[coreboot] [PATCH] Drop drivers/pci/onboard

Myles Watson mylesgw at gmail.com
Fri Nov 6 22:47:12 CET 2009


On Fri, Nov 6, 2009 at 3:34 PM, Carl-Daniel Hailfinger <
c-d.hailfinger.devel.2006 at gmx.net> wrote:

> On 06.11.2009 22:02, Myles Watson wrote:
> > On Fri, Nov 6, 2009 at 1:14 PM, Myles Watson <mylesgw at gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> >
> >> On Fri, Nov 6, 2009 at 12:56 PM, Myles Watson <mylesgw at gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>> On Fri, Nov 6, 2009 at 12:41 PM, Peter Stuge <peter at stuge.se> wrote:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>  Myles Watson wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>>>> PCI onboard was only used for ROM images at fixed offsets in
> >>>>>>> flash.  Now that we have CBFS, there is no use for it.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>  But what about the PCI device ids which are being taken out of the
> >>>> device tree? Are they guaranteed to be discovered through automatic
> >>>> scanning?
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>> Yes.  If the couldn't be probed, they would have been disabled even
> though
> >>> they were found in the tree.
> >>>
> >>> I wonder a little about the on_mainboard flag.  It's possible that some
> of
> >>> these devices would have had that flag set if they didn't need to have
> a
> >>> ROM.  I don't know of a good way to automatically figure out which
> devices
> >>> that would apply to.
> >>>
> >>>
> >> The rest of the story :)
> >>
> >> The on_mainboard flag gets used to set subsystem IDs and
> >> CONFIG_CONSOLE_VGA_ONBOARD_AT_FIRST
> >>
> >>
> > I put all the devices back in the tree.  So they show up in static.c like
> > they should, they just don't have the onboard driver any more.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Myles Watson <mylesgw at gmail.com>
> >
>
> I really like this patch, and the effort you put into removing commented
> out variants as well. A few minor cosmetic points, but other than that it
> is
> Acked-by: Carl-Daniel Hailfinger <c-d.hailfinger.devel.2006 at gmx.net>
>
Thanks.


> > Index: svn/src/mainboard/asus/mew-vm/Config.lb
> > ===================================================================
> > --- svn.orig/src/mainboard/asus/mew-vm/Config.lb
> > +++ svn/src/mainboard/asus/mew-vm/Config.lb
> > @@ -97,18 +97,14 @@ chip northbridge/intel/i82810
> >       device pci_domain 0 on
> >               device pci 0.0 on end # Host bridge
> >               device pci 1.0 on # Onboard Video
> > -                     #chip drivers/pci/onboard
> >                       #       device pci 1.0 on end
> >
>
> A device which hangs off itself?

I couldn't tell.  The PCI devfn (1.0) doesn't help because a child device
will be on a different bus, so it's allowed to have the same devfn as its
parent.  That's why I left it.


>
> >                       device pci 1e.0 on # PCI Bridge
> > -                             #chip drivers/pci/onboard
> >                               #       device pci 1.0 on end
> >
>
> Hm. Kill the above line? Could be a botched cut-n-paste.
>
Could be.  Again, I couldn't tell.  Anyone with the board would know the
first time they booted, so it could be removed.  I was trying to be
minimally invasive.


>
> > Index: svn/src/mainboard/gigabyte/ga_2761gxdk/Config.lb
> > ===================================================================
> > --- svn.orig/src/mainboard/gigabyte/ga_2761gxdk/Config.lb
> > +++ svn/src/mainboard/gigabyte/ga_2761gxdk/Config.lb
> > @@ -178,9 +178,7 @@ chip northbridge/amd/amdk8/root_complex
> >                               chip southbridge/sis/sis966
> >                                       device pci 0.0 on end   #
> Northbridge
> >                                       device pci 1.0 on               #
> AGP bridge
> > -                                       chip drivers/pci/onboard      #
> Integrated VGA
> >                                               device pci 0.0 on end
> >
>
> This looks fishy, but then again, I never understood the v2 device tree
> syntax completely.
>
I'm not sure what looks fishy here.  This is the way I understand it:
1. Devices between the 'on' and 'end' tokens are children (or children of
children) of the device.
2. The 'chip' token assigns the driver for devices inside it.

So in this case, device 1.0 has an AGP bus with 0.0 hanging off of it.

Thanks,
Myles
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