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Date:      Sat, 31 Aug 2002 16:07:07 +0100 (BST)
From:      Gavin Atkinson <gavin.atkinson@ury.york.ac.uk>
To:        <current@FreeBSD.ORG>
Cc:        <iwasaki@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: ACPI no longer disabled when APM enabled?
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.4.33.0208292036570.64364-100000@ury.york.ac.uk>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.33.0208291840020.63107-100000@ury.york.ac.uk>

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On Thu, 29 Aug 2002, Gavin Atkinson wrote:

> Since the recent ACPI import (i believe), it seems that ACPI is no longer
> disabled when APM is enabled. I do not explicitely disable API anywhere.
> In the past, I have seen upon bootup a message "apm: Other PM system
> enabled." and the kernel would carry on booting as if ACPI had not been
> loaded.

As a follow-up to this... adding the hint hint.acpi.0.disable="1" fixes
the suspend problems, but produces the following error messages on
boot-up:

unknown: <PNP0303> can't assign resources (port)
unknown: <PNP0f13> can't assign resources (irq)
unknown: <PNP0700> can't assign resources (port)
unknown: <PNP0501> can't assign resources (port)
unknown: <PNP0401> can't assign resources (port)

These only exist with the acpi hint above. Removing the hint and
reverting to a previous kernel (where ACPI is disabled because APM is
enabled) shows them with the hint in place too, but obviously acpi is not
enabled then. I have confirmed that this is new with the latest acpi
import.

The recent heads-up about hw.acpi.0.disable="1" has not fixed the problem
I am seeing.

Those ISA PNP IDs correspond to,

/usr/src/sys/isa/atkbdc_isa.c:  { 0x0303d041, "Keyboard controller (i8042)" },/* PNP0303 */
/usr/src/sys/boot/common/pnpdata:ident=PNP0700 module=fd             # PC standard floppy disk controller
/usr/src/sys/boot/common/pnpdata:ident=PNP0501 module=sio            # 16550A-compatible COM port
/usr/src/sys/boot/common/pnpdata:ident=PNP0401 module=lpt            # ECP printer port
/usr/src/sys/isa/psm.c: { 0x130fd041, "PS/2 mouse port" },              /* PNP0F13 */

These devices seem to work fine however.

Gavin


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