Re: [RFC PATCH] Revert "arm64: PCI: Exclude ACPI "consumer" resources from host bridge windows"

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On 5/27/21 11:32 AM, Lorenzo Pieralisi wrote:
On Wed, May 26, 2021 at 09:58:36PM +0100, Will Deacon wrote:
On Tue, May 11, 2021 at 01:40:20AM +0200, Maximilian Luz wrote:
The Microsoft Surface Pro X has host bridges defined as

     Name (_HID, EisaId ("PNP0A08") /* PCI Express Bus */)  // _HID: Hardware ID
     Name (_CID, EisaId ("PNP0A03") /* PCI Bus */)  // _CID: Compatible ID

     Method (_CRS, 0, NotSerialized)  // _CRS: Current Resource Settings
     {
         Name (RBUF, ResourceTemplate ()
         {
             Memory32Fixed (ReadWrite,
                 0x60200000,         // Address Base
                 0x01DF0000,         // Address Length
                 )
             WordBusNumber (ResourceProducer, MinFixed, MaxFixed, PosDecode,
                 0x0000,             // Granularity
                 0x0000,             // Range Minimum
                 0x0001,             // Range Maximum
                 0x0000,             // Translation Offset
                 0x0002,             // Length
                 ,, )
         })
         Return (RBUF) /* \_SB_.PCI0._CRS.RBUF */
     }

meaning that the memory resources aren't (explicitly) defined as
"producers", i.e. host bridge windows.

Commit 8fd4391ee717 ("arm64: PCI: Exclude ACPI "consumer" resources from
host bridge windows") introduced a check that removes such resources,
causing BAR allocation failures later on:

     [ 0.150731] pci 0002:00:00.0: BAR 14: no space for [mem size 0x00100000]
     [ 0.150744] pci 0002:00:00.0: BAR 14: failed to assign [mem size 0x00100000]
     [ 0.150758] pci 0002:01:00.0: BAR 0: no space for [mem size 0x00004000 64bit]
     [ 0.150769] pci 0002:01:00.0: BAR 0: failed to assign [mem size 0x00004000 64bit]

This eventually prevents the PCIe NVME drive from being accessible.

On x86 we already skip the check for producer/window due to some history
with negligent firmware. It seems that Microsoft is intent on continuing
that history on their ARM devices, so let's drop that check here too.

Signed-off-by: Maximilian Luz <luzmaximilian@xxxxxxxxx>
---

Please note: I am not sure if this is the right way to fix that, e.g. I
don't know if any additional checks like on IA64 or x86 might be
required instead, or if this might break things on other devices. So
please consider this more as a bug report rather than a fix.

Apologies for the re-send, I seem to have unintentionally added a blank
line before the subject.

---
  arch/arm64/kernel/pci.c | 14 --------------
  1 file changed, 14 deletions(-)

Adding Lorenzo to cc, as he'll have a much better idea about this than me.

This is:

https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210510234020.1330087-1-luzmaximilian@xxxxxxxxx

Sigh. We can't apply this patch since it would trigger regressions on
other platforms (IIUC the root complex registers would end up in the
host bridge memory windows).

I am not keen on reverting commit 8fd4391ee717 because it does the
right thing.

I think this requires a quirk and immediate reporting to Microsoft.

Since I wrote this I have found other arm64 devices with the same
problem. I don't think that this is Microsoft exclusive anymore, but
rather that this is a Qualcomm problem (Qualcomm SoC seems to be the
common thread). See e.g. DSDTs in [1]. So it should probably be reported
to them.

Regards,
Max

[1]: https://github.com/aarch64-laptops/build/tree/dfce25bc12655713c7e1e0422b191e9c944e4fb2/misc



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