239665a3bb
ACPI tables follow a tree structure in memory. The root of the tree is the RSDP (Root System Description Pointer). To find the RSDP, the OS searches for the signature "RSD PTR " in well known physical memory locations. Then the OS computes a table checksum to verify that the signature is really part of a valid table header. Some systems have a proper signature but an invalid checksum; followed elsewhere by a proper signature with valid checksum. http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9444 The Linux RSDP scanning code bailed out on those systems and as a result they booted with ACPI disabled. Fix this by deleting the Linux RSDP scanning code and plugging in the ACPICA RSDP scanning code. Signed-off-by: Len Brown <len.brown@intel.com> |
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alpha | ||
arm | ||
avr32 | ||
blackfin | ||
cris | ||
frv | ||
h8300 | ||
ia64 | ||
m32r | ||
m68k | ||
m68knommu | ||
mips | ||
parisc | ||
powerpc | ||
ppc | ||
s390 | ||
sh | ||
sh64 | ||
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um | ||
v850 | ||
x86 | ||
xtensa |