[+cc Sinan, Alex, Rafael] On Fri, Dec 14, 2018 at 01:15:58PM +0000, Ross Lagerwall wrote: > Hi Bjorn, > > Your commit 5b0764cac9f1 ("PCI: Probe for device reset support during > enumeration") moved checking whether a device could be reset much earlier to > when the device is first probed. When the device is first probed, the other > devices on the bus may not have been discovered yet. This means that we will > claim to support SBR as a reset mechanism because it is the only device > behind the bus at that pointer meanwhile the others simply haven't been > discovered yet. This results in dev->reset_fn being incorrectly set to true > and a reset file being created. When userspace actually tries to use the > reset file it fails because now there are other sibling devices preventing > the use of an SBR. First of all, I'm very sorry about the regression and thanks very much for the report! I know it's a lot of work to track down things like this. We run pci_probe_reset_function() during pci_init_capabilities(), which is before other devices on the bus are discovered, as you say. That checks not just for SBR support, but for other types of reset (FLR, PM, etc) as well. In your case the userspace reset actually fails, so I assume that means SBR is the *only* supported reset type for that device? Since you have two devices on the bus, I guess SBR of device A *should* work during the interval between enumerating A and B (it will reset both A and B in hardware, but since the OS doesn't know about B yet, that's probably OK). After we enumerate B and potentially bind a driver to it, we can't use SBR any more, of course. I could imagine removing A's sysfs reset file when B is enumerated, but the locking might be ugly. And of course A might support other types of reset, and then you *want* A's sysfs file. What happened prior to 5b0764cac9f1? There was never a sysfs reset file at all, so userspace didn't even attempt the reset? We could wait to create the sysfs reset file until after we've enumerated all the devices on the bus, but then we're opening a race when a device could be hot-added to the bus. E.g., boot-time enumeration finds only A, we create its sysfs reset file, then we hot-add device B (admittedly mostly a conventional PCI scenario), and now we're in the same situation you're seeing where A's reset file exists, but it always fails because SBR is no longer safe. Bjorn