On Tue, Dec 17, 2013 at 05:30:02PM -0700, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: Hi Bjorn, Thank you for the review! Sorry for a heavy skipping - I just wanted to focus on a principal moment in your suggestion and then go on with the original note. > I only see five users of pci_enable_msi_block() (nvme, ath10k, wil6210, > ipr, vfio); we can easily convert those to use pci_enable_msi_range() and > then remove pci_enable_msi_block(). > It would be good if pci_enable_msix() could be implemented in terms of > pci_enable_msix_range(nvec, nvec), with a little extra glue to handle the > positive return values. So you want to get rid of the tri-state "low-level" pci_enable_msi_block() and pci_enable_msix(), right? I believe we can not do this, since we need to support a non-standard hardware which (a) can not be asked any arbitrary number of vectors within a range and (b) needs extra magic to enable MSI operation. I.e. below is a snippet from a real device driver Mark Lord has sent in a previous conversation: xx_disable_all_irqs(dev); do { if (nvec < 2) xx_prep_for_1_msix_vector(dev); else if (nvec < 4) xx_prep_for_2_msix_vectors(dev); else if (nvec < 8) xx_prep_for_4_msix_vectors(dev); else if (nvec < 16) xx_prep_for_8_msix_vectors(dev); else xx_prep_for_16_msix_vectors(dev); nvec = pci_enable_msix(dev->pdev, dev->irqs, dev->num_vectors); } while (nvec > 0); The same probably could have been done with pci_enable_msix_range(nvec, nvec) call and checking for -ENOSPC errno, but IMO it would be less graceful and reliable, since -ENOSPC might come from anywhere. IOW, I believe we need to keep the door open for custom MSI-enablement (loop) implementations. -- Regards, Alexander Gordeev agordeev@xxxxxxxxxx -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-pci" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html