From owner-svn-src-head@freebsd.org Sun Jul 24 07:45:25 2016 Return-Path: Delivered-To: svn-src-head@mailman.ysv.freebsd.org Received: from mx1.freebsd.org (mx1.freebsd.org [IPv6:2001:1900:2254:206a::19:1]) by mailman.ysv.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 12109BA3314; Sun, 24 Jul 2016 07:45:25 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from mmel@FreeBSD.org) Received: from mail.miracle.cz (mail.miracle.cz [193.84.128.19]) (using TLSv1.2 with cipher ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 (256/256 bits)) (Client CN "mail.miracle.cz", Issuer "Miracle Group Root CA" (not verified)) by mx1.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 5E22A1F54; Sun, 24 Jul 2016 07:45:24 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from mmel@FreeBSD.org) Received: from [193.84.128.50] (meloun.ad.miracle.cz [193.84.128.50]) by mail.miracle.cz (Postfix) with ESMTPSA id 0EC853ACA4; Sun, 24 Jul 2016 09:45:20 +0200 (CEST) Subject: Re: svn commit: r301453 - in head/sys: arm/arm arm64/arm64 dev/fdt dev/gpio dev/iicbus dev/ofw dev/pci dev/vnic kern mips/mips sys To: Nathan Whitehorn , Svatopluk Kraus , src-committers@FreeBSD.org, svn-src-all@FreeBSD.org, svn-src-head@FreeBSD.org References: <201606051620.u55GKD5S066398@repo.freebsd.org> <578E0B5D.3070105@FreeBSD.org> <578F6075.7010500@FreeBSD.org> <05a80ac6-4285-ec9d-36e9-2f92c609f746@freebsd.org> <57907B0F.9070204@FreeBSD.org> <9d2a224c-b787-2875-5984-a7a2354e8695@freebsd.org> <57934ABD.6010807@FreeBSD.org> <4e7a3e8f-cc21-f5f2-e3e0-4dbd554a4cd0@freebsd.org> From: Michal Meloun X-Enigmail-Draft-Status: N1110 Message-ID: <5794720F.4050303@FreeBSD.org> Date: Sun, 24 Jul 2016 09:45:19 +0200 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.2.0 MIME-Version: 1.0 In-Reply-To: <4e7a3e8f-cc21-f5f2-e3e0-4dbd554a4cd0@freebsd.org> X-Greylist: Sender succeeded SMTP AUTH, not delayed by milter-greylist-4.4.3 (mail.miracle.cz); Sun, 24 Jul 2016 09:45:20 +0200 (CEST) Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Content-Filtered-By: Mailman/MimeDel 2.1.22 X-BeenThere: svn-src-head@freebsd.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.22 Precedence: list List-Id: SVN commit messages for the src tree for head/-current List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Sun, 24 Jul 2016 07:45:25 -0000 Dne 23.07.2016 v 20:35 Nathan Whitehorn napsal(a): > > > On 07/23/16 03:45, Michal Meloun wrote: >> Dne 21.07.2016 v 17:53 Nathan Whitehorn napsal(a): >>> >>> On PowerPC, GENERIC64 supports FDT systems (some IBM hardware), OFW >>> systems (Macs, some IBM hardware), systems with no device trees at >>> all (old-style PS3), and systems with a mixture of device tree and >>> no device tree (new-style PS3). On these, there is a mixture of >>> "real" interrupts and GPIO-type interrupts. There is no limitation >>> that this be used only for device-tree-type systems. >>> >>> The system requires two things: an interrupt domain key and an >>> arbitrary unique byte string describing the interrupt. When running >>> with a device tree, these are set to the phandle of the >>> interrupt-parent and the contents of the device tree interrupt >>> specifier, respectively, and the system was of course developed with >>> that in mind. But they don't need to be, and often aren't. You could >>> make the domain an element of an enum (where "ACPI" is a choice, for >>> instance -- this is what PS3 does), or set it to a pointer to a >>> device_t, or really anything you like. Similarly, the interrupt >>> specifier is totally free-form. >> >> Yes, I agree. and i think that we followed the same direction. But i >> see two problems with this approach. >> - in some cases (OFW, device_t) you don't have control over domain >> key value, so you cannot guarantee its uniqueness. >> Of course, probability of collision is low, but it is. > > We could solve this in a number of ways, for example widening to 64 > bits, or adding another value (domain type, for example). You could > also make an acpi_bus_map_intr() to go with the OFW one that connect > in some machine-dependent code if you have fundamentally incompatible > bus enumeration mechanisms that you expect to exist simultaneously -- > but, of course, no systems like this seem to actually exist, so the > problem is both easily solved and totally theoretical. > >> - within ofw_bus_map_intr() (or later - at the time when byte string >> must be decoded) you are not able (easily) to differentiate >> between different formats, thus you are not able to select >> appropriate decoder. The GPIO controller, for example, >> must be able to handle interrupts defined by standard OFW property, >> or by pair concurrently. > > In principle, you could solve that as above, or by registering a > second interrupt domain for the same controller. > > In practice, it doesn't matter since, in the GPIO case, for example, > the GPIO controller is never itself also a normal interrupt controller > (i.e. the GIC and GPIO controller are always different devices). As > such, the theoretical does not occur in practice. form https://svnweb.freebsd.org/base/head/sys/gnu/dts/arm/tegra124-jetson-tk1.dts?revision=295436&view=markup#l1380 "interrupts = ; " Do you want more examples ? > >> For this reason we makes domain key composite, in our model, the >> domain key consist of "domain key type" >> and "domain key value". This composite key guarantees uniqueness and >> it also allows to select proper parser for byte string. > > Yes, but this solves what is a nonexistant problem by making the > system substantially less flexible and more invasive. Which is not a > good tradeoff. > I think that existence of problem is confirmed in the above example . Quote from previous paragraph: "We could solve this in a number of ways, ... , or adding another value (domain type, for example)." What can I say more ... >> This is, imho, only one difference between us. > > One of many, yes. > >> >>> You could, for instance, set it to one of the structures introduced >>> in r301453 if you wanted to. >>> >>> I would have zero problems with changing the prototype of the >>> existing dev/ofw function to something more generic in name, like: >>> >>> bus_map_intr(device_t dev, uintptr_t iparent, size_t intrlen, void >>> *intr) >>> >>> instead of the existing equivalent: >>> >>> ofw_bus_map_intr(device_t dev, phandle_t iparent, int icells, >>> pcell_t *intr) >>> >> Our bus_map_intr() method is not indeed as replacement of >> ofw_bus_map_intr(). Its evolution of "how we can store more complex >> data to resource list (from bus enumerator) and transfer it to >> bus_allocate_resource() and/or to bus_setup_intr()" in driver >> independent way. We found no reasonable way to do it, so we postponed >> reading of properties to bus_allocate_resource() time. > > Right, but that is (a) a solved problem with ofw_bus_map_intr() and > (b) this code doesn't solve it as completely. What does it let you do > that the existing code does not? There has not been a single concrete > example of something anyone wants to do on actual hardware so far in > this discussion. > >> But now jhb@ gives us alternative and I must say that this looks >> like a clean and elegant way how to make this (assuming that we can >> expand resource_list_entry by pointer to alloc_resource_args) > > Except that jhb@'s suggestion doesn't actually work for interrupts for > the reasons I and others have pointed out. We could make such a > system, but it would be a different one. > >> >>>> By this, one byte string in OFW encoding can describe one IRQ and >>>> exactly same string in UEFI encoding can describe different IRQ. >>>> Or, in reverse, OFW and UEFI can describe same (and compatible) IRQ >>>> by two different strings. >>>> This is exact reason, why we discards virtual IRQ idea and I think >>>> that this fact is root issue of this clash. >>>> Probably it doesn't make sense to talk about others, unless we can >>>> find consensus on this. >>> >>> You have the larger problem if you end up in this situation that you >>> are enumerating the hardware by two different and incompatible >>> techniques. There simply is no way to solve this unless you either >>> (a) segregate the system into an ACPI-enumerated domain and an >>> OF-enumerated domain, in which case the problem vanishes, (b) >>> discard one enumeration, which is what arm64 does and will always >>> do, according to Andrew in another post, or (c) make some incredibly >>> complex merging code that would naturally handle interrupts with >>> everything else. So I don't think this is an actual, real problem. >>> >> I think that above proposed solution resolves this gracefully. > > Assuming you are talking about jhb's decoration plan in the bus > hierarchy, it doesn't actually work for interrupts at all because of > lateral connections and circular dependencies. > >> >>> >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>> 2. It partially duplicates the functionality of >>>>>>> OFW_BUS_MAP_INTR(), but is both problematically more general and >>>>>>> less flexible (it has requirements on timing of PIC attachment >>>>>>> vs. driver resource allocation) >>>>>> OFW_BUS_MAP_INTR() can parse only OFW based data and expect >>>>>> that parsed data are magicaly stored within the call. >>>>>> The new method, bus_map_intr(), can parse data from multiple >>>>>> sources (OFW, UEFI / ACPI, synthetic[gpio device + pin >>>>>> number]). It also returns parsed data back to caller. >>>>> >>>>> That is not true. It works as long as you can specify the >>>>> interrupt state as a 32-bit key of some kind for the PIC and a >>>>> string of arbitrary data, which works with all of those. You could >>>>> even make the interrupt data be a pointer to exactly the structs >>>>> you have chosen to define here. >>>> Nope, in heterogeneous world, same string can describe two >>>> different IRQs and/or two different strings can describe single IRQ >>>> in compatible manner. >>> >>> Can you give *any* concrete example of this that doesn't involve >>> mixed ACPI/FDT enumeration of a single system where devices appear >>> in both trees, which doesn't actually ever happen? >> GPIO - its interrupt function can be accessed by regular >> "interrupts" property, or it can be derived from GPIO pin. > > The GPIO controller has one or more interrupts assigned to it that are > part of its parent's interrupt domain. It cascades them to one or more > virtual interrupts that belong to its own domain. Where is the > ambiguity or complication here? >>> >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>> 3. It is not fully transparent to end code. Since it happens at >>>>>>> bus_alloc_resource() time, it is complicated to get the >>>>>>> appropriate values for IRQs constructed by composite techniques >>>>>>> (interrupt-map vs. interrupts vs. hand allocation vs. PCI >>>>>>> routing, for example). >>>>>> I don't see any limitation - can you be more exact? Why is not >>>>>> transparent? Why is more complicated ? >>>>> >>>>> Suppose that a PCI device adds more IRQs to its resource list or >>>>> modifies the ordering. How is whatever bus layer supposed to do >>>>> something sensible at allocation time? It requires that RID >>>>> numbers mean something to the parent bus after assignment, which >>>>> is not guaranteed by anything and is, in more than handful of >>>>> cases I think of, not true in practice. >>>> Sure. And since the new code allows delivering resources in RL, so >>>> I don't see any limitation here. >>> >>> It indexed mapping by RID and then searches interrupt lists by that >>> to get the interrupt-parent. This is fundamentally a broken design >>> if the child needs to, say, add a second interrupt to its RL on a >>> different interrupt-parent. >> ?? I don't understand. The new code doesn't need this. > > int bus_generic_map_intr(device_t dev, device_t child, int *rid, > rman_res_t *start, rman_res_t *end, > rman_res_t *count, struct intr_map_data > **imd); > > This works either by rid or by rman_res_t. In the event of a > self-assigned interrupt from the child, which is a fairly common case, > neither of these values are meaningfully parseable by the bus parent, > especially if the interrupt is on a different controller. The main > issue is that this code goes back to the device tree according to the > *parent*'s idea of how it should be parsed and there are many cases > (GPIO interrupts, for example) when the *child* needs to amend the > list in a different way. >> >>> >>>> >>>>> >>>>>>> It is much easier to do this correctly at bus attach time when >>>>>>> the resource lists are made (how PPC does it). >>>>>>> >>>>>> I don't agree. I don't agree. Making this at bus attach time >>>>>> leads into complicated 'virtual' IRQ infrastructure, with many >>>>>> unresolved corner cases. >>>>> >>>>> Which unresolved corner cases? This has been working correctly on >>>>> a number of platforms in both FreeBSD and Linux for many years. >>>> Nope, it doesn't work for ARM yet (for GPIO interrupts for >>>> example) and Linux uses EPROBE_DEFER mechanism for a long time. >>>> See: http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/drivers/base/platform.c#L87 >>> >>> There is some missing code on ARM (probably about 30 minutes of work >>> to make it match PowerPC) to make it work in an ideal case, sure, >>> but there is no reason you could not go out right now, with the >>> existing code, and implement GPIO interrupts by declaring the GPIO >>> driver as an interrupt controller. >>> >>> Can you give any concrete case of something that doesn't work? >> GPIO again. How you can allocate interrupt associated with given gpio >> pin installed by "cd-gpios = <&gpio TEGRA_GPIO(V, 2) GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>;" > > You parse that as an interrupt on a interrupt domain associated with > the GPIO controller referenced by &gpio. In pseudo-code: > > int irq = ofw_bus_map_intr(dev, <&gpio>, ncells, GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>); > The GPIO controller, meanwhile, has registered an interrupt domain for > <&gpio> and is asked to decode and configure the interrupt defined by > , which it knows how to parse. This > is simple and straightforward. And again and again: We have "cd-gpios = <&gpio TEGRA_GPIO(V, 2) GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>;" and interrupt-parent = <&gpio>; "interrupts = ; " in one tree. And we need to get a interrupt in both variants. > >> >>>> >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>> (1) is easy to fix without API changes, but (2) and (3) are >>>>>>> fundamental architectural problems that will bite us immediately >>>>>>> down the road and cause a permanent schism between OF support on >>>>>>> different platforms. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Let me describe how this is handled on PowerPC (Linux on PPC >>>>>>> solves the problem the same way). When constructing a resource >>>>>>> list, bus drivers that construct them from OF properties call >>>>>>> ofw_bus_map_intr() with the interrupt parent phandle and the >>>>>>> array of cells corresponding to the interrupt. This thunks >>>>>>> immediately to nexus, which connects to code in intr_machdep.c. >>>>>>> Code there assigns a unique made-up virtual IRQ and returns it, >>>>>>> caching the interrupt parent ID and opaque interrupt data (if >>>>>>> the same string of data reappears later, you get back the same >>>>>>> virtual IRQ of course). >>>>>>> >>>>>>> When PIC drivers attach and register themselves with the >>>>>>> interrupt handling layer, all the interrupts for that PIC are >>>>>>> passed to it along with the virtual IRQ. The PIC driver is >>>>>>> supposed to know what its interrupt data mean, which can be >>>>>>> safely guaranteed, and it presents the assigned virtual IRQ >>>>>>> number to the kernel when dispatching interrupts. (IRQs >>>>>>> configured after PIC attachment are passed through immediately). >>>>>>> >>>>>>> This accomplishes the following things: >>>>>>> 1. Parsing interrupt data is moved to the PIC driver, which is >>>>>>> the only place it can be done safely. >>>>>> I don't see anything different comparing with INTRNG. >>>>> >>>>> What I am advocating *is* INTRNG, at least as originally conceived >>>>> and implemented. >>>>> >>>>>>> 2. There is no ordering requirement on PIC attachment vs. the >>>>>>> attachment of anything else. >>>>>> I think thats is not a true - PIC must exist before >>>>>> bus_alloc_resource() / bus_setup_intr() is called. >>>>> >>>>> It does not with the IRQ mapping infrastructure. Interrupts are >>>>> set up at PIC attachment, whenever that occurs. >>>>> >>>> Assuming that bus_alloc_resource and bus_setup_intr() are close >>>> thorougher and in linear piece of code, can i assume that you can >>>> call bus_setup_intr() >>>> without PIC attached ? >>> >>> Yes. >> So driver can request and/or setup any random IRQ and gets success >> from bus_alloc_resource() or bus_setup_intr()? >> Do you think that is this right behavior? > > Yes. And it is a behavior required by newbus. > >>> >>>>>> >>>>>>> 3. Changes are extremely minimal relative to the "standard" >>>>>>> interrupt flow: you only have to patch code that is already >>>>>>> directly dealing with OF interrupts. >>>>>> I don't see anything different comparing with INTRNG. >>>>> >>>>> Again, this was the original INTRNG architecture and is already >>>>> implemented. As such, there are *no* changes required on ARM to >>>>> get it. bus_map_intr() adds a bunch of new code, in parallel with >>>>> the old code that also solves the problem, to no purpose. >>>> So, on PPC, how i can get interrupt for GPIO pin described by this >>>> property: >>>> https://svnweb.freebsd.org/base/head/sys/gnu/dts/arm/tegra124-jetson-tk1.dts?revision=295436&view=markup#l1691 >>>> >>> >>> The GPIO controller registers itself as an interrupt domain and >>> decodes those strings as IRQ specifiers. When interrupts are >>> configured, it does whatever it needs to do to configure them >>> appropriately and dispatches them to the kernel when they occur. >>> It's a pretty trivial cascaded interrupt configuration. And, since >>> the VIRQ code does not need the interrupt controller attached in >>> advance, you don't need to worry about attach order of wherever >>> &gpio points and the SDHCI driver. >>> >>>>> >>>>>>> 4. It happens at bus enumeration time, when results can be >>>>>>> guaranteed self-consistent. >>>>>> Where do you see any potential source of inconsistency in INTRNG? >>>>> >>>>> See the example above about modified interrupt lists. There is >>>>> also no obvious way for a child device to construct an interrupt >>>>> not assigned to it by the parent device from device tree >>>>> properties without knowing in some detail what kind of interrupt >>>>> needs to be built. >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>> 5. It combines naturally with ofw_bus_lookup_imap() and friends >>>>>>> in the interrupt-map case (e.g. for PCI). >>>>>> Again, I don't see anything different. Proper parsing of >>>>>> interrupt property is not a problem of INTRNG (but must be fixed, >>>>>> of course). >>>>> >>>>> But it is *already* fixed by the standard code that already >>>>> exists. You are introducing a less-functional parallel code path here. >>>> NO, its not fixed, at least not for ARM. >>> >>> Why not, concretely? I'm happy to write whatever code is missing if >>> there's a bug. It can't be more than a few tens of lines in arm/intr.c. >> Interrupt maps are not covered by current ARM code. > > This suggests otherwise: > files.arm:dev/ofw/ofwpci.c optional fdt pci > > But it's quite possible that code is not being used as widely as it > should, since it's a new introduction to the ARM tree. That the > existing code is not being used broadly enough is hardly a reasonable > to invent something new. > >>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I'm not sure what the right path forward is, but this code needs >>>>>>> to be fixed. The PowerPC code is fully MI, and was the template >>>>>>> for the original INTRNG, so it shouldn't be too bad to replace. >>>>>>> -Nathan >>>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> So, new INTRNG: >>>>>> - Introduces new more general bus method that can parse interrupt >>>>>> configuration >>>>>> data from any source. Is this step backward? >>>>> >>>>> Yes, since it is more general in some sense, while simultaneously >>>>> handling fewer cases than code that already exists and is implemented. >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> - Old INTRNG and PPC code stores unparsed and/or parsed interrupt >>>>>> data in >>>>>> INTRNG and each consumer must query for them. This data sharing >>>>>> also causes >>>>>> significant locking issues. New INTRNG stores interrupt >>>>>> configuration data into >>>>>> given resource, so each relevant bus method can access it >>>>>> immediately. >>>>>> Is this step backward? >>>>> >>>>> Which locking issues? And yes, it is. >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> - New INTRNG is not OFW centric, it can works with virtually >>>>>> unlimited number >>>>>> of configuration data sources. Is this step backward? >>>>> >>>>> Also yes, because it makes the interrupt handles less opaque, >>>>> which makes the infrastructure less flexible. >>>>> >>>>>> - New INTRNG correctly uses standard system infrastructure. Real >>>>>> IRQ number >>>>>> is reserved in rman within bus_alloc_resource() call, >>>>>> interrupt HW is >>>>>> configured (only!) within bus_setup_intr() call. Is this step >>>>>> backward? >>>>> >>>>> The "real" IRQ number is not well defined always, so requiring >>>>> that is a step backwards, yes. >>>>> >>>>>> - New INTRNG completely eliminates huge and not always working >>>>>> virtual >>>>>> IRQ concept. >>>>> >>>>> When does it "not always work"? It seems to, in fact, always work >>>>> on multiple platforms and have for a long time in the face of all >>>>> kinds of totally bizarre topologies and system architectures. >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Don’t take me bad, I’m open to any change. But no, at this time, >>>>>> I’m not ready to completely revert someone else's work – although >>>>>> I am a co-author. >>>>> >>>>> I would urge, in the strongest possible terms, that this be backed >>>>> out from stable/11 at least. We can add the new API back for 11.1 >>>>> if we want it, but we totally lose the ability to change it later >>>>> in the stable/11 cycle if it stays in now. >>>>> -Nathan >>>>> >>>> The API is part of still unstable, experimental INTRNG, so its not >>>> fixed we we can change it at any time, I think. >>>> But yes, we forget to wrap new bus_map_intr() method (and >>>> associated code) by #ifdef INTRNG. Is this sufficient for you? >>> >>> For HEAD, yes. I would like it out of stable/11 entirely until this >>> discussion converges. >>> -Nathan >> The current code (in stable/11) works and is tested. I simple cannot >> commit any untested change for stable tree mainly if is in BETA2 >> stage. And I cannot fully test the requested change, at this time i >> have access to single ARM platform. >> But we're in the same situation - both have the same commit bit, >> neither one of us is the author of the disputed commit and neither of >> us are not able to fully test it. >> So feel free to commit what you want, if you have courage to commit >> untested code. I haven't it...\ >> Michal >> > > Well, the code isn't actually used anywhere in stable/11, or HEAD, so > it can't possibly be either tested or important for the functionality > of any current code. As such, I will revert from HEAD on Monday and > request an MFC from re@ following that if the author has not appeared > by that time. > -Nathan The code is, of course, already used by each of INTRNG enabled platforms. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ diff --git a/sys/dev/ofw/ofwbus.c b/sys/dev/ofw/ofwbus.c index 1e048c4..14eb507 100644 --- a/sys/dev/ofw/ofwbus.c +++ b/sys/dev/ofw/ofwbus.c @@ -323,7 +323,7 @@ ofwbus_map_intr(device_t bus, device_t child, int *rid, rman_res_t *start, int ncells, rv; u_int irq; struct intr_map_data_fdt *fdt_data; - +printf(" *** %s: bus: %p\n", __func__, bus); node = ofw_bus_get_node(child); rv = ofw_bus_intr_by_rid(child, node, *rid, &iparent, &ncells, &cells); if (rv != 0) diff --git a/sys/kern/subr_bus.c b/sys/kern/subr_bus.c index af3ca57..b381163 100644 --- a/sys/kern/subr_bus.c +++ b/sys/kern/subr_bus.c @@ -3960,6 +3960,7 @@ int bus_generic_map_intr(device_t dev, device_t child, int *rid, rman_res_t *start, rman_res_t *end, rman_res_t *count, struct intr_map_data **imd) { +printf(" *** %s: dev: %p\n", __func__, dev); /* Propagate up the bus hierarchy until someone handles it. */ if (dev->parent) return (BUS_MAP_INTR(dev->parent, child, rid, start, end, count, --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Result: *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** bus_generic_map_intr: dev: 0xc4ce5780 *** bus_generic_map_intr: dev: 0xc4ce0980 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** bus_generic_map_intr: dev: 0xc4e52080 *** bus_generic_map_intr: dev: 0xc4e52480 *** bus_generic_map_intr: dev: 0xc4e52780 *** bus_generic_map_intr: dev: 0xc4ce1500 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** bus_generic_map_intr: dev: 0xc4ce0300 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 *** ofwbus_map_intr: bus: 0xc4ce1880 So its hard to say that code is unused. And, just for info, last "clean in PPC way" is initial commit INTRNG at r289529 (9 months ago). Michal