Date: Thu, 17 Jul 2014 01:39:05 +0200 From: Daniele Mazzotti <kappei84@gmail.com> To: Anthony Jenkins <Anthony.B.Jenkins@att.net> Cc: freebsd-acpi@freebsd.org, Ian Smith <smithi@nimnet.asn.au> Subject: Re: atrtc.c patch for ACPI CMOS region (was Re: ACPI support - Freebsd 10 on Sony Vaio VPCCA3C5E) Message-ID: <CAC=ypSULYuJzMqPMYSy-GuyNFS3UvfoMjCrR1VSX8NW8ynQ3iQ@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <53C6E9B3.1080402@att.net> References: <CAC=ypSVopgcL82FpqJosmgFeRkeeevP0RG-GrAEZD2YQyi%2BPrg@mail.gmail.com> <CAC=ypSV36Dk_3a30OeCxmowqnM5iqcJkM%2B4qKgsOTNTEzmztSQ@mail.gmail.com> <53C020CE.8010205@att.net> <CAC=ypSV_qQ-EsfwJAa6NRiZhTvOi-xh9A=oFKXzNMj9GTpHbOA@mail.gmail.com> <53C02604.9070207@att.net> <CAC=ypSV=yXjnNYJTMSU3tDTjez9NAe3PqsDPRiF5sf2D6FBxRA@mail.gmail.com> <CAC=ypSVbiOpTxUZeJnQUTMdjtbicu2JdG5p5g9%2BgR%2BS72-6RVg@mail.gmail.com> <CAC=ypSU3J3cPuEqDhrwAGm3MyNNGCc39W_4kTLJFbsYWjV5HoQ@mail.gmail.com> <53C3D322.3080302@att.net> <CAC=ypSXA8MZzT0V1RxhxyXd88Xk8od_6zmjn%2B9rd4W%2BtVgyvXQ@mail.gmail.com> <CAC=ypSUqHF%2B2_ajsjU5x3=if01twAtmsPcmQGBgNC=VEAdOKnQ@mail.gmail.com> <20140716040719.Y50382@sola.nimnet.asn.au> <CAC=ypSXYxpuqw9KA-OZRNJ=R50Cw9RoJtzp_bsqfG7pKvXYvmQ@mail.gmail.com> <20140716143406.V50382@sola.nimnet.asn.au> <CAC=ypSX19jrHxFp5cNzEJJZKOeKiGj%2BCgNRCA=yRMjWatEy1zA@mail.gmail.com> <53C67D70.6060603@att.net> <20140717011710.W50382@sola.nimnet.asn.au> <53C6E9B3.1080402@att.net>
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Hi guys, @Anthony: actually I am a "he" and not a "she" and I never thought about changing my nature below the waist :-). By the way I will try to apply the patch as soon as I will be back home as I left my personal PC at home and I won't be back until Monday. I will let you know if that will fix my suspend/resume issue. Regarding the battery issue I hope that I will try to follow the recommendations from Ian in another email and see what happen. Cheers, Daniele. Il 16/lug/2014 23:08 "Anthony Jenkins" <Anthony.B.Jenkins@att.net> ha scritto: > On 07/16/2014 13:16, Ian Smith wrote: > > On Wed, 16 Jul 2014 09:26:08 -0400, Anthony Jenkins wrote: > > > On 07/16/2014 01:32, Daniele Mazzotti wrote: > > >> Hi guys, thanks again for the support, but I am leaving for a > > >> businesses trip and I will be forced to put this debug thing on hold > > >> for a while. I will be back on track next week. > > > > > > Bah... really wanted to figure out the patch problem. I suspect the > > > file picked up some corruption somewhere between the email and your > > > FreeBSD filesystem. Your OS version has the same revision of that > > > source file as mine, so it should apply cleanly. If you feel like > > > tinkering with it in your free time, I've posted the patch here: > > > http://pastebin.com/P0B44u0c > > > > > > Good luck, > > > Anthony > > > > Either by show raw and save, or by download, the patch has ^M lineends. > Bah! Well that'd explain it... I'm generating the file on a pure FreeBSD > box, opened in gvim, select all, copy, paste to pastebin.com. > > Interesting, but I can't see atrtc.c being the right sort of place for > > this, seems way out of scope. Couldn't you include its headers and use > > functions rtcin() and writertc() from elsewhere in kernel, perhaps a > > module living in the same hierarchy as acpi_ibm, acpi_asus and such, > > that one could build and kldload if useful on a certain machine/s? > This is in support of the PNP0800 device, for which atrtc.c is the driver. > The ACPI spec (5.0 is what I'm reading) says that device should implement > a handler to read offset 0x00-0x7F. > > If so, you haven't to do battle with Time Lords :) with something people > > could add and load at own risk without messing with core kernel stuff. > > > > acpi_ibm should be a useful template, as it includes code to read CMOS > > bytes in the 0x60-0x6f range, presumably updated by the BIOS, whether > > opaquely or somehow via AML code I don't know. It uses rtcin() so has > > that scope in place. > > > > I'd still like to see your patch reject attempts to read or write to at > > least below 0x10. Even reading status register/s resets interrupts, and > > why would anyone need to mess with clock and/or timer regs via ACPI? > I assume it'd be the BIOS AML which would use my CMOS region handler; it'd > be a BIOS bug that reads/writes the clock regs. > > Have you found exactly which CMOS bytes your box needs to meddle with? > I do have printf()s in my code (don't think I added it to the patch) that > says what's read/written, I'll have to look again. > > Maybe you could add a sysctl to limit access to some specific range? > I dunno... I really think what I have is the Right Thing To Do... Someone > else from freebsd-acpi@ suggested this approach. Maybe someone versed in > ACPI could clarify from the spec? > > > Don't mind me, just thinking aloud, and I've no idea how this might > > relate to Daniele's issue with stale battery data? > > Agreed... I'm pretty much just blindly tossing the patch over to her. :-) > She did complain about suspend issues, and my patch fixes suspend issues > on my HP and another guinea pig from the mailing list (with an HP). Next I > need to figure out why acpi_hp doesn't work on my laptop, as I see SystemIO > calls to 0x72/0x73 when I try to adjust the brightness. > > Thanks, > Anthony > > cheers, Ian > > > > PS Daniele: no, never tempted by Sonys; rusted-on Thinkpad kinda guy :) > > _______________________________________________ > > freebsd-acpi@freebsd.org mailing list > > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-acpi > > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-acpi-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" > > > >
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