On Fri, Mar 17, 2017 at 01:08:03AM +0100, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 04:12:43PM -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > [+cc Luis] > > > > On Mon, Feb 27, 2017 at 03:14:14PM +0000, Lorenzo Pieralisi wrote: > > > The PCI specifications (Rev 3.0, 3.2.5 "Transaction Ordering and > > > Posting") mandate non-posted configuration transactions. As further > > > highlighted in the PCIe specifications (4.0 - Rev0.3, "Ordering > > > Considerations for the Enhanced Configuration Access Mechanism"), > > > through ECAM and ECAM-derivative configuration mechanism, the memory > > > mapped transactions from the host CPU into Configuration Requests on the > > > PCI express fabric may create ordering problems for software because > > > writes to memory address are typically posted transactions (unless the > > > architecture can enforce through virtual address mapping non-posted > > > write transactions behaviour) but writes to Configuration Space are not > > > posted on the PCI express fabric. > > > > > > Current DT and ACPI host bridge controllers map PCI configuration space > > > (ECAM and ECAM-derivative) into the virtual address space through > > > ioremap() calls, that are non-cacheable device accesses on most > > > architectures, but may provide "bufferable" or "posted" write semantics > > > in architecture like eg ARM/ARM64 that allow ioremap'ed regions writes > > > to be buffered in the bus connecting the host CPU to the PCI fabric; > > > this behaviour, as underlined in the PCIe specifications, may trigger > > > transactions ordering rules and must be prevented. > > > > > > Introduce a new generic and explicit API to create a memory > > > mapping for ECAM and ECAM-derivative config space area that > > > defaults to ioremap_nocache() (which should provide a sane default > > > behaviour) but still allowing architectures on which ioremap_nocache() > > > results in posted write transactions to override the function > > > call with an arch specific implementation that complies with > > > the PCI specifications for configuration transactions. > > ... > > > +#ifndef pci_remap_cfgspace > > > +#define pci_remap_cfgspace pci_remap_cfgspace > > > +static inline void __iomem *pci_remap_cfgspace(phys_addr_t offset, > > > + size_t size) > > > +{ > > > + return ioremap_nocache(offset, size); > > > +} > > > > I'm fine with this conceptually, but I think it would make more sense > > if the name weren't specific to PCI or config space, e.g., > > ioremap_nopost() or something. > > Seems reasonable to me -- but are there other buses that could use > this already as well ? Wouldn't these other buses also run into > similar issues ? Can someone also bounce me a copy of the patches > that use this ? I forwarded a copy of the initial posting of all 20 patches to you. > While at it, please add some documentation too, the above commit log > is huge, and yet for the person eyeballing the code they won't have > any clue why this was added exactly. Since this is about helping > with picking the right ioremap due to certain semantics / > requirements on the PCI config space, we should clarify then what > exactly are the expectations here. The clearer you are the less in > trouble we can get later. I think the documentation above does contain the critical facts that: - Accesses to PCI config space and PCI I/O port space should be non-posted - ARM64 currently maps them as posted, which may cause ordering problems It's possible the changelog could be made clearer by *removing* text, but I'm not sure what Lorenzo could *add* to make it better. This particular patch is generic (not ARM64-specific), so maybe all we need to say here is that PCI requires non-posted mappings in some cases, and we currently don't have a generic ioremap() to make them, so we're adding a way for an arch to provide such an interface. Bjorn