On 2/27/23 15:30, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
On Mon, Feb 27, 2023, at 22:09, Larry Finger wrote:
On 2/27/23 14:38, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
Is this the Cardbus or the PCMCIA version of the BCM4306 device? As far
as I understand this particular chip can be wired up either way inside
of the card, and the PowerBook G4 supports both types of devices.
If it's the PCMCIA version, then dropping support for it was the idea
of the patch series that we can debate, but if it was the Cardbus version
that broke, then this was likely a bug I introduced by accident.
The BCM4306 is internal, and wired directly to the PCI bus. My understanding is
that the BCM4318 is a cardbus device. It definitely shows up in an lspci scan.
Ah right, I got confused because I had googled for BCM4306 for too long
trying to find out whether that might be used in combination with the
BCM63xx SoC support that patch 1 removed.
BCM4318 should definitely keep working after my series. My best guess
is that the problem is that I introduced an unnecessary dependency
between CONFIG_CARDBUS and CONFIG_PCI_HOTPLUG, so you'd need to
either undo the dependency or enable both in the local config.
If it's not that, then it's a bug in my changes that needs to be
fixed before they can be considered for integration. As long as
we are still debating whether the series makes sense at all,
I'm not worried about this.
Arnd,
It was a configuration problem. In the .config obtained by installing your
patches, and doing a make, CONFIG_CARDBUS was not mentioned, and
CONFIG_PCI_HOTPLUG was not selected. When I deleted the reference to the latter,
did a make, and set ..._HOTPLUG, I got CONFIG+CARDBUS set to "m", and the yenta
modules were built. This version sees the BCM4318 in the lspci scan, and the
interface works. Your patches are OK.
I am not sure how to warn people about the configuration change possible
breaking things.
Larry