On 29 June 2016 at 15:34, Christopher Covington <cov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi Tomasz, > > On 06/29/2016 06:48 AM, Tomasz Nowicki wrote: >> On 28.06.2016 18:12, Duc Dang wrote: >>> On Tue, Jun 28, 2016 at 6:04 AM, Christopher Covington >>> <cov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> Hi Tomasz, > >>>> Ard's comments on v3 included: >>>> >>>> "... exact OEM table/rev id matches ..." >>>> "... substring match ... out of the question ..." > > Digging through the archives I see Jon Master commented earlier to "be > careful with substring match". > >>> I think having OEM Table ID as "PLAT " and then "PLAT2 " (the the >>> next version of the SoC) is common. So yes, matching full string is >>> better as we can use "PLAT2 " in MCFG table and not worry about the >>> "PLAT" sub-string match causes the quirk to be applied >>> unintentionally. > >> Note that platforms already shipped where OEM string has no padding will > > I'm confused by this statement. OEMID is defined as 6 bytes long and OEM > Table ID as 8 bytes long in the ACPI specification. As far as I can > tell, if your string isn't exactly that long, padding up to that length > is required. > >> have change the firmware or add 0 padding to our quirk array IDs. > > The fixed 6 or 8 character string compare, as used v2 of this patchset, > will be compatible with existing firmware as best I can tell. Adding > padding to the quirk array IDs is exactly what I'm suggesting, although > all the strings I've seen are space padded rather than null padded. > I don't think any interpretation of the 6 or 8 byte wide OEM fields is necessary to be able to match it against a list of known values as used by the quirky platforms. We need an exact match against whatever we know is in the table of an affected system, and whether a space qualifies as padding or as a character is irrelevant. > Matches: > {"APM ", "XGENE ", 1} > {"CAVIUM", "THUNDERX", 1} > {"HISI ", "HISI-D02", 1} > {"HISI ", "HISI-D03", 1} > {"QCOM ", "QDF2432 ", 1} > I would not mind listing these as { { 'A','P','M',' ',' ',' ',' '}, {'X','G','E','N','E',' ',' ',' '}, 1} ... just to stress that we are not dealing with C strings (and to avoid having to deal with the implicit NUL terminator). That also means memcmp() with a fixed length is the most appropriate to perform the comparison > Given the above tuples, won't accidentally match: > (guessing at possible future ids) > {"APM ", "XGENEi ", 1} > {"CAVIUM", "THUNDERX", i} i != 1 > {"CAVIUM", "THUNDERi", 1} > {"CAVIUM", "THUNDRXi", 1} > {"HISI ", "HISI-D0i", 1} i != 2 && i != 3 > {"QCOM ", "QDF24ij ", 1} i != 3 && j != 2 > > References for APM, HiSilicon IDs: > https://lists.linaro.org/pipermail/linaro-acpi/2016-June/007108.html > https://lists.linaro.org/pipermail/linaro-acpi/2016-June/007043.html > > Thanks, > Cov > > -- > Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. > Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum, > a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project -- 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