On 06.11.2015 09:52, Jiang Liu wrote:
On 2015/11/6 2:19, Lorenzo Pieralisi wrote:
On Thu, Nov 05, 2015 at 03:21:34PM +0100, Tomasz Nowicki wrote:
On 14.10.2015 08:29, Jiang Liu wrote:
[...]
+static void acpi_pci_root_validate_resources(struct device *dev,
+ struct list_head *resources,
+ unsigned long type)
+{
+ LIST_HEAD(list);
+ struct resource *res1, *res2, *root = NULL;
+ struct resource_entry *tmp, *entry, *entry2;
+
+ BUG_ON((type & (IORESOURCE_MEM | IORESOURCE_IO)) == 0);
+ root = (type & IORESOURCE_MEM) ? &iomem_resource : &ioport_resource;
+
+ list_splice_init(resources, &list);
+ resource_list_for_each_entry_safe(entry, tmp, &list) {
+ bool free = false;
+ resource_size_t end;
+
+ res1 = entry->res;
+ if (!(res1->flags & type))
+ goto next;
+
+ /* Exclude non-addressable range or non-addressable portion */
+ end = min(res1->end, root->end);
+ if (end <= res1->start) {
+ dev_info(dev, "host bridge window %pR (ignored, not CPU addressable)\n",
+ res1);
+ free = true;
+ goto next;
+ } else if (res1->end != end) {
+ dev_info(dev, "host bridge window %pR ([%#llx-%#llx] ignored, not CPU addressable)\n",
+ res1, (unsigned long long)end + 1,
+ (unsigned long long)res1->end);
+ res1->end = end;
+ }
+
+ resource_list_for_each_entry(entry2, resources) {
+ res2 = entry2->res;
+ if (!(res2->flags & type))
+ continue;
+
+ /*
+ * I don't like throwing away windows because then
+ * our resources no longer match the ACPI _CRS, but
+ * the kernel resource tree doesn't allow overlaps.
+ */
+ if (resource_overlaps(res1, res2)) {
+ res2->start = min(res1->start, res2->start);
+ res2->end = max(res1->end, res2->end);
+ dev_info(dev, "host bridge window expanded to %pR; %pR ignored\n",
+ res2, res1);
+ free = true;
+ goto next;
+ }
+ }
+
+next:
+ resource_list_del(entry);
+ if (free)
+ resource_list_free_entry(entry);
+ else
+ resource_list_add_tail(entry, resources);
+ }
+}
+
+int acpi_pci_probe_root_resources(struct acpi_pci_root_info *info)
+{
+ int ret;
+ struct list_head *list = &info->resources;
+ struct acpi_device *device = info->bridge;
+ struct resource_entry *entry, *tmp;
+ unsigned long flags;
+
+ flags = IORESOURCE_IO | IORESOURCE_MEM | IORESOURCE_MEM_8AND16BIT;
+ ret = acpi_dev_get_resources(device, list,
+ acpi_dev_filter_resource_type_cb,
+ (void *)flags);
+ if (ret < 0)
+ dev_warn(&device->dev,
+ "failed to parse _CRS method, error code %d\n", ret);
+ else if (ret == 0)
+ dev_dbg(&device->dev,
+ "no IO and memory resources present in _CRS\n");
+ else {
+ resource_list_for_each_entry_safe(entry, tmp, list) {
+ if (entry->res->flags & IORESOURCE_DISABLED)
+ resource_list_destroy_entry(entry);
+ else
+ entry->res->name = info->name;
+ }
+ acpi_pci_root_validate_resources(&device->dev, list,
+ IORESOURCE_MEM);
+ acpi_pci_root_validate_resources(&device->dev, list,
+ IORESOURCE_IO);
It is not clear to me why we need these two calls above ^^^. We are
using pci_acpi_root_add_resources(info) later. Is it not enough?
Also, I cannot use acpi_pci_probe_root_resources() in my ARM64 PCI
driver. It is because acpi_dev_get_resources is adding
translation_offset to IO ranges start address and then:
acpi_pci_root_validate_resources(&device->dev, list,
IORESOURCE_IO);
rejects that IO regions as it is out of my 0x0-SZ_16M window.
Does acpi_pci_probe_root_resources meant to be x86 specific and I
should avoid using it?
IIUC, you _have_ to have the proper translation_offset to map the bridge
window into the IO address space:
http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-arm-kernel/2015-June/348708.html
Then, using the offset, you should do something ia64 does, namely,
retrieve the CPU address corresponding to IO space (see arch/ia64/pci/pci.c
- add_io_space()) and map it in the physical address space by using
pci_remap_iospace(), it is similar to what we have to do with DT.
It is extremely confusing and I am not sure I got it right myself,
I am still grokking ia64 code to understand what it really does.
So basically, the IO bridge window coming from acpi_dev_get_resource()
should represent the IO space in 0 - 16M, IIUC.
By using the offset (that was initialized using translation_offset) and
the resource->start, you can retrieve the cpu address that you need to
actually map the IO space, since that's what we do on ARM (ie the
IO resource is an offset into the virtual address space set aside
for IO).
Confusing, to say the least. Jiang, did I get it right ?
Hi Lorenzo and Tomasz,
With a cup of coffee, I got myself awake eventually:)
Now we are going to talk about IO port on IA64, really a little
complex:( Actually there are two types of translation.
1) A PCI domain has a 24-bit IO port address space, there may
be multiple IO port address spaces in systems with multiple PCI
domains. So the first type of translation is to translate domain
specific IO port address into system global IO port address
(iomem_resource) by
res->start = acpi_des->start + acpi_des->translation_offset
2) IA64 needs to map IO port address spaces into MMIO address
space because it has no instructions to access IO ports directly.
So IA64 has reserved a MMIO range to map IO port address spaces.
This type of translation relies on architecture specific information
instead of ACPI descriptors.
On the other hand, ACPI specification has defined "I/O to Memory
Translation" flag and "Memory to I/O Translation" flag in
ACPI Extended Address Space Descriptor,
Based on 2) and above, does it mean IA64 should use "ACPI Extended
Address Space Descriptor" for its PCI bridge IO windows only?
but current implementation
doesn't really support such a use case. So we need to find a way
out here. Could you please help to provide more information about
PCI host bridge resource descriptor implementation details on
ARM64?
Sure, ARM64 (0-16M IO space) QEMU example:
DWordIO (ResourceProducer, MinFixed, MaxFixed, PosDecode, EntireRange,
0x00000000, // Granularity
0x00000000, // Range Minimum
0x0000FFFF, // Range Maximum
0x3EFF0000, // Translation Offset
0x00010000, // Length
,, , TypeStatic)
You can also have a look at my implementation example in mail to Lorenzo.
Thanks,
Tomasz
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