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authorMike Loptien <mike.loptien@se-eng.com>2014-06-06 15:16:29 -0600
committerMike Loptien <mike.loptien@se-eng.com>2014-06-11 17:07:50 +0200
commitc93a75a5ab067f86104028b74d92fc54cb939cd5 (patch)
tree8f91538cc2b45d7df3d049c443d66e8617c6a641 /COPYING
parentce740c474c3590dcb0da184d7663adf1f1d78ea8 (diff)
AMD/CIMx: Add functions for AMD PCI IRQ routing
The PCI_INTR table is an Index/Data pair of I/O ports 0xC00 and 0xC01. This table is responsible for physically routing IRQs to the PIC and IOAPIC. The settings given in this table are chipset and mainboard dependent, so the table values will reside in the mainboard.c file. This allows for a system to uniquely set its IRQ routing. The function to write the PCI_INTR table resides in cimx_util.c because the indices into the table have the same definitions for all SBx00 FCH chipsets. The next piece is a function that will read the PCI_INTR table and program the INT_LINE and INT_PIN registers in PCI config space appropriately. This function will read a devices' INT_PIN register, which is always hardcoded to a value if it uses hardware interrupts. It then uses this value, along with the device and function numbers to determine an index into the PCI_INTR table. It will read the table and program the corresponding value into the PCI config space register 0x3C, INT_LINE. Finally, it will set this IRQ number to LEVEL_TRIGGERED on the PIC because it is a PCI device interrupt and the must be level triggered. For example, the SB800 USB EHCI device 0:18.2 has an INT_PIN value hardcoded to 2. This corresponds to PIN B. On the Persimmon mainboard, I want the USB device to use IRQ 11. I will program the PCI_INTR table at index 0x31 (this USB device index) to 11. This function will then read the INT_PIN register, read the PCI_INTR table, and then program the INT_LINE register with the value it read. It will then set the IRQ on the PIC to LEVEL_TRIGGERED by writing a 1 to I/O port 0x4D1 at bit position 4. Also, the SB700 has slightly different register definitions than the newer SB800 and SB900 so it needs its own set of #defines for the pci_intr registers. Only the Persimmon mainboard is adapted to this change as an example for other mainboards. Change-Id: I6de858289a17fa1e1abacf6328ea5099be74b1d6 Signed-off-by: Mike Loptien <mike.loptien@se-eng.com> Reviewed-on: http://review.coreboot.org/5877 Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins) Reviewed-by: Kyösti Mälkki <kyosti.malkki@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Edward O'Callaghan <eocallaghan@alterapraxis.com>
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