On Tue, Nov 05, 2024 at 11:18:28AM -0600, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > On Mon, Nov 04, 2024 at 11:18:43AM +0000, Conor Dooley wrote: > > On Fri, Nov 01, 2024 at 02:51:29PM -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > > On Wed, Aug 14, 2024 at 09:08:42AM +0100, Conor Dooley wrote: > > > > From: Conor Dooley <conor.dooley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > > > > > The PCI host controller on PolarFire SoC has multiple "instances", each > > > > with their own bridge and ctrl address spaces. The original binding has > > > > an "apb" register region, and it is expected to be set to the base > > > > address of the host controllers register space. Defines in the driver > > > > were used to compute the addresses of the bridge and ctrl address ranges > > > > corresponding to instance1. Some customers want to use instance0 however > > > > and that requires changing the defines in the driver, which is clearly > > > > not a portable solution. > > > > > > The subject mentions "instance 1 or 2". > > > > > > This paragraph implies adding support for "instance0" ("customers want > > > to use instance0"). > > > > > > The DT patch suggests that we're adding support for "instance2" > > > ("customers want to use instance2"). > > > > > > Both patches suggest that the existing support is for "instance 1". > > > > > > Maybe what's being added is "instance 2", and this commit log should > > > s/instance0/instance 2/ ? And probably s/instance1/instance 1/ so the > > > style is consistent? > > > > Hmm no, it would be s/instance1/instance 2/ & s/instance0/instance 1/. > > The indices are 1-based, not 0-based. > > > > > Is this a "pick one or the other but not both" situation, or does this > > > device support two independent PCIe controllers? > > > > > > I first thought this driver supported a single PCIe controller, and > > > you were adding support for a second independent controller. > > > > I don't know if they are fully independent (Daire would have to confirm) > > but as far as the driver in linux is concerned they are. As far as I > > know, you could operate both instances at the same time, but I've not > > heard of any customer that is actually doing that nor tested it myself. > > Operating both instances would require another node in the devicetree, > > which should work fine given the private data structs are allocated at > > runtime. I think the config space is shared. > > > > > But the fact that you say "the [singular] host controller on > > > PolarFire", and you're not changing mc_host_probe() to call > > > pci_host_common_probe() more than once makes me think there is only a > > > single PCIe controller, and for some reason you can choose to operate > > > it using either register set 1 or register set 2. > > > > The wording I've used mostly stems from conversations with Daire. We've > > kinda been saying that there's a single controller with two root port > > instances. > > If these are two separate Root Ports, can we call them "Root Ports" > instead of "instances"? Common terminology makes for common > understanding. Sure. > > Each root port instance is connected to different IOs, > > they're more than just different registers for accessing the same thing. > > Sounds like some customers use Root Port 1 and others use Root Port 2, > maybe based on things like which pins are more convenient to route. Aye, the user that motivated the patchset uses a very small package and was not able to use root port 1 for that reason. > I would very much like to reword these commit logs using as much > standard PCIe terminology as possible. Most of these native PCIe > controller drivers have Root Complex and Root Port concepts all mixed > together, and anything we can do to standardize them will be a > benefit. I can do that tomorrow.
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