On Fri, Aug 16, 2024 at 10:30:29AM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote: > On Thu, Aug 15, 2024 at 05:47:17PM -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > [+cc Vidya, Jon since tegra194 does similar things] > > > > On Mon, Jul 29, 2024 at 05:52:45PM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote: > > > Currently, the endpoint cleanup function dw_pcie_ep_cleanup() and EPF > > > deinit notify function pci_epc_deinit_notify() are called during the > > > execution of qcom_pcie_perst_assert() i.e., when the host has asserted > > > PERST#. But quickly after this step, refclk will also be disabled by the > > > host. > > > > > > All of the Qcom endpoint SoCs supported as of now depend on the refclk from > > > the host for keeping the controller operational. Due to this limitation, > > > any access to the hardware registers in the absence of refclk will result > > > in a whole endpoint crash. Unfortunately, most of the controller cleanups > > > require accessing the hardware registers (like eDMA cleanup performed in > > > dw_pcie_ep_cleanup(), powering down MHI EPF etc...). So these cleanup > > > functions are currently causing the crash in the endpoint SoC once host > > > asserts PERST#. > > > > > > One way to address this issue is by generating the refclk in the endpoint > > > itself and not depending on the host. But that is not always possible as > > > some of the endpoint designs do require the endpoint to consume refclk from > > > the host (as I was told by the Qcom engineers). > > > > > > So let's fix this crash by moving the controller cleanups to the start of > > > the qcom_pcie_perst_deassert() function. qcom_pcie_perst_deassert() is > > > called whenever the host has deasserted PERST# and it is guaranteed that > > > the refclk would be active at this point. So at the start of this function, > > > the controller cleanup can be performed. Once finished, rest of the code > > > execution for PERST# deassert can continue as usual. > > > > What makes this v6.11 material? Does it fix a problem we added in > > v6.11-rc1? > > No, this is not a 6.11 material, but the rest of the patches I > shared offline. For reference, the patches you shared offline are: PCI: qcom: Use OPP only if the platform supports it PCI: qcom-ep: Do not enable resources during probe() PCI: qcom-ep: Disable MHI RAM data parity error interrupt for SA8775P SoC PCI: qcom-ep: Move controller cleanups to qcom_pcie_perst_deassert() > > Is there a Fixes: commit? > > Hmm, the controller addition commit could be the valid fixes tag. > > > This patch essentially does this: > > > > qcom_pcie_perst_assert > > - pci_epc_deinit_notify > > - dw_pcie_ep_cleanup > > qcom_pcie_disable_resources > > > > qcom_pcie_perst_deassert > > + if (pcie_ep->cleanup_pending) > > + pci_epc_deinit_notify(pci->ep.epc); > > + dw_pcie_ep_cleanup(&pci->ep); > > dw_pcie_ep_init_registers > > pci_epc_init_notify > > > > Maybe it makes sense to call both pci_epc_deinit_notify() and > > pci_epc_init_notify() from the PERST# deassert function, but it makes > > me question whether we really need both. > > There is really no need to call pci_epc_deinit_notify() during the first > deassert (i.e., during the ep boot) because there are no cleanups to be done. > It is only needed during a successive PERST# assert + deassert. > > > pcie-tegra194.c has a similar structure: > > > > pex_ep_event_pex_rst_assert > > pci_epc_deinit_notify > > dw_pcie_ep_cleanup > > > > pex_ep_event_pex_rst_deassert > > dw_pcie_ep_init_registers > > pci_epc_init_notify > > > > Is there a reason to make them different, or could/should a similar > > change be made to tegra? > > Design wise both drivers are similar, so it could apply. I didn't > spin a patch because if testing of tegra driver gets delayed (I've > seen this before), then I do not want to stall merging the whole > series. It can and should be separate patches, one per driver. But I don't want to end up with the drivers being needlessly different. > For Qcom it is important to get this merged asap to avoid > the crash. If this is not v6.11 material, there's time to work this out. > > > + if (pcie_ep->cleanup_pending) { > > > > Do we really need this flag? I assume the cleanup functions could > > tell whether any previous setup was done? > > Not so. Some cleanup functions may trigger a warning if attempted to do it > before 'setup'. I think dw_edma_remove() that is part of dw_pcie_ep_cleanup() > does that IIRC. It looks safe to me: dw_pcie_ep_cleanup dw_pcie_edma_remove dw_edma_remove(chip = &pci->edma) # struct dw_pcie *pci dev = chip->dev dw = chip->dw if (!dw) return -ENODEV but if not, it could probably be made safe by adding a NULL pointer check and/or a "chip->dw = NULL" at the right spot. We hardly have any cleanup functions affected by "cleanup_pending", so I think we can decide that they should be safe before 'setup' and just make it so. Bjorn