* EfiTestManagedDevice() issue in driver GetControllerName() function @ 2017-02-21 20:07 David A. Van Arnem 2017-02-21 21:37 ` Followup : " David A. Van Arnem 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: David A. Van Arnem @ 2017-02-21 20:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: edk2-devel Hi all, I am developing a UEFI_DRIVER for a custom PCIe device. I've followed the UEFI Driver Model, and implemented the Driver Binding, Component Name, and Component Name 2 protocols for my driver. I'm trying to retrieve the Controller Name from this driver in a UEFI_APPLICATION, but I've run into an issue. In the driver's Start() function, I open the EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL on ControllerHandle using the following: Status = gBS->OpenProtocol ( ControllerHandle, &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid, (VOID **)&PciIoProtocol, This->DriverBindingHandle, ControllerHandle, EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_DRIVER ); And leave it open when Start() exits, unless some other part of the Start() function fails, which doesn't appear to be happening based on my debug messages. Following some of the examples in edk2, in my Component Name's GetControllerName() function, I used EfiTestManagedDevice() to check that the ControllerHandle opened EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL: Status = EfiTestManagedDevice ( ControllerHandle, g<devicename>DriverBinding.DriverBindingHandle, &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid ); Finally, to get the Controller Name in the application, I first get a buffer of handles that publish the ComponentName2 protocol, then walk through each and call GetControllerName(). However, the EfiTestManagedDevice() check in my driver is returning EFI_UNSUPPORTED, indicating the protocol is not supported on the handle. Furthermore, after using "load <drivername>.efi" from the shell, openinfo on the handle returns: Handle 188 (6E16A798) ComponentName2 ComponentName DriverBinding Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(200) HandProt Image(<null string>) ImageDevicePath Drv[187] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(01) GetProt Image(<null string>) LoadedImage Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(09) HandProt Image(<null string>) I feel like maybe I'm missing a step here. Should I see PciIo in openinfo? Do I need to open a "child" instance of the ControllerHandle in my application to get EfiTestManagedDevice() to pass? I'm not sure if that's the right terminology, I'm having a little difficulty understanding the "child" concept in this context. Any tips appreciated. -- Regards, David Van Arnem Development Engineer IV Computer Measurement Laboratory, LLC ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Followup : EfiTestManagedDevice() issue in driver GetControllerName() function 2017-02-21 20:07 EfiTestManagedDevice() issue in driver GetControllerName() function David A. Van Arnem @ 2017-02-21 21:37 ` David A. Van Arnem 2017-02-21 22:10 ` Jeff Westfahl 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: David A. Van Arnem @ 2017-02-21 21:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: edk2-devel Hello again, I think the problem lies in my application, as upon further investigation, all the handles that publish the Component Name 2 protocol appear to be failing the EfiTestManagedDevice() check (they all return EFI_UNSUPPORTED). My eventual goal is, given a buffer of handles that publish EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL, I would like to locate my specific device. I was going to do a string comparison of the ControllerName, but this doesn't seem to be the right approach. Is there a recommended way to accomplish this? Regards, David On 02/21/2017 01:07 PM, David A. Van Arnem wrote: > Hi all, > > I am developing a UEFI_DRIVER for a custom PCIe device. I've followed > the UEFI Driver Model, and implemented the Driver Binding, Component > Name, and Component Name 2 protocols for my driver. I'm trying to > retrieve the Controller Name from this driver in a UEFI_APPLICATION, but > I've run into an issue. > > In the driver's Start() function, I open the EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL on > ControllerHandle using the following: > > Status = gBS->OpenProtocol ( > ControllerHandle, > &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid, > (VOID **)&PciIoProtocol, > This->DriverBindingHandle, > ControllerHandle, > EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_DRIVER > ); > > And leave it open when Start() exits, unless some other part of the > Start() function fails, which doesn't appear to be happening based on my > debug messages. > > Following some of the examples in edk2, in my Component Name's > GetControllerName() function, I used EfiTestManagedDevice() to check > that the ControllerHandle opened EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL: > > Status = EfiTestManagedDevice ( > ControllerHandle, > g<devicename>DriverBinding.DriverBindingHandle, > &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid > ); > > Finally, to get the Controller Name in the application, I first get a > buffer of handles that publish the ComponentName2 protocol, then walk > through each and call GetControllerName(). > > However, the EfiTestManagedDevice() check in my driver is returning > EFI_UNSUPPORTED, indicating the protocol is not supported on the handle. > Furthermore, after using "load <drivername>.efi" from the shell, > openinfo on the handle returns: > > Handle 188 (6E16A798) > ComponentName2 > ComponentName > DriverBinding > Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(200) HandProt Image(<null string>) > ImageDevicePath > Drv[187] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(01) GetProt Image(<null string>) > LoadedImage > Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(09) HandProt Image(<null string>) > > I feel like maybe I'm missing a step here. Should I see PciIo in > openinfo? Do I need to open a "child" instance of the ControllerHandle > in my application to get EfiTestManagedDevice() to pass? I'm not sure > if that's the right terminology, I'm having a little difficulty > understanding the "child" concept in this context. Any tips appreciated. > -- Regards, David Van Arnem Development Engineer IV Computer Measurement Laboratory, LLC ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Followup : EfiTestManagedDevice() issue in driver GetControllerName() function 2017-02-21 21:37 ` Followup : " David A. Van Arnem @ 2017-02-21 22:10 ` Jeff Westfahl 2017-02-21 22:24 ` David A. Van Arnem 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Jeff Westfahl @ 2017-02-21 22:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: David A. Van Arnem; +Cc: edk2-devel Hello David, It sounds like you are trying to get a list of handles to your specific devices, correct? One way to do this is to create a new protocol for your devices and create an instance of this protocol when your driver attaches to a PCI device. Then you can just retrieve all handles that match your new protocol. Creating a new protocol for this use case could be as simple as just allocating a unique GUID, using uuidgen or something similar. You don't necessarily need to have data or functions associated with your protocol for this purpose, although that may prove useful. I wouldn't consider myself an expert of any kind on UEFI drivers, so if others see problems with my suggestions or have better ideas, please chime in. Regards, Jeff On Tue, 21 Feb 2017, David A. Van Arnem wrote: > Hello again, > > I think the problem lies in my application, as upon further > investigation, all the handles that publish the Component Name 2 > protocol appear to be failing the EfiTestManagedDevice() check (they all > return EFI_UNSUPPORTED). My eventual goal is, given a buffer of handles > that publish EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL, I would like to locate my specific > device. I was going to do a string comparison of the ControllerName, > but this doesn't seem to be the right approach. Is there a recommended > way to accomplish this? > > Regards, > David > > On 02/21/2017 01:07 PM, David A. Van Arnem wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> I am developing a UEFI_DRIVER for a custom PCIe device. I've followed >> the UEFI Driver Model, and implemented the Driver Binding, Component >> Name, and Component Name 2 protocols for my driver. I'm trying to >> retrieve the Controller Name from this driver in a UEFI_APPLICATION, but >> I've run into an issue. >> >> In the driver's Start() function, I open the EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL on >> ControllerHandle using the following: >> >> Status = gBS->OpenProtocol ( >> ControllerHandle, >> &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid, >> (VOID **)&PciIoProtocol, >> This->DriverBindingHandle, >> ControllerHandle, >> EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_DRIVER >> ); >> >> And leave it open when Start() exits, unless some other part of the >> Start() function fails, which doesn't appear to be happening based on my >> debug messages. >> >> Following some of the examples in edk2, in my Component Name's >> GetControllerName() function, I used EfiTestManagedDevice() to check >> that the ControllerHandle opened EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL: >> >> Status = EfiTestManagedDevice ( >> ControllerHandle, >> g<devicename>DriverBinding.DriverBindingHandle, >> &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid >> ); >> >> Finally, to get the Controller Name in the application, I first get a >> buffer of handles that publish the ComponentName2 protocol, then walk >> through each and call GetControllerName(). >> >> However, the EfiTestManagedDevice() check in my driver is returning >> EFI_UNSUPPORTED, indicating the protocol is not supported on the handle. >> Furthermore, after using "load <drivername>.efi" from the shell, >> openinfo on the handle returns: >> >> Handle 188 (6E16A798) >> ComponentName2 >> ComponentName >> DriverBinding >> Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(200) HandProt Image(<null string>) >> ImageDevicePath >> Drv[187] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(01) GetProt Image(<null string>) >> LoadedImage >> Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(09) HandProt Image(<null string>) >> >> I feel like maybe I'm missing a step here. Should I see PciIo in >> openinfo? Do I need to open a "child" instance of the ControllerHandle >> in my application to get EfiTestManagedDevice() to pass? I'm not sure >> if that's the right terminology, I'm having a little difficulty >> understanding the "child" concept in this context. Any tips appreciated. >> > > -- > Regards, > David Van Arnem > Development Engineer IV > Computer Measurement Laboratory, LLC > > _______________________________________________ > edk2-devel mailing list > edk2-devel@lists.01.org > https://lists.01.org/mailman/listinfo/edk2-devel > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Followup : EfiTestManagedDevice() issue in driver GetControllerName() function 2017-02-21 22:10 ` Jeff Westfahl @ 2017-02-21 22:24 ` David A. Van Arnem 2017-02-21 22:30 ` Jeff Westfahl 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: David A. Van Arnem @ 2017-02-21 22:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jeff Westfahl; +Cc: edk2-devel Hi Jeff, On 02/21/2017 03:10 PM, Jeff Westfahl wrote: > Hello David, > > It sounds like you are trying to get a list of handles to your specific > devices, correct? Yes, exactly. > > One way to do this is to create a new protocol for your devices and > create an instance of this protocol when your driver attaches to a PCI > device. Then you can just retrieve all handles that match your new > protocol. > > Creating a new protocol for this use case could be as simple as just > allocating a unique GUID, using uuidgen or something similar. You don't > necessarily need to have data or functions associated with your protocol > for this purpose, although that may prove useful. This sounds like a simple method to accomplish what I need, thanks. I assume I would install the custom protocol in the same place I install the Driver Binding and Component Name(2) implementations? Regards, David > > I wouldn't consider myself an expert of any kind on UEFI drivers, so if > others see problems with my suggestions or have better ideas, please > chime in. > > Regards, > Jeff > > On Tue, 21 Feb 2017, David A. Van Arnem wrote: > >> Hello again, >> >> I think the problem lies in my application, as upon further >> investigation, all the handles that publish the Component Name 2 >> protocol appear to be failing the EfiTestManagedDevice() check (they all >> return EFI_UNSUPPORTED). My eventual goal is, given a buffer of handles >> that publish EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL, I would like to locate my specific >> device. I was going to do a string comparison of the ControllerName, >> but this doesn't seem to be the right approach. Is there a recommended >> way to accomplish this? >> >> Regards, >> David >> >> On 02/21/2017 01:07 PM, David A. Van Arnem wrote: >>> Hi all, >>> >>> I am developing a UEFI_DRIVER for a custom PCIe device. I've followed >>> the UEFI Driver Model, and implemented the Driver Binding, Component >>> Name, and Component Name 2 protocols for my driver. I'm trying to >>> retrieve the Controller Name from this driver in a UEFI_APPLICATION, but >>> I've run into an issue. >>> >>> In the driver's Start() function, I open the EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL on >>> ControllerHandle using the following: >>> >>> Status = gBS->OpenProtocol ( >>> ControllerHandle, >>> &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid, >>> (VOID **)&PciIoProtocol, >>> This->DriverBindingHandle, >>> ControllerHandle, >>> EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_DRIVER >>> ); >>> >>> And leave it open when Start() exits, unless some other part of the >>> Start() function fails, which doesn't appear to be happening based on my >>> debug messages. >>> >>> Following some of the examples in edk2, in my Component Name's >>> GetControllerName() function, I used EfiTestManagedDevice() to check >>> that the ControllerHandle opened EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL: >>> >>> Status = EfiTestManagedDevice ( >>> ControllerHandle, >>> g<devicename>DriverBinding.DriverBindingHandle, >>> &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid >>> ); >>> >>> Finally, to get the Controller Name in the application, I first get a >>> buffer of handles that publish the ComponentName2 protocol, then walk >>> through each and call GetControllerName(). >>> >>> However, the EfiTestManagedDevice() check in my driver is returning >>> EFI_UNSUPPORTED, indicating the protocol is not supported on the handle. >>> Furthermore, after using "load <drivername>.efi" from the shell, >>> openinfo on the handle returns: >>> >>> Handle 188 (6E16A798) >>> ComponentName2 >>> ComponentName >>> DriverBinding >>> Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(200) HandProt Image(<null string>) >>> ImageDevicePath >>> Drv[187] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(01) GetProt Image(<null string>) >>> LoadedImage >>> Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(09) HandProt Image(<null string>) >>> >>> I feel like maybe I'm missing a step here. Should I see PciIo in >>> openinfo? Do I need to open a "child" instance of the ControllerHandle >>> in my application to get EfiTestManagedDevice() to pass? I'm not sure >>> if that's the right terminology, I'm having a little difficulty >>> understanding the "child" concept in this context. Any tips >>> appreciated. >>> >> >> -- >> Regards, >> David Van Arnem >> Development Engineer IV >> Computer Measurement Laboratory, LLC >> >> _______________________________________________ >> edk2-devel mailing list >> edk2-devel@lists.01.org >> https://lists.01.org/mailman/listinfo/edk2-devel >> -- Regards, David Van Arnem Development Engineer IV Computer Measurement Laboratory, LLC ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Followup : EfiTestManagedDevice() issue in driver GetControllerName() function 2017-02-21 22:24 ` David A. Van Arnem @ 2017-02-21 22:30 ` Jeff Westfahl 2017-02-21 22:57 ` David A. Van Arnem 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Jeff Westfahl @ 2017-02-21 22:30 UTC (permalink / raw) To: David A. Van Arnem; +Cc: Jeff Westfahl, edk2-devel Hi David, You would install the protocol in the start function of your driver. When the start function is called, it passes you an EFI_HANDLE. You install your protocol on this handle. Regards, Jeff On Tue, 21 Feb 2017, David A. Van Arnem wrote: > Hi Jeff, > > On 02/21/2017 03:10 PM, Jeff Westfahl wrote: >> Hello David, >> >> It sounds like you are trying to get a list of handles to your specific >> devices, correct? > > Yes, exactly. > >> >> One way to do this is to create a new protocol for your devices and >> create an instance of this protocol when your driver attaches to a PCI >> device. Then you can just retrieve all handles that match your new >> protocol. >> >> Creating a new protocol for this use case could be as simple as just >> allocating a unique GUID, using uuidgen or something similar. You don't >> necessarily need to have data or functions associated with your protocol >> for this purpose, although that may prove useful. > > This sounds like a simple method to accomplish what I need, thanks. I > assume I would install the custom protocol in the same place I install > the Driver Binding and Component Name(2) implementations? > > Regards, > David > >> >> I wouldn't consider myself an expert of any kind on UEFI drivers, so if >> others see problems with my suggestions or have better ideas, please >> chime in. >> >> Regards, >> Jeff >> >> On Tue, 21 Feb 2017, David A. Van Arnem wrote: >> >>> Hello again, >>> >>> I think the problem lies in my application, as upon further >>> investigation, all the handles that publish the Component Name 2 >>> protocol appear to be failing the EfiTestManagedDevice() check (they all >>> return EFI_UNSUPPORTED). My eventual goal is, given a buffer of handles >>> that publish EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL, I would like to locate my specific >>> device. I was going to do a string comparison of the ControllerName, >>> but this doesn't seem to be the right approach. Is there a recommended >>> way to accomplish this? >>> >>> Regards, >>> David >>> >>> On 02/21/2017 01:07 PM, David A. Van Arnem wrote: >>>> Hi all, >>>> >>>> I am developing a UEFI_DRIVER for a custom PCIe device. I've followed >>>> the UEFI Driver Model, and implemented the Driver Binding, Component >>>> Name, and Component Name 2 protocols for my driver. I'm trying to >>>> retrieve the Controller Name from this driver in a UEFI_APPLICATION, but >>>> I've run into an issue. >>>> >>>> In the driver's Start() function, I open the EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL on >>>> ControllerHandle using the following: >>>> >>>> Status = gBS->OpenProtocol ( >>>> ControllerHandle, >>>> &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid, >>>> (VOID **)&PciIoProtocol, >>>> This->DriverBindingHandle, >>>> ControllerHandle, >>>> EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_DRIVER >>>> ); >>>> >>>> And leave it open when Start() exits, unless some other part of the >>>> Start() function fails, which doesn't appear to be happening based on my >>>> debug messages. >>>> >>>> Following some of the examples in edk2, in my Component Name's >>>> GetControllerName() function, I used EfiTestManagedDevice() to check >>>> that the ControllerHandle opened EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL: >>>> >>>> Status = EfiTestManagedDevice ( >>>> ControllerHandle, >>>> g<devicename>DriverBinding.DriverBindingHandle, >>>> &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid >>>> ); >>>> >>>> Finally, to get the Controller Name in the application, I first get a >>>> buffer of handles that publish the ComponentName2 protocol, then walk >>>> through each and call GetControllerName(). >>>> >>>> However, the EfiTestManagedDevice() check in my driver is returning >>>> EFI_UNSUPPORTED, indicating the protocol is not supported on the handle. >>>> Furthermore, after using "load <drivername>.efi" from the shell, >>>> openinfo on the handle returns: >>>> >>>> Handle 188 (6E16A798) >>>> ComponentName2 >>>> ComponentName >>>> DriverBinding >>>> Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(200) HandProt Image(<null string>) >>>> ImageDevicePath >>>> Drv[187] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(01) GetProt Image(<null string>) >>>> LoadedImage >>>> Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(09) HandProt Image(<null string>) >>>> >>>> I feel like maybe I'm missing a step here. Should I see PciIo in >>>> openinfo? Do I need to open a "child" instance of the ControllerHandle >>>> in my application to get EfiTestManagedDevice() to pass? I'm not sure >>>> if that's the right terminology, I'm having a little difficulty >>>> understanding the "child" concept in this context. Any tips >>>> appreciated. >>>> >>> >>> -- >>> Regards, >>> David Van Arnem >>> Development Engineer IV >>> Computer Measurement Laboratory, LLC >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> edk2-devel mailing list >>> edk2-devel@lists.01.org >>> https://lists.01.org/mailman/listinfo/edk2-devel >>> > > -- > Regards, > David Van Arnem > Development Engineer IV > Computer Measurement Laboratory, LLC > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Followup : EfiTestManagedDevice() issue in driver GetControllerName() function 2017-02-21 22:30 ` Jeff Westfahl @ 2017-02-21 22:57 ` David A. Van Arnem 0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: David A. Van Arnem @ 2017-02-21 22:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jeff Westfahl; +Cc: edk2-devel On 02/21/2017 03:30 PM, Jeff Westfahl wrote: > Hi David, > > You would install the protocol in the start function of your driver. > When the start function is called, it passes you an EFI_HANDLE. You > install your protocol on this handle. Great! Thanks for your time. Regards, David > > Regards, > Jeff > > On Tue, 21 Feb 2017, David A. Van Arnem wrote: > >> Hi Jeff, >> >> On 02/21/2017 03:10 PM, Jeff Westfahl wrote: >>> Hello David, >>> >>> It sounds like you are trying to get a list of handles to your specific >>> devices, correct? >> >> Yes, exactly. >> >>> >>> One way to do this is to create a new protocol for your devices and >>> create an instance of this protocol when your driver attaches to a PCI >>> device. Then you can just retrieve all handles that match your new >>> protocol. >>> >>> Creating a new protocol for this use case could be as simple as just >>> allocating a unique GUID, using uuidgen or something similar. You don't >>> necessarily need to have data or functions associated with your protocol >>> for this purpose, although that may prove useful. >> >> This sounds like a simple method to accomplish what I need, thanks. I >> assume I would install the custom protocol in the same place I install >> the Driver Binding and Component Name(2) implementations? >> >> Regards, >> David >> >>> >>> I wouldn't consider myself an expert of any kind on UEFI drivers, so if >>> others see problems with my suggestions or have better ideas, please >>> chime in. >>> >>> Regards, >>> Jeff >>> >>> On Tue, 21 Feb 2017, David A. Van Arnem wrote: >>> >>>> Hello again, >>>> >>>> I think the problem lies in my application, as upon further >>>> investigation, all the handles that publish the Component Name 2 >>>> protocol appear to be failing the EfiTestManagedDevice() check (they >>>> all >>>> return EFI_UNSUPPORTED). My eventual goal is, given a buffer of >>>> handles >>>> that publish EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL, I would like to locate my specific >>>> device. I was going to do a string comparison of the ControllerName, >>>> but this doesn't seem to be the right approach. Is there a recommended >>>> way to accomplish this? >>>> >>>> Regards, >>>> David >>>> >>>> On 02/21/2017 01:07 PM, David A. Van Arnem wrote: >>>>> Hi all, >>>>> >>>>> I am developing a UEFI_DRIVER for a custom PCIe device. I've followed >>>>> the UEFI Driver Model, and implemented the Driver Binding, Component >>>>> Name, and Component Name 2 protocols for my driver. I'm trying to >>>>> retrieve the Controller Name from this driver in a >>>>> UEFI_APPLICATION, but >>>>> I've run into an issue. >>>>> >>>>> In the driver's Start() function, I open the EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL on >>>>> ControllerHandle using the following: >>>>> >>>>> Status = gBS->OpenProtocol ( >>>>> ControllerHandle, >>>>> &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid, >>>>> (VOID **)&PciIoProtocol, >>>>> This->DriverBindingHandle, >>>>> ControllerHandle, >>>>> EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_DRIVER >>>>> ); >>>>> >>>>> And leave it open when Start() exits, unless some other part of the >>>>> Start() function fails, which doesn't appear to be happening based >>>>> on my >>>>> debug messages. >>>>> >>>>> Following some of the examples in edk2, in my Component Name's >>>>> GetControllerName() function, I used EfiTestManagedDevice() to check >>>>> that the ControllerHandle opened EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL: >>>>> >>>>> Status = EfiTestManagedDevice ( >>>>> ControllerHandle, >>>>> g<devicename>DriverBinding.DriverBindingHandle, >>>>> &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid >>>>> ); >>>>> >>>>> Finally, to get the Controller Name in the application, I first get a >>>>> buffer of handles that publish the ComponentName2 protocol, then walk >>>>> through each and call GetControllerName(). >>>>> >>>>> However, the EfiTestManagedDevice() check in my driver is returning >>>>> EFI_UNSUPPORTED, indicating the protocol is not supported on the >>>>> handle. >>>>> Furthermore, after using "load <drivername>.efi" from the shell, >>>>> openinfo on the handle returns: >>>>> >>>>> Handle 188 (6E16A798) >>>>> ComponentName2 >>>>> ComponentName >>>>> DriverBinding >>>>> Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(200) HandProt Image(<null string>) >>>>> ImageDevicePath >>>>> Drv[187] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(01) GetProt Image(<null string>) >>>>> LoadedImage >>>>> Drv[01] Ctrl[ ] Cnt(09) HandProt Image(<null string>) >>>>> >>>>> I feel like maybe I'm missing a step here. Should I see PciIo in >>>>> openinfo? Do I need to open a "child" instance of the >>>>> ControllerHandle >>>>> in my application to get EfiTestManagedDevice() to pass? I'm not sure >>>>> if that's the right terminology, I'm having a little difficulty >>>>> understanding the "child" concept in this context. Any tips >>>>> appreciated. >>>>> >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Regards, >>>> David Van Arnem >>>> Development Engineer IV >>>> Computer Measurement Laboratory, LLC >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> edk2-devel mailing list >>>> edk2-devel@lists.01.org >>>> https://lists.01.org/mailman/listinfo/edk2-devel >>>> >> >> -- >> Regards, >> David Van Arnem >> Development Engineer IV >> Computer Measurement Laboratory, LLC >> >> -- Regards, David Van Arnem Development Engineer IV Computer Measurement Laboratory, LLC ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2017-02-21 22:57 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2017-02-21 20:07 EfiTestManagedDevice() issue in driver GetControllerName() function David A. Van Arnem 2017-02-21 21:37 ` Followup : " David A. Van Arnem 2017-02-21 22:10 ` Jeff Westfahl 2017-02-21 22:24 ` David A. Van Arnem 2017-02-21 22:30 ` Jeff Westfahl 2017-02-21 22:57 ` David A. Van Arnem
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