linux/arch/m68k/mac/via.c

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/*
* 6522 Versatile Interface Adapter (VIA)
*
* There are two of these on the Mac II. Some IRQs are vectored
* via them as are assorted bits and bobs - eg RTC, ADB.
*
* CSA: Motorola seems to have removed documentation on the 6522 from
* their web site; try
* http://nerini.drf.com/vectrex/other/text/chips/6522/
* http://www.zymurgy.net/classic/vic20/vicdet1.htm
* and
* http://193.23.168.87/mikro_laborversuche/via_iobaustein/via6522_1.html
* for info. A full-text web search on 6522 AND VIA will probably also
* net some usefulness. <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu> 20apr1999
*
* Additional data is here (the SY6522 was used in the Mac II etc):
* http://www.6502.org/documents/datasheets/synertek/synertek_sy6522.pdf
* http://www.6502.org/documents/datasheets/synertek/synertek_sy6522_programming_reference.pdf
*
* PRAM/RTC access algorithms are from the NetBSD RTC toolkit version 1.08b
* by Erik Vogan and adapted to Linux by Joshua M. Thompson (funaho@jurai.org)
*
*/
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/mm.h>
#include <linux/delay.h>
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/irq.h>
#include <asm/bootinfo.h>
#include <asm/macintosh.h>
#include <asm/macints.h>
#include <asm/mac_via.h>
#include <asm/mac_psc.h>
#include <asm/mac_oss.h>
volatile __u8 *via1, *via2;
int rbv_present;
int via_alt_mapping;
EXPORT_SYMBOL(via_alt_mapping);
static __u8 rbv_clear;
/*
* Globals for accessing the VIA chip registers without having to
* check if we're hitting a real VIA or an RBV. Normally you could
* just hit the combined register (ie, vIER|rIER) but that seems to
* break on AV Macs...probably because they actually decode more than
* eight address bits. Why can't Apple engineers at least be
* _consistently_ lazy? - 1999-05-21 (jmt)
*/
static int gIER,gIFR,gBufA,gBufB;
/*
* Timer defs.
*/
#define TICK_SIZE 10000
#define MAC_CLOCK_TICK (783300/HZ) /* ticks per HZ */
#define MAC_CLOCK_LOW (MAC_CLOCK_TICK&0xFF)
#define MAC_CLOCK_HIGH (MAC_CLOCK_TICK>>8)
/*
* On Macs with a genuine VIA chip there is no way to mask an individual slot
* interrupt. This limitation also seems to apply to VIA clone logic cores in
* Quadra-like ASICs. (RBV and OSS machines don't have this limitation.)
*
* We used to fake it by configuring the relevent VIA pin as an output
* (to mask the interrupt) or input (to unmask). That scheme did not work on
* (at least) the Quadra 700. A NuBus card's /NMRQ signal is an open-collector
* circuit (see Designing Cards and Drivers for Macintosh II and Macintosh SE,
* p. 10-11 etc) but VIA outputs are not (see datasheet).
*
* Driving these outputs high must cause the VIA to source current and the
* card to sink current when it asserts /NMRQ. Current will flow but the pin
* voltage is uncertain and so the /NMRQ condition may still cause a transition
* at the VIA2 CA1 input (which explains the lost interrupts). A side effect
* is that a disabled slot IRQ can never be tested as pending or not.
*
* Driving these outputs low doesn't work either. All the slot /NMRQ lines are
* (active low) OR'd together to generate the CA1 (aka "SLOTS") interrupt (see
* The Guide To Macintosh Family Hardware, 2nd edition p. 167). If we drive a
* disabled /NMRQ line low, the falling edge immediately triggers a CA1
* interrupt and all slot interrupts after that will generate no transition
* and therefore no interrupt, even after being re-enabled.
*
* So we make the VIA port A I/O lines inputs and use nubus_disabled to keep
* track of their states. When any slot IRQ becomes disabled we mask the CA1
* umbrella interrupt. Only when all slot IRQs become enabled do we unmask
* the CA1 interrupt. It must remain enabled even when cards have no interrupt
* handler registered. Drivers must therefore disable a slot interrupt at the
* device before they call free_irq (like shared and autovector interrupts).
*
* There is also a related problem when MacOS is used to boot Linux. A network
* card brought up by a MacOS driver may raise an interrupt while Linux boots.
* This can be fatal since it can't be handled until the right driver loads
* (if such a driver exists at all). Apparently related to this hardware
* limitation, "Designing Cards and Drivers", p. 9-8, says that a slot
* interrupt with no driver would crash MacOS (the book was written before
* the appearance of Macs with RBV or OSS).
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
*/
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
static u8 nubus_disabled;
void via_debug_dump(void);
/*
* Initialize the VIAs
*
* First we figure out where they actually _are_ as well as what type of
* VIA we have for VIA2 (it could be a real VIA or an RBV or even an OSS.)
* Then we pretty much clear them out and disable all IRQ sources.
*
* Note: the OSS is actually "detected" here and not in oss_init(). It just
* seems more logical to do it here since via_init() needs to know
* these things anyways.
*/
void __init via_init(void)
{
switch(macintosh_config->via_type) {
/* IIci, IIsi, IIvx, IIvi (P6xx), LC series */
case MAC_VIA_IICI:
via1 = (void *) VIA1_BASE;
if (macintosh_config->ident == MAC_MODEL_IIFX) {
via2 = NULL;
rbv_present = 0;
oss_present = 1;
} else {
via2 = (void *) RBV_BASE;
rbv_present = 1;
oss_present = 0;
}
if (macintosh_config->ident == MAC_MODEL_LCIII) {
rbv_clear = 0x00;
} else {
/* on most RBVs (& unlike the VIAs), you */
/* need to set bit 7 when you write to IFR */
/* in order for your clear to occur. */
rbv_clear = 0x80;
}
gIER = rIER;
gIFR = rIFR;
gBufA = rSIFR;
gBufB = rBufB;
break;
/* Quadra and early MacIIs agree on the VIA locations */
case MAC_VIA_QUADRA:
case MAC_VIA_II:
via1 = (void *) VIA1_BASE;
via2 = (void *) VIA2_BASE;
rbv_present = 0;
oss_present = 0;
rbv_clear = 0x00;
gIER = vIER;
gIFR = vIFR;
gBufA = vBufA;
gBufB = vBufB;
break;
default:
panic("UNKNOWN VIA TYPE");
}
printk(KERN_INFO "VIA1 at %p is a 6522 or clone\n", via1);
printk(KERN_INFO "VIA2 at %p is ", via2);
if (rbv_present) {
printk("an RBV\n");
} else if (oss_present) {
printk("an OSS\n");
} else {
printk("a 6522 or clone\n");
}
#ifdef DEBUG_VIA
via_debug_dump();
#endif
/*
* Shut down all IRQ sources, reset the timers, and
* kill the timer latch on VIA1.
*/
via1[vIER] = 0x7F;
via1[vIFR] = 0x7F;
via1[vT1LL] = 0;
via1[vT1LH] = 0;
via1[vT1CL] = 0;
via1[vT1CH] = 0;
via1[vT2CL] = 0;
via1[vT2CH] = 0;
via1[vACR] &= ~0xC0; /* setup T1 timer with no PB7 output */
via1[vACR] &= ~0x03; /* disable port A & B latches */
/*
* SE/30: disable video IRQ
* XXX: testing for SE/30 VBL
*/
if (macintosh_config->ident == MAC_MODEL_SE30) {
via1[vDirB] |= 0x40;
via1[vBufB] |= 0x40;
}
/*
* Set the RTC bits to a known state: all lines to outputs and
* RTC disabled (yes that's 0 to enable and 1 to disable).
*/
via1[vDirB] |= (VIA1B_vRTCEnb | VIA1B_vRTCClk | VIA1B_vRTCData);
via1[vBufB] |= (VIA1B_vRTCEnb | VIA1B_vRTCClk);
/* Everything below this point is VIA2/RBV only... */
if (oss_present)
return;
if ((macintosh_config->via_type == MAC_VIA_QUADRA) &&
(macintosh_config->adb_type != MAC_ADB_PB1) &&
(macintosh_config->adb_type != MAC_ADB_PB2) &&
(macintosh_config->ident != MAC_MODEL_C660) &&
(macintosh_config->ident != MAC_MODEL_Q840)) {
via_alt_mapping = 1;
via1[vDirB] |= 0x40;
via1[vBufB] &= ~0x40;
} else {
via_alt_mapping = 0;
}
/*
* Now initialize VIA2. For RBV we just kill all interrupts;
* for a regular VIA we also reset the timers and stuff.
*/
via2[gIER] = 0x7F;
via2[gIFR] = 0x7F | rbv_clear;
if (!rbv_present) {
via2[vT1LL] = 0;
via2[vT1LH] = 0;
via2[vT1CL] = 0;
via2[vT1CH] = 0;
via2[vT2CL] = 0;
via2[vT2CH] = 0;
via2[vACR] &= ~0xC0; /* setup T1 timer with no PB7 output */
via2[vACR] &= ~0x03; /* disable port A & B latches */
}
/* Everything below this point is VIA2 only... */
if (rbv_present)
return;
/*
* Set vPCR for control line interrupts.
*
* CA1 (SLOTS IRQ), CB1 (ASC IRQ): negative edge trigger.
*
* Macs with ESP SCSI have a negative edge triggered SCSI interrupt.
* Testing reveals that PowerBooks do too. However, the SE/30
* schematic diagram shows an active high NCR5380 IRQ line.
*/
pr_debug("VIA2 vPCR is 0x%02X\n", via2[vPCR]);
if (macintosh_config->via_type == MAC_VIA_II) {
/* CA2 (SCSI DRQ), CB2 (SCSI IRQ): indep. input, pos. edge */
via2[vPCR] = 0x66;
} else {
/* CA2 (SCSI DRQ), CB2 (SCSI IRQ): indep. input, neg. edge */
via2[vPCR] = 0x22;
}
}
/*
* Start the 100 Hz clock
*/
void __init via_init_clock(irq_handler_t func)
{
via1[vACR] |= 0x40;
via1[vT1LL] = MAC_CLOCK_LOW;
via1[vT1LH] = MAC_CLOCK_HIGH;
via1[vT1CL] = MAC_CLOCK_LOW;
via1[vT1CH] = MAC_CLOCK_HIGH;
if (request_irq(IRQ_MAC_TIMER_1, func, 0, "timer", func))
pr_err("Couldn't register %s interrupt\n", "timer");
}
/*
* Debugging dump, used in various places to see what's going on.
*/
void via_debug_dump(void)
{
printk(KERN_DEBUG "VIA1: DDRA = 0x%02X DDRB = 0x%02X ACR = 0x%02X\n",
(uint) via1[vDirA], (uint) via1[vDirB], (uint) via1[vACR]);
printk(KERN_DEBUG " PCR = 0x%02X IFR = 0x%02X IER = 0x%02X\n",
(uint) via1[vPCR], (uint) via1[vIFR], (uint) via1[vIER]);
if (oss_present) {
printk(KERN_DEBUG "VIA2: <OSS>\n");
} else if (rbv_present) {
printk(KERN_DEBUG "VIA2: IFR = 0x%02X IER = 0x%02X\n",
(uint) via2[rIFR], (uint) via2[rIER]);
printk(KERN_DEBUG " SIFR = 0x%02X SIER = 0x%02X\n",
(uint) via2[rSIFR], (uint) via2[rSIER]);
} else {
printk(KERN_DEBUG "VIA2: DDRA = 0x%02X DDRB = 0x%02X ACR = 0x%02X\n",
(uint) via2[vDirA], (uint) via2[vDirB],
(uint) via2[vACR]);
printk(KERN_DEBUG " PCR = 0x%02X IFR = 0x%02X IER = 0x%02X\n",
(uint) via2[vPCR],
(uint) via2[vIFR], (uint) via2[vIER]);
}
}
/*
* This is always executed with interrupts disabled.
*
* TBI: get time offset between scheduling timer ticks
*/
unsigned long mac_gettimeoffset (void)
{
unsigned long ticks, offset = 0;
/* read VIA1 timer 2 current value */
ticks = via1[vT1CL] | (via1[vT1CH] << 8);
/* The probability of underflow is less than 2% */
if (ticks > MAC_CLOCK_TICK - MAC_CLOCK_TICK / 50)
/* Check for pending timer interrupt in VIA1 IFR */
if (via1[vIFR] & 0x40) offset = TICK_SIZE;
ticks = MAC_CLOCK_TICK - ticks;
ticks = ticks * 10000L / MAC_CLOCK_TICK;
return ticks + offset;
}
/*
* Flush the L2 cache on Macs that have it by flipping
* the system into 24-bit mode for an instant.
*/
void via_flush_cache(void)
{
via2[gBufB] &= ~VIA2B_vMode32;
via2[gBufB] |= VIA2B_vMode32;
}
/*
* Return the status of the L2 cache on a IIci
*/
int via_get_cache_disable(void)
{
/* Safeguard against being called accidentally */
if (!via2) {
printk(KERN_ERR "via_get_cache_disable called on a non-VIA machine!\n");
return 1;
}
return (int) via2[gBufB] & VIA2B_vCDis;
}
/*
* Initialize VIA2 for Nubus access
*/
void __init via_nubus_init(void)
{
/* unlock nubus transactions */
if ((macintosh_config->adb_type != MAC_ADB_PB1) &&
(macintosh_config->adb_type != MAC_ADB_PB2)) {
/* set the line to be an output on non-RBV machines */
if (!rbv_present)
via2[vDirB] |= 0x02;
/* this seems to be an ADB bit on PMU machines */
/* according to MkLinux. -- jmt */
via2[gBufB] |= 0x02;
}
/*
* Disable the slot interrupts. On some hardware that's not possible.
* On some hardware it's unclear what all of these I/O lines do.
*/
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
switch (macintosh_config->via_type) {
case MAC_VIA_II:
case MAC_VIA_QUADRA:
pr_debug("VIA2 vDirA is 0x%02X\n", via2[vDirA]);
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
break;
case MAC_VIA_IICI:
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
/* RBV. Disable all the slot interrupts. SIER works like IER. */
via2[rSIER] = 0x7F;
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
break;
}
}
void via_nubus_irq_startup(int irq)
{
int irq_idx = IRQ_IDX(irq);
switch (macintosh_config->via_type) {
case MAC_VIA_II:
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
case MAC_VIA_QUADRA:
/* Make the port A line an input. Probably redundant. */
if (macintosh_config->via_type == MAC_VIA_II) {
/* The top two bits are RAM size outputs. */
via2[vDirA] &= 0xC0 | ~(1 << irq_idx);
} else {
/* Allow NuBus slots 9 through F. */
via2[vDirA] &= 0x80 | ~(1 << irq_idx);
}
/* fall through */
case MAC_VIA_IICI:
via_irq_enable(irq);
break;
}
}
void via_nubus_irq_shutdown(int irq)
{
switch (macintosh_config->via_type) {
case MAC_VIA_II:
case MAC_VIA_QUADRA:
/* Ensure that the umbrella CA1 interrupt remains enabled. */
via_irq_enable(irq);
break;
case MAC_VIA_IICI:
via_irq_disable(irq);
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
break;
}
}
/*
* The generic VIA interrupt routines (shamelessly stolen from Alan Cox's
* via6522.c :-), disable/pending masks added.
*/
void via1_irq(unsigned int irq, struct irq_desc *desc)
{
int irq_num;
unsigned char irq_bit, events;
events = via1[vIFR] & via1[vIER] & 0x7F;
if (!events)
return;
irq_num = VIA1_SOURCE_BASE;
irq_bit = 1;
do {
if (events & irq_bit) {
via1[vIFR] = irq_bit;
generic_handle_irq(irq_num);
}
++irq_num;
irq_bit <<= 1;
} while (events >= irq_bit);
}
static void via2_irq(unsigned int irq, struct irq_desc *desc)
{
int irq_num;
unsigned char irq_bit, events;
events = via2[gIFR] & via2[gIER] & 0x7F;
if (!events)
return;
irq_num = VIA2_SOURCE_BASE;
irq_bit = 1;
do {
if (events & irq_bit) {
via2[gIFR] = irq_bit | rbv_clear;
generic_handle_irq(irq_num);
}
++irq_num;
irq_bit <<= 1;
} while (events >= irq_bit);
}
/*
* Dispatch Nubus interrupts. We are called as a secondary dispatch by the
* VIA2 dispatcher as a fast interrupt handler.
*/
void via_nubus_irq(unsigned int irq, struct irq_desc *desc)
{
int slot_irq;
unsigned char slot_bit, events;
events = ~via2[gBufA] & 0x7F;
if (rbv_present)
events &= via2[rSIER];
else
events &= ~via2[vDirA];
if (!events)
return;
do {
slot_irq = IRQ_NUBUS_F;
slot_bit = 0x40;
do {
if (events & slot_bit) {
events &= ~slot_bit;
generic_handle_irq(slot_irq);
}
--slot_irq;
slot_bit >>= 1;
} while (events);
/* clear the CA1 interrupt and make certain there's no more. */
via2[gIFR] = 0x02 | rbv_clear;
events = ~via2[gBufA] & 0x7F;
if (rbv_present)
events &= via2[rSIER];
else
events &= ~via2[vDirA];
} while (events);
}
/*
* Register the interrupt dispatchers for VIA or RBV machines only.
*/
void __init via_register_interrupts(void)
{
if (via_alt_mapping) {
/* software interrupt */
irq_set_chained_handler(IRQ_AUTO_1, via1_irq);
/* via1 interrupt */
irq_set_chained_handler(IRQ_AUTO_6, via1_irq);
} else {
irq_set_chained_handler(IRQ_AUTO_1, via1_irq);
}
irq_set_chained_handler(IRQ_AUTO_2, via2_irq);
irq_set_chained_handler(IRQ_MAC_NUBUS, via_nubus_irq);
}
void via_irq_enable(int irq) {
int irq_src = IRQ_SRC(irq);
int irq_idx = IRQ_IDX(irq);
#ifdef DEBUG_IRQUSE
printk(KERN_DEBUG "via_irq_enable(%d)\n", irq);
#endif
if (irq_src == 1) {
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
via1[vIER] = IER_SET_BIT(irq_idx);
} else if (irq_src == 2) {
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
if (irq != IRQ_MAC_NUBUS || nubus_disabled == 0)
via2[gIER] = IER_SET_BIT(irq_idx);
} else if (irq_src == 7) {
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
switch (macintosh_config->via_type) {
case MAC_VIA_II:
case MAC_VIA_QUADRA:
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
nubus_disabled &= ~(1 << irq_idx);
/* Enable the CA1 interrupt when no slot is disabled. */
if (!nubus_disabled)
via2[gIER] = IER_SET_BIT(1);
break;
case MAC_VIA_IICI:
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
/* On RBV, enable the slot interrupt.
* SIER works like IER.
*/
via2[rSIER] = IER_SET_BIT(irq_idx);
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
break;
}
}
}
void via_irq_disable(int irq) {
int irq_src = IRQ_SRC(irq);
int irq_idx = IRQ_IDX(irq);
#ifdef DEBUG_IRQUSE
printk(KERN_DEBUG "via_irq_disable(%d)\n", irq);
#endif
if (irq_src == 1) {
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
via1[vIER] = IER_CLR_BIT(irq_idx);
} else if (irq_src == 2) {
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
via2[gIER] = IER_CLR_BIT(irq_idx);
} else if (irq_src == 7) {
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
switch (macintosh_config->via_type) {
case MAC_VIA_II:
case MAC_VIA_QUADRA:
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
nubus_disabled |= 1 << irq_idx;
if (nubus_disabled)
via2[gIER] = IER_CLR_BIT(1);
break;
case MAC_VIA_IICI:
via2[rSIER] = IER_CLR_BIT(irq_idx);
m68k: Mac nubus IRQ fixes (plan E) Some Macs lack a slot interrupt enable register. So the existing code makes disabled and unregistered slot IRQ lines outputs set high. This seems to work on quadras, but does not work on genuine VIAs (perhaps the card still succeeds in pulling the line low, or perhaps because this increases the settle time on the port A input, meaning that the CA1 IRQ could fire before the slot line reads active). Because of this, the nubus_active flags were used to mask IRQs, which is actually worse than the problem it tries to solve. Any interrupt masked by nubus_active will remain asserted and prevent further transitions on CA1. And so the nubus gets wedged regardless of hardware (emulated VIA ASIC, real VIA chip or RBV). The best solution to this hardware limitation of genuine VIAs is to disable the umbrella SLOTS IRQ when disabling a slot on those machines. Unfortunately, this means all slot IRQs get disabled when any slot IRQ is disabled. But it is only a problem when there's more than 1 device using nubus interrupts. Another potential problem for genuine VIAs is an unregistered nubus IRQ. Eventually it will be possible to enable the CA1 interrupt by installing its handler only _after_ all nubus drivers have loaded but _before_ the kernel needs them, at which time this last problem can be fixed. For now it can be worked around: - disable MacOS extensions - don't boot MacOS (use the Emile bootloader instead) - get the bootloaders to disable ROM drivers (Penguin does this for video cards already, don't know about Emile) - physically remove unsupported cards Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@telegraphics.com.au> Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-01 20:32:57 +00:00
break;
}
}
}
void via1_set_head(int head)
{
if (head == 0)
via1[vBufA] &= ~VIA1A_vHeadSel;
else
via1[vBufA] |= VIA1A_vHeadSel;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(via1_set_head);
int via2_scsi_drq_pending(void)
{
return via2[gIFR] & (1 << IRQ_IDX(IRQ_MAC_SCSIDRQ));
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(via2_scsi_drq_pending);