On Wed, Nov 07, 2018 at 07:38:56AM -0600, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > Firmware supplies ACPI namespace. The namespace contains an abstract > description of the platform, including devices. Devices are > identified by PNP IDs, which are analogous to PCI vendor/device IDs, > except that a device may have several generic "compatible device IDs" > in addition to an ID unique to the device. Devices may also contain > methods (supplied by firmware as part of the namespace), which are > essentially bytecode that can be executed by the ACPI interpreter in > the kernel. Linux drivers claim ACPI devices based on PNP ID and > operate them using either ACPI methods (which can decouple the driver > from device specifics) or the usual direct MMIO/IO port/MSR style. > > Here's an outline of how it *could* work: > > - AMD defines "AMD0001" device ID for the CPU temp sensor > - BIOS supplies AMD0001 devices in the ACPI namespace > - Each AMD0001 device has a _TMP method (supplied by BIOS and > specific to the CPU) > - Linux driver claims AMD0001 devices > - Driver reads temp sensors by executing _TMP methods (Linux ACPI > interpreter runs the bytecode) Thanks for explaining. > That way when you release a new platform with different temp sensors, > you update the BIOS AMD0001 devices and _TMP methods to know about > them, and the old Linux driver works unchanged. So I don't know about temp sensors - I'm talking about amd_nb which is something... well, I explained already what it is in my previous mail so I won't repeat myself. Anyway, if there is such a PNP ID device - and I believe I have stumbled upon some blurb about it in the BKDGs - which says "this device represents the PCI device IDs of a CPU" and if that can be used to register amd_nb through it, then sure, I don't see why not. This way, when new CPU comes out and the same PNP ID device is present, amd_nb would load, sure. Maybe Brian knows more on the subject... -- Regards/Gruss, Boris. Good mailing practices for 400: avoid top-posting and trim the reply.