On Mon, Jan 29, 2018 at 10:11:42AM +0530, Manikanta Maddireddy wrote: > > > On 25-Jan-18 8:06 PM, Thierry Reding wrote: > > On Thu, Jan 11, 2018 at 11:38:07AM +0530, Manikanta Maddireddy wrote: > >> Per PCIe r3.0, sec 5.3.3.2.1, PCIe root port shoould broadcast PME_Turn_Off > >> message before PCIe link goes to L2. PME_Turn_Off broadcast mechanism is > >> implemented in AFI module. Each Tegra PCIe root port has its own > >> PME_Turn_Off and PME_TO_Ack bitmap in AFI_PME register, program this > >> register to broadcast PME_Turn_Off message. > >> > >> Signed-off-by: Manikanta Maddireddy <mmaddireddy@xxxxxxxxxx> > >> --- > >> V2: > >> * no change in this patch > >> V3: > >> * add PME bitmap in soc data instead of using compatible string > >> * replace while loop with readl_poll_timeout() for polling > >> * commit log correction > >> V4: > >> * no change in this patch > >> V5: > >> * Rebased on linux-next > >> V6: > >> * no change in this patch > >> > >> drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c | 45 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > >> 1 file changed, 45 insertions(+) > >> > >> diff --git a/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c b/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c > >> index 981f126b14d6..cc33fc0fb300 100644 > >> --- a/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c > >> +++ b/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c > >> @@ -31,6 +31,7 @@ > >> #include <linux/delay.h> > >> #include <linux/export.h> > >> #include <linux/interrupt.h> > >> +#include <linux/iopoll.h> > >> #include <linux/irq.h> > >> #include <linux/irqdomain.h> > >> #include <linux/kernel.h> > >> @@ -153,6 +154,8 @@ > >> #define AFI_INTR_EN_FPCI_TIMEOUT (1 << 7) > >> #define AFI_INTR_EN_PRSNT_SENSE (1 << 8) > >> > >> +#define AFI_PCIE_PME 0xf0 > >> + > >> #define AFI_PCIE_CONFIG 0x0f8 > >> #define AFI_PCIE_CONFIG_PCIE_DISABLE(x) (1 << ((x) + 1)) > >> #define AFI_PCIE_CONFIG_PCIE_DISABLE_ALL 0xe > >> @@ -233,6 +236,8 @@ > >> #define PADS_REFCLK_CFG_PREDI_SHIFT 8 /* 11:8 */ > >> #define PADS_REFCLK_CFG_DRVI_SHIFT 12 /* 15:12 */ > >> > >> +#define PME_ACK_TIMEOUT 10000 > >> + > >> struct tegra_msi { > >> struct msi_controller chip; > >> DECLARE_BITMAP(used, INT_PCI_MSI_NR); > >> @@ -251,6 +256,8 @@ struct tegra_pcie_soc { > >> u32 tx_ref_sel; > >> u32 pads_refclk_cfg0; > >> u32 pads_refclk_cfg1; > >> + u8 pme_turnoff_bit[3]; > >> + u8 pme_ack_bit[3]; > > > > This seems suboptimal to me. Perhaps a better way would be: > > > > struct tegra_pcie_port_soc { > > struct { > > u8 turnoff_bit; > > u8 ack_bit; > > } pme; > > }; > > > > And since we already have num_ports which defines exactly how many ports > > we have: > > > > struct tegra_pcie_soc { > > unsigned int num_ports; > > const struct tegra_pcie_port_soc *ports; > > ... > > }; > > > > I suspect that as you're adding more features we may need more of this > > data. > > > > But I'm fine to keep it like this. We can always switch to something > > different if the above becomes too much cluttered. > > > I agree it is sub optimal. I moved pme bitmap values to soc data because > tegra30 and tegra186 have different bitmap values. To differentiate this > I allocated static memory in tegra_pcie_soc. I am a bit hesitant do dynamic > allocation based on num_ports because I need to use compatible string > to distinguish between tegra30 & tegra186 in runtime. I believe it is OK > to have trade off 16 bits to avoid these compatible check? Sorry if I was unclear. I didn't suggest that you'd dynamically allocate memory, instead you'd hook it up like so: static const struct tegra_pcie_port_soc tegra186_pcie_ports[] = { { .turnoff_bit = 0, .ack_bit = 5 }, { .turnoff_bit = 8, .ack_bit = 10 }, { .turnoff_bit = 12, .ack_bit = 14 }, }; And then in the existing tegra186_pcie, you'd set this: static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra186_pcie = { .num_ports = 3, .ports = tegra186_pcie_ports, ... }; And similar for the others. I realize that this is somewhat more verbose than your original, but I think it's more readable. It also allows you to reuse data, such as: static const struct tegra_pcie_port_soc tegra20_pcie_ports[] = { { .turnoff_bit = 0, .ack_bit = 5 }, { .turnoff_bit = 8, .ack_bit = 10 }, }; ... static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra20_pcie = { .num_ports = 2, .ports = tegra20_pcie_ports, ... }; ... static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra124_pcie = { .num_ports = 2, .ports = tegra20_pcie_ports, ... }; static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra210_pcie = { .num_ports = 2, .ports = tegra20_pcie_ports, ... }; Of course the sharing only works as long as the port definitions don't contain data that's different between the chips. You could even go and derive the .num_ports as ARRAY_SIZE() of the ports definition. So the above does not dynamically allocate memory, it is just a more explicit way of specifying the data. It puts the data closer together, and thereby makes it easier to read, in my opinion. But as I said, feel free to leave this as-is. We can easily rework this later on or if necessary. Thierry
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