ACPI: Execute platform _OSC also with query bit clear

The platform _OSC can change the hardware state when query bit is not
set. According to ACPI spec it is recommended that the OS runs _OSC with
query bit set until the platform does not mask any of the capabilities.
Then it should run it with query bit clear in order to actually commit
the changes. Linux has not been doing this for the reasons that there
has not been anything to commit, until now.

The ACPI 6.4 introduced _OSC for USB4 to allow the OS to negotiate
native control over USB4 tunneling. The platform might implement this so
that it only activates the software connection manager path when the OS
calls the _OSC with the query bit clear. Otherwise it may default to the
firmware connection manager, for instance.

For this reason modify the _OSC support so that we first execute it with
query bit set, then use the returned value as base of the features we
want to control and run the _OSC again with query bit clear. This also
follows what Windows is doing.

Also rename the function to better match what it does.

Signed-off-by: Mario Limonciello <mario.limonciello@dell.com>
Acked-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Mika Westerberg <mika.westerberg@linux.intel.com>
This commit is contained in:
Mario Limonciello 2020-10-26 18:01:05 +03:00 committed by Mika Westerberg
parent 5ca6768825
commit 719e1f561a

View file

@ -282,9 +282,9 @@ bool osc_pc_lpi_support_confirmed;
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(osc_pc_lpi_support_confirmed);
static u8 sb_uuid_str[] = "0811B06E-4A27-44F9-8D60-3CBBC22E7B48";
static void acpi_bus_osc_support(void)
static void acpi_bus_osc_negotiate_platform_control(void)
{
u32 capbuf[2];
u32 capbuf[2], *capbuf_ret;
struct acpi_osc_context context = {
.uuid_str = sb_uuid_str,
.rev = 1,
@ -321,17 +321,36 @@ static void acpi_bus_osc_support(void)
capbuf[OSC_SUPPORT_DWORD] |= OSC_SB_APEI_SUPPORT;
if (ACPI_FAILURE(acpi_get_handle(NULL, "\\_SB", &handle)))
return;
if (ACPI_SUCCESS(acpi_run_osc(handle, &context))) {
u32 *capbuf_ret = context.ret.pointer;
if (context.ret.length > OSC_SUPPORT_DWORD) {
osc_sb_apei_support_acked =
capbuf_ret[OSC_SUPPORT_DWORD] & OSC_SB_APEI_SUPPORT;
osc_pc_lpi_support_confirmed =
capbuf_ret[OSC_SUPPORT_DWORD] & OSC_SB_PCLPI_SUPPORT;
}
if (ACPI_FAILURE(acpi_run_osc(handle, &context)))
return;
capbuf_ret = context.ret.pointer;
if (context.ret.length <= OSC_SUPPORT_DWORD) {
kfree(context.ret.pointer);
return;
}
/* do we need to check other returned cap? Sounds no */
/*
* Now run _OSC again with query flag clear and with the caps
* supported by both the OS and the platform.
*/
capbuf[OSC_QUERY_DWORD] = 0;
capbuf[OSC_SUPPORT_DWORD] = capbuf_ret[OSC_SUPPORT_DWORD];
kfree(context.ret.pointer);
if (ACPI_FAILURE(acpi_run_osc(handle, &context)))
return;
capbuf_ret = context.ret.pointer;
if (context.ret.length > OSC_SUPPORT_DWORD) {
osc_sb_apei_support_acked =
capbuf_ret[OSC_SUPPORT_DWORD] & OSC_SB_APEI_SUPPORT;
osc_pc_lpi_support_confirmed =
capbuf_ret[OSC_SUPPORT_DWORD] & OSC_SB_PCLPI_SUPPORT;
}
kfree(context.ret.pointer);
}
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------------
@ -1168,7 +1187,7 @@ static int __init acpi_bus_init(void)
* _OSC method may exist in module level code,
* so it must be run after ACPI_FULL_INITIALIZATION
*/
acpi_bus_osc_support();
acpi_bus_osc_negotiate_platform_control();
/*
* _PDC control method may load dynamic SSDT tables,