Hi Arnd,
Am 01.01.2022 um 05:04 schrieb Arnd Bergmann:
On Wed, Dec 29, 2021 at 10:44 PM Michael Schmitz <schmitzmic@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Am 30.12.2021 um 14:48 schrieb Arnd Bergmann:
On Tue, Dec 28, 2021 at 11:15 PM Michael Schmitz <schmitzmic@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
What some other architectures do is to rely on inb()/outb() to have a
zero-based offset, and use an io_offset in PCI buses to ensure that a
low port number on the bus gets translated into a pointer value for the
virtual mapping in the kernel, which is then represented as an unsigned
int.
M54xx does just that for Coldfire:
arch/m68k/include/asm/io_no.h:
#define PCI_IO_PA 0xf8000000 /* Host physical address */
(used to set PCI BAR mappings, so matches your definition above).
I think coldfire gets it right here, using PCI_IOBASE to find the start of
the window and a zero io_offset:
#define PCI_IOBASE ((void __iomem *) PCI_IO_PA)
Good - I bear that in mind if I ever get around to reactivating my 060
accelerator and the PCI board for that.
All other (MMU) m68k users of inb()/outb() apply an io_offset in the
platform specific address translation:
arch/m68k/include/asm/io_mm.h:
#define q40_isa_io_base 0xff400000
#define enec_isa_read_base 0xfffa0000
#define enec_isa_write_base 0xfffb0000
arch/m68k/include/asm/amigayle.h:
#define GAYLE_IO (0xa20000+zTwoBase) /* 16bit and
even 8bit registers */
#define GAYLE_IO_8BITODD (0xa30000+zTwoBase) /* odd 8bit
registers */
(all constants used in address translation inlines that are used by the
m68k inb()/outb() macros - you can call that the poor man's version of
PCI BAR mappings ...).
This still looks like the same thing to me, where you have inb() take a
zero-based port number, not a pointer. The effect is the same as the
coldfire version, it just uses a custom inline function instead of the
version from asm-generic/io.h.
Right.
So as long as support for any of the m68k PCI or ISA bridges is selected
in the kernel config, the appropriate IO space mapping is applied. If no
support for PCI or ISA bridges is selected, we already fall back to zero
offset mapping (but as far as I can tell, it shouldn't be possible to
build a kernel without bridge support but drivers that require it).
Right.
As this is indistinguishable from architectures that just don't have
a base address for I/O ports (we unfortunately picked 0 as the default
PCI_IOBASE value), my suggestion was to start marking architectures
that may have this problem as using HAS_IOPORT in order to keep
the existing behavior unchanged. If m68k does not suffer from this,
making HAS_IOPORT conditional on those config options that actually
need it would of course be best.
Following your description, HAS_IOPORT would be required for neither of
PCI, ISA or ATARI_ROM_ISA ??
For these three options, we definitely need HAS_IOPORT, which would
imply that some version of inb()/outb() is provided. The difference between
Thanks for clarifying that (and to Niklas as well). Did sound a little
counter-intuitive to me...
using a custom PCI_IOBASE (or an open-coded equivalent) and using
a zero PCI_IOBASE in combination with registering PCI using a custom
io_offset is whether we can use drivers with hardcoded port numbers.
These should depend on a different Kconfig symbol to be introduced
(CONFIG_HARDCODED_IOPORT or similar) once we introduce them,
and you could decide for m68k whether to allow those or not, I would
assume you do want them in order to use certain legacy ISA drivers.
That's exactly the purpose (though we're overmuch pushing the envelope
trying to accomodate legacy ISA drivers on too many platforms).
Cheers,
Michael
Arnd