On Wed, 28 Feb 2018, Jan Kiszka wrote: > From: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@xxxxxxxxxxx> > > Per PCIe r4.0, sec 7.5.1.1.9, multi-function devices are required to > have a function 0. Therefore, Linux scans for devices at function 0 > (devfn 0/8/16/...) and only scans for other functions if function 0 > has its Multi-Function Device bit set or ARI or SR-IOV indicate > there are more functions. > > The Jailhouse hypervisor may pass individual functions of a > multi-function device to a guest without passing function 0, which > means a Linux guest won't find them. > > Change Linux PCI probing so it scans all function numbers when > running as a guest over Jailhouse. > void pcibios_scan_specific_bus(int busn) > { > + int stride = jailhouse_paravirt() ? 1 : 8; > int devfn; > u32 l; > > if (pci_find_bus(0, busn)) > return; > > - for (devfn = 0; devfn < 256; devfn += 8) { > + for (devfn = 0; devfn < 256; devfn += stride) { > if (!raw_pci_read(0, busn, devfn, PCI_VENDOR_ID, 2, &l) && > l != 0x0000 && l != 0xffff) { > DBG("Found device at %02x:%02x [%04x]\n", busn, devfn, l); Shouldn't that take the situation into account where the MFD bit is set on a regular devfn, i.e. (devfn % 8) == 0? In that case you'd scan the subfunctions twice. Thanks, tglx