Commit Graph

1399 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
John Baldwin
94203d0a02 - Enable an extra debugging bootverbose printf when probing ISA PNP cards
listing   each card as it is found on non-PC98 (PC98 already had this).
- Increase the length of the DELAY() used before timing out while reading
  PNP resource data.

Tested by:	Steven Nikkel  steven_nikkel ertyu org
MFC after:	1 week
2011-03-29 12:38:13 +00:00
Andriy Gapon
3d844eddb7 bus_add_child: change type of order parameter to u_int
This reflects actual type used to store and compare child device orders.
Change is mostly done via a Coccinelle (soon to be devel/coccinelle)
semantic patch.
Verified by LINT+modules kernel builds.

Followup to:	r212213
MFC after:	10 days
2010-09-10 11:19:03 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
6b0dfd288f When we are not switching VTs, just mark all buffer to be updated. 2010-07-15 23:11:51 +00:00
Alexander Motin
875b8844be Implement new event timers infrastructure. It provides unified APIs for
writing event timer drivers, for choosing best possible drivers by machine
independent code and for operating them to supply kernel with hardclock(),
statclock() and profclock() events in unified fashion on various hardware.

Infrastructure provides support for both per-CPU (independent for every CPU
core) and global timers in periodic and one-shot modes. MI management code
at this moment uses only periodic mode, but one-shot mode use planned for
later, as part of tickless kernel project.

For this moment infrastructure used on i386 and amd64 architectures. Other
archs are welcome to follow, while their current operation should not be
affected.

This patch updates existing drivers (i8254, RTC and LAPIC) for the new
order, and adds event timers support into the HPET driver. These drivers
have different capabilities:
 LAPIC - per-CPU timer, supports periodic and one-shot operation, may
freeze in C3 state, calibrated on first use, so may be not exactly precise.
 HPET - depending on hardware can work as per-CPU or global, supports
periodic and one-shot operation, usually provides several event timers.
 i8254 - global, limited to periodic mode, because same hardware used also
as time counter.
 RTC - global, supports only periodic mode, set of frequencies in Hz
limited by powers of 2.

Depending on hardware capabilities, drivers preferred in following orders,
either LAPIC, HPETs, i8254, RTC or HPETs, LAPIC, i8254, RTC.
User may explicitly specify wanted timers via loader tunables or sysctls:
kern.eventtimer.timer1 and kern.eventtimer.timer2.
If requested driver is unavailable or unoperational, system will try to
replace it. If no more timers available or "NONE" specified for second,
system will operate using only one timer, multiplying it's frequency by few
times and uing respective dividers to honor hz, stathz and profhz values,
set during initial setup.
2010-06-20 21:33:29 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
55e1b13327 Do not attempt to switch to the same VTs between suspend and resume. 2010-05-26 16:37:54 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
cb881f8f8e Let the first device suspend and the last device resume syscons(4). 2010-05-26 15:29:53 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
fa091a4804 Fix more style(9) nits that I missed in the previous commit. 2010-05-22 07:44:33 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
b4f9625a6e Fix style(9) nits. 2010-05-22 07:38:29 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
dd962f5b8a Suspend screen updates when the video controller is powered down. 2010-05-22 07:35:17 +00:00
Attilio Rao
3258030144 Introduce the new kernel sub-tree x86 which should contain all the code
shared and generalized between our current amd64, i386 and pc98.

This is just an initial step that should lead to a more complete effort.
For the moment, a very simple porting of cpufreq modules, BIOS calls and
the whole MD specific ISA bus part is added to the sub-tree but ideally
a lot of code might be added and more shared support should grow.

Sponsored by:	Sandvine Incorporated
Reviewed by:	emaste, kib, jhb, imp
Discussed on:	arch
MFC:		3 weeks
2010-02-25 14:13:39 +00:00
Martin Blapp
c2ede4b379 Remove extraneous semicolons, no functional changes.
Submitted by:	Marc Balmer <marc@msys.ch>
MFC after:	1 week
2010-01-07 21:01:37 +00:00
Robert Noland
cfd7bacef2 Update d_mmap() to accept vm_ooffset_t and vm_memattr_t.
This replaces d_mmap() with the d_mmap2() implementation and also
changes the type of offset to vm_ooffset_t.

Purge d_mmap2().

All driver modules will need to be rebuilt since D_VERSION is also
bumped.

Reviewed by:	jhb@
MFC after:	Not in this lifetime...
2009-12-29 21:51:28 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
1ce5efd4b6 Attach dpms(4) to vgapm and make sure to restore DPMS state after
VGA is resumed properly.

Reviewed by:	jhb
2009-12-15 19:58:23 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
bf71c25f87 - Partially revert hackish r198964 and r199002.
- Add a proxy driver vgapm to help vgapci to save/load VGA state.
- Move device_set_desc() to the right place while we are here.

Reviewed by:	jhb
2009-11-12 17:56:56 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
b66e2b8e50 Remove duplicate suspend/resume code from vga_pci.c and let vga(4) register
itself to an associated PCI device if it exists.  It is little bit hackish
but it should fix build without frame buffer driver since r198964.
Fix some style(9) nits in vga_isa.c while we are here.
2009-11-06 20:32:26 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
2259d74c68 Save/restore VGA state from vga_pci.c instead of relying on vga_isa.c.
It was not working because we were saving its state after the device was
powered down.  Simplify vesa_load_state() as the culprit is fixed now.
2009-11-05 22:58:50 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
7ac3e951e3 Save/restore VGA color palette while suspending and resuming. 2009-11-04 00:58:20 +00:00
John Baldwin
2fcd493c4b Tweak the way that the ACPI and ISA bus drivers match hint devices to
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
2009-08-24 21:51:46 +00:00
Alexander Motin
1703f2b424 Rename statclock_disable variable to atrtcclock_disable that it actually is,
and hide it inside of atrtc driver. Add new tunable hint.atrtc.0.clock
controlling it. Setting it to 0 disables using RTC clock as stat-/
profclock sources.

Teach i386 and amd64 SMP platforms to emulate stat-/profclocks using i8254
hardclock, when LAPIC and RTC clocks are disabled.

This allows to reduce global interrupt rate of idle system down to about
100 interrupts per core, permitting C3 and deeper C-states provide maximum
CPU power efficiency.
2009-05-03 17:47:21 +00:00
Alexander Motin
58a2bb4996 Add resume methods to i8254 and atrtc devices. 2009-05-01 21:43:04 +00:00
John Baldwin
b5b361cb8c Allow syscons to work on amd64 and i386 without any hints:
- Enable keyboard autodetection by default for ISA syscons attachments.
- If there are no syscons hints at all, assume there is a single sc0 device
  anyway.  The console probe will still fail unless a VGA adapter is found.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2009-03-05 19:10:17 +00:00
John Baldwin
0d484d249f Allow device hints to wire the unit numbers of devices.
- An "at" hint now reserves a device name.
- A new BUS_HINT_DEVICE_UNIT method is added to the bus interface.  When
  determining the unit number of a device, this method is invoked to
  let the bus driver specify the unit of a device given a specific
  devclass.  This is the only way a device can be given a name reserved
  via an "at" hint.
- Implement BUS_HINT_DEVICE_UNIT() for the acpi(4) and isa(4) bus drivers.
  Both of these busses implement this by comparing the resources for a
  given hint device with the resources enumerated by ACPI/PnPBIOS and
  wire a unit if the hint resources are a subset of the "real" resources.
- Use bus_hinted_children() for adding hinted devices on isa(4) busses
  now instead of doing it by hand.
- Remove the unit kludging from sio(4) as it is no longer necessary.

Prodding from:	peter, imp
OK'd by:	marcel
MFC after:	1 month
2008-11-18 21:01:54 +00:00
Warner Losh
132580b5af MFp4:
Make the ISA bus keep track of more PNP details.  Plus a minor style
fix while I'm here.  More could be done here, but except for some SBCs
that don't have ACPI, there's limited value to anybody in doing so.
2008-11-02 18:48:54 +00:00
Warner Losh
5b4ae40039 MFp4 (my newcard tree):
ISACFGATTR_MULTI is unused.  Retire it, and a function that has no
side effects used to compute it.
2008-08-24 07:40:14 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
7e82012aff atrtc.c is a repocopy of the RTC device driver from i386/isa/clock.c
In addition to the device driver functionality, it exposes a number of
functions which various other bits of code use to fondle the RTC chip.
2008-04-14 07:57:15 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
2946435299 Move i386 to generic RTC handling code.
Make clock_if.m and subr_rtc.c standard on i386

Add hints for "atrtc" driver, for non-PnP, non-ACPI systems.
NB: Make sure to install GENERIC.hints into /boot/device.hints in these!

Nuke MD inittodr(), resettodr() functions.

Don't attach to PHP0B00 in the "attimer" dummy driver any more, and remove
comments that no longer apply for that reason.

Add new "atrtc" device driver, which handles IBM PC AT Real Time
Clock compatible devices using subr_rtc and clock_if.

This driver is not entirely clean: other code still fondles the
hardware to get a statclock interrupt on non-ACPI timer systems.

Wrap some overly long lines.

After it has settled in -current, this will be ported to amd64.

Technically this is MFC'able, but I fail to see a good reason.
2008-04-12 20:46:06 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
dad3b6c6fd Back in the good old days, PC's had random pieces of rock for
frequency generation and what frequency the generated was anyones
guess.

In general the 32.768kHz RTC clock x-tal was the best, because that
was a regular wrist-watch Xtal, whereas the X-tal generating the
ISA bus frequency was much lower quality, often costing as much as
several cents a piece, so it made good sense to check the ISA bus
frequency against the RTC clock.

The other relevant property of those machines, is that they
typically had no more than 16MB RAM.

These days, CPU chips croak if their clocks are not tightly within
specs and all necessary frequencies are derived from the master
crystal by means if PLL's.

Considering that it takes on average 1.5 second to calibrate the
frequency of the i8254 counter, that more likely than not, we will
not actually use the result of the calibration, and as the final
clincher, we seldom use the i8254 for anything besides BEL in
syscons anyway, it has become time to drop the calibration code.

If you need to tell the system what frequency your i8254 runs,
you can do so from the loader using hw.i8254.freq or using the
sysctl kern.timecounter.tc.i8254.frequency.
2008-03-26 22:12:00 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
1d73a9dc74 Further cleanup of sound generation in syscons:
The timer_spkr_*() functions take care of the enabling/disabling
of the speaker.

Test on the existence of timer_spkr_*() functions, rather than
architectures.
2008-03-26 22:02:51 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
e465985885 The "free-lance" timer in the i8254 is only used for the speaker
these days, so de-generalize the acquire_timer/release_timer api
to just deal with speakers.

The new (optional) MD functions are:
	timer_spkr_acquire()
	timer_spkr_release()
and
	timer_spkr_setfreq()

the last of which configures the timer to generate a tone of a given
frequency, in Hz instead of 1/1193182th of seconds.

Drop entirely timer2 on pc98, it is not used anywhere at all.

Move sysbeep() to kern/tty_cons.c and use the timer_spkr*() if
they exist, and do nothing otherwise.

Remove prototypes and empty acquire-/release-timer() and sysbeep()
functions from the non-beeping archs.

This eliminate the need for the speaker driver to know about
i8254frequency at all.  In theory this makes the speaker driver MI,
contingent on the timer_spkr_*() functions existing but the driver
does not know this yet and still attaches to the ISA bus.

Syscons is more tricky, in one function, sc_tone(), it knows the hz
and things are just fine.

In the other function, sc_bell() it seems to get the period from
the KDMKTONE ioctl in terms if 1/1193182th second, so we hardcode
the 1193182 and leave it at that.  It's probably not important.

Change a few other sysbeep() uses which obviously knew that the
argument was in terms of i8254 frequency, and leave alone those
that look like people thought sysbeep() took frequency in hertz.

This eliminates the knowledge of i8254_freq from all but the actual
clock.c code and the prof_machdep.c on amd64 and i386, where I think
it would be smart to ask for help from the timecounters anyway [TBD].
2008-03-26 20:09:21 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
ebfbcd612a Rename timer0_max_count to i8254_max_count.
Rename timer0_real_max_count to i8254_real_max_count and make it static.
Rename timer_freq to i8254_freq and make it a loader tunable.
2008-03-26 15:03:24 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
f168bfa529 The RTC related pscnt and psdiv variables have no business being public. 2008-03-26 13:25:27 +00:00
John Baldwin
c05655bfda Use cpu_spinwait() (i.e., "pause") when spinning on rdtsc during DELAY().
MFC after:	1 week
2008-01-17 18:59:38 +00:00
Wojciech A. Koszek
9336e0699b Replace explicit calls to video methods with their respective variants
implemented with macros. This patch improves code readability. Reasoning
behind vidd_* is a sort of "video discipline".

List of macros is supposed to be complete--all methods of video_switch
ought to have their respective macros from now on.

Functionally, this code should be no-op. My intention is to leave current
behaviour of touched code as is.

No objections:	rwatson
Silence on:	freebsd-current@
Approved by:	cognet
2007-12-29 23:26:59 +00:00
Peter Wemm
d556638404 Split /dev/nvram driver out of isa/clock.c for i386 and amd64. I have not
refactored it to be a generic device.
Instead of being part of the standard kernel, there is now a 'nvram' device
for i386/amd64.  It is in DEFAULTS like io and mem, and can be turned off
with 'nodevice nvram'.  This matches the previous behavior when it was
first committed.
2007-10-26 03:23:54 +00:00
David Malone
9be70a793e It seems that some i386 mothermoards either do not implement the
day of week field correctly, or they remember bad values that are
written into the day of week field. For this reason, ignore the day
of week field when reading the clock on i386 rather than bailing if
it is set incorrectly.

Problems were seen on a number of platforms, including VMWare, qemu,
EPIA ME6000, Epox-3PTA and ABIT-SL30T.

This is a slightly different fix to that proposed by Ted in his PR,
but the same basic idea.

PR:		111117
Submitted by:	Ted Faber <faber@lunabase.org>
Approved by:	re (rwatson)
MFC after:	3 weeks
2007-07-27 09:34:42 +00:00
David Malone
6d8617d42a If clock_ct_to_ts fails to convert time time from the real time clock,
print a one line error message. Add some comments on not being able to
trust the day of week field (I'll act on these comments in a follow up
commit).

Approved by:	re
MFC after:	3 weeks
2007-07-23 09:42:32 +00:00
Peter Wemm
5915fb72fb Prototype (but functional) Linux-ish /dev/nvram interface to the extra
114 bytes of cmos ram in the PC clock chip.  The big difference between
this and the Linux version is that we do not recalculate the checksums
for bytes 16..31.

We use this at work when cloning identical machines - we can copy the
bios settings as well.  Reading /dev/nvram gives 114 bytes of data but
you can seek/read/write whichever bytes you like.

Yes, this is a "foot, gun, fire!" type of device.
2007-06-15 22:58:14 +00:00
David Malone
041b706b2f Despite several examples in the kernel, the third argument of
sysctl_handle_int is not sizeof the int type you want to export.
The type must always be an int or an unsigned int.

Remove the instances where a sizeof(variable) is passed to stop
people accidently cut and pasting these examples.

In a few places this was sysctl_handle_int was being used on 64 bit
types, which would truncate the value to be exported.  In these
cases use sysctl_handle_quad to export them and change the format
to Q so that sysctl(1) can still print them.
2007-06-04 18:25:08 +00:00
John Baldwin
90dea4f9a7 When trying to allocate a PnP BIOS memory resource, the code loops trying
to move up the start address until the allocation succeeds.  If the
alignment of the resource was 0, then the code would keep trying the same
request in an infinite loop and hang.  Force the request to always move
start up by at least 1 byte each time through the loop.
2007-04-17 15:14:23 +00:00
Bruce Evans
d78180f8f5 Partial fix for a bug in rev.1.231. If suspend/resume clobbers the
RTC state, then it may clobber the RTC index register, so the index
register must be restored before using it to restore control registers
in rtc_restore().

The following problems remain:
- rtc_restore() is only called if pmtimer is configured.  Buggy
  suspend/resumes are more likely to clobber the index register than
  a control register, so pmtimer is more needed than it used to be.
- pmtimer doesn't exist for amd64.
- Restoring of the RTC state may race with rtcintr().  If an RTC
  interrupt is handled before the state is restored, then rtcin(RTC_INTR)
  in rtcintr() may read from the wrong register, so rtcintr() may spin
  forever.  This may be mitigated by the most common state clobbering
  being to turn off RTC interrupts.
2007-03-05 09:10:17 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
de038d5ffc style(9). 2007-03-04 04:55:19 +00:00
John Baldwin
84d37a463a Use pause() rather than tsleep() on explicit global dummy variables. 2007-02-27 17:22:30 +00:00
Paolo Pisati
ef544f6312 o break newbus api: add a new argument of type driver_filter_t to
bus_setup_intr()

o add an int return code to all fast handlers

o retire INTR_FAST/IH_FAST

For more info: http://docs.freebsd.org/cgi/getmsg.cgi?fetch=465712+0+current/freebsd-current

Reviewed by: many
Approved by: re@
2007-02-23 12:19:07 +00:00
Bruce Evans
71799af2d5 Cleaned up declaration and initialization of clock_lock. It is only
used by clock code, so don't export it to the world for machdep.c to
initialize.  There is a minor problem initializing it before it is
used, since although clock initialization is split up so that parts
of it can be done early, the first part was never done early enough
to actually work.  Split it up a bit more and do the first part as
late as possible to document the necessary order.  The functions that
implement the split are still bogusly exported.

Cleaned up initialization of the i8254 clock hardware using the new
split.  Actually initialize it early enough, and don't work around it
not being initialized in DELAY() when DELAY() is called early for
initialization of some console drivers.

This unfortunately moves a little more code before the early debugger
breakpoint so that it is harder to debug.  The ordering of console and
related initialization is delicate because we want to do as little as
possible before the breakpoint, but must initialize a console.
2007-01-23 08:01:20 +00:00
Ceri Davies
18929073b9 Be consistent with the spelling of "dependent" in user-visible places.
PR:		kern/27429
Submitted by:	T. William Wells
2006-12-30 11:55:47 +00:00
Bruce Evans
b73057227b Optimized RTC accesses by avoiding null writes to the index register
and by only delaying when an RTC register is written to.  The delay
after writing to the data register is now not just a workaround.

This reduces the number of ISA accesses in the usual case from 4 to
1.  The usual case is 2 rtcin()'s for each RTC interrupt.  The index
register is almost always RTC_INTR for this.  The 3 extra ISA accesses
were 1 for writing the index and 2 for delays.  Some delays are needed
in theory, but in practice they now just slow down slow accesses some
more since almost eveyone including us does them wrong so modern systems
enforce sufficient delays in hardware.  I used to have the delays ifdefed
out, but with the index register optimization the delays are rarely
executed so the old magic ones can be kept or even implemented non-
magically without significant cost.

Optimizing RTC interrupt handling is more interesting than it used to
be because RTC interrupts are currently needed to fix the more efficient
apic timer interrupts on some systems.  apic_timer_hz is normally 2000
so the RTC interrupt rate needs to be 2048 to keep the apic timer
firing on such systems.  Without these changes, each RTC interrupt
normally took 10 ISA accesses (2 PIC accesses and 2 sets of 4 RTC
accesses).  Each ISA access takes 1-1.5uS so 10 of then at 2048 Hz
takes 2-3% of a CPU.  Now 4 of them take 0.8-1.2% of a CPU.
2006-12-03 03:49:28 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
e4c9547050 Use calendaric calculation support from subr_clock.c instead of home-rolled.
Eventually, this RTC should probably use subr_rtc.c as well
2006-10-02 16:18:40 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
b69f71eb29 Second part of a little cleanup in the calendar/timezone/RTC handling.
Split subr_clock.c in two parts (by repo-copy):
   subr_clock.c contains generic RTC and calendaric stuff. etc.
   subr_rtc.c contains the newbus'ified RTC interface.

Centralize the machdep.{adjkerntz,disable_rtc_set,wall_cmos_clock}
sysctls and associated variables into subr_clock.c.  They are
not machine dependent and we have generic code that relies on being
present so they are not even optional.
2006-10-02 15:42:02 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
f645b0b51c First part of a little cleanup in the calendar/timezone/RTC handling.
Move relevant variables to <sys/clock.h> and fix #includes as necessary.

Use libkern's much more time- & spamce-efficient BCD routines.
2006-10-02 12:59:59 +00:00
Warner Losh
ddebcb409b Eliminate one set of XBOX #ifdefs. The Xbox code just needs to set a
different TIMER_FREQ value than default.  Accomplish this via the
config file rather than via an #ifdef.
2006-08-09 23:47:38 +00:00