On Thursday 15 April 2021 10:13:17 Rob Herring wrote: > On Thu, Apr 15, 2021 at 3:45 AM Marek Behun <marek.behun@xxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Thu, 15 Apr 2021 10:36:40 +0200 > > Pali Rohár <pali@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > On Tuesday 13 April 2021 13:17:29 Rob Herring wrote: > > > > On Mon, Apr 12, 2021 at 7:41 AM Pali Rohár <pali@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > Since commit 526a76991b7b ("PCI: aardvark: Implement driver 'remove' > > > > > function and allow to build it as module") PCIe controller driver for > > > > > Armada 37xx can be dynamically loaded and unloaded at runtime. Also driver > > > > > allows dynamic binding and unbinding of PCIe controller device. > > > > > > > > > > Kernel PCI subsystem assigns by default dynamically allocated PCI domain > > > > > number (starting from zero) for this PCIe controller every time when device > > > > > is bound. So PCI domain changes after every unbind / bind operation. > > > > > > > > PCI host bridges as a module are relatively new, so seems likely a bug to me. > > > > > > Why a bug? It is there since 5.10 and it is working. > > I mean historically, the PCI subsystem didn't even support host > bridges as a module. They weren't even proper drivers and it was all > arch specific code. Most of the host bridge drivers are still built-in > only. This seems like a small detail that was easily overlooked. > unbind is not a well tested path. Ok! Just to note that during my testing I have not spotted any issue. > > > > > Alternative way for assigning PCI domain number is to use static allocated > > > > > numbers defined in Device Tree. This option has requirement that every PCI > > > > > controller in system must have defined PCI bus number in Device Tree. > > > > > > > > That seems entirely pointless from a DT point of view with a single PCI bridge. > > > > > > If domain id is not specified in DT then kernel uses counter and assigns > > > counter++. So it is not pointless if we want to have stable domain id. > > > > What Rob is trying to say is that > > - the bug is that kernel assigns counter++ > > - device-tree should not be used to fix problems with how kernel does > > things > > - if a device has only one PCIe controller, it is pointless to define > > it's pci-domain. If there were multiple controllers, then it would > > make sense, but there is only one > > Yes. I think what we want here is a domain bitmap rather than a > counter and we assign the lowest free bit. That could also allow for > handling a mixture of fixed domain numbers and dynamically assigned > ones. Currently this code is implemented in pci_bus_find_domain_nr() function. IIRC domain number is 16bit integer, so plain bitmap would consume 8 kB of memory. I'm not sure if it is fine or some other tree-based structure for allocated domain numbers is needed. > You could create scenarios where the numbers change on you, but it > wouldn't be any different than say plugging in USB serial adapters. > You get the same ttyUSBx device when you re-attach unless there's been > other ttyUSBx devices attached/detached. This should be fine for most scenarios. Dynamically attaching / detaching PCI domain is not such common action... Will you implement this new feature?