Re: [linux-usb-devel] Re: Commit "[PATCH] USB: Always do usb-handoff" breaks my powerbook
From: David Brownell
Date: Mon Oct 31 2005 - 20:41:59 EST
On Monday 31 October 2005 4:16 pm, Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote:
> On Mon, 2005-10-31 at 16:23 +1100, Paul Mackerras wrote:
> > My G4 powerbook gets a machine check on boot as a result of commit
> > 478a3bab8c87a9ba4a4ba338314e32bb0c378e62. Putting a return at the
> > start of quirk_usb_early_handoff fixes it.
> >
> > The code in quirk_usb_handoff_ohci looks rather bogus in that it
> > doesn't do pci_enable_device before trying to access the device.
No PCI quirk code has ever called pci_enable_device() AFAICT.
Of course the _need_ to do such a thing might be another PPC-specific
(or OpenFirmware-specific?) PCI thing ... we've hit other cases where
PPC breaks things that work on other PCI systems (and vice versa).
> That and it doesn't test if the BARs are assigned at all, doesn't
> request the resources, etc...
If quirk code can't rely on BARs, then the PCI system needs some
basic overhauls ... yes? I mean, how could quirk code ever work
if it can't access the relevant chip registers??
> I'm not sure it's legal to do pci_enable_device() from within a pci
> quirk anyway. I really wonder what that code is doing in the quirks, I
> don't think it's the right place, but I may be wrong.
Erm, what "code is doing" what, that you mean ??
> What is the logic supposed to be there ?
Which logic? The fundamental thing those USB handoff functions do
is make sure that BIOS code lets go of the host controllers. The
main reason it'd be using a controller is because of USB keyboards,
mice, or maybe boot disks. Secondarily, that code needs to make
sure the controller is really quiesced before Linux starts using it.
- Dave
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