On Fri, 30 Mar 2018 16:05:18 -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > + if (bw_avail >= bw_cap) > + pci_info(dev, "%d Mb/s available bandwidth (%s x%d link)\n", > + bw_cap, PCIE_SPEED2STR(speed_cap), width_cap); > + else > + pci_info(dev, "%d Mb/s available bandwidth, limited by %s x%d link at %s (capable of %d Mb/s with %s x%d link)\n", > + bw_avail, PCIE_SPEED2STR(speed), width, > + limiting_dev ? pci_name(limiting_dev) : "<unknown>", > + bw_cap, PCIE_SPEED2STR(speed_cap), width_cap); I was just looking at using this new function to print PCIe BW for a NIC, but I'm slightly worried that there is nothing in the message that says PCIe... For a NIC some people may interpret the bandwidth as NIC bandwidth: [ 39.839989] nfp 0000:04:00.0: Netronome Flow Processor NFP4000/NFP6000 PCIe Card Probe [ 39.848943] nfp 0000:04:00.0: 63.008 Gb/s available bandwidth (8 GT/s x8 link) [ 39.857146] nfp 0000:04:00.0: RESERVED BARs: 0.0: General/MSI-X SRAM, 0.1: PCIe XPB/MSI-X PBA, 0.4: Explicit0, 0.5: Explicit1, fre4 It's not a 63Gbps NIC... I'm sorry if this was discussed before and I didn't find it. Would it make sense to add the "PCIe: " prefix to the message like bnx2x used to do? Like: nfp 0000:04:00.0: PCIe: 63.008 Gb/s available bandwidth (8 GT/s x8 link) Sorry for a very late comment.