that corresponds to a specified rid and new-bus resource.
- Have the ACPI PCI bridge driver call BUS_CONFIG_INTR() on interrupts
that it routes through link devices.
- Remove needactivate variable from acpi_alloc_resource() by changing the
function not modify the flags variable but just mask off RF_ACTIVE when
calling rman_reserve_resource().
Reviewed by: njl (1, an earlier version)
allocation was passed up to nexus. Now, we probe sysresource objects and
manage the resources they describe in a local rman pool. This helps
devices which attach/detach varying resources (like the _CST object) and
module loads/unloads. The allocation/release routines now check to see if
the resource is described in a child sysresource object and if so,
allocate from the local rman. Sysresource objects add their resources to
the pool and reserve them upon boot. This means sysresources need to be
probed before other ACPI devices.
Changes include:
* Add ordering to the child device probe. The current order is: system
resource objects, embedded controllers, then everything else.
* Make acpi_MatchHid take a handle instead of a device_t arg.
* Replace acpi_{get,set}_resource with the generic equivalents.
method. This is necessary on ia64 where it's known that serial interfaces
described in the ACPI namespace may not have the well-known IRQs assigned
to them. This confuses us in thinking they are PCI based interrupts and
wrongly program the APIC.
I/O port range, then we should ignore a resource if it's NOT
a memory range AND NOT an I/O port range.
The OR in the condition caused us to ignore perfectly valid
memory addresses.
While here, remove redundant parenthesis and reindent the
debug print to avoid long lines.
for the device now (we should really just be parsing a passed-in resource
buffer).
Wrap long lines so this is (more) readable.
Support Address16 and Address32 resources, in the CONSUMER case.
Support DRQs so that we can handle ISA devices.
Support ExtendedIrqs (we ignore most of their attributes)
Add a placeholder device for system memory and system resources. This
takes the place of the nexus placeholder, which only attaches to ISA.
- Use __func__ instead of __FUNCTION.
- Support power-off to S3 or S5 (takawata)
- Enable ACPI debugging earlier (with a sysinit)
- Fix a deadlock in the EC code (takawata)
- Improve arithmetic and reduce the risk of spurious wakeup in
AcpiOsSleep.
- Add AcpiOsGetThreadId.
- Simplify mutex code (still disabled).
infrastructure. It's not perfect, but it's a lot better than what
we've been using so far. The following rules apply to this:
o BSD component names should be capitalised
o Layer names should be taken from the non-CA set for now. We
may elect to add some new BSD-specific layers later.
- Make it possible to turn off selective debugging flags or layers
by listing them in debug.acpi.layer or debug.acpi.level prefixed
with !.
- Fully implement support for avoiding nodes in the ACPI namespace.
Nodes may be listed in the debug.acpi.avoid environment variable;
these nodes and all their children will be ignored (although still
scanned over) by ACPI functions which scan the namespace. Multiple
nodes can be specified, separated by whitespace.
- Implement support for selectively disabling ACPI subsystem components
via the debug.acpi.disable environment variable. The following
components can be disabled:
o bus creation/scanning of the ACPI 'bus'
o children attachment of children to the ACPI 'bus'
o button the acpi_button control-method button driver
o ec the acpi_ec embedded-controller driver
o isa acpi replacement of PnP BIOS for ISA device discovery
o lid the control-method lid switch driver
o pci pci root-bus discovery
o processor CPU power/speed management
o thermal system temperature detection and control
o timer ACPI timecounter
Multiple components may be disabled by specifying their name(s)
separated by whitespace.
- Add support for ioctl registration. ACPI subsystem components may
register ioctl handlers with the /dev/acpi generic ioctl handler,
allowing us to avoid the need for a multitude of /dev/acpi* control
devices, etc.
ACPICA. Most of these are still works in progress. Support exists for:
- Fixed feature and control method power, lid and sleep buttons.
- Detection of ISA PnP devices using ACPI namespace.
- Detection of PCI root busses using ACPI namespace.
- CPU throttling and sleep states (incomplete)
- Thermal monitoring and cooling control (incomplete)
- Interface to platform embedded controllers (mostly complete)
- ACPI timer (incomplete)
- Simple userland control of sleep states.
- Shutdown and poweroff.