On Fri, 2022-05-13 at 09:07 -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > On Thu, May 12, 2022 at 04:56:42PM +0200, Niklas Schnelle wrote: > > On Thu, 2022-05-05 at 10:38 +0200, Niklas Schnelle wrote: > > > While determining the next PCI function is factored out of > > > pci_scan_slot() into next_fn() the former still handles the first > > > function as a special case. This duplicates the code from the scan loop. > > > > > > Furthermore the non ARI branch of next_fn() is generally hard to > > > understand and especially the check for multifunction devices is hidden > > > in the handling of NULL devices for non-contiguous multifunction. It > > > also signals that no further functions need to be scanned by returning > > > 0 via wraparound and this is a valid function number. > > > > > > Improve upon this by transforming the conditions in next_fn() to be > > > easier to understand. > > > > > > By changing next_fn() to return -ENODEV instead of 0 when there is no > > > next function we can then handle the initial function inside the loop > > > and deduplicate the shared handling. This also makes it more explicit > > > that only function 0 must exist. > > > > > > No functional change is intended. > > > > > > Cc: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@xxxxxxxxxxx> > > > Signed-off-by: Niklas Schnelle <schnelle@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > --- > > > > Friendly ping :-) > > Thanks and sorry for the delay. I'm off today for my daughter's > wedding reception but will get back to it next week. Just to expose > some of my thought process (and not to request more work from you!) > I've been wondering whether b1bd58e448f2 ("PCI: Consolidate > "next-function" functions") is really causing us more trouble than > it's worth. In some ways that makes the single next-function harder > to read. But I guess the hypervisor special case is not exactly a > "next-function" thing -- it's a "keep scanning even if there's no fn > 0" thing. > > Bjorn I've thought again about your comment. Personally what I like about b1bd58e448f2 ("PCI: Consolidate "next-function" functions") is that it got rid of the next_fn function pointer complication. I agree though that on the other hand it removed a nice separation between the ARI and traditional cases. So I'm thinking maybe we should bring that part back. I think my patch as is makes it easier to see the equivalence to the existing code but then we could add a patch on top and turn it into the below, it's a bit more verbose but very easy to follow. static int next_ari_fn(struct pci_bus *bus, struct pci_dev *dev, int fn) { … } static int next_trad_fn(struct pci_bus *bus, struct pci_dev *dev, int fn) { if (fn >= 7) return -ENODEV; /* only multifunction devices may have more functions */ if (dev && !dev->multifunction) return -ENODEV; return fn + 1; } static int next_fn(struct pci_bus *bus, struct pci_dev *dev, int fn) { if (pci_ari_enabled(bus)) { return next_ari_fn(bus, dev, fn); } return next_trad_fn(bus, dev, fn); }