On Thu, Jun 08, 2023 at 03:06:52PM +0530, Vidya Sagar wrote: > This reverts commit 4fb8e46c1bc4 ("PCI: tegra194: Enable > support for 256 Byte payload") > > Consider a PCIe hierarchy with a PCIe switch and a device connected > downstream of the switch that has support for MPS which is the minimum > in the hierarchy, and root port programmed with an MPS in its DevCtl > register that is greater than the minimum. In this scenario, the default > bus configuration of the kernel i.e. "PCIE_BUS_DEFAULT" doesn't > configure the MPS settings in the hierarchy correctly resulting in the > device with support for minimum MPS in the hierarchy receiving the TLPs > of size more than that. Although this can be addresed by appending > "pci=pcie_bus_safe" to the kernel command line, it doesn't seem to be a > good idea to always have this commandline argument even for the basic > functionality to work. > Reverting commit 4fb8e46c1bc4 ("PCI: tegra194: Enable support for 256 > Byte payload") avoids this requirement and ensures that the basic > functionality of the devices irrespective of the hierarchy and the MPS of > the devices in the hierarchy. > To reap the benefits of having support for higher MPS, optionally, one can > always append the kernel command line with "pci=pcie_bus_perf". Please add blank lines between paragraphs and wrap to fill 75 columns. Also add a period at the end of the very first sentence. s/addresed/addressed/ I guess that without 4fb8e46c1bc4, Linux configured everything with 128 byte MPS, and 4fb8e46c1bc4 was intended as an optimization to allow 256 byte MPS. If the Root Port advertises Max_Payload_Size Supported as 256 bytes in DevCap, and the PCI core doesn't configure MPS=256 when possible, I'd argue that should be fixed in the PCI core without a driver change like this. Bjorn