Re: PCI-ISA Bridge not operating

From: Jordan Crouse
Date: Fri Jul 11 2008 - 15:07:36 EST


On 11/07/08 14:58 -0400, David Brigada wrote:
> David Brigada wrote:
> > Jordan Crouse wrote:
> >> On 11/07/08 10:58 -0400, David Brigada wrote:
> >>> Hi,
> >>>
> >>> I'm working with the MSM800XEV board from Digital-Logic. This board
> >>> uses a Geode LX800 for a CPU and has the CS5536 companion board also
> >>> installed. The board works with an IT8888G IC that provides a PCI/ISA
> >>> bridge to a PC/104 bus that is externally provided.
> >>>
> >>> If I boot with FreeDOS, I can twiddle I/O ports, and the proper ISA
> >>> signaling comes over the PC/104 bus. In Linux, the /IOW or /IOR line
> >>> goes low as expected, but the address doesn't come over the bus. The
> >>> DOS that I'm running doesn't seem to have any specific drivers for the
> >>> chip, I'm guessing that the hardware should "just work" --- the IT8888G
> >>> is designed to grab I/O requests in the ISA range off the PCI bus after
> >>> a short delay if nothing else grabs them first.
> >>>
> >>> I have a feeling that it has something to do with the CS5536 companion
> >>> chip, as it seems as though there is a driver for a PCI/ISA bridge on
> >>> that chip, though I can't get much detail from AMD's datasheet on that
> >>> functionality. I do know that on the MSM800XEV, any such functionality
> >>> is wired to the IT8888G, not the CS5536.
> >>>
> >>> There are two kernel config options related to the PCI IDs of the parts
> >>> of the device that handle the ISA bus, CONFIG_SCx200_ACB and
> >>> CONFIG_CS5535_GPIO. I've tried disabling both, but it doesn't seem to help.
> >>>
> >>> In lspci, the CS5536 PCI/ISA bridge is shown, but not the IT8888G.
> >>>
> >>> Any ideas?
> >> ISA should indeed "just work". The only thing I'm wondering is if
> >> the kernel is interfering (it shouldn't). I assume that since it works
> >> in FreeDOS that there is no possibility that something on the PCI bus
> >> is grabbing the cycles instead.
> >
> > That's what I'm thinking --- that the CS5536 PCI/ISA bridge is claiming
> > the cycles.
> >
> >> How are you trying to access the device in Linux? Through a kernel module
> >> or a user application running as root?
> >
> > I've tried both. I have a kernel module that I wrote for the hardware.
> > When I couldn't get that working, I tried looping some code that keeps
> > touching the same I/O port that I'm using.
> >
> >> Jordan
> >>
> >
> > Dave
>
> Looking through the documentation for the CS5536, in the "CS56536
> Companion Device Data Book," section 5.2.8, it says the following:
>
> > If the SDOFF (Subtractive Decode Off) bit in the GLPCI_MSR_CTRL (MSR
> > 51000010h[10]) is cleared (reset value), any PCI transaction, other
> > than Configuration Read/Write, Interrupt Acknowledge, and Special
> > Cycle transactions, not claimed by any device (i.3., not asserting
> > DEVSEL#) within the default active decode cycles (three cycles
> > immediately after FRAME# being asserted) will be accepted by GLPCI_SB
> > at the fourth clock edge.
>
> This is the same behavior that the IT8888G chip uses --- it waits three
> cycles for another device to claim it and then passes the transaction
> along. I'm guessing that the CS5536 might be grabbing it (maybe it's
> electrically closer, or the logic is more optimized) before the IT8888G
> can handle it.
>
> Does this seem feasible as to what could be happening?

Sure, but then why does FreeDOS work? It shouldn't be any different
when the bits hit the line.

Jordan
--
Jordan Crouse
Systems Software Development Engineer
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.

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