On Tue, 2018-02-06 at 08:36 +1100, Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote: > On Fri, 2018-02-02 at 17:32 +0800, Ryder Lee wrote: > > On Wed, 2018-01-31 at 10:02 -0600, Rob Herring wrote: > > > On Wed, Jan 31, 2018 at 1:41 AM, Ryder Lee <ryder.lee@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > A root complex usually consist of a host bridge and multiple P2P bridges, > > > > and someone may express that in the form of a root node with many subnodes > > > > and list all four interrupts for each slot (child node) in the root node > > > > like this: > > > > > > > > pcie-controller { > > > > ... > > > > interrupt-map-mask = <0xf800 0 0 7>; > > > > interrupt-map = <0x0000 0 0 {INTx} &{interrupt parent} ...> > > > > 0x0800 0 0 {INTx} &{interrupt parent} ...>; > > > > > > > > pcie@0,0 { > > > > reg = <0x0000 0 0 0 0>; > > > > ... > > > > }; > > > > > > > > pcie@1,0 { > > > > reg = <0x0800 0 0 0 0>; > > > > ... > > > > }; > > > > }; > > > > > > > > As shown above, we'd like to propagate IRQs from a root port to the devices > > > > in the hierarchy below it in this way. However, it seems that the current > > > > parser couldn't handle such cases and will get something unexpected below: > > > > > > > > pcieport 0000:00:01.0: assign IRQ: got 213 > > > > igb 0000:01:00.0: assign IRQ: got 212 > > > > > > > > There is a device which is connected to 2nd slot, but the port doesn't share > > > > the same IRQ with its downstream devices. The problem here is that, if the > > > > loop found a P2P bridge, it wouldn't check whether the reg property exists > > > > in ppnode or not but just pass the subordinate devfn to of_irq_parse_raw(), > > > > thus the subsequent flow couldn't correctly resolve them. > > I don't really understand the problem explanation here. Something > doesn't look right as you shouldn't have to change that function, but I > just don't get what you a > > Cheers, > Ben. > I think the code should look at the bridge address <0x0800 ...> we list in bindings for resolving interrupts in this case, but it seems like it use the 'pdev->defvn << 8' which is not really we want and will lead to mismatch. interrupt-map-mask = <0xf800 0 0 7>; interrupt-map = <0x0000 0 0 1 ...>, <0x0000 0 0 2 ...>, <0x0000 0 0 3 ...>, <0x0000 0 0 4 ...>, 0x0800 0 0 1 ...>, 0x0800 0 0 2 ...>, 0x0800 0 0 3 ...>, 0x0800 0 0 4 ...>; ... pcie@1,0 { reg = <0x0800 0 0 0 0>; ... }; Or, alternatively, we could add a interrupt-map property in both child and root node to solve this. The below example is my original version as I don't want to change that function either. interrupt-map-mask = <0xf800 0 0 0>; interrupt-map = <0x0000 0 0 0 ...>, 0x0800 0 0 0 ...>; ... pcie@1,0 { reg = <0x0800 0 0 0 0>; #interrupt-cells = <1>; interrupt-map-mask = <0 0 0 0>; interrupt-map = <0 0 0 0 ...>; ... }; However, I can't find any other similar case in documentation. Thanks. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html