Hi Thomas, On Tue, Feb 19, 2019 at 11:27:47AM +0100, Thomas Petazzoni wrote: > On Mon, 18 Feb 2019 21:37:25 +0100 > Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > I would say we should strengthen the behavior of outX() where possible. > > > > I don't know if arm64 actually has a way of doing that, my understanding > > > > earlier was that the AXI bus was already posted, so there is not much > > > > you can do here to define __io_paw() in a way that will prevent posted > > > > writes. > > > > > > If we could map I/O space using different page table attributes (probably by > > > hacking pci_remap_iospace() ?) then we could disable the > > > early-write-acknowledge hint and implement __io_paw() as a completion > > > barrier, although it would be at the mercy of the system as to whether or > > > not that requires a response from the RC. > > > > Ah, it seems we actually do that on 32-bit ARM, at least on one platform, > > see 6a02734d420f ("ARM: mvebu: map PCI I/O regions strongly ordered") > > and prior commits. > > Yes, some Marvell Armada 32-bit platforms have an errata that require > the PCI MEM and PCI I/O regions to be mapped strongly ordered. > > BTW, this requirement prevents us from using the pci_remap_iospace() > API from drivers/pci, because it assumes page attributes of > pgprot_device(PAGE_KERNEL). That's why we're still using the > ARM-specific pci_ioremap_io() function. Ah, I think I vaguely remember that. It was to avoid a hardware deadlock, right? In which case, I'd rather consider this use of strongly-ordered memory an exceptional case as opposed to a general property of I/O mappings. > > > I would still prefer to document the weaker semantics as the portable > > > interface, unless there are portable drivers relying on this today (which > > > would imply that it's widely supported by other architectures). > > > > I don't know of any portable driver that actually relies on it, but > > that's mainly because there are very few portable drivers that > > use inb()/outb() in the first place. How many of those require > > the non-posted behavior I don't know > > > > Adding Thomas, Gregory and Russell to Cc, as they were involved > > in the discussion that led to the 32-bit change, maybe they are > > aware of a specific example. > > I'm just arriving in the middle of this thread, and I'm not sure to > understand what is the question. If the question is whether PCI I/O is > really used in practice, then I've never seen it be used with Marvell > platforms (but I'm also not aware of all PCIe devices people are > using). I personally have a hacked-up version of the e1000e driver > that intentionally does some PCI I/O accesses, that I use as a way to > validate that PCI I/O support is minimally working, but that's it. It was actually even more subtle than that! The question is whether outX() is relied upon to be non-posted in portable drivers, because at the moment it's typicall posted for arm/arm64 systems, with the exception of the Armada erratum above. Cheers, Will