arm-acpi.rst 26 KB

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  1. ===================
  2. ACPI on Arm systems
  3. ===================
  4. ACPI can be used for Armv8 and Armv9 systems designed to follow
  5. the BSA (Arm Base System Architecture) [0] and BBR (Arm
  6. Base Boot Requirements) [1] specifications. Both BSA and BBR are publicly
  7. accessible documents.
  8. Arm Servers, in addition to being BSA compliant, comply with a set
  9. of rules defined in SBSA (Server Base System Architecture) [2].
  10. The Arm kernel implements the reduced hardware model of ACPI version
  11. 5.1 or later. Links to the specification and all external documents
  12. it refers to are managed by the UEFI Forum. The specification is
  13. available at http://www.uefi.org/specifications and documents referenced
  14. by the specification can be found via http://www.uefi.org/acpi.
  15. If an Arm system does not meet the requirements of the BSA and BBR,
  16. or cannot be described using the mechanisms defined in the required ACPI
  17. specifications, then ACPI may not be a good fit for the hardware.
  18. While the documents mentioned above set out the requirements for building
  19. industry-standard Arm systems, they also apply to more than one operating
  20. system. The purpose of this document is to describe the interaction between
  21. ACPI and Linux only, on an Arm system -- that is, what Linux expects of
  22. ACPI and what ACPI can expect of Linux.
  23. Why ACPI on Arm?
  24. ----------------
  25. Before examining the details of the interface between ACPI and Linux, it is
  26. useful to understand why ACPI is being used. Several technologies already
  27. exist in Linux for describing non-enumerable hardware, after all. In this
  28. section we summarize a blog post [3] from Grant Likely that outlines the
  29. reasoning behind ACPI on Arm systems. Actually, we snitch a good portion
  30. of the summary text almost directly, to be honest.
  31. The short form of the rationale for ACPI on Arm is:
  32. - ACPI’s byte code (AML) allows the platform to encode hardware behavior,
  33. while DT explicitly does not support this. For hardware vendors, being
  34. able to encode behavior is a key tool used in supporting operating
  35. system releases on new hardware.
  36. - ACPI’s OSPM defines a power management model that constrains what the
  37. platform is allowed to do into a specific model, while still providing
  38. flexibility in hardware design.
  39. - In the enterprise server environment, ACPI has established bindings (such
  40. as for RAS) which are currently used in production systems. DT does not.
  41. Such bindings could be defined in DT at some point, but doing so means Arm
  42. and x86 would end up using completely different code paths in both firmware
  43. and the kernel.
  44. - Choosing a single interface to describe the abstraction between a platform
  45. and an OS is important. Hardware vendors would not be required to implement
  46. both DT and ACPI if they want to support multiple operating systems. And,
  47. agreeing on a single interface instead of being fragmented into per OS
  48. interfaces makes for better interoperability overall.
  49. - The new ACPI governance process works well and Linux is now at the same
  50. table as hardware vendors and other OS vendors. In fact, there is no
  51. longer any reason to feel that ACPI only belongs to Windows or that
  52. Linux is in any way secondary to Microsoft in this arena. The move of
  53. ACPI governance into the UEFI forum has significantly opened up the
  54. specification development process, and currently, a large portion of the
  55. changes being made to ACPI are being driven by Linux.
  56. Key to the use of ACPI is the support model. For servers in general, the
  57. responsibility for hardware behaviour cannot solely be the domain of the
  58. kernel, but rather must be split between the platform and the kernel, in
  59. order to allow for orderly change over time. ACPI frees the OS from needing
  60. to understand all the minute details of the hardware so that the OS doesn’t
  61. need to be ported to each and every device individually. It allows the
  62. hardware vendors to take responsibility for power management behaviour without
  63. depending on an OS release cycle which is not under their control.
  64. ACPI is also important because hardware and OS vendors have already worked
  65. out the mechanisms for supporting a general purpose computing ecosystem. The
  66. infrastructure is in place, the bindings are in place, and the processes are
  67. in place. DT does exactly what Linux needs it to when working with vertically
  68. integrated devices, but there are no good processes for supporting what the
  69. server vendors need. Linux could potentially get there with DT, but doing so
  70. really just duplicates something that already works. ACPI already does what
  71. the hardware vendors need, Microsoft won’t collaborate on DT, and hardware
  72. vendors would still end up providing two completely separate firmware
  73. interfaces -- one for Linux and one for Windows.
  74. Kernel Compatibility
  75. --------------------
  76. One of the primary motivations for ACPI is standardization, and using that
  77. to provide backward compatibility for Linux kernels. In the server market,
  78. software and hardware are often used for long periods. ACPI allows the
  79. kernel and firmware to agree on a consistent abstraction that can be
  80. maintained over time, even as hardware or software change. As long as the
  81. abstraction is supported, systems can be updated without necessarily having
  82. to replace the kernel.
  83. When a Linux driver or subsystem is first implemented using ACPI, it by
  84. definition ends up requiring a specific version of the ACPI specification
  85. -- its baseline. ACPI firmware must continue to work, even though it may
  86. not be optimal, with the earliest kernel version that first provides support
  87. for that baseline version of ACPI. There may be a need for additional drivers,
  88. but adding new functionality (e.g., CPU power management) should not break
  89. older kernel versions. Further, ACPI firmware must also work with the most
  90. recent version of the kernel.
  91. Relationship with Device Tree
  92. -----------------------------
  93. ACPI support in drivers and subsystems for Arm should never be mutually
  94. exclusive with DT support at compile time.
  95. At boot time the kernel will only use one description method depending on
  96. parameters passed from the boot loader (including kernel bootargs).
  97. Regardless of whether DT or ACPI is used, the kernel must always be capable
  98. of booting with either scheme (in kernels with both schemes enabled at compile
  99. time).
  100. Booting using ACPI tables
  101. -------------------------
  102. The only defined method for passing ACPI tables to the kernel on Arm
  103. is via the UEFI system configuration table. Just so it is explicit, this
  104. means that ACPI is only supported on platforms that boot via UEFI.
  105. When an Arm system boots, it can either have DT information, ACPI tables,
  106. or in some very unusual cases, both. If no command line parameters are used,
  107. the kernel will try to use DT for device enumeration; if there is no DT
  108. present, the kernel will try to use ACPI tables, but only if they are present.
  109. If neither is available, the kernel will not boot. If acpi=force is used
  110. on the command line, the kernel will attempt to use ACPI tables first, but
  111. fall back to DT if there are no ACPI tables present. The basic idea is that
  112. the kernel will not fail to boot unless it absolutely has no other choice.
  113. Processing of ACPI tables may be disabled by passing acpi=off on the kernel
  114. command line; this is the default behavior.
  115. In order for the kernel to load and use ACPI tables, the UEFI implementation
  116. MUST set the ACPI_20_TABLE_GUID to point to the RSDP table (the table with
  117. the ACPI signature "RSD PTR "). If this pointer is incorrect and acpi=force
  118. is used, the kernel will disable ACPI and try to use DT to boot instead; the
  119. kernel has, in effect, determined that ACPI tables are not present at that
  120. point.
  121. If the pointer to the RSDP table is correct, the table will be mapped into
  122. the kernel by the ACPI core, using the address provided by UEFI.
  123. The ACPI core will then locate and map in all other ACPI tables provided by
  124. using the addresses in the RSDP table to find the XSDT (eXtended System
  125. Description Table). The XSDT in turn provides the addresses to all other
  126. ACPI tables provided by the system firmware; the ACPI core will then traverse
  127. this table and map in the tables listed.
  128. The ACPI core will ignore any provided RSDT (Root System Description Table).
  129. RSDTs have been deprecated and are ignored on arm64 since they only allow
  130. for 32-bit addresses.
  131. Further, the ACPI core will only use the 64-bit address fields in the FADT
  132. (Fixed ACPI Description Table). Any 32-bit address fields in the FADT will
  133. be ignored on arm64.
  134. Hardware reduced mode (see Section 4.1 of the ACPI 6.1 specification) will
  135. be enforced by the ACPI core on arm64. Doing so allows the ACPI core to
  136. run less complex code since it no longer has to provide support for legacy
  137. hardware from other architectures. Any fields that are not to be used for
  138. hardware reduced mode must be set to zero.
  139. For the ACPI core to operate properly, and in turn provide the information
  140. the kernel needs to configure devices, it expects to find the following
  141. tables (all section numbers refer to the ACPI 6.5 specification):
  142. - RSDP (Root System Description Pointer), section 5.2.5
  143. - XSDT (eXtended System Description Table), section 5.2.8
  144. - FADT (Fixed ACPI Description Table), section 5.2.9
  145. - DSDT (Differentiated System Description Table), section
  146. 5.2.11.1
  147. - MADT (Multiple APIC Description Table), section 5.2.12
  148. - GTDT (Generic Timer Description Table), section 5.2.24
  149. - PPTT (Processor Properties Topology Table), section 5.2.30
  150. - DBG2 (DeBuG port table 2), section 5.2.6, specifically Table 5-6.
  151. - APMT (Arm Performance Monitoring unit Table), section 5.2.6, specifically Table 5-6.
  152. - AGDI (Arm Generic diagnostic Dump and Reset Device Interface Table), section 5.2.6, specifically Table 5-6.
  153. - If PCI is supported, the MCFG (Memory mapped ConFiGuration
  154. Table), section 5.2.6, specifically Table 5-6.
  155. - If booting without a console=<device> kernel parameter is
  156. supported, the SPCR (Serial Port Console Redirection table),
  157. section 5.2.6, specifically Table 5-6.
  158. - If necessary to describe the I/O topology, SMMUs and GIC ITSs,
  159. the IORT (Input Output Remapping Table, section 5.2.6, specifically
  160. Table 5-6).
  161. - If NUMA is supported, the following tables are required:
  162. - SRAT (System Resource Affinity Table), section 5.2.16
  163. - SLIT (System Locality distance Information Table), section 5.2.17
  164. - If NUMA is supported, and the system contains heterogeneous memory,
  165. the HMAT (Heterogeneous Memory Attribute Table), section 5.2.28.
  166. - If the ACPI Platform Error Interfaces are required, the following
  167. tables are conditionally required:
  168. - BERT (Boot Error Record Table, section 18.3.1)
  169. - EINJ (Error INJection table, section 18.6.1)
  170. - ERST (Error Record Serialization Table, section 18.5)
  171. - HEST (Hardware Error Source Table, section 18.3.2)
  172. - SDEI (Software Delegated Exception Interface table, section 5.2.6,
  173. specifically Table 5-6)
  174. - AEST (Arm Error Source Table, section 5.2.6,
  175. specifically Table 5-6)
  176. - RAS2 (ACPI RAS2 feature table, section 5.2.21)
  177. - If the system contains controllers using PCC channel, the
  178. PCCT (Platform Communications Channel Table), section 14.1
  179. - If the system contains a controller to capture board-level system state,
  180. and communicates with the host via PCC, the PDTT (Platform Debug Trigger
  181. Table), section 5.2.29.
  182. - If NVDIMM is supported, the NFIT (NVDIMM Firmware Interface Table), section 5.2.26
  183. - If video framebuffer is present, the BGRT (Boot Graphics Resource Table), section 5.2.23
  184. - If IPMI is implemented, the SPMI (Server Platform Management Interface),
  185. section 5.2.6, specifically Table 5-6.
  186. - If the system contains a CXL Host Bridge, the CEDT (CXL Early Discovery
  187. Table), section 5.2.6, specifically Table 5-6.
  188. - If the system supports MPAM, the MPAM (Memory Partitioning And Monitoring table), section 5.2.6,
  189. specifically Table 5-6.
  190. - If the system lacks persistent storage, the IBFT (ISCSI Boot Firmware
  191. Table), section 5.2.6, specifically Table 5-6.
  192. If the above tables are not all present, the kernel may or may not be
  193. able to boot properly since it may not be able to configure all of the
  194. devices available. This list of tables is not meant to be all inclusive;
  195. in some environments other tables may be needed (e.g., any of the APEI
  196. tables from section 18) to support specific functionality.
  197. ACPI Detection
  198. --------------
  199. Drivers should determine their probe() type by checking for a null
  200. value for ACPI_HANDLE, or checking .of_node, or other information in
  201. the device structure. This is detailed further in the "Driver
  202. Recommendations" section.
  203. In non-driver code, if the presence of ACPI needs to be detected at
  204. run time, then check the value of acpi_disabled. If CONFIG_ACPI is not
  205. set, acpi_disabled will always be 1.
  206. Device Enumeration
  207. ------------------
  208. Device descriptions in ACPI should use standard recognized ACPI interfaces.
  209. These may contain less information than is typically provided via a Device
  210. Tree description for the same device. This is also one of the reasons that
  211. ACPI can be useful -- the driver takes into account that it may have less
  212. detailed information about the device and uses sensible defaults instead.
  213. If done properly in the driver, the hardware can change and improve over
  214. time without the driver having to change at all.
  215. Clocks provide an excellent example. In DT, clocks need to be specified
  216. and the drivers need to take them into account. In ACPI, the assumption
  217. is that UEFI will leave the device in a reasonable default state, including
  218. any clock settings. If for some reason the driver needs to change a clock
  219. value, this can be done in an ACPI method; all the driver needs to do is
  220. invoke the method and not concern itself with what the method needs to do
  221. to change the clock. Changing the hardware can then take place over time
  222. by changing what the ACPI method does, and not the driver.
  223. In DT, the parameters needed by the driver to set up clocks as in the example
  224. above are known as "bindings"; in ACPI, these are known as "Device Properties"
  225. and provided to a driver via the _DSD object.
  226. ACPI tables are described with a formal language called ASL, the ACPI
  227. Source Language (section 19 of the specification). This means that there
  228. are always multiple ways to describe the same thing -- including device
  229. properties. For example, device properties could use an ASL construct
  230. that looks like this: Name(KEY0, "value0"). An ACPI device driver would
  231. then retrieve the value of the property by evaluating the KEY0 object.
  232. However, using Name() this way has multiple problems: (1) ACPI limits
  233. names ("KEY0") to four characters unlike DT; (2) there is no industry
  234. wide registry that maintains a list of names, minimizing re-use; (3)
  235. there is also no registry for the definition of property values ("value0"),
  236. again making re-use difficult; and (4) how does one maintain backward
  237. compatibility as new hardware comes out? The _DSD method was created
  238. to solve precisely these sorts of problems; Linux drivers should ALWAYS
  239. use the _DSD method for device properties and nothing else.
  240. The _DSM object (ACPI Section 9.14.1) could also be used for conveying
  241. device properties to a driver. Linux drivers should only expect it to
  242. be used if _DSD cannot represent the data required, and there is no way
  243. to create a new UUID for the _DSD object. Note that there is even less
  244. regulation of the use of _DSM than there is of _DSD. Drivers that depend
  245. on the contents of _DSM objects will be more difficult to maintain over
  246. time because of this; as of this writing, the use of _DSM is the cause
  247. of quite a few firmware problems and is not recommended.
  248. Drivers should look for device properties in the _DSD object ONLY; the _DSD
  249. object is described in the ACPI specification section 6.2.5, but this only
  250. describes how to define the structure of an object returned via _DSD, and
  251. how specific data structures are defined by specific UUIDs. Linux should
  252. only use the _DSD Device Properties UUID [4]:
  253. - UUID: daffd814-6eba-4d8c-8a91-bc9bbf4aa301
  254. Common device properties can be registered by creating a pull request to [4] so
  255. that they may be used across all operating systems supporting ACPI.
  256. Device properties that have not been registered with the UEFI Forum can be used
  257. but not as "uefi-" common properties.
  258. Before creating new device properties, check to be sure that they have not
  259. been defined before and either registered in the Linux kernel documentation
  260. as DT bindings, or the UEFI Forum as device properties. While we do not want
  261. to simply move all DT bindings into ACPI device properties, we can learn from
  262. what has been previously defined.
  263. If it is necessary to define a new device property, or if it makes sense to
  264. synthesize the definition of a binding so it can be used in any firmware,
  265. both DT bindings and ACPI device properties for device drivers have review
  266. processes. Use them both. When the driver itself is submitted for review
  267. to the Linux mailing lists, the device property definitions needed must be
  268. submitted at the same time. A driver that supports ACPI and uses device
  269. properties will not be considered complete without their definitions. Once
  270. the device property has been accepted by the Linux community, it must be
  271. registered with the UEFI Forum [4], which will review it again for consistency
  272. within the registry. This may require iteration. The UEFI Forum, though,
  273. will always be the canonical site for device property definitions.
  274. It may make sense to provide notice to the UEFI Forum that there is the
  275. intent to register a previously unused device property name as a means of
  276. reserving the name for later use. Other operating system vendors will
  277. also be submitting registration requests and this may help smooth the
  278. process.
  279. Once registration and review have been completed, the kernel provides an
  280. interface for looking up device properties in a manner independent of
  281. whether DT or ACPI is being used. This API should be used [5]; it can
  282. eliminate some duplication of code paths in driver probing functions and
  283. discourage divergence between DT bindings and ACPI device properties.
  284. Programmable Power Control Resources
  285. ------------------------------------
  286. Programmable power control resources include such resources as voltage/current
  287. providers (regulators) and clock sources.
  288. With ACPI, the kernel clock and regulator framework is not expected to be used
  289. at all.
  290. The kernel assumes that power control of these resources is represented with
  291. Power Resource Objects (ACPI section 7.1). The ACPI core will then handle
  292. correctly enabling and disabling resources as they are needed. In order to
  293. get that to work, ACPI assumes each device has defined D-states and that these
  294. can be controlled through the optional ACPI methods _PS0, _PS1, _PS2, and _PS3;
  295. in ACPI, _PS0 is the method to invoke to turn a device full on, and _PS3 is for
  296. turning a device full off.
  297. There are two options for using those Power Resources. They can:
  298. - be managed in a _PSx method which gets called on entry to power
  299. state Dx.
  300. - be declared separately as power resources with their own _ON and _OFF
  301. methods. They are then tied back to D-states for a particular device
  302. via _PRx which specifies which power resources a device needs to be on
  303. while in Dx. Kernel then tracks number of devices using a power resource
  304. and calls _ON/_OFF as needed.
  305. The kernel ACPI code will also assume that the _PSx methods follow the normal
  306. ACPI rules for such methods:
  307. - If either _PS0 or _PS3 is implemented, then the other method must also
  308. be implemented.
  309. - If a device requires usage or setup of a power resource when on, the ASL
  310. should organize that it is allocated/enabled using the _PS0 method.
  311. - Resources allocated or enabled in the _PS0 method should be disabled
  312. or de-allocated in the _PS3 method.
  313. - Firmware will leave the resources in a reasonable state before handing
  314. over control to the kernel.
  315. Such code in _PSx methods will of course be very platform specific. But,
  316. this allows the driver to abstract out the interface for operating the device
  317. and avoid having to read special non-standard values from ACPI tables. Further,
  318. abstracting the use of these resources allows the hardware to change over time
  319. without requiring updates to the driver.
  320. Clocks
  321. ------
  322. ACPI makes the assumption that clocks are initialized by the firmware --
  323. UEFI, in this case -- to some working value before control is handed over
  324. to the kernel. This has implications for devices such as UARTs, or SoC-driven
  325. LCD displays, for example.
  326. When the kernel boots, the clocks are assumed to be set to reasonable
  327. working values. If for some reason the frequency needs to change -- e.g.,
  328. throttling for power management -- the device driver should expect that
  329. process to be abstracted out into some ACPI method that can be invoked
  330. (please see the ACPI specification for further recommendations on standard
  331. methods to be expected). The only exceptions to this are CPU clocks where
  332. CPPC provides a much richer interface than ACPI methods. If the clocks
  333. are not set, there is no direct way for Linux to control them.
  334. If an SoC vendor wants to provide fine-grained control of the system clocks,
  335. they could do so by providing ACPI methods that could be invoked by Linux
  336. drivers. However, this is NOT recommended and Linux drivers should NOT use
  337. such methods, even if they are provided. Such methods are not currently
  338. standardized in the ACPI specification, and using them could tie a kernel
  339. to a very specific SoC, or tie an SoC to a very specific version of the
  340. kernel, both of which we are trying to avoid.
  341. Driver Recommendations
  342. ----------------------
  343. DO NOT remove any DT handling when adding ACPI support for a driver. The
  344. same device may be used on many different systems.
  345. DO try to structure the driver so that it is data-driven. That is, set up
  346. a struct containing internal per-device state based on defaults and whatever
  347. else must be discovered by the driver probe function. Then, have the rest
  348. of the driver operate off of the contents of that struct. Doing so should
  349. allow most divergence between ACPI and DT functionality to be kept local to
  350. the probe function instead of being scattered throughout the driver. For
  351. example::
  352. static int device_probe_dt(struct platform_device *pdev)
  353. {
  354. /* DT specific functionality */
  355. ...
  356. }
  357. static int device_probe_acpi(struct platform_device *pdev)
  358. {
  359. /* ACPI specific functionality */
  360. ...
  361. }
  362. static int device_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
  363. {
  364. ...
  365. struct device_node node = pdev->dev.of_node;
  366. ...
  367. if (node)
  368. ret = device_probe_dt(pdev);
  369. else if (ACPI_HANDLE(&pdev->dev))
  370. ret = device_probe_acpi(pdev);
  371. else
  372. /* other initialization */
  373. ...
  374. /* Continue with any generic probe operations */
  375. ...
  376. }
  377. DO keep the MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE entries together in the driver to make it
  378. clear the different names the driver is probed for, both from DT and from
  379. ACPI::
  380. static struct of_device_id virtio_mmio_match[] = {
  381. { .compatible = "virtio,mmio", },
  382. { }
  383. };
  384. MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(of, virtio_mmio_match);
  385. static const struct acpi_device_id virtio_mmio_acpi_match[] = {
  386. { "LNRO0005", },
  387. { }
  388. };
  389. MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(acpi, virtio_mmio_acpi_match);
  390. ASWG
  391. ----
  392. The ACPI specification changes regularly. During the year 2014, for instance,
  393. version 5.1 was released and version 6.0 substantially completed, with most of
  394. the changes being driven by Arm-specific requirements. Proposed changes are
  395. presented and discussed in the ASWG (ACPI Specification Working Group) which
  396. is a part of the UEFI Forum. The current version of the ACPI specification
  397. is 6.5 release in August 2022.
  398. Participation in this group is open to all UEFI members. Please see
  399. http://www.uefi.org/workinggroup for details on group membership.
  400. It is the intent of the Arm ACPI kernel code to follow the ACPI specification
  401. as closely as possible, and to only implement functionality that complies with
  402. the released standards from UEFI ASWG. As a practical matter, there will be
  403. vendors that provide bad ACPI tables or violate the standards in some way.
  404. If this is because of errors, quirks and fix-ups may be necessary, but will
  405. be avoided if possible. If there are features missing from ACPI that preclude
  406. it from being used on a platform, ECRs (Engineering Change Requests) should be
  407. submitted to ASWG and go through the normal approval process; for those that
  408. are not UEFI members, many other members of the Linux community are and would
  409. likely be willing to assist in submitting ECRs.
  410. Linux Code
  411. ----------
  412. Individual items specific to Linux on Arm, contained in the Linux
  413. source code, are in the list that follows:
  414. ACPI_OS_NAME
  415. This macro defines the string to be returned when
  416. an ACPI method invokes the _OS method. On Arm
  417. systems, this macro will be "Linux" by default.
  418. The command line parameter acpi_os=<string>
  419. can be used to set it to some other value. The
  420. default value for other architectures is "Microsoft
  421. Windows NT", for example.
  422. ACPI Objects
  423. ------------
  424. Detailed expectations for ACPI tables and object are listed in the file
  425. Documentation/arch/arm64/acpi_object_usage.rst.
  426. References
  427. ----------
  428. [0] https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0094/latest
  429. document Arm-DEN-0094: "Arm Base System Architecture", version 1.0C, dated 6 Oct 2022
  430. [1] https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0044/latest
  431. Document Arm-DEN-0044: "Arm Base Boot Requirements", version 2.0G, dated 15 Apr 2022
  432. [2] https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0029/latest
  433. Document Arm-DEN-0029: "Arm Server Base System Architecture", version 7.1, dated 06 Oct 2022
  434. [3] http://www.secretlab.ca/archives/151,
  435. 10 Jan 2015, Copyright (c) 2015,
  436. Linaro Ltd., written by Grant Likely.
  437. [4] _DSD (Device Specific Data) Implementation Guide
  438. https://github.com/UEFI/DSD-Guide/blob/main/dsd-guide.pdf
  439. [5] Kernel code for the unified device
  440. property interface can be found in
  441. include/linux/property.h and drivers/base/property.c.
  442. Authors
  443. -------
  444. - Al Stone <al.stone@linaro.org>
  445. - Graeme Gregory <graeme.gregory@linaro.org>
  446. - Hanjun Guo <hanjun.guo@linaro.org>
  447. - Grant Likely <grant.likely@linaro.org>, for the "Why ACPI on ARM?" section