On Thu, Dec 28, 2017 at 06:30:58PM -0500, Alexandru Chirvasitu wrote: > Attached, but heads up on this: when redirecting the output of lspci > -vvv to a text file as root I get > > pcilib: sysfs_read_vpd: read failed: Input/output error > > I can find bugs filed for various distros to this same effect, but > haven't tracked down any explanations. This is a tangent, but I think you should *always* see "Input/output error" on this system when running "lspci -vvv" as root, regardless of whether you redirect the output (the error probably goes to stderr, not stdout, so it's probably easy to miss when not redirecting the output). I think this is the -EIO return from pci_vpd_read(), which probably means pci_vpd_size() returned 0 for one of your devices, which means the VPD data provided by the device wasn't formatted correctly. If this happens, you should see a warning in dmesg about it ("invalid VPD tag" or similar) -- could you verify that? It's possible we should return something other than -EIO, or maybe pcilib should do something other than emitting the warning. In pcilib, sysfs_read_vpd() emits the warning [1], and it would seem sort of ugly to special-case EIO, so maybe we should change this in the kernel. It looks like your Qualcomm Atheros Attansic NIC at 06:00.0 is the only device with VPD, so that's probably the one: 06:00.0 Ethernet controller: Qualcomm Atheros Attansic L2 Fast Ethernet Capabilities: [6c] Vital Product Data Not readable I think lspci would still print "Not readable" if we just made the kernel return 0 instead of -EIO [2]. Bjorn [1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/utils/pciutils/pciutils.git/tree/lib/sysfs.c#n410 [2] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/utils/pciutils/pciutils.git/tree/ls-vpd.c#n87