On Wed, Jul 22, 2020 at 11:40 AM Bjorn Helgaas <helgaas@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > [+cc Puranjay] > > On Tue, Jul 21, 2020 at 08:18:03PM -0600, Robert Hancock wrote: > > Recently ASPM handling was changed to no longer disable ASPM on all > > PCIe to PCI bridges. Unfortunately these ASMedia PCIe to PCI bridge > > devices don't seem to function properly with ASPM enabled, as they > > cause the parent PCIe root port to cause repeated AER timeout errors. > > In addition to flooding the kernel log, this also causes the machine > > to wake up immediately after suspend is initiated. > > Hi Robert, thanks a lot for the report of this problem > (https://lore.kernel.org/r/CADLC3L1R2hssRjxHJv9yhdN_7-hGw58rXSfNp-FraZh0Tw+gRw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx > and https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1853960). > > I'm pretty sure Linux ASPM support is missing some things. This > problem might be a hardware problem where a quirk is the right > solution, but it could also be that it's a result of a Linux defect > that we should fix. > > Could you collect the dmesg log and "sudo lspci -vvxxxx" output > somewhere (maybe a bugzilla.kernel.org issue)? I want to figure out > whether this L1 PM substates are enabled on this link, and whether > that's configured correctly. Created a Bugzilla entry and added dmesg and lspci output: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=208667 As I noted in that report, I subsequently found this page on ASMedia's site: https://www.asmedia.com.tw/eng/e_show_products.php?cate_index=169&item=114 which indicates this ASM1083 device has "No PCIe ASPM support". It's not clear why this problem isn't occurring on Windows however - either it is not enabling ASPM, somehow it doesn't cause issues with the PCIe link, or it is causing issues and just doesn't notify the user in any way. I can try and check if this bridge device is ending up with ASPM enabled under Windows 10 or not..