Re: [PATCH v3] PCI: Add D3 support for PCI bridges in DT based platforms

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On Thu, Feb 22, 2024 at 10:40:52AM +0100, Lukas Wunner wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 21, 2024 at 12:20:00PM -0600, Bjorn Helgaas wrote:
> >   1) D3hot doesn't work per spec.  This sounds like a hardware
> >      defect in the device that should be a quirk based on
> >      Vendor/Device ID, not something in DT.  I don't actually know if
> >      this is common, although there are several existing quirks that
> >      mention issues with D3.
> 
> My recollection is that putting Root Ports into D3hot on older x86
> systems would raise MCEs,

Color me dubious.  I don't know why an MCE should happen unless we
tried to access MMIO space on the Root Port or we tried to access
downstream devices, and the UR or whatever got turned into MCE.
Avoiding D3hot seems like papering over something that we don't fully
understand.

> which is why pci_bridge_d3_possible() only
> allows D3hot in cases which are known to work (e.g. Thunderbolt
> controllers, machines with a recent BIOS).  It was a conservative
> policy chosen to avoid regressions.
> 
> I don't know if similar issues exist on non-ACPI systems.  If they
> don't exist, platform_pci_bridge_d3() could just return true for
> all devicetree-based systems.  Might be worth testing if any systems
> can be found which exhibit issues with such a policy.  That would
> obviate the need to specify "supports-d3" in the devicetree.
> Quite the opposite, ports which are known not to work could be
> blacklisted.  Of course if it turns out that's the majority then
> whitelisting via "supports-d3" is a better option.
> 
> >   2) The platform doesn't support putting the bridge in D3cold and
> >      back to D0.  I don't understand this either because I assumed DT
> >      would describe *hardware*, and "supports-d3" might imply the
> >      presence of hardware power control, but doesn't tell us how to
> >      operate it, and it must be up to a native driver to know how to
> >      do it.
> 
> I think we're putting devices into D3hot first before cutting power
> (i.e. putting them into D3cold), so knowing that D3hot is safe is
> basically a prerequisite for D3cold.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Lukas




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