/* * MTD map driver for BIOS Flash on Intel SCB2 boards * Copyright (C) 2002 Sun Microsystems, Inc. * Tim Hockin <thockin@sun.com> * * A few notes on this MTD map: * * This was developed with a small number of SCB2 boards to test on. * Hopefully, Intel has not introducted too many unaccounted variables in the * making of this board. * * The BIOS marks its own memory region as 'reserved' in the e820 map. We * try to request it here, but if it fails, we carry on anyway. * * This is how the chip is attached, so said the schematic: * * a 4 MiB (32 Mib) 16 bit chip * * a 1 MiB memory region * * A20 and A21 pulled up * * D8-D15 ignored * What this means is that, while we are addressing bytes linearly, we are * really addressing words, and discarding the other byte. This means that * the chip MUST BE at least 2 MiB. This also means that every block is * actually half as big as the chip reports. It also means that accesses of * logical address 0 hit higher-address sections of the chip, not physical 0. * One can only hope that these 4MiB x16 chips were a lot cheaper than 1MiB x8 * chips. * * This driver assumes the chip is not write-protected by an external signal. * As of the this writing, that is true, but may change, just to spite me. * * The actual BIOS layout has been mostly reverse engineered. Intel BIOS * updates for this board include 10 related (*.bio - &.bi9) binary files and * another separate (*.bbo) binary file. The 10 files are 64k of data + a * small header. If the headers are stripped off, the 10 64k files can be * concatenated into a 640k image. This is your BIOS image, proper. The * separate .bbo file also has a small header. It is the 'Boot Block' * recovery BIOS. Once the header is stripped, no further prep is needed. * As best I can tell, the BIOS is arranged as such: * offset 0x00000 to 0x4ffff (320k): unknown - SCSI BIOS, etc? * offset 0x50000 to 0xeffff (640k): BIOS proper * offset 0xf0000 ty 0xfffff (64k): Boot Block region * * Intel's BIOS update program flashes the BIOS and Boot Block in separate * steps. Probably a wise thing to do. */ #include <linux/module.h> #include <linux/types.h> #include <linux/kernel.h> #include <linux/init.h> #include <asm/io.h> #include <linux/mtd/mtd.h> #include <linux/mtd/map.h> #include <linux/mtd/cfi.h> #include <linux/pci.h> #include <linux/pci_ids.h> #define MODNAME "scb2_flash" #define SCB2_ADDR 0xfff00000 #define SCB2_WINDOW 0x00100000 static void __iomem *scb2_ioaddr; static struct mtd_info *scb2_mtd; static struct map_info scb2_map = { .name = "SCB2 BIOS Flash", .size = 0, .bankwidth = 1, }; static int region_fail; static int __devinit scb2_fixup_mtd(struct mtd_info *mtd) { int i; int done = 0; struct map_info *map = mtd->priv; struct cfi_private *cfi = map->fldrv_priv; /* barf if this doesn't look right */ if (cfi->cfiq->InterfaceDesc != CFI_INTERFACE_X16_ASYNC) { printk(KERN_ERR MODNAME ": unsupported InterfaceDesc: %#x\n", cfi->cfiq->InterfaceDesc); return -1; } /* I wasn't here. I didn't see. dwmw2. */ /* the chip is sometimes bigger than the map - what a waste */ mtd->size = map->size; /* * We only REALLY get half the chip, due to the way it is * wired up - D8-D15 are tossed away. We read linear bytes, * but in reality we are getting 1/2 of each 16-bit read, * which LOOKS linear to us. Because CFI code accounts for * things like lock/unlock/erase by eraseregions, we need to * fudge them to reflect this. Erases go like this: * * send an erase to an address * * the chip samples the address and erases the block * * add the block erasesize to the address and repeat * -- the problem is that addresses are 16-bit addressable * -- we end up erasing every-other block */ mtd->erasesize /= 2; for (i = 0; i < mtd->numeraseregions; i++) { struct mtd_erase_region_info *region = &mtd->eraseregions[i]; region->erasesize /= 2; } /* * If the chip is bigger than the map, it is wired with the high * address lines pulled up. This makes us access the top portion of * the chip, so all our erase-region info is wrong. Start cutting from * the bottom. */ for (i = 0; !done && i < mtd->numeraseregions; i++) { struct mtd_erase_region_info *region = &mtd->eraseregions[i]; if (region->numblocks * region->erasesize > mtd->size) { region->numblocks = ((unsigned long)mtd->size / region->erasesize); done = 1; } else { region->numblocks = 0; } region->offset = 0; } return 0; } /* CSB5's 'Function Control Register' has bits for decoding @ >= 0xffc00000 */ #define CSB5_FCR 0x41 #define CSB5_FCR_DECODE_ALL 0x0e static int __devinit scb2_flash_probe(struct pci_dev *dev, const struct pci_device_id *ent) { u8 reg; /* enable decoding of the flash region in the south bridge */ pci_read_config_byte(dev, CSB5_FCR, ®); pci_write_config_byte(dev, CSB5_FCR, reg | CSB5_FCR_DECODE_ALL); if (!request_mem_region(SCB2_ADDR, SCB2_WINDOW, scb2_map.name)) { /* * The BIOS seems to mark the flash region as 'reserved' * in the e820 map. Warn and go about our business. */ printk(KERN_WARNING MODNAME ": warning - can't reserve rom window, continuing\n"); region_fail = 1; } /* remap the IO window (w/o caching) */ scb2_ioaddr = ioremap_nocache(SCB2_ADDR, SCB2_WINDOW); if (!scb2_ioaddr) { printk(KERN_ERR MODNAME ": Failed to ioremap window!\n"); if (!region_fail) release_mem_region(SCB2_ADDR, SCB2_WINDOW); return -ENOMEM; } scb2_map.phys = SCB2_ADDR; scb2_map.virt = scb2_ioaddr; scb2_map.size = SCB2_WINDOW; simple_map_init(&scb2_map); /* try to find a chip */ scb2_mtd = do_map_probe("cfi_probe", &scb2_map); if (!scb2_mtd) { printk(KERN_ERR MODNAME ": flash probe failed!\n"); iounmap(scb2_ioaddr); if (!region_fail) release_mem_region(SCB2_ADDR, SCB2_WINDOW); return -ENODEV; } scb2_mtd->owner = THIS_MODULE; if (scb2_fixup_mtd(scb2_mtd) < 0) { del_mtd_device(scb2_mtd); map_destroy(scb2_mtd); iounmap(scb2_ioaddr); if (!region_fail) release_mem_region(SCB2_ADDR, SCB2_WINDOW); return -ENODEV; } printk(KERN_NOTICE MODNAME ": chip size 0x%llx at offset 0x%llx\n", (unsigned long long)scb2_mtd->size, (unsigned long long)(SCB2_WINDOW - scb2_mtd->size)); add_mtd_device(scb2_mtd); return 0; } static void __devexit scb2_flash_remove(struct pci_dev *dev) { if (!scb2_mtd) return; /* disable flash writes */ if (scb2_mtd->lock) scb2_mtd->lock(scb2_mtd, 0, scb2_mtd->size); del_mtd_device(scb2_mtd); map_destroy(scb2_mtd); iounmap(scb2_ioaddr); scb2_ioaddr = NULL; if (!region_fail) release_mem_region(SCB2_ADDR, SCB2_WINDOW); pci_set_drvdata(dev, NULL); } static struct pci_device_id scb2_flash_pci_ids[] = { { .vendor = PCI_VENDOR_ID_SERVERWORKS, .device = PCI_DEVICE_ID_SERVERWORKS_CSB5, .subvendor = PCI_ANY_ID, .subdevice = PCI_ANY_ID }, { 0, } }; static struct pci_driver scb2_flash_driver = { .name = "Intel SCB2 BIOS Flash", .id_table = scb2_flash_pci_ids, .probe = scb2_flash_probe, .remove = __devexit_p(scb2_flash_remove), }; static int __init scb2_flash_init(void) { return pci_register_driver(&scb2_flash_driver); } static void __exit scb2_flash_exit(void) { pci_unregister_driver(&scb2_flash_driver); } module_init(scb2_flash_init); module_exit(scb2_flash_exit); MODULE_LICENSE("GPL"); MODULE_AUTHOR("Tim Hockin <thockin@sun.com>"); MODULE_DESCRIPTION("MTD map driver for Intel SCB2 BIOS Flash"); MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(pci, scb2_flash_pci_ids);