On Thu, 2016-11-10 at 11:22 +0000, Mark Rutland wrote: > On POWER8, our PCIe doesn't do IO at all, but we have an LPC bus behind > > firmware calls ;-) We use that infrastructure to plumb in the LPC bus. > > Just to check, do you hook that in your inb/outb/etc? Yes. > Generally, it would seem nicer if we could have higher-level > isa_{inb,outb,whatever} accessors that we could hook separately from > other IO. Maybe but generally speaking, we don't discriminate accessors per bus, ie, readl etc... work on all memory mapped busses, inb... works on all busses with an "IO space", at least that's been the idea. It probably all comes from the fact that PCI IO and ISA are the same space on x86 and most other platforms (not all). > We don't necessarily have to move all ISA drivers over to that if we had > a separate symbol for that interface. What I do on ppc today is that I have a chunk of virtual address space that is reserved for "IO space". The first 64k are "reserved" in that they route to "the primary" ISA bus (for legacy crap that uses hard coded addresses, though I use that for my LPC bus too). I "allocate" space for the PCI IO spaces higher in that space. Was I to support more LPC busses I could allocate them up there too. The IO resource of a given device thus becomes the actual IO port plus the offset of the base of the segment it's in. For memory mapped IO, inb/outb will just add the virtual address of the base of all IO space to that. The hooking mechanism will pickup the stuff that isn't memory mapped. It's a bit messy but then IO space performance has never been a huge worry since IO cycles tend to be very slow to begin with. Note: We also have the ISA memory and ISA FW spaces that we don't have good accessors for. They somewhat exist (I think the fbdev layer uses some for vga) but it's messy. Cheers, Ben. -- 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