Here's what I had to do. First, though, let me say: the new linuxbios architecture, while hard to get the hang of (learning curve) is very powerful.
You can have a mainboard-specific pci scan function, and that's what I needed. I may put this as a generic thing into the pci device code.
See below for how it works. Basically, for your mainboard, you provide a function that scans the root of the "mainboard PCI" tree.
ron
Here goes
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#include <console/console.h> #include <device/device.h> #include <device/pci.h> #include <device/pci_ids.h> #include <device/pci_ops.h>
#include <arch/io.h> #include <device/chip.h> #include "chip.h"
static int mainboard_scan_bus(device_t root, int maxbus) { int retval; printk_spew("%s: root %p maxbus %d\n", __FUNCTION__, root, maxbus); retval = pci_scan_bus(root->bus, 0, 0xff, maxbus); printk_spew("DONE %s: return %d\n", __FUNCTION__, maxbus); return maxbus; }
static struct device_operations mainboard_operations = { .read_resources = root_dev_read_resources, .set_resources = root_dev_set_resources, .enable_resources = enable_childrens_resources, .init = 0, .scan_bus = mainboard_scan_bus, .enable = 0, };
static void enumerate(struct chip *chip) { struct chip *child; dev_root.ops = &mainboard_operations; chip->dev = &dev_root; chip->bus = 0; for(child = chip->children; child; child = child->next) { child->bus = &dev_root.link[0]; } } struct chip_control mainboard_via_epia_control = { .enumerate = enumerate, .name = "VIA EPIA mainboard ", };