On Fri, Jun 09, 2023 at 03:09:26PM -0700, David E. Box wrote: > Hi Bjorn, > > On Thu, 2023-06-08 at 15:52 -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > On Tue, Apr 11, 2023 at 02:33:23PM -0700, David E. Box wrote: > > > In commit f492edb40b54 ("PCI: vmd: Add quirk to configure PCIe ASPM and > > > LTR") the VMD driver calls pci_enabled_link_state as a callback from > > > pci_bus_walk. Both will acquire the pci_bus_sem lock leading to a lockdep > > > warning. Instead of doing the pci_bus_walk, move the fix to quirks.c using > > > DECLARE_PCI_FIXUP_FINAL. > > > +#define VMD_DEVICE_LTR 0x1003 /* 3145728 ns */ > > > > It would be nice to know how this value was derived. But I know we > > had this hard-coded value before, so it's not new with this patch. > > Do you mean to show the multiplier that determines that value or to > say why this particular number was chosen? For the latter, it the > largest that could be set (given the multipier options) that will > allow the SoC to get to it's lowest power state. And it's the same > so far on all the SoCs covered by the VMD driver. Oh, sorry, I meant "why this number was chosen". PCIe r6.0, sec 7.8.2, says this capability allows software to provide "platform latency information," so I assume this is somehow dependent on platform, but I really don't understand the details of how LTR works, and we didn't have an explanation before, so this was just a "if you happen to know, it might be useful here" comment. > > > +static void quirk_intel_vmd(struct pci_dev *pdev) > > > > I think this quirk could possibly stay in > > drivers/pci/controller/vmd.c, couldn't it? It has a lot of > > VMD-specific knowledge that it would nice to contain in vmd.c. > > I may have misunderstood your comment on V1 then. But you suggested > that this would be typically done as PCI_FIXUP so that the PCI core > could call it and we could avoid the locking issue that was seen > while walking the bus in vmd.c. Right, I think it makes sense to be a DECLARE_PCI_FIXUP_CLASS_FINAL(), but I was thinking that it could be implemented in vmd.c and still be called by the PCI core. But now I'm uncertain since vmd.c can be compiled as a module, and I'm not sure how that could work, since pci_fixup_device() calls things in the __start_pci_fixups_final[] table, and I don't see how loading a module would insert the fixup entry into that table. So maybe it needs to be in quirks.c after all. I think my only remaining questions here are about how to identify devices below VMD and the order of enabling ASPM states vs setting LTR. Bjorn