- wdc_xfer to ata_xfer
- channel_queue to ata_queue
and move them to <dev/ata/atavar.h> so they can be used by non-wdc ATA
controllers. Clean up the member names of these structures while at it.
in a different fashion. Individually, they have the same functionality,
but their layout is different. An example of such a chipset is
the Promise 203xx.
To be able to deal with this, transform the cmd and dma bus_space handles
into an array of handles, each seperately created with bus_space_subregion.
The code generated by using the extra indirection shouldn't change much,
since the extra indirection is negated by having the offset calculation
already done in bus_space_subregion. E.g.
bus_space_write_4(tag, handle, offset, value)
becomes
bus_space_write_4(tag, handles[offset], 0, value)
Reviewed by Manuel Bouyer. Tested on wdc_isa, wdc_pcmcia, viaide, piixide (i386)
and on cmdide (sparc64).
http://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-kern/2003/09/25/0006.html
This adds a device (atabus) between IDE controllers and wd or atapibus, to
have each ATA channel show up in the device tree. Later there will be atabus
devices in /dev, so that we can do IOCTL on them.
Each atabus has its own kernel thread, to handle operations that needs polling,
e.g. reset and others.
Device probing on each bus it defered to the atabus thread creation.
This allows to do the reset and basic device probes in parallel, which reduce
boot time on systems with several pciide controllers.
1) Don't wait for DRQ on an IDENTIFY command -- if it's not set when we see
BSY clear, abort the command and ignore the drive. (Do this by testing
for DRQ in the read/write cases in __wdccommand_intr().)
2) Don't wait for DRQ to deassert when we finish an IDENTIFY (or any other
non-block command that reads data) -- we don't do this for block I/O, and
empirically it doesn't clear on my CF cards at all, causing a pointless 1s
delay.
3) Add comments to some of the delay()s, and add missing ones in wdcreset()
and the WDCC_RECAL in the so-called "pre-ATA" probe.
4) Slightly simplify the reset sequence -- we were doing an extra I/O.
5) Modify the register writability test to make sure that registers are not
overlapped -- this can happen in some weird cases with a missing device 1.
6) Check the error register value after the reset -- if it's not 01h or 81h,
as appropriate (see ATA spec), punt.
Tested with a number of ATA-only, ATAPI-only, mixed ATA-ATAPI, CF, and IDE
disk configurations.
Also remove the SINGLE_DRIVE nonsense again.
most polling.
2) Clean up some goofiness in pciide -- get rid of the whole "candisable" path
(it's gratuitous) and simplify the code by calling pciide_map_compat_intr(),
*_set_modes() and wdc_print_modes() from central locations.
3) Add a register writability and register ghost test to eliminate phantom
drives more quickly.
in the default disklabel and the boot message, instead of using the
value reported by the drive (which is 16383 if the drive is larger than 8G).
Should fix PR 9864