Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2004 19:22:30 -0800 (PST) From: Nate Lawson <nate@root.org> To: "M. Warner Losh" <imp@bsdimp.com> Cc: arch@freebsd.org Subject: Re: newbus ioport usage Message-ID: <20040126191657.B31071@root.org> In-Reply-To: <20040126.181720.15264443.imp@bsdimp.com> References: <20040126140100.T29680@root.org> <20040126.151728.133912536.imp@bsdimp.com> <20040126.181720.15264443.imp@bsdimp.com>
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On Mon, 26 Jan 2004, M. Warner Losh wrote: > In message: <20040126165523.W30461@root.org> > Nate Lawson <nate@root.org> writes: > : Ok, I'm doing the set/alloc and it works. However, one weird thing. If I > : allocate all ports at boot time, it succeeds. My driver goes through > : multiple release/allocate cycles and it all works as expected. However if > : I boot and attach to only one of the registers, subsequent attempts to > : attach the second one fail. The resources are 2 IO ports, 0x101c and > : 0x101d. Both are 1 byte. > > Deos devinfo -r show any cause for the problem? Maybe you aren't > releasing them properly? Also, why not allocate them as a block of 2? Ok, I've found what's going on. Apparently my acpi_sysresource0 pseudo-device is claiming all resources in its _CRS method. If I don't boot with 0x101c and 0x101d attached, it attaches to 0x1010-0x109d. But if I boot attaching them, it reserves less of the range. acpi_cpu0 I/O ports: 0x101c 0x101d acpi_sysresource0 I/O ports: 0x10-0x1f 0x24-0x25 0x28-0x29 0x2c-0x2d 0x2e-0x2f 0x30-0x31 0x34-0x35 0x38-0x39 0x3c-0x3d 0x50-0x53 0x72-0x77 0x90-0x9f 0xa4-0xa5 0xa8-0xa9 0xac-0xad 0xb0-0xb5 0xb8-0xb9 0xbc-0xbd 0x101e-0x109d 0x1180-0x11bf 0x15e0-0x15ef 0x1600-0x167f I'm not sure of a way around this. All ASL I've seen keeps these registers contiguous so I could whack out a block of 8 of them, although that doesn't seem correct. Perhaps acpi_cpu should be able to override the acpi_sysresource0 allocations, maybe by asking it for the resource if bus_resource_alloc returns NULL. Thoughts? -Nate
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