(violating the PC Card spec), so... use the "power cycle" socket event to
determine when we've reached Vcc before proceeding, rather than using a fixed
amount of time. This has the double advantage that it makes the card attach
time even shorter on sane systems -- the minimum is now ~38ms on my i8500
rather than 222ms.
Probably a similar change should be made to pcic, but it was hard enough
figuring out whether it would work with pccbb. The chip specs suck.
For now, I'm leaving in a couple of additional printf()s in the hope that I
will get some interesting data from them.
* Assert RESET before powering off a socket.
* Turn on the output enable bit earlier so the interface actually drives CEn
and RESET.
* Tighten up the power-on timing a bit.
* Mention the specific timing values named in the spec.
For pccbb, be careful to always power off before zeroing PWRCTL.
back after touching the PCI registers.
This shouldn't be necessary, but somehow the controller detects the need for
VPP2=12V and automatically applies it, and gives us a "bad Vcc" error if we
turn it off accidentally.
* Like the i82365 code, add a "delay" function that uses tsleep() to wait, and
use this in the socket enable/disable paths. This gets rid of the annoying
system pauses during card insertion and removal. (There are still some
issues related to this in various drivers -- notably big delay()s in wi and
xi.)
* Move the power-change delay out of pccbb_power() and into the PCMCIA backend
code -- specifically, once in the disable path and once in the enable path.
We were being pretty schizo about this before. Make these use tsleep().
(Note: This should be safe because card insertion/removal is handled by a
kernel process, not in an interrupt handler. It works for me with
DIAGNOSTIC.)
* If we get a "bad Vcc" error, attempt to force the socket to power off, and
return an error. If we don't do this, we will get "bad Vcc" errors forever
and never be able to use another card without rebooting, which is dumb.
XXX I haven't been able to test this very well, because it doesn't fail for
me in the first place. :-)
* Clean up the socket mappings earlier in the enable path.
* Try to be consistent about clearing PWRCTL (which contains OE) before turning
off power.
instead have a call down from the PCMCIA mid-layer to set it. Use this from
pcmcia_function_enable(). (Currently the policy is the same, but this would
allow for more flexibility in deciding which mode to use.)
Now it is safe to hold the socket enabled during attach, so do that. Only
one enable/disable cycle to attach a card now!
True IDE mode. Hinted at by Charles Hannum a while back. This lets
my PCI-Cardbus adapter read SanDisk CF cards much more reliably.
Also bring in a few defines from FreeBSD for some more TI registers and such.
- add pccbb_attach_hook in pccbbattach for MD initializations.
- omit arithmetics to bus_space_handle_t.
- remove use of IST_LEVEL; not defined on sparc64 and unused.