On 2014/8/1 21:52, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > On Wednesday 30 July 2014, Yijing Wang wrote: >> On 2014/7/29 22:08, Arnd Bergmann wrote: >>> On Saturday 26 July 2014 11:08:37 Yijing Wang wrote: >>>> >>>> The new data struct for generic MSI driver. >>>> struct msi_irqs { >>>> u8 msi_enabled:1; /* Enable flag */ >>>> u8 msix_enabled:1; >>>> struct list_head msi_list; /* MSI desc list */ >>>> void *data; /* help to find the MSI device */ >>>> struct msi_ops *ops; /* MSI device specific hook */ >>>> }; >>>> struct msi_irqs is used to manage MSI related informations. Every device supports >>>> MSI should contain this data struct and allocate it. >>> >>> I think you should have a stronger association with the 'struct >>> device' here. Can you replace the 'void *data' with 'struct device *dev'? >> >> Actually, I used the struct device *dev in my first draft, finally, I replaced >> it with void *data, because some MSI devices don't have a struct device *dev, >> like the existing hpet device, dmar msi device, and OF device, like the ARM consolidator. >> >> Of course, we can make the MSI devices have their own struct device, and register to >> device tree, eg, add a class device named MSI_DEV. But I'm not sure whether it is appropriate. > > It doesn't have to be in the (OF) device tree, but I think it absolutely makes > sense to use the 'struct device' infrastructure here, as almost everything uses > a device, and the ones that don't do that today can be easily changed. I will try to use "struct device" infrastructure, thanks for your suggestion. :) > >>> The other part I'm not completely sure about is how you want to >>> have MSIs map into normal IRQ descriptors. At the moment, all >>> MSI users are based on IRQ numbers, but this has known scalability problems. >> >> Hmmm, I still use the IRQ number to map the MSIs to IRQ description. >> I'm sorry, I don't understand you meaning. >> What are the scalability problems you mentioned ? >> For device drivers, they always process interrupt in two steps. >> If irq is the legacy interrupt, drivers will first >> use the irq_of_parse_and_map() or pci_enable_device() to parse and get the IRQ number. >> Then drivers will call the request_irq() to register the interrupt handler. >> If irq is MSIs, first call pci_enable_msi/x() to get the IRQ number and then call >> request_irq() to register interrupt handler. > > The method you describe here makes sense for PCI devices that are required to support > legacy interrupts and may or may not support MSI on a given system, but not so much > for platform devices for which we know exactly whether we want to use MSI > or legacy interrupts. > > In particular if you have a device that can only do MSI, the entire pci_enable_msi > step is pointless: all we need to do is program the correct MSI target address/message > pair into the device and register the handler. Yes, I almost agree if we won't change the existing hundreds of drivers, what I worried about is some drivers may want to know the IRQ numbers, and use the IRQ number to process different things, as I mentioned in another reply. But we can also provide the interface which integrate MSI configuration and request_irq(), if most drivers don't care the IRQ number. > >>> I wonder if we can do the interface in a way that >>> hides the interrupt number from generic device drivers and just >>> passes a 'struct irq_desc'. Note that there are long-term plans to >>> get rid of IRQ numbers entirely, but those plans have existed for >>> a long time already without anybody seriously addressing the device >>> driver interfaces so far, so it might never really happen. >>> >> >> Maybe this is a huge work, now hundreds drivers use the IRQ number, so maybe we can consider >> this in a separate title. > > Sorry for being unclear here: I did suggest changing all drivers now. What I meant > is that we use a different API for non-PCI devices that works without IRQ numbers. > I don't think we should touch the PCI interfaces at this point. OK, I got it. >>> What I'd envision as the API from the device driver perspective is something >>> as simple like this: >>> >>> struct msi_desc *msi_request(struct msi_chip *chip, irq_handler_t handler, >>> unsigned long flags, const char *name, struct device *dev); >>> >>> which would get an msi descriptor that is valid for this device (dev) >>> connected to a particular msi_chip, and associate a handler function >>> with it. The device driver can call that function and retrieve the >>> address/message pair from the msi_desc in order to store it in its own >>> device specific registers. The request_irq() can be handled internally >>> to msi_request(). >> >> This is a huge change for device drivers, and some device drivers don't know which msi_chip >> their MSI irq deliver to. I'm reworking the msi_chip, and try to use msi_chip to eliminate >> all arch_msi_xxx() under every arch in kernel. And the important point is how to create the >> binding for the MSI device to the target msi_chip. > > Which drivers are you thinking of? Again, I wouldn't expect to change any PCI drivers, > but only platform drivers that do native MSI, so we only have to change drivers that > do not support any MSI at all yet and that need to be changed anyway in order to add > support. I mean platform device drivers, because we can find the target msi_chip by some platform interfaces(like the existing of_pci_find_msi_chip_by_node()). So we no need to explicitly provide the msi_chip as the function argument. > >> For PCI device, some arm platform already bound the msi_chip to the pci hostbridge, then all >> pci devices under the pci hostbridge deliver their MSI irqs to the target msi_chip. >> And other platform create the binding in DTS file, then the MSI device can find their msi_chip >> by device_node. >> I don't know whether there are other situations, we should provide a generic interface that >> every MSI device under every platform can use it to find its msi_chip exactly. > > We have introduced the "msi-parent" property to mirror the "interrupt-parent" property. > For the PCI case, this property is only needed in the PCI host controller, and there > can be a system-wide default, by putting the "msi-parent" property into the root device > node or the node of a bus that is parent to all devices supporting MSI. > > For non-PCI devices, it should be possible to override the "msi-parent" property per > device, but those can also use the global property. > > The main use case that I see are PCI host controllers that have their own MSI catcher > included, so meaning that any PCI device can either send its MSIs there, or to a > system-wide GICv3 instance, and we need a way to select which one. Yes, agree. > > A degenerate case of this would be a system where a PCI device sends its MSI into > the host controller, that generates a legacy interrupt and that in turn gets > sent to an irqchip which turns it back into an MSI for the GICv3. This would of > course be very inefficient, but I think we should be able to express this with > both the binding and the in-kernel framework just to be on the safe side. Yes, the best way to tell the kernel which msi_chip should deliver to is describe the binding in DTS file. If a real degenerate case found, we can update the platform interface which is responsible for getting the match msi_chip in future. > > > Arnd > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in > the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/ > > . > -- Thanks! 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