| ================================================== |
| QEMU and ACPI BIOS Generic Event Device interface |
| ================================================== |
| |
| The ACPI *Generic Event Device* (GED) is a HW reduced platform |
| specific device introduced in ACPI v6.1 that handles all platform |
| events, including the hotplug ones. GED is modelled as a device |
| in the namespace with a _HID defined to be ACPI0013. This document |
| describes the interface between QEMU and the ACPI BIOS. |
| |
| GED allows HW reduced platforms to handle interrupts in ACPI ASL |
| statements. It follows a very similar approach to the _EVT method |
| from GPIO events. All interrupts are listed in _CRS and the handler |
| is written in _EVT method. However, the QEMU implementation uses a |
| single interrupt for the GED device, relying on an IO memory region |
| to communicate the type of device affected by the interrupt. This way, |
| we can support up to 32 events with a unique interrupt. |
| |
| **Here is an example,** |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Device (\_SB.GED) |
| { |
| Name (_HID, "ACPI0013") |
| Name (_UID, Zero) |
| Name (_CRS, ResourceTemplate () |
| { |
| Interrupt (ResourceConsumer, Edge, ActiveHigh, Exclusive, ,, ) |
| { |
| 0x00000029, |
| } |
| }) |
| OperationRegion (EREG, SystemMemory, 0x09080000, 0x04) |
| Field (EREG, DWordAcc, NoLock, WriteAsZeros) |
| { |
| ESEL, 32 |
| } |
| Method (_EVT, 1, Serialized) |
| { |
| Local0 = ESEL // ESEL = IO memory region which specifies the |
| // device type. |
| If (((Local0 & One) == One)) |
| { |
| MethodEvent1() |
| } |
| If ((Local0 & 0x2) == 0x2) |
| { |
| MethodEvent2() |
| } |
| ... |
| } |
| } |
| |
| GED IO interface (4 byte access) |
| -------------------------------- |
| **read access:** |
| |
| :: |
| |
| [0x0-0x3] Event selector bit field (32 bit) set by QEMU. |
| |
| bits: |
| 0: Memory hotplug event |
| 1: System power down event |
| 2: NVDIMM hotplug event |
| 3: CPU hotplug event |
| 4-31: Reserved |
| |
| **write_access:** |
| |
| Nothing is expected to be written into GED IO memory |