Hi, On 22/06/21 14:16, Pali Rohár wrote: > On Tuesday 22 June 2021 12:56:04 Lorenzo Pieralisi wrote: >> [Adding Linus for GPIO discussion, thread: >> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pci/20210531090540.2663171-1-luca@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] >> >> On Tue, Jun 22, 2021 at 01:06:27PM +0200, Pali Rohár wrote: >>> Hello! >>> >>> On Tuesday 22 June 2021 12:57:22 Luca Ceresoli wrote: >>>> Nothing happened after a few weeks... I understand that knowing the >>>> correct reset timings is relevant, but unfortunately I cannot help much >>>> in finding out the correct values. >>>> >>>> However I'm wondering what should happen to this patch. It *does* fix a >>>> real bug, but potentially with an incorrect or non-optimal usleep range. >>>> Do we really want to ignore a bugfix because we are not sure about how >>>> long this delay should be? >>> >>> As there is no better solution right now, I'm fine with your patch. But >>> patch needs to be approved by Lorenzo, so please wait for his final >>> answer. >> >> I am not a GPIO expert and I have a feeling this is platform specific >> beyond what the PCI specification can actually define architecturally. > > In my opinion timeout is not platform specific as I wrote in email: > https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pci/20210310110535.zh4pnn4vpmvzwl5q@pali/ > > My experiments already proved that some PCIe cards needs to be in reset > state for some minimal time otherwise they cannot be enumerated. And it > does not matter to which platform you connect those (endpoint) cards. > > I do not think that timeout itself is platform specific. GPIO controls > PERST# pin and therefore specified sleep value directly drives how long > is card on the other end of PCIe slot in Warm Reset state. PCIe CEM spec > directly says that PERST# signal controls PCIe Warm Reset. > > What is here platform specific thing is that PERST# signal is controlled > by GPIO. But value of signal (high / low) and how long is in signal in > which state for me sounds like not an platform specific thing, but as > PCIe / CEM related. That's exactly my understanding of this matter. At least for the dra7xx controller it works exactly like this, PERSTn# is nothing but a GPIO output from the SoC that drives the PERSTn# input of the external chip without affecting the controller directly. -- Luca