On Mon, Nov 19, 2018 at 12:42:25PM -0500, Sinan Kaya wrote: > On 11/19/2018 12:32 PM, Sinan Kaya wrote: > > > > > > But we're not using HEST as a fine grain control. We disable native AER > > > handling if *any* device has FF set in HEST, and that just forces people > > > to use pcie_ports=native to get around that. > > > > > > > I don't see *any* in the code. aer_hest_parse() does the HEST table parsing. > > It switches to firmware first mode if global flag in HEST is set. Otherwise > > for each BDF in device, hest_match_pci() is used to do a cross-matching against > > HEST table contents. > > > > Am I missing something? > > I see. I think you are talking about aer_firmware_first, right? > > aer_set_firmware_first() and pcie_aer_get_firmware_first() seem to do the right > thing. Right, but what difference does it make if device specific AER checks do the right thing if pcie_aer_init() doesn't even register it's port driver? > aer_firmware_first is probably getting set because events are all routed to a > single root port and aer_acpi_firmware_first() is used to decide whether AER > should be initialized or not. > > I think I understand what is going on now. > > Still, breaking existing systems that rely on HEST table is not cool. > I'd rather have users specify "pcie_ports=native" to skip FF rather than > having broken systems by default to be honest. The pcie_ports=native work-around ignores FF to potentially unknown results, though.