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| 1 | ACPI _OSI and _REV methods | ||
| 2 | -------------------------- | ||
| 3 | |||
| 4 | An ACPI BIOS can use the "Operating System Interfaces" method (_OSI) | ||
| 5 | to find out what the operating system supports. Eg. If BIOS | ||
| 6 | AML code includes _OSI("XYZ"), the kernel's AML interpreter | ||
| 7 | can evaluate that method, look to see if it supports 'XYZ' | ||
| 8 | and answer YES or NO to the BIOS. | ||
| 9 | |||
| 10 | The ACPI _REV method returns the "Revision of the ACPI specification | ||
| 11 | that OSPM supports" | ||
| 12 | |||
| 13 | This document explains how and why the BIOS and Linux should use these methods. | ||
| 14 | It also explains how and why they are widely misused. | ||
| 15 | |||
| 16 | How to use _OSI | ||
| 17 | --------------- | ||
| 18 | |||
| 19 | Linux runs on two groups of machines -- those that are tested by the OEM | ||
| 20 | to be compatible with Linux, and those that were never tested with Linux, | ||
| 21 | but where Linux was installed to replace the original OS (Windows or OSX). | ||
| 22 | |||
| 23 | The larger group is the systems tested to run only Windows. Not only that, | ||
| 24 | but many were tested to run with just one specific version of Windows. | ||
| 25 | So even though the BIOS may use _OSI to query what version of Windows is running, | ||
| 26 | only a single path through the BIOS has actually been tested. | ||
| 27 | Experience shows that taking untested paths through the BIOS | ||
| 28 | exposes Linux to an entire category of BIOS bugs. | ||
| 29 | For this reason, Linux _OSI defaults must continue to claim compatibility | ||
| 30 | with all versions of Windows. | ||
| 31 | |||
| 32 | But Linux isn't actually compatible with Windows, and the Linux community | ||
| 33 | has also been hurt with regressions when Linux adds the latest version of | ||
| 34 | Windows to its list of _OSI strings. So it is possible that additional strings | ||
| 35 | will be more thoroughly vetted before shipping upstream in the future. | ||
| 36 | But it is likely that they will all eventually be added. | ||
| 37 | |||
| 38 | What should an OEM do if they want to support Linux and Windows | ||
| 39 | using the same BIOS image? Often they need to do something different | ||
| 40 | for Linux to deal with how Linux is different from Windows. | ||
| 41 | Here the BIOS should ask exactly what it wants to know: | ||
| 42 | |||
| 43 | _OSI("Linux-OEM-my_interface_name") | ||
| 44 | where 'OEM' is needed if this is an OEM-specific hook, | ||
| 45 | and 'my_interface_name' describes the hook, which could be a | ||
| 46 | quirk, a bug, or a bug-fix. | ||
| 47 | |||
| 48 | In addition, the OEM should send a patch to upstream Linux | ||
| 49 | via the linux-acpi@vger.kernel.org mailing list. When that patch | ||
| 50 | is checked into Linux, the OS will answer "YES" when the BIOS | ||
| 51 | on the OEM's system uses _OSI to ask if the interface is supported | ||
| 52 | by the OS. Linux distributors can back-port that patch for Linux | ||
| 53 | pre-installs, and it will be included by all distributions that | ||
| 54 | re-base to upstream. If the distribution can not update the kernel binary, | ||
| 55 | they can also add an acpi_osi=Linux-OEM-my_interface_name | ||
| 56 | cmdline parameter to the boot loader, as needed. | ||
| 57 | |||
| 58 | If the string refers to a feature where the upstream kernel | ||
| 59 | eventually grows support, a patch should be sent to remove | ||
| 60 | the string when that support is added to the kernel. | ||
| 61 | |||
| 62 | That was easy. Read on, to find out how to do it wrong. | ||
| 63 | |||
| 64 | Before _OSI, there was _OS | ||
| 65 | -------------------------- | ||
| 66 | |||
| 67 | ACPI 1.0 specified "_OS" as an | ||
| 68 | "object that evaluates to a string that identifies the operating system." | ||
| 69 | |||
| 70 | The ACPI BIOS flow would include an evaluation of _OS, and the AML | ||
| 71 | interpreter in the kernel would return to it a string identifying the OS: | ||
| 72 | |||
| 73 | Windows 98, SE: "Microsoft Windows" | ||
| 74 | Windows ME: "Microsoft WindowsME:Millenium Edition" | ||
| 75 | Windows NT: "Microsoft Windows NT" | ||
| 76 | |||
| 77 | The idea was on a platform tasked with running multiple OS's, | ||
| 78 | the BIOS could use _OS to enable devices that an OS | ||
| 79 | might support, or enable quirks or bug workarounds | ||
| 80 | necessary to make the platform compatible with that pre-existing OS. | ||
| 81 | |||
| 82 | But _OS had fundamental problems. First, the BIOS needed to know the name | ||
| 83 | of every possible version of the OS that would run on it, and needed to know | ||
| 84 | all the quirks of those OS's. Certainly it would make more sense | ||
| 85 | for the BIOS to ask *specific* things of the OS, such | ||
| 86 | "do you support a specific interface", and thus in ACPI 3.0, | ||
| 87 | _OSI was born to replace _OS. | ||
| 88 | |||
| 89 | _OS was abandoned, though even today, many BIOS look for | ||
| 90 | _OS "Microsoft Windows NT", though it seems somewhat far-fetched | ||
| 91 | that anybody would install those old operating systems | ||
| 92 | over what came with the machine. | ||
| 93 | |||
| 94 | Linux answers "Microsoft Windows NT" to please that BIOS idiom. | ||
| 95 | That is the *only* viable strategy, as that is what modern Windows does, | ||
| 96 | and so doing otherwise could steer the BIOS down an untested path. | ||
| 97 | |||
| 98 | _OSI is born, and immediately misused | ||
| 99 | -------------------------------------- | ||
| 100 | |||
| 101 | With _OSI, the *BIOS* provides the string describing an interface, | ||
| 102 | and asks the OS: "YES/NO, are you compatible with this interface?" | ||
| 103 | |||
| 104 | eg. _OSI("3.0 Thermal Model") would return TRUE if the OS knows how | ||
| 105 | to deal with the thermal extensions made to the ACPI 3.0 specification. | ||
| 106 | An old OS that doesn't know about those extensions would answer FALSE, | ||
| 107 | and a new OS may be able to return TRUE. | ||
| 108 | |||
| 109 | For an OS-specific interface, the ACPI spec said that the BIOS and the OS | ||
| 110 | were to agree on a string of the form such as "Windows-interface_name". | ||
| 111 | |||
| 112 | But two bad things happened. First, the Windows ecosystem used _OSI | ||
| 113 | not as designed, but as a direct replacement for _OS -- identifying | ||
| 114 | the OS version, rather than an OS supported interface. Indeed, right | ||
| 115 | from the start, the ACPI 3.0 spec itself codified this misuse | ||
| 116 | in example code using _OSI("Windows 2001"). | ||
| 117 | |||
| 118 | This misuse was adopted and continues today. | ||
| 119 | |||
| 120 | Linux had no choice but to also return TRUE to _OSI("Windows 2001") | ||
| 121 | and its successors. To do otherwise would virtually guarantee breaking | ||
| 122 | a BIOS that has been tested only with that _OSI returning TRUE. | ||
| 123 | |||
| 124 | This strategy is problematic, as Linux is never completely compatible with | ||
| 125 | the latest version of Windows, and sometimes it takes more than a year | ||
| 126 | to iron out incompatibilities. | ||
| 127 | |||
| 128 | Not to be out-done, the Linux community made things worse by returning TRUE | ||
| 129 | to _OSI("Linux"). Doing so is even worse than the Windows misuse | ||
| 130 | of _OSI, as "Linux" does not even contain any version information. | ||
| 131 | _OSI("Linux") led to some BIOS' malfunctioning due to BIOS writer's | ||
| 132 | using it in untested BIOS flows. But some OEM's used _OSI("Linux") | ||
| 133 | in tested flows to support real Linux features. In 2009, Linux | ||
| 134 | removed _OSI("Linux"), and added a cmdline parameter to restore it | ||
| 135 | for legacy systems still needed it. Further a BIOS_BUG warning prints | ||
| 136 | for all BIOS's that invoke it. | ||
| 137 | |||
| 138 | No BIOS should use _OSI("Linux"). | ||
| 139 | |||
| 140 | The result is a strategy for Linux to maximize compatibility with | ||
| 141 | ACPI BIOS that are tested on Windows machines. There is a real risk | ||
| 142 | of over-stating that compatibility; but the alternative has often been | ||
| 143 | catastrophic failure resulting from the BIOS taking paths that | ||
| 144 | were never validated under *any* OS. | ||
| 145 | |||
| 146 | Do not use _REV | ||
| 147 | --------------- | ||
| 148 | |||
| 149 | Since _OSI("Linux") went away, some BIOS writers used _REV | ||
| 150 | to support Linux and Windows differences in the same BIOS. | ||
| 151 | |||
| 152 | _REV was defined in ACPI 1.0 to return the version of ACPI | ||
| 153 | supported by the OS and the OS AML interpreter. | ||
| 154 | |||
| 155 | Modern Windows returns _REV = 2. Linux used ACPI_CA_SUPPORT_LEVEL, | ||
| 156 | which would increment, based on the version of the spec supported. | ||
| 157 | |||
| 158 | Unfortunately, _REV was also misused. eg. some BIOS would check | ||
| 159 | for _REV = 3, and do something for Linux, but when Linux returned | ||
| 160 | _REV = 4, that support broke. | ||
| 161 | |||
| 162 | In response to this problem, Linux returns _REV = 2 always, | ||
| 163 | from mid-2015 onward. The ACPI specification will also be updated | ||
| 164 | to reflect that _REV is deprecated, and always returns 2. | ||
| 165 | |||
| 166 | Apple Mac and _OSI("Darwin") | ||
| 167 | ---------------------------- | ||
| 168 | |||
| 169 | On Apple's Mac platforms, the ACPI BIOS invokes _OSI("Darwin") | ||
| 170 | to determine if the machine is running Apple OSX. | ||
| 171 | |||
| 172 | Like Linux's _OSI("*Windows*") strategy, Linux defaults to | ||
| 173 | answering YES to _OSI("Darwin") to enable full access | ||
| 174 | to the hardware and validated BIOS paths seen by OSX. | ||
| 175 | Just like on Windows-tested platforms, this strategy has risks. | ||
| 176 | |||
| 177 | Starting in Linux-3.18, the kernel answered YES to _OSI("Darwin") | ||
| 178 | for the purpose of enabling Mac Thunderbolt support. Further, | ||
| 179 | if the kernel noticed _OSI("Darwin") being invoked, it additionally | ||
| 180 | disabled all _OSI("*Windows*") to keep poorly written Mac BIOS | ||
| 181 | from going down untested combinations of paths. | ||
| 182 | |||
| 183 | The Linux-3.18 change in default caused power regressions on Mac | ||
| 184 | laptops, and the 3.18 implementation did not allow changing | ||
| 185 | the default via cmdline "acpi_osi=!Darwin". Linux-4.7 fixed | ||
| 186 | the ability to use acpi_osi=!Darwin as a workaround, and | ||
| 187 | we hope to see Mac Thunderbolt power management support in Linux-4.11. | ||
