On Tue, Aug 02, 2022 at 02:27:30PM +0200, Łukasz Bartosik wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > > On Fri, Jul 29, 2022 at 11:40:22AM +0200, Łukasz Bartosik wrote: > > > A thunderbolt > > > lspci -d 8086:9a1b -vmmknn > > > Slot: 00:0d.2 > > > Class: System peripheral [0880] > > > Vendor: Intel Corporation [8086] > > > Device: Tiger Lake-LP Thunderbolt 4 NHI #0 [9a1b] > > > > > > presents itself with PCI class 0x088000 after Chromebook boots. > > > lspci -s 00:0d.2 -xxx > > > 00:0d.2 System peripheral: Intel Corporation Tiger Lake-LP Thunderbolt 4 > > > NHI #0 (rev 01) > > > 00: 86 80 1b 9a 00 00 10 00 01 00 80 08 00 00 00 00 > > > ... > > > > > > However after thunderbolt is powered up in nhi_probe() > > > its class changes to 0x0c0340 > > > lspci -s 00:0d.2 -xxx > > > 00:0d.2 System peripheral: Intel Corporation Tiger Lake-LP Thunderbolt 4 > > > NHI #0 (rev 01) > > > 00: 86 80 1b 9a 06 04 10 00 01 40 03 0c 00 00 00 00 > > > ... > > > > > > which leaves pci_dev structure with old class value > > > cat /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:00:0d.2/class > > > 0x088000 > > > > This is completely unexpected. Which Chromebook this is and have you > > tried to upgrade it to the latest? > > > > This happens on a Tiger Lake based reference Chromebook platform. > The issue also happens on the latest ChromeOS image available for that platform. Is this something available for purchase? I'm asking because I have Acer Tiger Lake based Chromebook (740 spin or something) here and the TBT controller class is "USB controller" all the time, and this is what is expected. It should not change the class at any point.