Calling mac_reset() on a Mac IIci does reset the system, but what follows is a POST failure that requires a manual reset to resolve. Avoid that by using the 68030 asm implementation instead of the C implementation. Apparently the SE/30 has a similar problem as it has used the asm implementation since before git. This patch extends that solution to other systems with a similar ROM. After this patch, the only systems still using the C implementation are 68040 systems where adb_type is either MAC_ADB_IOP or MAC_ADB_II. This implies a 1 MiB Quadra ROM. This now includes the Quadra 900/950, which previously fell through to the "should never get here" catch-all. Reported-and-tested-by: Stan Johnson <userm57@xxxxxxxxx> Fixes: 1da177e4c3f4 ("Linux-2.6.12-rc2") Signed-off-by: Finn Thain <fthain@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- Tested on Mac IIci & IIfx, Quadra 630 & 650, Daystar Mac II, QEMU. Some corner cases remain problematic. For example, a stock Mac II or a Mac IIci with a 68040 accelerator will still use the C routine, because mac_reset() lacks an asm implementation for '020 and '040 systems. However, amiga_reset(), atari_reset() and mac_reset() do have a lot in common, which suggests that a generic asm reset function parameterized by final JMP location may be a useful refactoring. This would provide the '020 and '040 handling missing here and could potentially replace hp300_reset(), dn_dummy_reset() and q40_reset(). --- arch/m68k/mac/misc.c | 36 ++++++++++++++++++------------------ 1 file changed, 18 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-) diff --git a/arch/m68k/mac/misc.c b/arch/m68k/mac/misc.c index 4c8f8cbfa05f..e7f0f72c1b36 100644 --- a/arch/m68k/mac/misc.c +++ b/arch/m68k/mac/misc.c @@ -453,30 +453,18 @@ void mac_poweroff(void) void mac_reset(void) { - if (macintosh_config->adb_type == MAC_ADB_II && - macintosh_config->ident != MAC_MODEL_SE30) { - /* need ROMBASE in booter */ - /* indeed, plus need to MAP THE ROM !! */ - - if (mac_bi_data.rombase == 0) - mac_bi_data.rombase = 0x40800000; - - /* works on some */ - rom_reset = (void *) (mac_bi_data.rombase + 0xa); - - local_irq_disable(); - rom_reset(); #ifdef CONFIG_ADB_CUDA - } else if (macintosh_config->adb_type == MAC_ADB_EGRET || - macintosh_config->adb_type == MAC_ADB_CUDA) { + if (macintosh_config->adb_type == MAC_ADB_EGRET || + macintosh_config->adb_type == MAC_ADB_CUDA) { cuda_restart(); + } else #endif #ifdef CONFIG_ADB_PMU - } else if (macintosh_config->adb_type == MAC_ADB_PB2) { + if (macintosh_config->adb_type == MAC_ADB_PB2) { pmu_restart(); + } else #endif - } else if (CPU_IS_030) { - + if (CPU_IS_030) { /* 030-specific reset routine. The idea is general, but the * specific registers to reset are '030-specific. Until I * have a non-030 machine, I can't test anything else. @@ -524,6 +512,18 @@ void mac_reset(void) "jmp %/a0@\n\t" /* jump to the reset vector */ ".chip 68k" : : "r" (offset), "a" (rombase) : "a0"); + } else { + /* need ROMBASE in booter */ + /* indeed, plus need to MAP THE ROM !! */ + + if (mac_bi_data.rombase == 0) + mac_bi_data.rombase = 0x40800000; + + /* works on some */ + rom_reset = (void *)(mac_bi_data.rombase + 0xa); + + local_irq_disable(); + rom_reset(); } /* should never get here */ -- 2.39.3