On 24-06-04 14:38:40, Konrad Dybcio wrote: > > > On 6/4/24 14:20, Johan Hovold wrote: > > On Tue, Jun 04, 2024 at 02:00:10PM +0200, Konrad Dybcio wrote: > > > On 6/3/24 14:52, Johan Hovold wrote: > > > > > > As I just mentioned in my reply on the PHY patch, this does not seem to > > > > work on the CRD were the link still come up as 2-lane (also with the > > > > clocks fixed): > > > > > > > > qcom-pcie 1bf8000.pci: PCIe Gen.4 x2 link up > > > > > > > > So something appears to be wrong here or in the PHY changes. > > > > > > Is the device on the other end x4-capable? Or does it not matter in > > > this log line? > > > > Yes, of course. It's the CRD as I wrote above, and you can tell from > > other log entries: > > > > pci 0007:01:00.0: 31.506 Gb/s available PCIe bandwidth, limited by 16.0 GT/s PCIe x2 link at 0007:00:00.0 (capable of 63.012 Gb/s with 16.0 GT/s PCIe x4 link) > > > > lspci and what Windows reports. > Ok, good. I was scared of double-sourcing of parts that are not identical > in spec.. > On my CRD, there is a KBG50ZNS256G. > [1] suggests this wasn't ever achieved.. which makes the cover letter of > this series a bit misleading.. True ... > > What does the TCSR check return? If 0, can you hardcode it to 1 and see if > the link comes up at x4? TCSR check returns 1. But that is not enough. The PCIe controller needs to handles some stuff about margining. See the following patchset. https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pci/20240501163610.8900-3-quic_schintav@xxxxxxxxxxx/ But even with this, I'm not able to get 4-lanes mode to work (yet). So it must be something else in the controller driver that is needed. IIRC, this is the first Qualcomm platform that would support Gen4 with 4-lanes upstream. Maybe I'm wrong. > > Konrad > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/Zl8H0KOrfuF91kpZ@xxxxxxxxxx/