diff options
author | Grant Likely <grant.likely@secretlab.ca> | 2010-06-18 11:10:01 -0600 |
---|---|---|
committer | Grant Likely <grant.likely@secretlab.ca> | 2010-07-05 16:14:25 -0600 |
commit | b83da291b4c73eaddc20e2edb614123a6d681b3b (patch) | |
tree | de3388516ccdc635b93839492279fed3ca7e20d0 /arch/powerpc/platforms/powermac/pic.c | |
parent | b6295c8b85fe83e5679b7b8bebe4df85deebebfc (diff) |
of/powerpc: Move Powermac irq quirk code into powermac pic driver code
The code that figures out what is wrong with the powermac irq device
tree data belongs with the rest of the powermac irq code. This patch
moves it out of prom_parse.c and into powermac/pic.c so that it is only
compiled in when actually needed.
Signed-off-by: Grant Likely <grant.likely@secretlab.ca>
Cc: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org>
Cc: Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au>
Diffstat (limited to 'arch/powerpc/platforms/powermac/pic.c')
-rw-r--r-- | arch/powerpc/platforms/powermac/pic.c | 72 |
1 files changed, 66 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/arch/powerpc/platforms/powermac/pic.c b/arch/powerpc/platforms/powermac/pic.c index 630a533d0e59..890d5f72b198 100644 --- a/arch/powerpc/platforms/powermac/pic.c +++ b/arch/powerpc/platforms/powermac/pic.c @@ -46,6 +46,10 @@ struct pmac_irq_hw { unsigned int level; }; +/* Workaround flags for 32bit powermac machines */ +unsigned int of_irq_workarounds; +struct device_node *of_irq_dflt_pic; + /* Default addresses */ static volatile struct pmac_irq_hw __iomem *pmac_irq_hw[4]; @@ -428,6 +432,42 @@ static void __init pmac_pic_probe_oldstyle(void) setup_irq(irq_create_mapping(NULL, 20), &xmon_action); #endif } + +int of_irq_map_oldworld(struct device_node *device, int index, + struct of_irq *out_irq) +{ + const u32 *ints = NULL; + int intlen; + + /* + * Old machines just have a list of interrupt numbers + * and no interrupt-controller nodes. We also have dodgy + * cases where the APPL,interrupts property is completely + * missing behind pci-pci bridges and we have to get it + * from the parent (the bridge itself, as apple just wired + * everything together on these) + */ + while (device) { + ints = of_get_property(device, "AAPL,interrupts", &intlen); + if (ints != NULL) + break; + device = device->parent; + if (device && strcmp(device->type, "pci") != 0) + break; + } + if (ints == NULL) + return -EINVAL; + intlen /= sizeof(u32); + + if (index >= intlen) + return -EINVAL; + + out_irq->controller = NULL; + out_irq->specifier[0] = ints[index]; + out_irq->size = 1; + + return 0; +} #endif /* CONFIG_PPC32 */ static void pmac_u3_cascade(unsigned int irq, struct irq_desc *desc) @@ -559,19 +599,39 @@ static int __init pmac_pic_probe_mpic(void) void __init pmac_pic_init(void) { - unsigned int flags = 0; - /* We configure the OF parsing based on our oldworld vs. newworld * platform type and wether we were booted by BootX. */ #ifdef CONFIG_PPC32 if (!pmac_newworld) - flags |= OF_IMAP_OLDWORLD_MAC; + of_irq_workarounds |= OF_IMAP_OLDWORLD_MAC; if (of_get_property(of_chosen, "linux,bootx", NULL) != NULL) - flags |= OF_IMAP_NO_PHANDLE; -#endif /* CONFIG_PPC_32 */ + of_irq_workarounds |= OF_IMAP_NO_PHANDLE; - of_irq_map_init(flags); + /* If we don't have phandles on a newworld, then try to locate a + * default interrupt controller (happens when booting with BootX). + * We do a first match here, hopefully, that only ever happens on + * machines with one controller. + */ + if (pmac_newworld && (of_irq_workarounds & OF_IMAP_NO_PHANDLE)) { + struct device_node *np; + + for_each_node_with_property(np, "interrupt-controller") { + /* Skip /chosen/interrupt-controller */ + if (strcmp(np->name, "chosen") == 0) + continue; + /* It seems like at least one person wants + * to use BootX on a machine with an AppleKiwi + * controller which happens to pretend to be an + * interrupt controller too. */ + if (strcmp(np->name, "AppleKiwi") == 0) + continue; + /* I think we found one ! */ + of_irq_dflt_pic = np; + break; + } + } +#endif /* CONFIG_PPC32 */ /* We first try to detect Apple's new Core99 chipset, since mac-io * is quite different on those machines and contains an IBM MPIC2. |