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authorChristoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>2019-08-13 09:25:00 +0200
committerTony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>2019-08-16 11:33:57 -0700
commitf7bc6e42bf12487182fc442a08eca25d968dc543 (patch)
treeb0cd73d052383791201ad06e0e15c491a08cc5e4 /Documentation
parentc9fa9c327b5228c516f4a8c54b91b711526e3e96 (diff)
drivers: remove the SGI SN2 IOC4 base support
The IOC4 is a multi-function chip seen on SGI SN2 and some SGI MIPS systems. This removes the base driver, which while not having an SN2 Kconfig dependency was only for sub-drivers that had one. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20190813072514.23299-15-hch@lst.de Signed-off-by: Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/driver-api/sgi-ioc4.rst49
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 49 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/sgi-ioc4.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/sgi-ioc4.rst
deleted file mode 100644
index 72709222d3c0..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/driver-api/sgi-ioc4.rst
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,49 +0,0 @@
-====================================
-SGI IOC4 PCI (multi function) device
-====================================
-
-The SGI IOC4 PCI device is a bit of a strange beast, so some notes on
-it are in order.
-
-First, even though the IOC4 performs multiple functions, such as an
-IDE controller, a serial controller, a PS/2 keyboard/mouse controller,
-and an external interrupt mechanism, it's not implemented as a
-multifunction device. The consequence of this from a software
-standpoint is that all these functions share a single IRQ, and
-they can't all register to own the same PCI device ID. To make
-matters a bit worse, some of the register blocks (and even registers
-themselves) present in IOC4 are mixed-purpose between these several
-functions, meaning that there's no clear "owning" device driver.
-
-The solution is to organize the IOC4 driver into several independent
-drivers, "ioc4", "sgiioc4", and "ioc4_serial". Note that there is no
-PS/2 controller driver as this functionality has never been wired up
-on a shipping IO card.
-
-ioc4
-====
-This is the core (or shim) driver for IOC4. It is responsible for
-initializing the basic functionality of the chip, and allocating
-the PCI resources that are shared between the IOC4 functions.
-
-This driver also provides registration functions that the other
-IOC4 drivers can call to make their presence known. Each driver
-needs to provide a probe and remove function, which are invoked
-by the core driver at appropriate times. The interface of these
-IOC4 function probe and remove operations isn't precisely the same
-as PCI device probe and remove operations, but is logically the
-same operation.
-
-sgiioc4
-=======
-This is the IDE driver for IOC4. Its name isn't very descriptive
-simply for historical reasons (it used to be the only IOC4 driver
-component). There's not much to say about it other than it hooks
-up to the ioc4 driver via the appropriate registration, probe, and
-remove functions.
-
-ioc4_serial
-===========
-This is the serial driver for IOC4. There's not much to say about it
-other than it hooks up to the ioc4 driver via the appropriate registration,
-probe, and remove functions.