On Thu, Aug 05, 2021 at 03:47:31PM +0800, Dongdong Liu wrote: > Hi Bjorn > > Many thanks for your review. > On 2021/8/5 7:17, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > On Wed, Aug 04, 2021 at 09:47:03PM +0800, Dongdong Liu wrote: > > > 10-Bit Tag capability, introduced in PCIe-4.0 increases the total Tag > > > field size from 8 bits to 10 bits. > > > > > > PCIe spec 5.0 r1.0 section 2.2.6.2 "Considerations for Implementing > > > 10-Bit Tag Capabilities" Implementation Note. > > > For platforms where the RC supports 10-Bit Tag Completer capability, > > > it is highly recommended for platform firmware or operating software > > > that configures PCIe hierarchies to Set the 10-Bit Tag Requester Enable > > > bit automatically in Endpoints with 10-Bit Tag Requester capability. This > > > enables the important class of 10-Bit Tag capable adapters that send > > > Memory Read Requests only to host memory. > > > > Quoted material should be set off with a blank line before it and > > indented by two spaces so it's clear exactly what comes from the spec > > and what you've added. For example, see > > https://git.kernel.org/linus/ec411e02b7a2 > Good point, will fix. > > > > We need to say why we assume it's safe to enable 10-bit tags for all > > devices below a Root Port that supports them. I think this has to do > > with switches being required to forward 10-bit tags correctly even if > > they were designed before 10-bit tags were added to the spec. > > PCIe spec 5.0 r1.0 section 2.2.6.2 "Considerations for Implementing > 10-Bit Tag Capabilities" Implementation Note: > > Switches that lack 10-Bit Tag Completer capability are still able to > forward NPRs and Completions carrying 10-Bit Tags correctly, since the > two new Tag bits are in TLP Header bits that were formerly Reserved, > and Switches are required to forward Reserved TLP Header bits without > modification. However, if such a Switch detects an error with an NPR > carrying a 10-Bit Tag, and that Switch handles the error by acting as > the Completer for the NPR, the resulting Completion will have an > invalid 10-Bit Tag. Thus, it is strongly recommended that Switches > between any components using 10-Bit Tags support 10-Bit Tag Completer > capability. Note that Switches supporting 16.0 GT/s data rates or > greater must support 10-Bit Tag Completer capability. > > This patch also consider to enable 10-Bit Tag for EP device need RP > and Switch device support 10-Bit Tag Completer capability. > > > > And it should call out any cases where it is *not* safe, e.g., if P2P > > traffic is an issue. > Yes, indeed. > > > > If there are cases where we don't want to enable 10-bit tags, whether > > it's to enable P2P traffic or merely to work around device defects, > > that ability needs to be here from the beginning. If somebody needs > > to bisect with 10-bit tags disabled, we don't want a bisection hole > > between this commit and the commit that adds the control. > We provide sysfs file to disable 10-bit tag for P2P traffic when needed. > The details see PATCH 7/8/9. A mechanism for avoiding problems needs to be present from the very beginning so there's no bisection hole. It should not be added by a future patch. The sysfs file is a start, but if we run into an issue, it could mean that we can't boot and run long enough to use sysfs to disable 10-bit tags. So I think we might need a kernel parameter that disables it (and possibly other things like MPS optimization). > Current we do not know the 10-bit tag defective devices, current may no > need do as 8-bit tag does in quirk_no_ext_tags().