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authorRaul E Rangel <rrangel@chromium.org>2021-05-24 16:38:50 -0600
committerRaul Rangel <rrangel@chromium.org>2022-08-10 16:30:19 +0000
commit74bce48f1d445053b217913df79a77dfe286e893 (patch)
tree6abc64bff40acaeb815dcf08c6253832728cda9e /src/soc/amd/common/block
parent423bc1a3790e1457a36dfdf6805be94b289164d5 (diff)
mb/google/{zork,guybrush,skyrim},soc/amd/espi: Fix vw_irq_polarity
The default state for the IRQ lines when the eSPI controller comes out of reset is high. This is because the IRQ lines are shared with the other IRQ sources using AND gates. This means that in order to not cause any spurious interrupts or miss any interrupts, the IO-APIC must use a low polarity trigger. On zork/guybrush/skyrim the eSPI IRQs are currently working as follows: * On power on/resume the eSPI controller drives IRQ 1 high. * eSPI controller gets configured to not invert IRQ 1. * OS configures IO-APIC IRQ 1 as Edge/High. * EC writes to HIKDO (Keyboard Data Out) which causes the EC to set IRQ1 high. * eSPI controller receives IRQ 1 high, doesn't invert it, and leaves IRQ 1 as high. This results in missing the first interrupt. * When the x86 reads from HIKDO, the EC deasserts IRQ1. This causes the eSPI controller to set IRQ1 to low. We are now primed to catch the next edge high interrupt. This is generally not a problem since the linux driver will probe the 8042 with interrupts off. On S3/S0i3 resume since the eSPI controller comes out of reset driving the IRQ lines high, we trigger a spurious IRQ since the IO-APIC is configured to trigger on edge high. This results in the 8042 controller getting incorrectly marked as a wake trigger. By configuring the IO-APIC to use low polarity interrupts, we no longer lose the first interrupt. This also means we can use a level interrupt to match what the EC actually asserts. We use the `Interrupt` keyword instead of the `IRQ` keyword in the ACPI because the linux kernel will ignore the level/polarity parameters for the `IRQ` keyword and default to `edge/high. `Interrupt` doesn't have this problem. The PIC is not currently configured anywhere and it defaults to an edge/high trigger. We could add some code to configure the PICs trigger register, but I don't think we need the functionality right now. For zork and guybrush, this change is a no-op. eSPI is configured in verstage which is located in RO, and we have already locked RO for these devices. We will need to figure out how to properly set the `vw_irq_polarity` for these devices. BUG=b:218874489, b:160595155, b:184752352, b:157984427, b:238818104 TEST=On zork, guybrush and skyrim $ suspend_stress_test --post_resume_command 'cat /sys/devices/platform/i8042/serio0/wakeup/wakeup35/active_count' Verify keyboard works as expected and no interrupt storms are observed. On morphius I verified keyboard and mouse work on windows as well. Signed-off-by: Raul E Rangel <rrangel@chromium.org> Change-Id: I4608a7684e34ebb389e0e55ceba7e7441939afe7 Reviewed-on: https://review.coreboot.org/c/coreboot/+/54924 Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins) <no-reply@coreboot.org> Reviewed-by: Karthik Ramasubramanian <kramasub@google.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'src/soc/amd/common/block')
-rw-r--r--src/soc/amd/common/block/include/amdblocks/espi.h44
1 files changed, 37 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/src/soc/amd/common/block/include/amdblocks/espi.h b/src/soc/amd/common/block/include/amdblocks/espi.h
index 971768853a..296ae4e1e3 100644
--- a/src/soc/amd/common/block/include/amdblocks/espi.h
+++ b/src/soc/amd/common/block/include/amdblocks/espi.h
@@ -36,13 +36,43 @@
#define ESPI_OOB_CH_EN (1 << 1)
#define ESPI_FLASH_CH_EN (1 << 0)
-/* Virtual wire interrupt polarity. eSPI interrupts are active level high signals. The
- polarity register inverts the incoming signal if the associated bit with the irq is
- 0. */
-#define ESPI_VW_IRQ_LEVEL_HIGH(x) (1 << (x))
-#define ESPI_VW_IRQ_LEVEL_LOW(x) (0 << (x))
-#define ESPI_VW_IRQ_EDGE_HIGH(x) (1 << (x))
-#define ESPI_VW_IRQ_EDGE_LOW(x) (0 << (x))
+/*
+ * Internally the SoC uses active low signals for the IRQs. This means what when
+ * the eSPI controller comes out of reset, it's driving its IRQ lines high.
+ * In order to avoid any spurious interrupts the IO-APIC must be configured to
+ * trigger on active low signals. The PIC is only capable of triggering on
+ * active high signals so the hardware has an inverter that converts the signals
+ * before they feed into the PIC.
+ *
+ * +----------+ Active Low
+ * | | | +--------+
+ * | IO-APIC <------+ | +-----+ LPC |
+ * | | | <---+---> | +--------+
+ * +----------+ | |
+ * | +-----+ | +--------+
+ * +---+ AND <---+-----+ eSPI |
+ * | +-----+ | +--------+
+ * +----------+ | |
+ * | | +--v--+ | +--------+
+ * | PIC <---+ NOT | +-----+ PIR |
+ * | | ^ +-----+ +--------+
+ * +----------+ |
+ * | Active High
+ *
+ * The eSPI controller has an inverter that is applied to incoming Virtual Wire
+ * IRQ messages. This allows eSPI peripherals to use active high signaling.
+ * If the peripheral uses active low signaling like the SoC does internally, the
+ * inverter can be disabled.
+ *
+ * The polarity register has the following behavior:
+ * 0: Invert the incoming VW IRQ before outputting to the AND gates.
+ * 1: Do not invert the incoming VW IRQ, but route it directly to the AND
+ * gates.
+ */
+#define ESPI_VW_IRQ_LEVEL_HIGH(x) (0 << (x))
+#define ESPI_VW_IRQ_LEVEL_LOW(x) (1 << (x))
+#define ESPI_VW_IRQ_EDGE_HIGH(x) (0 << (x))
+#define ESPI_VW_IRQ_EDGE_LOW(x) (1 << (x))
enum espi_io_mode {
ESPI_IO_MODE_SINGLE = ESPI_IO_MODE_VALUE(0),