Re: [RFC PATCH 1/3] pci: APM X-Gene PCIe controller driver

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On Tuesday 07 January 2014, Tanmay Inamdar wrote:
> > Also, the implementation is wrong since the I/O port range already needs
> > to be ioremapped in order for inb/outb to work. There is already a
> > generic implementation of this in include/asm-generic/iomap.h, which
> > correctly calls ioport_map. Make sure that arm64 uses this implementation
> > and provides an ioport_map() function like
> >
> > static inline void __iomem *ioport_map(unsigned long port, unsigned int nr)
> > {
> >         return PCI_IOBASE + port;
> > }
> 
> For X-Gene, IO regions are memory mapped IO regions. So I am not sure
> if 'ioport_map'
> would work.

It should. In fact all ARM and ARM64 platforms I have seen (and most powerpc
ones) have their IO region memory mapped. The way we handle this in Linux
is to map the IO space to a fixed virtual address at the time the host
controller is initialized, and all accesses to an IO port translate to
a access in this virtual address. See the inb()/outb() implementation on
arm and arm64, as well as the arm pci_ioremap_io() function for more
details.

> >> +static void xgene_pcie_setup_lanes(struct xgene_pcie_port *port)
> >> +{
> >> +     void *csr_base = port->csr_base;
> >> +     u32 val;
> >> +
> > ...
> >> +static void xgene_pcie_setup_link(struct xgene_pcie_port *port)
> >> +{
> >> +     void *csr_base = port->csr_base;
> >> +     u32 val;
> >> +
> >
> > Don't these belong into the PHY driver? Can the setup be done in the
> > firmware instead so we don't have to bother with it in Linux?
> > Presumably you already need PCI support at boot time already if
> > you want to boot from a PCI device.
> 
> They do look like phy setup functions but they are part of PCIe core
> register space.

Ok.

> >> +static void xgene_pcie_config_pims(void *csr_base, u32 addr,
> >> +                                u64 pim, resource_size_t size)
> >> +{
> >> +     u32 val;
> >> +
> >> +     xgene_pcie_out32(csr_base + addr, lower_32_bits(pim));
> >> +     val = upper_32_bits(pim) | EN_COHERENCY;
> >> +     xgene_pcie_out32(csr_base + addr + 0x04, val);
> >> +     xgene_pcie_out32(csr_base + addr + 0x08, 0x0);
> >> +     xgene_pcie_out32(csr_base + addr + 0x0c, 0x0);
> >> +     val = lower_32_bits(size);
> >> +     xgene_pcie_out32(csr_base + addr + 0x10, val);
> >> +     val = upper_32_bits(size);
> >> +     xgene_pcie_out32(csr_base + addr + 0x14, val);
> >> +}
> >
> > I suspect this is for programming the inbound translation window for
> > DMA transactions (maybe add a comment?), and the second 64-bit word is
> > for the bus-side address. Are you sure you want a translation starting
> > at zero, rather than an identity-mapping like this?
> 
> Actually it is an unused sub-region. I will remove setting to 0. It
> defaults to 0 anyways.

Is it always an identity-mapping then?

> >> +struct device_node *pcibios_get_phb_of_node(struct pci_bus *bus)
> >> +{
> >> +     struct xgene_pcie_port *port = xgene_pcie_bus_to_port(bus);
> >> +
> >> +     return of_node_get(port->node);
> >> +}
> >
> > Another pointless wrapper to remove.
> 
> If I remove this, then we get a failure while parsing irqs
> "pci 0000:00:00.0: of_irq_parse_pci() failed with rc=-22"

I mean it would be just as easy to open-code the function in the
callers, and more readable.

> >> +static int xgene_pcie_populate_inbound_regions(struct xgene_pcie_port *port)
> >> +{
> >> +     struct resource *msi_res = &port->res[XGENE_MSI];
> >> +     phys_addr_t ddr_size = memblock_phys_mem_size();
> >> +     phys_addr_t ddr_base = memblock_start_of_DRAM();
> >
> > This looks fragile. What about discontiguous memory? It's probably better to
> > leave this setup to the firmware, which already has to do it.
> 
> Idea is to map whole RAM. The memory controller in X-Gene does not
> allow holes or discontinuity in RAM.

There might be holes in the memory map for other reasons, e.g. some part of
memory could be reserved for use by a particular piece of software.
There is actually a definition for a "dma-ranges" property that is normally
use to communicate this information, i.e. which bus addresses for DMA
translate into which parent bus (or memory) addresses. I think it would
be more logical to use that property.

	Arnd
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