On Tue, Jun 18, 2024 at 06:09:01PM +0300, Shay Drory wrote: > PCI subfunctions (SF) are anchored on the auxiliary bus. PCI physical > and virtual functions are anchored on the PCI bus. The irq information > of each such function is visible to users via sysfs directory "msi_irqs" > containing files for each irq entry. However, for PCI SFs such > information is unavailable. Due to this users have no visibility on IRQs > used by the SFs. > Secondly, an SF can be multi function device supporting rdma, netdevice > and more. Without irq information at the bus level, the user is unable > to view or use the affinity of the SF IRQs. > > Hence to match to the equivalent PCI PFs and VFs, add "irqs" directory, > for supporting auxiliary devices, containing file for each irq entry. > > For example: > $ ls /sys/bus/auxiliary/devices/mlx5_core.sf.1/irqs/ > 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 > > Reviewed-by: Parav Pandit <parav@xxxxxxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Shay Drory <shayd@xxxxxxxxxx> ... > --- a/include/linux/auxiliary_bus.h > +++ b/include/linux/auxiliary_bus.h > @@ -58,6 +58,7 @@ > * in > * @name: Match name found by the auxiliary device driver, > * @id: unique identitier if multiple devices of the same name are exported, > + * @irqs: irqs xarray contains irq indices which are used by the device, Hi Shay, A minor nit from my side: please also add entries for @lock and @dir_exists. Flagged by kernel-doc -none > * > * An auxiliary_device represents a part of its parent device's functionality. > * It is given a name that, combined with the registering drivers > @@ -138,7 +139,10 @@ > struct auxiliary_device { > struct device dev; > const char *name; > + struct xarray irqs; > + struct mutex lock; /* Protects "irqs" directory creation */ > u32 id; > + u8 dir_exists:1; > }; > > /** ...