On 2021-03-23 18:09, Marc Zyngier wrote:
Hi Robin,
On Tue, 23 Mar 2021 11:45:02 +0000,
Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> wrote:
On 2021-03-22 18:46, Marc Zyngier wrote:
The new 'no_msi' attribute solves the problem of advertising the lack
of MSI capability for host bridges that know for sure that there will
be no MSI for their end-points.
However, there is a whole class of host bridges that cannot know
whether MSIs will be provided or not, as they rely on other blocks
to provide the MSI functionnality, using MSI domains. This is
the case for example on systems that use the ARM GIC architecture.
Introduce a new attribute ('msi_domain') indicating that implicit
dependency, and use this property to set the NO_MSI flag when
no MSI domain is found at probe time.
Acked-by: Bjorn Helgaas <bhelgaas@xxxxxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <maz@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
drivers/pci/probe.c | 2 +-
include/linux/pci.h | 1 +
2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/drivers/pci/probe.c b/drivers/pci/probe.c
index 146bd85c037e..bac9f69a06a8 100644
--- a/drivers/pci/probe.c
+++ b/drivers/pci/probe.c
@@ -925,7 +925,7 @@ static int pci_register_host_bridge(struct pci_host_bridge *bridge)
device_enable_async_suspend(bus->bridge);
pci_set_bus_of_node(bus);
pci_set_bus_msi_domain(bus);
- if (bridge->no_msi)
+ if (bridge->no_msi || (bridge->msi_domain && !bus->dev.msi_domain))
bus->bus_flags |= PCI_BUS_FLAGS_NO_MSI;
if (!parent)
diff --git a/include/linux/pci.h b/include/linux/pci.h
index 48605cca82ae..d322d00db432 100644
--- a/include/linux/pci.h
+++ b/include/linux/pci.h
@@ -551,6 +551,7 @@ struct pci_host_bridge {
unsigned int preserve_config:1; /* Preserve FW resource setup */
unsigned int size_windows:1; /* Enable root bus sizing */
unsigned int no_msi:1; /* Bridge has no MSI support */
+ unsigned int msi_domain:1; /* Bridge wants MSI domain */
Aren't these really the same thing? Either way we're saying the bridge
itself doesn't handle MSIs, it's just in one case we're effectively
encoding a platform-specific assumption that an external domain won't
be provided. I can't help wondering whether that distinction is really
necessary...
There is a subtle difference: no_msi indicates that there is no way
*any* MSI can be dealt with whatsoever (maybe because the RC doesn't
forward the corresponding TLPs?). msi_domain says "no MSI unless...".
PCI says that MSIs are simply memory writes at the transaction level, so
AFAIK unless the host bridge can't support DMA at all, it shouldn't be
in a position to make any assumptions about what transactions mean what.
I suppose there could in theory be an issue in the other direction,
where config space somehow didn't allow access to the MSI capability in
the first place, but then we'd presumably just never detect any device
as being MSI-capable in the first place, and it wouldn't matter either way.
We could implement the former with the latter, but I have the feeling
that's not totally bullet proof. Happy to revisit this if you think it
really matters.
I would expect it to be a fairly safe assumption that a host bridge
which "doesn't support MSIs" wouldn't have an msi-parent set, but I
don't have a strong opinion either way - I just figured we could
probably save a little bit of complexity here.
Cheers,
Robin.