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PCIBIOS(4) Device Drivers Manual (i386) PCIBIOS(4)

pcibiosintroduction to PCI BIOS support

pcibios0 at bios0 flags 0x0000

OpenBSD provides support for setting up PCI controllers, bridges, and devices using information extracted from the BIOS.

Ideally, the boot firmware of a machine (a.k.a. BIOS) should set up all PCI devices; assigning them I/O and memory addresses and interrupts. Alas, this does not always happen, so there is some PC specific code that can do the initialization when OpenBSD boots.

Flags is a bit mask each bit of which specifies a fixup procedure to omit. The following list specifies these procedures and gives flags bit values to disable them in case they cause problems.

0x0001
Fixup PCI I/O and memory addresses.

Some BIOS implementations don't allocate I/O space and memory space for all PCI devices. Especially, a BIOS which has "PnP OS mode" enabled shows this behavior. Since necessary space isn't allocated, those devices will not work without special handling.

Without this flag force allocation of I/O space and memory space instead of relying upon the BIOS to do so.

If necessary space is already correctly assigned to the devices, this option leaves the space as is.

Although many BIOS implementations leave CardBus bridges' space unallocated, the CardBus bridge device driver doesn't require this option, since the driver allocates necessary space by itself.

0x0002
Fixup PCI bus numbering; needed for many cardbus(4) bridges.

Each PCI bus and CardBus should have a unique bus number. But some BIOS implementations don't assign a bus number for subordinate PCI buses. And many BIOS implementations don't assign a bus number for CardBuses.

A typical symptom of this is the following boot message:

Please note that this cardbus0 has a bus number ‘0’, but normally the bus number 0 is used by the machine's primary PCI bus. Thus, this bus number for cardbus is incorrect (not assigned). In this situation, a device located in cardbus0 doesn't show correct device ID, because its bus number 0 incorrectly refers to the primary PCI bus, and a device ID in the primary PCI bus is shown in the boot message instead of the device's ID in the cardbus0.

Without this flag force assignment of bus numbers for all subordinate PCI buses and CardBuses.

Since this procedure renumbers all PCI buses and CardBuses, all bus numbers of subordinate buses become different when this option is enabled.

0x0004
Fixup PCI interrupt routing.

Some BIOS implementations don't assign an interrupt for some devices.

This procedure assigns an interrupt for such devices instead of relying upon the BIOS to do so.

If the BIOS has already assigned an interrupt to a device, this procedure leaves the interrupt as is.

0x0008
Make PCI interrupt routing fixup work with unknown interrupt routers. If this flag is specified and a PCI interrupt routing table entry indicates that only one IRQ is available for the entry, the IRQ is assumed to be already connected to the device, and the corresponding PCI Interrupt Configuration Register will be configured accordingly.

Without this flag, if a PCI interrupt router is not known, interrupt configuration will not be modified.

0x0010
Be verbose when performing pcibios tasks. Included in these diagnostics are: PCI device address fixup tables, interrupt fixup reports, and other diagnostic and non-fatal messages.
0x0020
Make the PCI interrupt routing fixup procedure verbose.
0x0040
Some buggy BIOS implementations provide inconsistent information between the PCI Interrupt Configuration Register and the PCI Interrupt Routing table. In such cases, the PCI Interrupt Configuration Register takes precedence by default. If this flag is specified the PCI Interrupt Routing table takes precedence.

bios(4), intro(4), pci(4), pci_conf_read(9), pci_intr_map(9)

The pcibios code appeared in NetBSD 1.5. OpenBSD support was added in OpenBSD 2.8. In contrast to NetBSD implementation pcibios in OpenBSD is a real device, where options control is done through the flags which are modifiable through the boot_config(8) interface. For OpenBSD 2.9 the PCI interrupt routing establishment sequence was redone to only fixup and route interrupts when attaching interrupts for a particular PCI device.

The option may conflict with the PCI CardBus driver's own address fixup.

July 1, 2008 OpenBSD-5.5