On Sat, Aug 6, 2022 at 5:17 AM Pali Rohár <pali@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Saturday 06 August 2022 16:36:13 Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote: > > Hi Pali, > > > > On Mon, Jul 11, 2022 at 12:51:08AM +0200, Pali Rohár wrote: > > > Hello! > > > > > > Together with Mauri we are working on extending pci-mvebu.c driver to > > > support Orion PCIe controllers as these controllers are same as mvebu > > > controller. > > > > > > There is just one big difference: Config space access on Orion is > > > different. mvebu uses classic Intel CFC/CF8 registers for indirect > > > config space access but Orion has direct memory mapped config space. > > > So Orion DTS files need to have this memory range for config space and > > > pci-mvebu.c driver have to read this range from DTS and properly map it. > > > > > > So my question is: How to properly define config space range in device > > > tree file? In which device tree property and in which format? Please > > > note that this memory range of config space is PCIe root port specific > > > and it requires its own MBUS_ID() like memory range of PCIe MEM and PCIe > > > IO mapping. Please look e.g. at armada-385.dtsi how are MBUS_ID() used: > > > https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/arm/boot/dts/armada-385.dtsi > > > > > > > On most of the platforms, the standard "reg" property is used to specify the > > config space together with other device specific memory regions. For instance, > > on the Qcom platforms based on Designware IP, we have below regions: > > > > reg = <0xfc520000 0x2000>, > > <0xff000000 0x1000>, > > <0xff001000 0x1000>, > > <0xff002000 0x2000>; > > reg-names = "parf", "dbi", "elbi", "config"; > > > > Where "parf" and "elbi" are Qcom controller specific regions, while "dbi" and > > "config" (config space) are common to all Designware IPs. > > > > These properties are documented in: Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pci/qcom,pcie.yaml > > > > Hope this helps! > > Hello! I have already looked at this. But as I pointed in above > armada-385.dtsi file, mvebu is quite complicated. First it does not use > explicit address ranges, but rather macros MBUS_ID() which assign > addresses at kernel runtime by mbus driver. Second issue is that config > space range (like any other resources) are pcie root port specific. So > it cannot be in pcie controller node and in pcie devices is "reg" > property reserved for pci bdf address. > > In last few days, I spent some time on this issue and after reading lot > of pcie dts files, including bindings and other documents (including > open firmware pci2_1.pdf) and I'm proposing following definition: > > soc { > pcie-mem-aperture = <0xe0000000 0x08000000>; /* 128 MiB memory space */ > pcie-cfg-aperture = <0xf0000000 0x01000000>; /* 16 MiB config space */ > pcie-io-aperture = <0xf2000000 0x00100000>; /* 1 MiB I/O space */ > > pcie { > ranges = <0x82000000 0 0x40000 MBUS_ID(0xf0, 0x01) 0x40000 0x0 0x2000>, /* Port 0.0 Internal registers */ > <0x82000000 0 0xf0000000 MBUS_ID(0x04, 0x79) 0 0x0 0x1000000>, /* Port 0.0 Config space */ IMO, this should be 0 for first cell as this is config space. What is 0xf0000000 as that's supposed to be an address in PCI address space. > <0x82000000 1 0x0 MBUS_ID(0x04, 0x59) 0 0x1 0x0>, /* Port 0.0 Mem */ > <0x81000000 1 0x0 MBUS_ID(0x04, 0x51) 0 0x1 0x0>, /* Port 0.0 I/O */ I/O space at 4GB? It's only 32-bits. I guess this is already there from the mvebu binding, but it seems kind of broken... > > pcie@1,0 { > reg = <0x0800 0 0 0 0>; /* BDF 0:1.0 */ > assigned-addresses = <0x82000800 0 0x40000 0x0 0x2000>, /* Port 0.0 Internal registers */ > <0x82000800 0 0xf0000000 0x0 0x1000000>; /* Port 0.0 Config space */ This says it is memory space, not config space. But the PCI binding says config space is not allowed in assigned-addresses. I think the parent ranges needs a config space entry with the BDF for each root port and then this entry should be dropped. It really looks to me like the mvebu binding created these fake PCI addresses to map root ports back to MBUS addresses when BDF could have been used instead. Rob