linux/drivers/ata/sata_promise.c

1051 lines
28 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

/*
* sata_promise.c - Promise SATA
*
* Maintained by: Jeff Garzik <jgarzik@pobox.com>
* Please ALWAYS copy linux-ide@vger.kernel.org
* on emails.
*
* Copyright 2003-2004 Red Hat, Inc.
*
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
* any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
* the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
*
*
* libata documentation is available via 'make {ps|pdf}docs',
* as Documentation/DocBook/libata.*
*
* Hardware information only available under NDA.
*
*/
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/pci.h>
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/blkdev.h>
#include <linux/delay.h>
#include <linux/interrupt.h>
#include <linux/device.h>
#include <scsi/scsi.h>
#include <scsi/scsi_host.h>
#include <scsi/scsi_cmnd.h>
#include <linux/libata.h>
#include "sata_promise.h"
#define DRV_NAME "sata_promise"
#define DRV_VERSION "2.10"
enum {
PDC_MAX_PORTS = 4,
PDC_MMIO_BAR = 3,
/* register offsets */
PDC_FEATURE = 0x04, /* Feature/Error reg (per port) */
PDC_SECTOR_COUNT = 0x08, /* Sector count reg (per port) */
PDC_SECTOR_NUMBER = 0x0C, /* Sector number reg (per port) */
PDC_CYLINDER_LOW = 0x10, /* Cylinder low reg (per port) */
PDC_CYLINDER_HIGH = 0x14, /* Cylinder high reg (per port) */
PDC_DEVICE = 0x18, /* Device/Head reg (per port) */
PDC_COMMAND = 0x1C, /* Command/status reg (per port) */
PDC_ALTSTATUS = 0x38, /* Alternate-status/device-control reg (per port) */
PDC_PKT_SUBMIT = 0x40, /* Command packet pointer addr */
PDC_INT_SEQMASK = 0x40, /* Mask of asserted SEQ INTs */
PDC_FLASH_CTL = 0x44, /* Flash control register */
PDC_GLOBAL_CTL = 0x48, /* Global control/status (per port) */
PDC_CTLSTAT = 0x60, /* IDE control and status (per port) */
PDC_SATA_PLUG_CSR = 0x6C, /* SATA Plug control/status reg */
PDC2_SATA_PLUG_CSR = 0x60, /* SATAII Plug control/status reg */
[PATCH] sata_promise fixes and updates This patch updates the sata_promise driver as follows: - Correct typo in definition of PDC_TBG_MODE: it's at 0x41C not 0x41 in first-generation chips. This error caused PCI access alignment exceptions on SPARC64, and on all platforms it disabled the expected initialisation of TBG mode. - Add flags field to struct pdc_host_priv. Define PDC_FLAG_GEN_II and use it to distinguish first- and second-generation chips. - Prevent the FLASH_CTL FIFO_SHD bit from being set to 1 on second- generation chips. This matches Promises' ulsata2 driver. - Prevent TBG mode and SLEW rate initialisation in second-generation chips. These two registers have moved, TBG mode has been redefined, and Promise's ulsata2 driver no longer attempts to initialise them. - Correct PCI device table so devices 0x3570, 0x3571, and 0x3d73 are marked as 2057x (2nd gen) not 2037x (1st gen). - Correct PCI device table so device 0x3d17 is marked as 40518 (2nd gen 4 ports) not 20319 (1st gen 4 ports). - Correct pdc_ata_init_one() to treat 20771 as a second-generation chip. Tested on 0x3d75 (2nd gen), 0x3d73 (2nd gen), and 0x3373 (1st gen) chips. The information comes from the newly uploaded Promise SATA HW specs, Promise's ultra and ulsata2 drivers, and debugging on 3d75/3d73/3373 chips. hp->hotplug_offset could now be removed and its value recomputed in pdc_host_init() using hp->flags, but that would be a cleanup not a functional change, so I'm ignoring it for now. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-11-23 05:00:15 +08:00
PDC_TBG_MODE = 0x41C, /* TBG mode (not SATAII) */
PDC_SLEW_CTL = 0x470, /* slew rate control reg (not SATAII) */
/* PDC_GLOBAL_CTL bit definitions */
PDC_PH_ERR = (1 << 8), /* PCI error while loading packet */
PDC_SH_ERR = (1 << 9), /* PCI error while loading S/G table */
PDC_DH_ERR = (1 << 10), /* PCI error while loading data */
PDC2_HTO_ERR = (1 << 12), /* host bus timeout */
PDC2_ATA_HBA_ERR = (1 << 13), /* error during SATA DATA FIS transmission */
PDC2_ATA_DMA_CNT_ERR = (1 << 14), /* DMA DATA FIS size differs from S/G count */
PDC_OVERRUN_ERR = (1 << 19), /* S/G byte count larger than HD requires */
PDC_UNDERRUN_ERR = (1 << 20), /* S/G byte count less than HD requires */
PDC_DRIVE_ERR = (1 << 21), /* drive error */
PDC_PCI_SYS_ERR = (1 << 22), /* PCI system error */
PDC1_PCI_PARITY_ERR = (1 << 23), /* PCI parity error (from SATA150 driver) */
PDC1_ERR_MASK = PDC1_PCI_PARITY_ERR,
PDC2_ERR_MASK = PDC2_HTO_ERR | PDC2_ATA_HBA_ERR | PDC2_ATA_DMA_CNT_ERR,
PDC_ERR_MASK = (PDC_PH_ERR | PDC_SH_ERR | PDC_DH_ERR | PDC_OVERRUN_ERR
| PDC_UNDERRUN_ERR | PDC_DRIVE_ERR | PDC_PCI_SYS_ERR
| PDC1_ERR_MASK | PDC2_ERR_MASK),
board_2037x = 0, /* FastTrak S150 TX2plus */
board_2037x_pata = 1, /* FastTrak S150 TX2plus PATA port */
board_20319 = 2, /* FastTrak S150 TX4 */
board_20619 = 3, /* FastTrak TX4000 */
board_2057x = 4, /* SATAII150 Tx2plus */
board_2057x_pata = 5, /* SATAII150 Tx2plus PATA port */
board_40518 = 6, /* SATAII150 Tx4 */
PDC_HAS_PATA = (1 << 1), /* PDC20375/20575 has PATA */
/* Sequence counter control registers bit definitions */
PDC_SEQCNTRL_INT_MASK = (1 << 5), /* Sequence Interrupt Mask */
/* Feature register values */
PDC_FEATURE_ATAPI_PIO = 0x00, /* ATAPI data xfer by PIO */
PDC_FEATURE_ATAPI_DMA = 0x01, /* ATAPI data xfer by DMA */
/* Device/Head register values */
PDC_DEVICE_SATA = 0xE0, /* Device/Head value for SATA devices */
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
/* PDC_CTLSTAT bit definitions */
PDC_DMA_ENABLE = (1 << 7),
PDC_IRQ_DISABLE = (1 << 10),
PDC_RESET = (1 << 11), /* HDMA reset */
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
PDC_COMMON_FLAGS = ATA_FLAG_NO_LEGACY |
ATA_FLAG_MMIO |
ATA_FLAG_PIO_POLLING,
[PATCH] sata_promise fixes and updates This patch updates the sata_promise driver as follows: - Correct typo in definition of PDC_TBG_MODE: it's at 0x41C not 0x41 in first-generation chips. This error caused PCI access alignment exceptions on SPARC64, and on all platforms it disabled the expected initialisation of TBG mode. - Add flags field to struct pdc_host_priv. Define PDC_FLAG_GEN_II and use it to distinguish first- and second-generation chips. - Prevent the FLASH_CTL FIFO_SHD bit from being set to 1 on second- generation chips. This matches Promises' ulsata2 driver. - Prevent TBG mode and SLEW rate initialisation in second-generation chips. These two registers have moved, TBG mode has been redefined, and Promise's ulsata2 driver no longer attempts to initialise them. - Correct PCI device table so devices 0x3570, 0x3571, and 0x3d73 are marked as 2057x (2nd gen) not 2037x (1st gen). - Correct PCI device table so device 0x3d17 is marked as 40518 (2nd gen 4 ports) not 20319 (1st gen 4 ports). - Correct pdc_ata_init_one() to treat 20771 as a second-generation chip. Tested on 0x3d75 (2nd gen), 0x3d73 (2nd gen), and 0x3373 (1st gen) chips. The information comes from the newly uploaded Promise SATA HW specs, Promise's ultra and ulsata2 drivers, and debugging on 3d75/3d73/3373 chips. hp->hotplug_offset could now be removed and its value recomputed in pdc_host_init() using hp->flags, but that would be a cleanup not a functional change, so I'm ignoring it for now. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-11-23 05:00:15 +08:00
/* ap->flags bits */
PDC_FLAG_GEN_II = (1 << 24),
PDC_FLAG_SATA_PATA = (1 << 25), /* supports SATA + PATA */
PDC_FLAG_4_PORTS = (1 << 26), /* 4 ports */
};
struct pdc_port_priv {
u8 *pkt;
dma_addr_t pkt_dma;
};
static int pdc_sata_scr_read(struct ata_port *ap, unsigned int sc_reg, u32 *val);
static int pdc_sata_scr_write(struct ata_port *ap, unsigned int sc_reg, u32 val);
static int pdc_ata_init_one (struct pci_dev *pdev, const struct pci_device_id *ent);
static int pdc_common_port_start(struct ata_port *ap);
static int pdc_sata_port_start(struct ata_port *ap);
static void pdc_qc_prep(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc);
static void pdc_tf_load_mmio(struct ata_port *ap, const struct ata_taskfile *tf);
static void pdc_exec_command_mmio(struct ata_port *ap, const struct ata_taskfile *tf);
static int pdc_check_atapi_dma(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc);
static int pdc_old_sata_check_atapi_dma(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc);
static void pdc_irq_clear(struct ata_port *ap);
static unsigned int pdc_qc_issue_prot(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc);
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
static void pdc_freeze(struct ata_port *ap);
static void pdc_thaw(struct ata_port *ap);
static void pdc_pata_error_handler(struct ata_port *ap);
static void pdc_sata_error_handler(struct ata_port *ap);
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
static void pdc_post_internal_cmd(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc);
static int pdc_pata_cable_detect(struct ata_port *ap);
static int pdc_sata_cable_detect(struct ata_port *ap);
static struct scsi_host_template pdc_ata_sht = {
.module = THIS_MODULE,
.name = DRV_NAME,
.ioctl = ata_scsi_ioctl,
.queuecommand = ata_scsi_queuecmd,
.can_queue = ATA_DEF_QUEUE,
.this_id = ATA_SHT_THIS_ID,
.sg_tablesize = LIBATA_MAX_PRD,
.cmd_per_lun = ATA_SHT_CMD_PER_LUN,
.emulated = ATA_SHT_EMULATED,
.use_clustering = ATA_SHT_USE_CLUSTERING,
.proc_name = DRV_NAME,
.dma_boundary = ATA_DMA_BOUNDARY,
.slave_configure = ata_scsi_slave_config,
.slave_destroy = ata_scsi_slave_destroy,
.bios_param = ata_std_bios_param,
};
static const struct ata_port_operations pdc_sata_ops = {
.tf_load = pdc_tf_load_mmio,
.tf_read = ata_tf_read,
.check_status = ata_check_status,
.exec_command = pdc_exec_command_mmio,
.dev_select = ata_std_dev_select,
.check_atapi_dma = pdc_check_atapi_dma,
.qc_prep = pdc_qc_prep,
.qc_issue = pdc_qc_issue_prot,
.freeze = pdc_freeze,
.thaw = pdc_thaw,
.error_handler = pdc_sata_error_handler,
.post_internal_cmd = pdc_post_internal_cmd,
.cable_detect = pdc_sata_cable_detect,
.data_xfer = ata_data_xfer,
.irq_clear = pdc_irq_clear,
.irq_on = ata_irq_on,
.scr_read = pdc_sata_scr_read,
.scr_write = pdc_sata_scr_write,
.port_start = pdc_sata_port_start,
};
/* First-generation chips need a more restrictive ->check_atapi_dma op */
static const struct ata_port_operations pdc_old_sata_ops = {
.tf_load = pdc_tf_load_mmio,
.tf_read = ata_tf_read,
.check_status = ata_check_status,
.exec_command = pdc_exec_command_mmio,
.dev_select = ata_std_dev_select,
.check_atapi_dma = pdc_old_sata_check_atapi_dma,
.qc_prep = pdc_qc_prep,
.qc_issue = pdc_qc_issue_prot,
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
.freeze = pdc_freeze,
.thaw = pdc_thaw,
.error_handler = pdc_sata_error_handler,
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
.post_internal_cmd = pdc_post_internal_cmd,
.cable_detect = pdc_sata_cable_detect,
.data_xfer = ata_data_xfer,
.irq_clear = pdc_irq_clear,
.irq_on = ata_irq_on,
.scr_read = pdc_sata_scr_read,
.scr_write = pdc_sata_scr_write,
.port_start = pdc_sata_port_start,
};
static const struct ata_port_operations pdc_pata_ops = {
.tf_load = pdc_tf_load_mmio,
.tf_read = ata_tf_read,
.check_status = ata_check_status,
.exec_command = pdc_exec_command_mmio,
.dev_select = ata_std_dev_select,
.check_atapi_dma = pdc_check_atapi_dma,
.qc_prep = pdc_qc_prep,
.qc_issue = pdc_qc_issue_prot,
.freeze = pdc_freeze,
.thaw = pdc_thaw,
.error_handler = pdc_pata_error_handler,
.post_internal_cmd = pdc_post_internal_cmd,
.cable_detect = pdc_pata_cable_detect,
.data_xfer = ata_data_xfer,
.irq_clear = pdc_irq_clear,
.irq_on = ata_irq_on,
.port_start = pdc_common_port_start,
};
static const struct ata_port_info pdc_port_info[] = {
/* board_2037x */
{
.flags = PDC_COMMON_FLAGS | ATA_FLAG_SATA |
PDC_FLAG_SATA_PATA,
.pio_mask = 0x1f, /* pio0-4 */
.mwdma_mask = 0x07, /* mwdma0-2 */
.udma_mask = ATA_UDMA6,
.port_ops = &pdc_old_sata_ops,
},
/* board_2037x_pata */
{
.flags = PDC_COMMON_FLAGS | ATA_FLAG_SLAVE_POSS,
.pio_mask = 0x1f, /* pio0-4 */
.mwdma_mask = 0x07, /* mwdma0-2 */
.udma_mask = ATA_UDMA6,
.port_ops = &pdc_pata_ops,
},
/* board_20319 */
{
.flags = PDC_COMMON_FLAGS | ATA_FLAG_SATA |
PDC_FLAG_4_PORTS,
.pio_mask = 0x1f, /* pio0-4 */
.mwdma_mask = 0x07, /* mwdma0-2 */
.udma_mask = ATA_UDMA6,
.port_ops = &pdc_old_sata_ops,
},
/* board_20619 */
{
.flags = PDC_COMMON_FLAGS | ATA_FLAG_SLAVE_POSS |
PDC_FLAG_4_PORTS,
.pio_mask = 0x1f, /* pio0-4 */
.mwdma_mask = 0x07, /* mwdma0-2 */
.udma_mask = ATA_UDMA6,
.port_ops = &pdc_pata_ops,
},
2006-01-17 21:06:21 +08:00
/* board_2057x */
{
.flags = PDC_COMMON_FLAGS | ATA_FLAG_SATA |
PDC_FLAG_GEN_II | PDC_FLAG_SATA_PATA,
.pio_mask = 0x1f, /* pio0-4 */
.mwdma_mask = 0x07, /* mwdma0-2 */
.udma_mask = ATA_UDMA6,
.port_ops = &pdc_sata_ops,
},
/* board_2057x_pata */
{
.flags = PDC_COMMON_FLAGS | ATA_FLAG_SLAVE_POSS |
PDC_FLAG_GEN_II,
.pio_mask = 0x1f, /* pio0-4 */
.mwdma_mask = 0x07, /* mwdma0-2 */
.udma_mask = ATA_UDMA6,
.port_ops = &pdc_pata_ops,
},
/* board_40518 */
{
.flags = PDC_COMMON_FLAGS | ATA_FLAG_SATA |
PDC_FLAG_GEN_II | PDC_FLAG_4_PORTS,
.pio_mask = 0x1f, /* pio0-4 */
.mwdma_mask = 0x07, /* mwdma0-2 */
.udma_mask = ATA_UDMA6,
.port_ops = &pdc_sata_ops,
},
};
static const struct pci_device_id pdc_ata_pci_tbl[] = {
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3371), board_2037x },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3373), board_2037x },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3375), board_2037x },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3376), board_2037x },
[PATCH] sata_promise fixes and updates This patch updates the sata_promise driver as follows: - Correct typo in definition of PDC_TBG_MODE: it's at 0x41C not 0x41 in first-generation chips. This error caused PCI access alignment exceptions on SPARC64, and on all platforms it disabled the expected initialisation of TBG mode. - Add flags field to struct pdc_host_priv. Define PDC_FLAG_GEN_II and use it to distinguish first- and second-generation chips. - Prevent the FLASH_CTL FIFO_SHD bit from being set to 1 on second- generation chips. This matches Promises' ulsata2 driver. - Prevent TBG mode and SLEW rate initialisation in second-generation chips. These two registers have moved, TBG mode has been redefined, and Promise's ulsata2 driver no longer attempts to initialise them. - Correct PCI device table so devices 0x3570, 0x3571, and 0x3d73 are marked as 2057x (2nd gen) not 2037x (1st gen). - Correct PCI device table so device 0x3d17 is marked as 40518 (2nd gen 4 ports) not 20319 (1st gen 4 ports). - Correct pdc_ata_init_one() to treat 20771 as a second-generation chip. Tested on 0x3d75 (2nd gen), 0x3d73 (2nd gen), and 0x3373 (1st gen) chips. The information comes from the newly uploaded Promise SATA HW specs, Promise's ultra and ulsata2 drivers, and debugging on 3d75/3d73/3373 chips. hp->hotplug_offset could now be removed and its value recomputed in pdc_host_init() using hp->flags, but that would be a cleanup not a functional change, so I'm ignoring it for now. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-11-23 05:00:15 +08:00
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3570), board_2057x },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3571), board_2057x },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3574), board_2057x },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3577), board_2057x },
[PATCH] sata_promise fixes and updates This patch updates the sata_promise driver as follows: - Correct typo in definition of PDC_TBG_MODE: it's at 0x41C not 0x41 in first-generation chips. This error caused PCI access alignment exceptions on SPARC64, and on all platforms it disabled the expected initialisation of TBG mode. - Add flags field to struct pdc_host_priv. Define PDC_FLAG_GEN_II and use it to distinguish first- and second-generation chips. - Prevent the FLASH_CTL FIFO_SHD bit from being set to 1 on second- generation chips. This matches Promises' ulsata2 driver. - Prevent TBG mode and SLEW rate initialisation in second-generation chips. These two registers have moved, TBG mode has been redefined, and Promise's ulsata2 driver no longer attempts to initialise them. - Correct PCI device table so devices 0x3570, 0x3571, and 0x3d73 are marked as 2057x (2nd gen) not 2037x (1st gen). - Correct PCI device table so device 0x3d17 is marked as 40518 (2nd gen 4 ports) not 20319 (1st gen 4 ports). - Correct pdc_ata_init_one() to treat 20771 as a second-generation chip. Tested on 0x3d75 (2nd gen), 0x3d73 (2nd gen), and 0x3373 (1st gen) chips. The information comes from the newly uploaded Promise SATA HW specs, Promise's ultra and ulsata2 drivers, and debugging on 3d75/3d73/3373 chips. hp->hotplug_offset could now be removed and its value recomputed in pdc_host_init() using hp->flags, but that would be a cleanup not a functional change, so I'm ignoring it for now. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-11-23 05:00:15 +08:00
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3d73), board_2057x },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3d75), board_2057x },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3318), board_20319 },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3319), board_20319 },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3515), board_40518 },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3519), board_40518 },
[PATCH] sata_promise fixes and updates This patch updates the sata_promise driver as follows: - Correct typo in definition of PDC_TBG_MODE: it's at 0x41C not 0x41 in first-generation chips. This error caused PCI access alignment exceptions on SPARC64, and on all platforms it disabled the expected initialisation of TBG mode. - Add flags field to struct pdc_host_priv. Define PDC_FLAG_GEN_II and use it to distinguish first- and second-generation chips. - Prevent the FLASH_CTL FIFO_SHD bit from being set to 1 on second- generation chips. This matches Promises' ulsata2 driver. - Prevent TBG mode and SLEW rate initialisation in second-generation chips. These two registers have moved, TBG mode has been redefined, and Promise's ulsata2 driver no longer attempts to initialise them. - Correct PCI device table so devices 0x3570, 0x3571, and 0x3d73 are marked as 2057x (2nd gen) not 2037x (1st gen). - Correct PCI device table so device 0x3d17 is marked as 40518 (2nd gen 4 ports) not 20319 (1st gen 4 ports). - Correct pdc_ata_init_one() to treat 20771 as a second-generation chip. Tested on 0x3d75 (2nd gen), 0x3d73 (2nd gen), and 0x3373 (1st gen) chips. The information comes from the newly uploaded Promise SATA HW specs, Promise's ultra and ulsata2 drivers, and debugging on 3d75/3d73/3373 chips. hp->hotplug_offset could now be removed and its value recomputed in pdc_host_init() using hp->flags, but that would be a cleanup not a functional change, so I'm ignoring it for now. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-11-23 05:00:15 +08:00
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3d17), board_40518 },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x3d18), board_40518 },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(PROMISE, 0x6629), board_20619 },
{ } /* terminate list */
};
static struct pci_driver pdc_ata_pci_driver = {
.name = DRV_NAME,
.id_table = pdc_ata_pci_tbl,
.probe = pdc_ata_init_one,
.remove = ata_pci_remove_one,
};
static int pdc_common_port_start(struct ata_port *ap)
{
struct device *dev = ap->host->dev;
struct pdc_port_priv *pp;
int rc;
rc = ata_port_start(ap);
if (rc)
return rc;
pp = devm_kzalloc(dev, sizeof(*pp), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!pp)
return -ENOMEM;
pp->pkt = dmam_alloc_coherent(dev, 128, &pp->pkt_dma, GFP_KERNEL);
if (!pp->pkt)
return -ENOMEM;
ap->private_data = pp;
return 0;
}
static int pdc_sata_port_start(struct ata_port *ap)
{
int rc;
rc = pdc_common_port_start(ap);
if (rc)
return rc;
/* fix up PHYMODE4 align timing */
if (ap->flags & PDC_FLAG_GEN_II) {
void __iomem *mmio = ap->ioaddr.scr_addr;
unsigned int tmp;
tmp = readl(mmio + 0x014);
tmp = (tmp & ~3) | 1; /* set bits 1:0 = 0:1 */
writel(tmp, mmio + 0x014);
}
return 0;
}
static void pdc_reset_port(struct ata_port *ap)
{
void __iomem *mmio = ap->ioaddr.cmd_addr + PDC_CTLSTAT;
unsigned int i;
u32 tmp;
for (i = 11; i > 0; i--) {
tmp = readl(mmio);
if (tmp & PDC_RESET)
break;
udelay(100);
tmp |= PDC_RESET;
writel(tmp, mmio);
}
tmp &= ~PDC_RESET;
writel(tmp, mmio);
readl(mmio); /* flush */
}
static int pdc_pata_cable_detect(struct ata_port *ap)
{
u8 tmp;
void __iomem *mmio = ap->ioaddr.cmd_addr + PDC_CTLSTAT + 0x03;
tmp = readb(mmio);
if (tmp & 0x01)
return ATA_CBL_PATA40;
return ATA_CBL_PATA80;
}
static int pdc_sata_cable_detect(struct ata_port *ap)
{
return ATA_CBL_SATA;
}
static int pdc_sata_scr_read(struct ata_port *ap, unsigned int sc_reg, u32 *val)
{
if (sc_reg > SCR_CONTROL)
return -EINVAL;
*val = readl(ap->ioaddr.scr_addr + (sc_reg * 4));
return 0;
}
static int pdc_sata_scr_write(struct ata_port *ap, unsigned int sc_reg, u32 val)
{
if (sc_reg > SCR_CONTROL)
return -EINVAL;
writel(val, ap->ioaddr.scr_addr + (sc_reg * 4));
return 0;
}
static void pdc_atapi_pkt(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc)
{
struct ata_port *ap = qc->ap;
dma_addr_t sg_table = ap->prd_dma;
unsigned int cdb_len = qc->dev->cdb_len;
u8 *cdb = qc->cdb;
struct pdc_port_priv *pp = ap->private_data;
u8 *buf = pp->pkt;
u32 *buf32 = (u32 *) buf;
unsigned int dev_sel, feature, nbytes;
/* set control bits (byte 0), zero delay seq id (byte 3),
* and seq id (byte 2)
*/
switch (qc->tf.protocol) {
case ATA_PROT_ATAPI_DMA:
if (!(qc->tf.flags & ATA_TFLAG_WRITE))
buf32[0] = cpu_to_le32(PDC_PKT_READ);
else
buf32[0] = 0;
break;
case ATA_PROT_ATAPI_NODATA:
buf32[0] = cpu_to_le32(PDC_PKT_NODATA);
break;
default:
BUG();
break;
}
buf32[1] = cpu_to_le32(sg_table); /* S/G table addr */
buf32[2] = 0; /* no next-packet */
/* select drive */
if (sata_scr_valid(&ap->link)) {
dev_sel = PDC_DEVICE_SATA;
} else {
dev_sel = ATA_DEVICE_OBS;
if (qc->dev->devno != 0)
dev_sel |= ATA_DEV1;
}
buf[12] = (1 << 5) | ATA_REG_DEVICE;
buf[13] = dev_sel;
buf[14] = (1 << 5) | ATA_REG_DEVICE | PDC_PKT_CLEAR_BSY;
buf[15] = dev_sel; /* once more, waiting for BSY to clear */
buf[16] = (1 << 5) | ATA_REG_NSECT;
buf[17] = 0x00;
buf[18] = (1 << 5) | ATA_REG_LBAL;
buf[19] = 0x00;
/* set feature and byte counter registers */
if (qc->tf.protocol != ATA_PROT_ATAPI_DMA) {
feature = PDC_FEATURE_ATAPI_PIO;
/* set byte counter register to real transfer byte count */
nbytes = qc->nbytes;
if (nbytes > 0xffff)
nbytes = 0xffff;
} else {
feature = PDC_FEATURE_ATAPI_DMA;
/* set byte counter register to 0 */
nbytes = 0;
}
buf[20] = (1 << 5) | ATA_REG_FEATURE;
buf[21] = feature;
buf[22] = (1 << 5) | ATA_REG_BYTEL;
buf[23] = nbytes & 0xFF;
buf[24] = (1 << 5) | ATA_REG_BYTEH;
buf[25] = (nbytes >> 8) & 0xFF;
/* send ATAPI packet command 0xA0 */
buf[26] = (1 << 5) | ATA_REG_CMD;
buf[27] = ATA_CMD_PACKET;
/* select drive and check DRQ */
buf[28] = (1 << 5) | ATA_REG_DEVICE | PDC_PKT_WAIT_DRDY;
buf[29] = dev_sel;
/* we can represent cdb lengths 2/4/6/8/10/12/14/16 */
BUG_ON(cdb_len & ~0x1E);
/* append the CDB as the final part */
buf[30] = (((cdb_len >> 1) & 7) << 5) | ATA_REG_DATA | PDC_LAST_REG;
memcpy(buf+31, cdb, cdb_len);
}
static void pdc_qc_prep(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc)
{
struct pdc_port_priv *pp = qc->ap->private_data;
unsigned int i;
VPRINTK("ENTER\n");
switch (qc->tf.protocol) {
case ATA_PROT_DMA:
ata_qc_prep(qc);
/* fall through */
case ATA_PROT_NODATA:
i = pdc_pkt_header(&qc->tf, qc->ap->prd_dma,
qc->dev->devno, pp->pkt);
if (qc->tf.flags & ATA_TFLAG_LBA48)
i = pdc_prep_lba48(&qc->tf, pp->pkt, i);
else
i = pdc_prep_lba28(&qc->tf, pp->pkt, i);
pdc_pkt_footer(&qc->tf, pp->pkt, i);
break;
case ATA_PROT_ATAPI:
ata_qc_prep(qc);
break;
case ATA_PROT_ATAPI_DMA:
ata_qc_prep(qc);
/*FALLTHROUGH*/
case ATA_PROT_ATAPI_NODATA:
pdc_atapi_pkt(qc);
break;
default:
break;
}
}
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
static void pdc_freeze(struct ata_port *ap)
{
void __iomem *mmio = ap->ioaddr.cmd_addr;
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
u32 tmp;
tmp = readl(mmio + PDC_CTLSTAT);
tmp |= PDC_IRQ_DISABLE;
tmp &= ~PDC_DMA_ENABLE;
writel(tmp, mmio + PDC_CTLSTAT);
readl(mmio + PDC_CTLSTAT); /* flush */
}
static void pdc_thaw(struct ata_port *ap)
{
void __iomem *mmio = ap->ioaddr.cmd_addr;
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
u32 tmp;
/* clear IRQ */
readl(mmio + PDC_INT_SEQMASK);
/* turn IRQ back on */
tmp = readl(mmio + PDC_CTLSTAT);
tmp &= ~PDC_IRQ_DISABLE;
writel(tmp, mmio + PDC_CTLSTAT);
readl(mmio + PDC_CTLSTAT); /* flush */
}
static void pdc_common_error_handler(struct ata_port *ap, ata_reset_fn_t hardreset)
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
{
if (!(ap->pflags & ATA_PFLAG_FROZEN))
pdc_reset_port(ap);
/* perform recovery */
ata_do_eh(ap, ata_std_prereset, ata_std_softreset, hardreset,
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
ata_std_postreset);
}
static void pdc_pata_error_handler(struct ata_port *ap)
{
pdc_common_error_handler(ap, NULL);
}
static void pdc_sata_error_handler(struct ata_port *ap)
{
pdc_common_error_handler(ap, sata_std_hardreset);
}
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
static void pdc_post_internal_cmd(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc)
{
struct ata_port *ap = qc->ap;
/* make DMA engine forget about the failed command */
if (qc->flags & ATA_QCFLAG_FAILED)
[PATCH] sata_promise: new EH conversion, take 2 This patch converts sata_promise to use new-style libata error handling on Promise SATA chips, for both SATA and PATA ports. * ATA_FLAG_SRST is no longer set * ->phy_reset is no longer set as it is unused when ->error_handler is present, and pdc_sata_phy_reset() has been removed * pdc_freeze() masks interrupts and halts DMA via PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_thaw() clears interrupt status in PDC_INT_SEQMASK and then unmasks interrupts in PDC_CTLSTAT * pdc_error_handler() reinitialises the port if it isn't frozen, and then invokes ata_do_eh() with standard {s,}ata reset methods * pdc_post_internal_cmd() resets the port in case of errors * the PATA-only 20619 chip continues to use old-style EH: not by necessity but simply because I don't have documentation for it or any way to test it Since the previous version pdc_error_handler() has been rewritten and it now mostly matches ahci and sata_sil24. In case anyone wonders: the call to pdc_reset_port() isn't a heavy-duty reset, it's a light-weight reset to quickly put a port into a sane state. The discussion about the PCI flushes in pdc_freeze() and pdc_thaw() seemed to end with a consensus that the flushes are OK and not obviously redundant, so I decided to keep them for now. This patch was prepared against 2.6.19-git7, but it also applies to 2.6.19 + libata #upstream, with or without the revised sata_promise cleanup patch I recently submitted. This patch does conflict with the #promise-sata-pata patch: this patch removes pdc_sata_phy_reset() while #promise-sata-pata modifies it. The correct patch resolution is to remove the function. Tested on 2037x and 2057x chips, with PATA patches on top and disks on both SATA and PATA ports. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-12-07 07:06:51 +08:00
pdc_reset_port(ap);
}
static void pdc_error_intr(struct ata_port *ap, struct ata_queued_cmd *qc,
u32 port_status, u32 err_mask)
{
struct ata_eh_info *ehi = &ap->link.eh_info;
unsigned int ac_err_mask = 0;
ata_ehi_clear_desc(ehi);
ata_ehi_push_desc(ehi, "port_status 0x%08x", port_status);
port_status &= err_mask;
if (port_status & PDC_DRIVE_ERR)
ac_err_mask |= AC_ERR_DEV;
if (port_status & (PDC_OVERRUN_ERR | PDC_UNDERRUN_ERR))
ac_err_mask |= AC_ERR_HSM;
if (port_status & (PDC2_ATA_HBA_ERR | PDC2_ATA_DMA_CNT_ERR))
ac_err_mask |= AC_ERR_ATA_BUS;
if (port_status & (PDC_PH_ERR | PDC_SH_ERR | PDC_DH_ERR | PDC2_HTO_ERR
| PDC_PCI_SYS_ERR | PDC1_PCI_PARITY_ERR))
ac_err_mask |= AC_ERR_HOST_BUS;
if (sata_scr_valid(&ap->link)) {
u32 serror;
pdc_sata_scr_read(ap, SCR_ERROR, &serror);
ehi->serror |= serror;
}
qc->err_mask |= ac_err_mask;
pdc_reset_port(ap);
ata_port_abort(ap);
}
static inline unsigned int pdc_host_intr(struct ata_port *ap,
struct ata_queued_cmd *qc)
{
unsigned int handled = 0;
void __iomem *port_mmio = ap->ioaddr.cmd_addr;
u32 port_status, err_mask;
err_mask = PDC_ERR_MASK;
if (ap->flags & PDC_FLAG_GEN_II)
err_mask &= ~PDC1_ERR_MASK;
else
err_mask &= ~PDC2_ERR_MASK;
port_status = readl(port_mmio + PDC_GLOBAL_CTL);
if (unlikely(port_status & err_mask)) {
pdc_error_intr(ap, qc, port_status, err_mask);
return 1;
}
switch (qc->tf.protocol) {
case ATA_PROT_DMA:
case ATA_PROT_NODATA:
case ATA_PROT_ATAPI_DMA:
case ATA_PROT_ATAPI_NODATA:
qc->err_mask |= ac_err_mask(ata_wait_idle(ap));
ata_qc_complete(qc);
handled = 1;
break;
default:
ap->stats.idle_irq++;
break;
}
return handled;
}
static void pdc_irq_clear(struct ata_port *ap)
{
struct ata_host *host = ap->host;
void __iomem *mmio = host->iomap[PDC_MMIO_BAR];
readl(mmio + PDC_INT_SEQMASK);
}
static inline int pdc_is_sataii_tx4(unsigned long flags)
{
const unsigned long mask = PDC_FLAG_GEN_II | PDC_FLAG_4_PORTS;
return (flags & mask) == mask;
}
static inline unsigned int pdc_port_no_to_ata_no(unsigned int port_no, int is_sataii_tx4)
{
static const unsigned char sataii_tx4_port_remap[4] = { 3, 1, 0, 2};
return is_sataii_tx4 ? sataii_tx4_port_remap[port_no] : port_no;
}
IRQ: Maintain regs pointer globally rather than passing to IRQ handlers Maintain a per-CPU global "struct pt_regs *" variable which can be used instead of passing regs around manually through all ~1800 interrupt handlers in the Linux kernel. The regs pointer is used in few places, but it potentially costs both stack space and code to pass it around. On the FRV arch, removing the regs parameter from all the genirq function results in a 20% speed up of the IRQ exit path (ie: from leaving timer_interrupt() to leaving do_IRQ()). Where appropriate, an arch may override the generic storage facility and do something different with the variable. On FRV, for instance, the address is maintained in GR28 at all times inside the kernel as part of general exception handling. Having looked over the code, it appears that the parameter may be handed down through up to twenty or so layers of functions. Consider a USB character device attached to a USB hub, attached to a USB controller that posts its interrupts through a cascaded auxiliary interrupt controller. A character device driver may want to pass regs to the sysrq handler through the input layer which adds another few layers of parameter passing. I've build this code with allyesconfig for x86_64 and i386. I've runtested the main part of the code on FRV and i386, though I can't test most of the drivers. I've also done partial conversion for powerpc and MIPS - these at least compile with minimal configurations. This will affect all archs. Mostly the changes should be relatively easy. Take do_IRQ(), store the regs pointer at the beginning, saving the old one: struct pt_regs *old_regs = set_irq_regs(regs); And put the old one back at the end: set_irq_regs(old_regs); Don't pass regs through to generic_handle_irq() or __do_IRQ(). In timer_interrupt(), this sort of change will be necessary: - update_process_times(user_mode(regs)); - profile_tick(CPU_PROFILING, regs); + update_process_times(user_mode(get_irq_regs())); + profile_tick(CPU_PROFILING); I'd like to move update_process_times()'s use of get_irq_regs() into itself, except that i386, alone of the archs, uses something other than user_mode(). Some notes on the interrupt handling in the drivers: (*) input_dev() is now gone entirely. The regs pointer is no longer stored in the input_dev struct. (*) finish_unlinks() in drivers/usb/host/ohci-q.c needs checking. It does something different depending on whether it's been supplied with a regs pointer or not. (*) Various IRQ handler function pointers have been moved to type irq_handler_t. Signed-Off-By: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> (cherry picked from 1b16e7ac850969f38b375e511e3fa2f474a33867 commit)
2006-10-05 21:55:46 +08:00
static irqreturn_t pdc_interrupt (int irq, void *dev_instance)
{
struct ata_host *host = dev_instance;
struct ata_port *ap;
u32 mask = 0;
unsigned int i, tmp;
unsigned int handled = 0;
void __iomem *mmio_base;
sata_promise: SATA hotplug support, take 2 This patch enables hotplugging of SATA devices in the sata_promise driver. It's been tested successfully on both first- and second-generation Promise SATA chips: SATA150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX4, SATA300 TX2plus, and SATA300 TX4. The only quirk I've seen is that hotplugging (insertion) on the first-generation SATA150 TX2plus requires a lengthier EH sequence than on the second-generation chips. On the second-generation chips a simple soft reset seems to suffice, but on the first-generation chip there's a "port is slow to respond" after the initial soft reset, after which libata issues a hard reset, and then the device is recognised. The hotplug checks are high up in the interrupt handling path, not deep down in error_intr as in ahci/sata_sil24. That's because the chip doesn't signal hotplug status changes in the per-port status register: instead a global register contains hotplug control and status flags for all ports. I considered following the ahci/sata_sil24 structure, but that would have required non-trivial changes to the interrupt handling path, so I chose to keep the hotplug changes simple and unobtrusive. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> -- This patch depends on the "sata_promise: cleanups" patch. Changes since the previous version (posted June 19): - Correct pdc_interrupt() to increment 'handled' also in the hotplug case. This prevents IRQ_NONE from being returned when an interrupt only has hotplug events to handle, which could confuse the kernel's IRQ machinery. - Added testing on the SATAII150 TX4. drivers/ata/sata_promise.c | 41 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 files changed, 36 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2007-07-03 07:09:05 +08:00
unsigned int hotplug_offset, ata_no;
u32 hotplug_status;
int is_sataii_tx4;
VPRINTK("ENTER\n");
if (!host || !host->iomap[PDC_MMIO_BAR]) {
VPRINTK("QUICK EXIT\n");
return IRQ_NONE;
}
mmio_base = host->iomap[PDC_MMIO_BAR];
sata_promise: SATA hotplug support, take 2 This patch enables hotplugging of SATA devices in the sata_promise driver. It's been tested successfully on both first- and second-generation Promise SATA chips: SATA150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX4, SATA300 TX2plus, and SATA300 TX4. The only quirk I've seen is that hotplugging (insertion) on the first-generation SATA150 TX2plus requires a lengthier EH sequence than on the second-generation chips. On the second-generation chips a simple soft reset seems to suffice, but on the first-generation chip there's a "port is slow to respond" after the initial soft reset, after which libata issues a hard reset, and then the device is recognised. The hotplug checks are high up in the interrupt handling path, not deep down in error_intr as in ahci/sata_sil24. That's because the chip doesn't signal hotplug status changes in the per-port status register: instead a global register contains hotplug control and status flags for all ports. I considered following the ahci/sata_sil24 structure, but that would have required non-trivial changes to the interrupt handling path, so I chose to keep the hotplug changes simple and unobtrusive. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> -- This patch depends on the "sata_promise: cleanups" patch. Changes since the previous version (posted June 19): - Correct pdc_interrupt() to increment 'handled' also in the hotplug case. This prevents IRQ_NONE from being returned when an interrupt only has hotplug events to handle, which could confuse the kernel's IRQ machinery. - Added testing on the SATAII150 TX4. drivers/ata/sata_promise.c | 41 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 files changed, 36 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2007-07-03 07:09:05 +08:00
/* read and clear hotplug flags for all ports */
if (host->ports[0]->flags & PDC_FLAG_GEN_II)
hotplug_offset = PDC2_SATA_PLUG_CSR;
else
hotplug_offset = PDC_SATA_PLUG_CSR;
hotplug_status = readl(mmio_base + hotplug_offset);
if (hotplug_status & 0xff)
writel(hotplug_status | 0xff, mmio_base + hotplug_offset);
hotplug_status &= 0xff; /* clear uninteresting bits */
/* reading should also clear interrupts */
mask = readl(mmio_base + PDC_INT_SEQMASK);
sata_promise: SATA hotplug support, take 2 This patch enables hotplugging of SATA devices in the sata_promise driver. It's been tested successfully on both first- and second-generation Promise SATA chips: SATA150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX4, SATA300 TX2plus, and SATA300 TX4. The only quirk I've seen is that hotplugging (insertion) on the first-generation SATA150 TX2plus requires a lengthier EH sequence than on the second-generation chips. On the second-generation chips a simple soft reset seems to suffice, but on the first-generation chip there's a "port is slow to respond" after the initial soft reset, after which libata issues a hard reset, and then the device is recognised. The hotplug checks are high up in the interrupt handling path, not deep down in error_intr as in ahci/sata_sil24. That's because the chip doesn't signal hotplug status changes in the per-port status register: instead a global register contains hotplug control and status flags for all ports. I considered following the ahci/sata_sil24 structure, but that would have required non-trivial changes to the interrupt handling path, so I chose to keep the hotplug changes simple and unobtrusive. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> -- This patch depends on the "sata_promise: cleanups" patch. Changes since the previous version (posted June 19): - Correct pdc_interrupt() to increment 'handled' also in the hotplug case. This prevents IRQ_NONE from being returned when an interrupt only has hotplug events to handle, which could confuse the kernel's IRQ machinery. - Added testing on the SATAII150 TX4. drivers/ata/sata_promise.c | 41 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 files changed, 36 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2007-07-03 07:09:05 +08:00
if (mask == 0xffffffff && hotplug_status == 0) {
VPRINTK("QUICK EXIT 2\n");
return IRQ_NONE;
}
spin_lock(&host->lock);
mask &= 0xffff; /* only 16 tags possible */
sata_promise: SATA hotplug support, take 2 This patch enables hotplugging of SATA devices in the sata_promise driver. It's been tested successfully on both first- and second-generation Promise SATA chips: SATA150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX4, SATA300 TX2plus, and SATA300 TX4. The only quirk I've seen is that hotplugging (insertion) on the first-generation SATA150 TX2plus requires a lengthier EH sequence than on the second-generation chips. On the second-generation chips a simple soft reset seems to suffice, but on the first-generation chip there's a "port is slow to respond" after the initial soft reset, after which libata issues a hard reset, and then the device is recognised. The hotplug checks are high up in the interrupt handling path, not deep down in error_intr as in ahci/sata_sil24. That's because the chip doesn't signal hotplug status changes in the per-port status register: instead a global register contains hotplug control and status flags for all ports. I considered following the ahci/sata_sil24 structure, but that would have required non-trivial changes to the interrupt handling path, so I chose to keep the hotplug changes simple and unobtrusive. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> -- This patch depends on the "sata_promise: cleanups" patch. Changes since the previous version (posted June 19): - Correct pdc_interrupt() to increment 'handled' also in the hotplug case. This prevents IRQ_NONE from being returned when an interrupt only has hotplug events to handle, which could confuse the kernel's IRQ machinery. - Added testing on the SATAII150 TX4. drivers/ata/sata_promise.c | 41 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 files changed, 36 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2007-07-03 07:09:05 +08:00
if (mask == 0 && hotplug_status == 0) {
VPRINTK("QUICK EXIT 3\n");
goto done_irq;
}
writel(mask, mmio_base + PDC_INT_SEQMASK);
sata_promise: SATA hotplug support, take 2 This patch enables hotplugging of SATA devices in the sata_promise driver. It's been tested successfully on both first- and second-generation Promise SATA chips: SATA150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX4, SATA300 TX2plus, and SATA300 TX4. The only quirk I've seen is that hotplugging (insertion) on the first-generation SATA150 TX2plus requires a lengthier EH sequence than on the second-generation chips. On the second-generation chips a simple soft reset seems to suffice, but on the first-generation chip there's a "port is slow to respond" after the initial soft reset, after which libata issues a hard reset, and then the device is recognised. The hotplug checks are high up in the interrupt handling path, not deep down in error_intr as in ahci/sata_sil24. That's because the chip doesn't signal hotplug status changes in the per-port status register: instead a global register contains hotplug control and status flags for all ports. I considered following the ahci/sata_sil24 structure, but that would have required non-trivial changes to the interrupt handling path, so I chose to keep the hotplug changes simple and unobtrusive. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> -- This patch depends on the "sata_promise: cleanups" patch. Changes since the previous version (posted June 19): - Correct pdc_interrupt() to increment 'handled' also in the hotplug case. This prevents IRQ_NONE from being returned when an interrupt only has hotplug events to handle, which could confuse the kernel's IRQ machinery. - Added testing on the SATAII150 TX4. drivers/ata/sata_promise.c | 41 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 files changed, 36 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2007-07-03 07:09:05 +08:00
is_sataii_tx4 = pdc_is_sataii_tx4(host->ports[0]->flags);
for (i = 0; i < host->n_ports; i++) {
VPRINTK("port %u\n", i);
ap = host->ports[i];
sata_promise: SATA hotplug support, take 2 This patch enables hotplugging of SATA devices in the sata_promise driver. It's been tested successfully on both first- and second-generation Promise SATA chips: SATA150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX4, SATA300 TX2plus, and SATA300 TX4. The only quirk I've seen is that hotplugging (insertion) on the first-generation SATA150 TX2plus requires a lengthier EH sequence than on the second-generation chips. On the second-generation chips a simple soft reset seems to suffice, but on the first-generation chip there's a "port is slow to respond" after the initial soft reset, after which libata issues a hard reset, and then the device is recognised. The hotplug checks are high up in the interrupt handling path, not deep down in error_intr as in ahci/sata_sil24. That's because the chip doesn't signal hotplug status changes in the per-port status register: instead a global register contains hotplug control and status flags for all ports. I considered following the ahci/sata_sil24 structure, but that would have required non-trivial changes to the interrupt handling path, so I chose to keep the hotplug changes simple and unobtrusive. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> -- This patch depends on the "sata_promise: cleanups" patch. Changes since the previous version (posted June 19): - Correct pdc_interrupt() to increment 'handled' also in the hotplug case. This prevents IRQ_NONE from being returned when an interrupt only has hotplug events to handle, which could confuse the kernel's IRQ machinery. - Added testing on the SATAII150 TX4. drivers/ata/sata_promise.c | 41 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 files changed, 36 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2007-07-03 07:09:05 +08:00
/* check for a plug or unplug event */
ata_no = pdc_port_no_to_ata_no(i, is_sataii_tx4);
tmp = hotplug_status & (0x11 << ata_no);
if (tmp && ap &&
!(ap->flags & ATA_FLAG_DISABLED)) {
struct ata_eh_info *ehi = &ap->link.eh_info;
sata_promise: SATA hotplug support, take 2 This patch enables hotplugging of SATA devices in the sata_promise driver. It's been tested successfully on both first- and second-generation Promise SATA chips: SATA150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX4, SATA300 TX2plus, and SATA300 TX4. The only quirk I've seen is that hotplugging (insertion) on the first-generation SATA150 TX2plus requires a lengthier EH sequence than on the second-generation chips. On the second-generation chips a simple soft reset seems to suffice, but on the first-generation chip there's a "port is slow to respond" after the initial soft reset, after which libata issues a hard reset, and then the device is recognised. The hotplug checks are high up in the interrupt handling path, not deep down in error_intr as in ahci/sata_sil24. That's because the chip doesn't signal hotplug status changes in the per-port status register: instead a global register contains hotplug control and status flags for all ports. I considered following the ahci/sata_sil24 structure, but that would have required non-trivial changes to the interrupt handling path, so I chose to keep the hotplug changes simple and unobtrusive. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> -- This patch depends on the "sata_promise: cleanups" patch. Changes since the previous version (posted June 19): - Correct pdc_interrupt() to increment 'handled' also in the hotplug case. This prevents IRQ_NONE from being returned when an interrupt only has hotplug events to handle, which could confuse the kernel's IRQ machinery. - Added testing on the SATAII150 TX4. drivers/ata/sata_promise.c | 41 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 files changed, 36 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2007-07-03 07:09:05 +08:00
ata_ehi_clear_desc(ehi);
ata_ehi_hotplugged(ehi);
ata_ehi_push_desc(ehi, "hotplug_status %#x", tmp);
ata_port_freeze(ap);
++handled;
continue;
}
/* check for a packet interrupt */
tmp = mask & (1 << (i + 1));
if (tmp && ap &&
!(ap->flags & ATA_FLAG_DISABLED)) {
struct ata_queued_cmd *qc;
qc = ata_qc_from_tag(ap, ap->link.active_tag);
if (qc && (!(qc->tf.flags & ATA_TFLAG_POLLING)))
handled += pdc_host_intr(ap, qc);
}
}
VPRINTK("EXIT\n");
done_irq:
spin_unlock(&host->lock);
return IRQ_RETVAL(handled);
}
static inline void pdc_packet_start(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc)
{
struct ata_port *ap = qc->ap;
struct pdc_port_priv *pp = ap->private_data;
void __iomem *mmio = ap->host->iomap[PDC_MMIO_BAR];
unsigned int port_no = ap->port_no;
u8 seq = (u8) (port_no + 1);
VPRINTK("ENTER, ap %p\n", ap);
writel(0x00000001, mmio + (seq * 4));
readl(mmio + (seq * 4)); /* flush */
pp->pkt[2] = seq;
wmb(); /* flush PRD, pkt writes */
writel(pp->pkt_dma, ap->ioaddr.cmd_addr + PDC_PKT_SUBMIT);
readl(ap->ioaddr.cmd_addr + PDC_PKT_SUBMIT); /* flush */
}
static unsigned int pdc_qc_issue_prot(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc)
{
switch (qc->tf.protocol) {
case ATA_PROT_ATAPI_NODATA:
if (qc->dev->flags & ATA_DFLAG_CDB_INTR)
break;
/*FALLTHROUGH*/
case ATA_PROT_NODATA:
if (qc->tf.flags & ATA_TFLAG_POLLING)
break;
/*FALLTHROUGH*/
case ATA_PROT_ATAPI_DMA:
case ATA_PROT_DMA:
pdc_packet_start(qc);
return 0;
default:
break;
}
return ata_qc_issue_prot(qc);
}
static void pdc_tf_load_mmio(struct ata_port *ap, const struct ata_taskfile *tf)
{
WARN_ON (tf->protocol == ATA_PROT_DMA ||
tf->protocol == ATA_PROT_ATAPI_DMA);
ata_tf_load(ap, tf);
}
static void pdc_exec_command_mmio(struct ata_port *ap, const struct ata_taskfile *tf)
{
WARN_ON (tf->protocol == ATA_PROT_DMA ||
tf->protocol == ATA_PROT_ATAPI_DMA);
ata_exec_command(ap, tf);
}
static int pdc_check_atapi_dma(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc)
{
u8 *scsicmd = qc->scsicmd->cmnd;
int pio = 1; /* atapi dma off by default */
/* Whitelist commands that may use DMA. */
switch (scsicmd[0]) {
case WRITE_12:
case WRITE_10:
case WRITE_6:
case READ_12:
case READ_10:
case READ_6:
case 0xad: /* READ_DVD_STRUCTURE */
case 0xbe: /* READ_CD */
pio = 0;
}
/* -45150 (FFFF4FA2) to -1 (FFFFFFFF) shall use PIO mode */
if (scsicmd[0] == WRITE_10) {
unsigned int lba;
lba = (scsicmd[2] << 24) | (scsicmd[3] << 16) | (scsicmd[4] << 8) | scsicmd[5];
if (lba >= 0xFFFF4FA2)
pio = 1;
}
return pio;
}
static int pdc_old_sata_check_atapi_dma(struct ata_queued_cmd *qc)
{
/* First generation chips cannot use ATAPI DMA on SATA ports */
return 1;
}
static void pdc_ata_setup_port(struct ata_port *ap,
void __iomem *base, void __iomem *scr_addr)
{
ap->ioaddr.cmd_addr = base;
ap->ioaddr.data_addr = base;
ap->ioaddr.feature_addr =
ap->ioaddr.error_addr = base + 0x4;
ap->ioaddr.nsect_addr = base + 0x8;
ap->ioaddr.lbal_addr = base + 0xc;
ap->ioaddr.lbam_addr = base + 0x10;
ap->ioaddr.lbah_addr = base + 0x14;
ap->ioaddr.device_addr = base + 0x18;
ap->ioaddr.command_addr =
ap->ioaddr.status_addr = base + 0x1c;
ap->ioaddr.altstatus_addr =
ap->ioaddr.ctl_addr = base + 0x38;
ap->ioaddr.scr_addr = scr_addr;
}
static void pdc_host_init(struct ata_host *host)
{
void __iomem *mmio = host->iomap[PDC_MMIO_BAR];
int is_gen2 = host->ports[0]->flags & PDC_FLAG_GEN_II;
int hotplug_offset;
u32 tmp;
if (is_gen2)
hotplug_offset = PDC2_SATA_PLUG_CSR;
else
hotplug_offset = PDC_SATA_PLUG_CSR;
/*
* Except for the hotplug stuff, this is voodoo from the
* Promise driver. Label this entire section
* "TODO: figure out why we do this"
*/
[PATCH] sata_promise fixes and updates This patch updates the sata_promise driver as follows: - Correct typo in definition of PDC_TBG_MODE: it's at 0x41C not 0x41 in first-generation chips. This error caused PCI access alignment exceptions on SPARC64, and on all platforms it disabled the expected initialisation of TBG mode. - Add flags field to struct pdc_host_priv. Define PDC_FLAG_GEN_II and use it to distinguish first- and second-generation chips. - Prevent the FLASH_CTL FIFO_SHD bit from being set to 1 on second- generation chips. This matches Promises' ulsata2 driver. - Prevent TBG mode and SLEW rate initialisation in second-generation chips. These two registers have moved, TBG mode has been redefined, and Promise's ulsata2 driver no longer attempts to initialise them. - Correct PCI device table so devices 0x3570, 0x3571, and 0x3d73 are marked as 2057x (2nd gen) not 2037x (1st gen). - Correct PCI device table so device 0x3d17 is marked as 40518 (2nd gen 4 ports) not 20319 (1st gen 4 ports). - Correct pdc_ata_init_one() to treat 20771 as a second-generation chip. Tested on 0x3d75 (2nd gen), 0x3d73 (2nd gen), and 0x3373 (1st gen) chips. The information comes from the newly uploaded Promise SATA HW specs, Promise's ultra and ulsata2 drivers, and debugging on 3d75/3d73/3373 chips. hp->hotplug_offset could now be removed and its value recomputed in pdc_host_init() using hp->flags, but that would be a cleanup not a functional change, so I'm ignoring it for now. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-11-23 05:00:15 +08:00
/* enable BMR_BURST, maybe change FIFO_SHD to 8 dwords */
tmp = readl(mmio + PDC_FLASH_CTL);
[PATCH] sata_promise fixes and updates This patch updates the sata_promise driver as follows: - Correct typo in definition of PDC_TBG_MODE: it's at 0x41C not 0x41 in first-generation chips. This error caused PCI access alignment exceptions on SPARC64, and on all platforms it disabled the expected initialisation of TBG mode. - Add flags field to struct pdc_host_priv. Define PDC_FLAG_GEN_II and use it to distinguish first- and second-generation chips. - Prevent the FLASH_CTL FIFO_SHD bit from being set to 1 on second- generation chips. This matches Promises' ulsata2 driver. - Prevent TBG mode and SLEW rate initialisation in second-generation chips. These two registers have moved, TBG mode has been redefined, and Promise's ulsata2 driver no longer attempts to initialise them. - Correct PCI device table so devices 0x3570, 0x3571, and 0x3d73 are marked as 2057x (2nd gen) not 2037x (1st gen). - Correct PCI device table so device 0x3d17 is marked as 40518 (2nd gen 4 ports) not 20319 (1st gen 4 ports). - Correct pdc_ata_init_one() to treat 20771 as a second-generation chip. Tested on 0x3d75 (2nd gen), 0x3d73 (2nd gen), and 0x3373 (1st gen) chips. The information comes from the newly uploaded Promise SATA HW specs, Promise's ultra and ulsata2 drivers, and debugging on 3d75/3d73/3373 chips. hp->hotplug_offset could now be removed and its value recomputed in pdc_host_init() using hp->flags, but that would be a cleanup not a functional change, so I'm ignoring it for now. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-11-23 05:00:15 +08:00
tmp |= 0x02000; /* bit 13 (enable bmr burst) */
if (!is_gen2)
[PATCH] sata_promise fixes and updates This patch updates the sata_promise driver as follows: - Correct typo in definition of PDC_TBG_MODE: it's at 0x41C not 0x41 in first-generation chips. This error caused PCI access alignment exceptions on SPARC64, and on all platforms it disabled the expected initialisation of TBG mode. - Add flags field to struct pdc_host_priv. Define PDC_FLAG_GEN_II and use it to distinguish first- and second-generation chips. - Prevent the FLASH_CTL FIFO_SHD bit from being set to 1 on second- generation chips. This matches Promises' ulsata2 driver. - Prevent TBG mode and SLEW rate initialisation in second-generation chips. These two registers have moved, TBG mode has been redefined, and Promise's ulsata2 driver no longer attempts to initialise them. - Correct PCI device table so devices 0x3570, 0x3571, and 0x3d73 are marked as 2057x (2nd gen) not 2037x (1st gen). - Correct PCI device table so device 0x3d17 is marked as 40518 (2nd gen 4 ports) not 20319 (1st gen 4 ports). - Correct pdc_ata_init_one() to treat 20771 as a second-generation chip. Tested on 0x3d75 (2nd gen), 0x3d73 (2nd gen), and 0x3373 (1st gen) chips. The information comes from the newly uploaded Promise SATA HW specs, Promise's ultra and ulsata2 drivers, and debugging on 3d75/3d73/3373 chips. hp->hotplug_offset could now be removed and its value recomputed in pdc_host_init() using hp->flags, but that would be a cleanup not a functional change, so I'm ignoring it for now. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-11-23 05:00:15 +08:00
tmp |= 0x10000; /* bit 16 (fifo threshold at 8 dw) */
writel(tmp, mmio + PDC_FLASH_CTL);
/* clear plug/unplug flags for all ports */
tmp = readl(mmio + hotplug_offset);
writel(tmp | 0xff, mmio + hotplug_offset);
sata_promise: SATA hotplug support, take 2 This patch enables hotplugging of SATA devices in the sata_promise driver. It's been tested successfully on both first- and second-generation Promise SATA chips: SATA150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX4, SATA300 TX2plus, and SATA300 TX4. The only quirk I've seen is that hotplugging (insertion) on the first-generation SATA150 TX2plus requires a lengthier EH sequence than on the second-generation chips. On the second-generation chips a simple soft reset seems to suffice, but on the first-generation chip there's a "port is slow to respond" after the initial soft reset, after which libata issues a hard reset, and then the device is recognised. The hotplug checks are high up in the interrupt handling path, not deep down in error_intr as in ahci/sata_sil24. That's because the chip doesn't signal hotplug status changes in the per-port status register: instead a global register contains hotplug control and status flags for all ports. I considered following the ahci/sata_sil24 structure, but that would have required non-trivial changes to the interrupt handling path, so I chose to keep the hotplug changes simple and unobtrusive. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> -- This patch depends on the "sata_promise: cleanups" patch. Changes since the previous version (posted June 19): - Correct pdc_interrupt() to increment 'handled' also in the hotplug case. This prevents IRQ_NONE from being returned when an interrupt only has hotplug events to handle, which could confuse the kernel's IRQ machinery. - Added testing on the SATAII150 TX4. drivers/ata/sata_promise.c | 41 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 files changed, 36 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2007-07-03 07:09:05 +08:00
/* unmask plug/unplug ints */
tmp = readl(mmio + hotplug_offset);
sata_promise: SATA hotplug support, take 2 This patch enables hotplugging of SATA devices in the sata_promise driver. It's been tested successfully on both first- and second-generation Promise SATA chips: SATA150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX2plus, SATAII150 TX4, SATA300 TX2plus, and SATA300 TX4. The only quirk I've seen is that hotplugging (insertion) on the first-generation SATA150 TX2plus requires a lengthier EH sequence than on the second-generation chips. On the second-generation chips a simple soft reset seems to suffice, but on the first-generation chip there's a "port is slow to respond" after the initial soft reset, after which libata issues a hard reset, and then the device is recognised. The hotplug checks are high up in the interrupt handling path, not deep down in error_intr as in ahci/sata_sil24. That's because the chip doesn't signal hotplug status changes in the per-port status register: instead a global register contains hotplug control and status flags for all ports. I considered following the ahci/sata_sil24 structure, but that would have required non-trivial changes to the interrupt handling path, so I chose to keep the hotplug changes simple and unobtrusive. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> -- This patch depends on the "sata_promise: cleanups" patch. Changes since the previous version (posted June 19): - Correct pdc_interrupt() to increment 'handled' also in the hotplug case. This prevents IRQ_NONE from being returned when an interrupt only has hotplug events to handle, which could confuse the kernel's IRQ machinery. - Added testing on the SATAII150 TX4. drivers/ata/sata_promise.c | 41 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 files changed, 36 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2007-07-03 07:09:05 +08:00
writel(tmp & ~0xff0000, mmio + hotplug_offset);
[PATCH] sata_promise fixes and updates This patch updates the sata_promise driver as follows: - Correct typo in definition of PDC_TBG_MODE: it's at 0x41C not 0x41 in first-generation chips. This error caused PCI access alignment exceptions on SPARC64, and on all platforms it disabled the expected initialisation of TBG mode. - Add flags field to struct pdc_host_priv. Define PDC_FLAG_GEN_II and use it to distinguish first- and second-generation chips. - Prevent the FLASH_CTL FIFO_SHD bit from being set to 1 on second- generation chips. This matches Promises' ulsata2 driver. - Prevent TBG mode and SLEW rate initialisation in second-generation chips. These two registers have moved, TBG mode has been redefined, and Promise's ulsata2 driver no longer attempts to initialise them. - Correct PCI device table so devices 0x3570, 0x3571, and 0x3d73 are marked as 2057x (2nd gen) not 2037x (1st gen). - Correct PCI device table so device 0x3d17 is marked as 40518 (2nd gen 4 ports) not 20319 (1st gen 4 ports). - Correct pdc_ata_init_one() to treat 20771 as a second-generation chip. Tested on 0x3d75 (2nd gen), 0x3d73 (2nd gen), and 0x3373 (1st gen) chips. The information comes from the newly uploaded Promise SATA HW specs, Promise's ultra and ulsata2 drivers, and debugging on 3d75/3d73/3373 chips. hp->hotplug_offset could now be removed and its value recomputed in pdc_host_init() using hp->flags, but that would be a cleanup not a functional change, so I'm ignoring it for now. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-11-23 05:00:15 +08:00
/* don't initialise TBG or SLEW on 2nd generation chips */
if (is_gen2)
[PATCH] sata_promise fixes and updates This patch updates the sata_promise driver as follows: - Correct typo in definition of PDC_TBG_MODE: it's at 0x41C not 0x41 in first-generation chips. This error caused PCI access alignment exceptions on SPARC64, and on all platforms it disabled the expected initialisation of TBG mode. - Add flags field to struct pdc_host_priv. Define PDC_FLAG_GEN_II and use it to distinguish first- and second-generation chips. - Prevent the FLASH_CTL FIFO_SHD bit from being set to 1 on second- generation chips. This matches Promises' ulsata2 driver. - Prevent TBG mode and SLEW rate initialisation in second-generation chips. These two registers have moved, TBG mode has been redefined, and Promise's ulsata2 driver no longer attempts to initialise them. - Correct PCI device table so devices 0x3570, 0x3571, and 0x3d73 are marked as 2057x (2nd gen) not 2037x (1st gen). - Correct PCI device table so device 0x3d17 is marked as 40518 (2nd gen 4 ports) not 20319 (1st gen 4 ports). - Correct pdc_ata_init_one() to treat 20771 as a second-generation chip. Tested on 0x3d75 (2nd gen), 0x3d73 (2nd gen), and 0x3373 (1st gen) chips. The information comes from the newly uploaded Promise SATA HW specs, Promise's ultra and ulsata2 drivers, and debugging on 3d75/3d73/3373 chips. hp->hotplug_offset could now be removed and its value recomputed in pdc_host_init() using hp->flags, but that would be a cleanup not a functional change, so I'm ignoring it for now. Signed-off-by: Mikael Pettersson <mikpe@it.uu.se> Signed-off-by: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
2006-11-23 05:00:15 +08:00
return;
/* reduce TBG clock to 133 Mhz. */
tmp = readl(mmio + PDC_TBG_MODE);
tmp &= ~0x30000; /* clear bit 17, 16*/
tmp |= 0x10000; /* set bit 17:16 = 0:1 */
writel(tmp, mmio + PDC_TBG_MODE);
readl(mmio + PDC_TBG_MODE); /* flush */
msleep(10);
/* adjust slew rate control register. */
tmp = readl(mmio + PDC_SLEW_CTL);
tmp &= 0xFFFFF03F; /* clear bit 11 ~ 6 */
tmp |= 0x00000900; /* set bit 11-9 = 100b , bit 8-6 = 100 */
writel(tmp, mmio + PDC_SLEW_CTL);
}
static int pdc_ata_init_one (struct pci_dev *pdev, const struct pci_device_id *ent)
{
static int printed_version;
const struct ata_port_info *pi = &pdc_port_info[ent->driver_data];
const struct ata_port_info *ppi[PDC_MAX_PORTS];
struct ata_host *host;
void __iomem *base;
int n_ports, i, rc;
int is_sataii_tx4;
if (!printed_version++)
dev_printk(KERN_DEBUG, &pdev->dev, "version " DRV_VERSION "\n");
/* enable and acquire resources */
rc = pcim_enable_device(pdev);
if (rc)
return rc;
rc = pcim_iomap_regions(pdev, 1 << PDC_MMIO_BAR, DRV_NAME);
if (rc == -EBUSY)
pcim_pin_device(pdev);
if (rc)
return rc;
base = pcim_iomap_table(pdev)[PDC_MMIO_BAR];
/* determine port configuration and setup host */
n_ports = 2;
if (pi->flags & PDC_FLAG_4_PORTS)
n_ports = 4;
for (i = 0; i < n_ports; i++)
ppi[i] = pi;
if (pi->flags & PDC_FLAG_SATA_PATA) {
u8 tmp = readb(base + PDC_FLASH_CTL+1);
if (!(tmp & 0x80))
ppi[n_ports++] = pi + 1;
}
host = ata_host_alloc_pinfo(&pdev->dev, ppi, n_ports);
if (!host) {
dev_printk(KERN_ERR, &pdev->dev, "failed to allocate host\n");
return -ENOMEM;
}
host->iomap = pcim_iomap_table(pdev);
is_sataii_tx4 = pdc_is_sataii_tx4(pi->flags);
for (i = 0; i < host->n_ports; i++) {
struct ata_port *ap = host->ports[i];
unsigned int ata_no = pdc_port_no_to_ata_no(i, is_sataii_tx4);
unsigned int port_offset = 0x200 + ata_no * 0x80;
unsigned int scr_offset = 0x400 + ata_no * 0x100;
pdc_ata_setup_port(ap, base + port_offset, base + scr_offset);
ata_port_pbar_desc(ap, PDC_MMIO_BAR, -1, "mmio");
ata_port_pbar_desc(ap, PDC_MMIO_BAR, port_offset, "port");
}
/* initialize adapter */
pdc_host_init(host);
rc = pci_set_dma_mask(pdev, ATA_DMA_MASK);
if (rc)
return rc;
rc = pci_set_consistent_dma_mask(pdev, ATA_DMA_MASK);
if (rc)
return rc;
/* start host, request IRQ and attach */
pci_set_master(pdev);
return ata_host_activate(host, pdev->irq, pdc_interrupt, IRQF_SHARED,
&pdc_ata_sht);
}
static int __init pdc_ata_init(void)
{
return pci_register_driver(&pdc_ata_pci_driver);
}
static void __exit pdc_ata_exit(void)
{
pci_unregister_driver(&pdc_ata_pci_driver);
}
MODULE_AUTHOR("Jeff Garzik");
MODULE_DESCRIPTION("Promise ATA TX2/TX4/TX4000 low-level driver");
MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(pci, pdc_ata_pci_tbl);
MODULE_VERSION(DRV_VERSION);
module_init(pdc_ata_init);
module_exit(pdc_ata_exit);