On Saturday 13 March 2021 15:43:14 Jianjun Wang wrote: > On Thu, 2021-03-11 at 13:38 +0100, Pali Rohár wrote: > > On Wednesday 24 February 2021 14:11:28 Jianjun Wang wrote: > > > +static int mtk_pcie_startup_port(struct mtk_pcie_port *port) > > > +{ > > ... > > > + > > > + /* Delay 100ms to wait the reference clocks become stable */ > > > + msleep(100); > > > + > > > + /* De-assert PERST# signal */ > > > + val &= ~PCIE_PE_RSTB; > > > + writel_relaxed(val, port->base + PCIE_RST_CTRL_REG); > > > > Hello! This is a new driver which introduce yet another custom timeout > > prior PERST# signal for PCIe card is de-asserted. Timeouts for other > > drivers I collected in older email [2]. > > > > Please look at my email [1] about PCIe Warm Reset if you have any clue > > about it. Lorenzo and Rob already expressed that this timeout should not > > be driver specific. But nobody was able to "decode" and "understand" > > PCIe spec yet about these timeouts. > > Hi Pali, > > I think this is more like a platform specific timeout, which is used to > wait for the reference clocks to become stable and finish the reset flow > of HW blocks. > > Here is the steps to start a link training in this HW: > > 1. Assert all reset signals which including the transaction layer, PIPE > interface and internal bus interface; > > 2. De-assert reset signals except the PERST#, this will make the > physical layer active and start to output the reference clock, but the > EP device remains in the reset state. > Before releasing the PERST# signal, the HW blocks needs at least 10ms > to finish the reset flow, and ref-clk needs about 30us to become stable. > > 3. De-assert PERST# signal, wait LTSSM enter L0 state. > > This 100ms timeout is reference to TPVPERL in the PCIe CEM spec. Since > we are in the kernel stage, the power supply has already stabled, this > timeout may not take that long. I think that this is not platform specific timeout or platform specific steps. This matches generic steps as defined in PCIe CEM spec, section 2.2.1. Initial Power-Up (G3 to S0). What is platform specific is just how to achieve these steps. Am I right? ... TPVPERL is one of my timeout candidates as minimal required timeout for Warm Reset. I have wrote it in email: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pci/20200430082245.xblvb7xeamm4e336@pali/ But I'm not sure as specially in none diagram is described just warm reset as defined in mPCIe CEM (3.2.4.3. PERST# Signal). ... Anyway, I would suggest to define constants for those timeouts. I guess that in future we could be able to define "generic" timeout constants which would not be in private driver section, but in some common header file. > > > + > > > + /* Check if the link is up or not */ > > > + err = readl_poll_timeout(port->base + PCIE_LINK_STATUS_REG, val, > > > + !!(val & PCIE_PORT_LINKUP), 20, > > > + 50 * USEC_PER_MSEC); > > > > IIRC, you need to wait at least 100ms after de-asserting PERST# signal > > as it is required by PCIe specs and also because experiments proved that > > some Compex wifi cards (e.g. WLE900VX) are not detected if you do not > > wait this minimal time. > > Yes, this should be 100ms, I will fix it at next version, thanks for > your review. In past Bjorn suggested to use msleep(PCI_PM_D3COLD_WAIT); macro for this step during reviewing aardvark driver. https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pci/20190426161050.GA189964@xxxxxxxxxx/ And next iteration used this PCI_PM_D3COLD_WAIT macro instead of 100: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pci/20190522213351.21366-2-repk@xxxxxxxxxxxx/ > Thanks. > > > > > + if (err) { > > > + val = readl_relaxed(port->base + PCIE_LTSSM_STATUS_REG); > > > + dev_err(port->dev, "PCIe link down, ltssm reg val: %#x\n", val); > > > + return err; > > > + } > > > > [1] - https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pci/20210310110535.zh4pnn4vpmvzwl5q@pali/ > > [2] - https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pci/20200424092546.25p3hdtkehohe3xw@pali/ >