On Mon, Apr 07, 2014 at 12:36:15PM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > On Monday 07 April 2014 09:31:20 Liviu Dudau wrote: > > On Sat, Apr 05, 2014 at 01:19:53AM +0100, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > > > > Host bridges on x86 could have MMIO apertures that turn CPU memory accesses > > > into PCI port accesses. We could implement any number of I/O port spaces > > > this way, by making the kernel inb()/outb()/etc. interfaces smart enough to > > > use the memory-mapped space instead of (or in addition to) the > > > INB/OUTB/etc. instructions. > > PowerPC actually has this already, as CONFIG_PPC_INDIRECT_PIO meaning that > access to PIO registers is bus specific, and there is also CONFIG_PPC_INDIRECT_MMIO > for the case where MMIO access is not native. > > > Right, sorry for my ignorance then: how does *currently* the device driver do > > the I/O transfer transparent of the implementation mechanism? Or they have > > intimate knowledge of wether the device is behind a host bridge and can do MMIO > > or is on an ISA or CF bus and then it needs INB/OUTB ? And if we make inb/outb > > smarter, does that mean that we need to change the drivers? > > The idea of that would be to not change drivers. > > My preference here would be to only have a generic function for those > architectures that have the simple MMIO access all the time. > > > > ia64 does this (see arch/ia64/include/asm/io.h for a little description) > > > and I think maybe one or two other arches have something similar. > > > > > > > Introduce a pci_register_io_range() helper function that can be used > > > > by the architecture code to keep track of the I/O ranges described by the > > > > PCI bindings. If the PCI_IOBASE macro is not defined that signals > > > > lack of support for PCI and we return an error. > > > > > > I don't quite see how you intend to use this, because this series doesn't > > > include any non-stub implementation of pci_register_io_range(). > > > > > > Is this anything like the ia64 strategy I mentioned above? If so, it would > > > be really nice to unify some of this stuff. > > > > After discussions with Arnd and Catalin I know have a new series that moves > > some of the code from arm64 series into this one. I am putting it through > > testing right know as I am going to have to depend on another series that > > makes PCI_IOBASE defined only for architectures that do MMIO in order to > > choose the correct default implementation for these functions. My hope is > > that I will be able to send the series this week. > > I think migrating other architectures to use the same code should be > a separate effort from adding a generic implementation that can be > used by arm64. It's probably a good idea to have patches to convert > arm32 and/or microblaze. Agree. My updated series only moves the arm64 code into framework to make the arm64 part a noop. Liviu > > Arnd > > -- ==================== | I would like to | | fix the world, | | but they're not | | giving me the | \ source code! / --------------- ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ -- 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