On Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 6:07 AM, John Baldwin <j...@freebsd.org> wrote: > On Monday, August 16, 2010 7:23:54 pm Garrett Cooper wrote: >> On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 1:19 PM, John Baldwin <j...@freebsd.org> wrote: >> > On Sunday, August 15, 2010 1:33:38 am Garrett Cooper wrote: >> >> One thing that's puzzling me about the ppc(4) driver's ISA >> >> routines is that it only checks to see whether or not the device has >> >> an IO error: >> > >> > Your patch would break hinted ppc devices. ENXIO means that the device_t >> > being probed has an ISA PNP ID, but it does not match any of the IDs in the >> > list. ENONET means that the device_t does not have an ISA ID at all. For >> > the >> > isa bus that means it was explicitly created via a set of ppc.X hints. >> >> Just clarifying some things because I don't know all of the details. >> >> If a ISA based parallel port fails to probe with ENOENT, then it's >> assumed that the configuration details are incorrect, and it should >> reprobe the device with different configuration settings (irq, isa >> port, etc) a max of BIOS_MAX_PPC times before it finally bails failing >> to configure a device (ppc_probe in ppc.c)? What if all of the ISA >> details in the device.hints file are bogus and the only detail that's >> correct is in the puc driver, etc? Would it fail to connect the card >> if it reached the BIOS_MAX_PPC ISA-related failure limit (see >> ppc_probe again)? > > ISA_PNP_PROBE() does not talk to the hardware, it just compares device IDs. > You have to realize that device_t objects on an ISA device come from three > sources: > > 1) "Builtin" devices are auto-enumerated via ACPI or PnP BIOS. Any > modern BIOS will do this for things like built in serial ports, ISA > timers, PS/2 keyboard, etc. > > 2) ISA PnP adapters in an ISA slot are enumerated via ISA PnP. > > 3) Users indicate that specific ISA devices are present via hints. > > Devices from 1) and 2) have an assigned device ID (HID) and zero-or-more > compatibility IDs (CID). ISA_PNP_PROBE() accepts a list of HID IDs and > returns true (0) if the HID or any of the CIDs match any of the ids in > the list that is passed in. If none of the IDs match it returns ENXIO. > Thus for devices from 1) and 2) ISA_PNP_PROBE() returns either 0 or > ENXIO. For devices from 3), ISA_PNP_PROBE() will always return ENOENT. > > Your change would break 3) since those devices would then never probe. > > ppc_probe() is called to verify that the hardware truly exists at the > resources that are claimed. In practice the loop you refer to never runs > now as the default hints for ppc always specify a port and ppc adapters > from 1) always include the port resource. That loop should probably > belong in an identify routine instead of in the probe routine anyway. > It probably predates new-bus. > > The waters are slightly muddied further by the fact that if the resources > specified in a hint match the resources from one of the devices found via > 1) or 2), the device from 1) or 2) will actually subsume the hinted device > so you will not get a separate type 3) device. For example, in the default > hints uart0 specifies an I/O port of 0x3f8. If ACPI tells the OS about a > COM1 serial port with the default I/O port (0x3f8), then the hints cause > that device to be "named" uart0 and to use the flags from uart0 to enable > the serial console, etc.
So more or less it's for BIOSes with ISA that doesn't feature plug and play (286s, 386s, some 486s?)? Just trying to fill in the gap :). Thanks! -Garrett _______________________________________________ freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hackers-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"