Re: [Patch v7 4/7] PCI/ACPI: Add interface acpi_pci_root_create()

From: Jiang Liu
Date: Tue Nov 10 2015 - 00:51:36 EST


This is a multi-part message in MIME format.On 2015/11/10 4:09, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> On Monday 09 November 2015 17:10:43 Lorenzo Pieralisi wrote:
>> On Mon, Nov 09, 2015 at 03:07:38PM +0100, Tomasz Nowicki wrote:
>>> On 06.11.2015 14:22, Jiang Liu wrote:
>>>> On 2015/11/6 20:40, Tomasz Nowicki wrote:
>>>>> On 06.11.2015 12:46, Jiang Liu wrote:
>>>>>> On 2015/11/6 18:37, Tomasz Nowicki wrote:
>>>>>>> On 06.11.2015 09:52, Jiang Liu wrote:
>>>>>>> Sure, ARM64 (0-16M IO space) QEMU example:
>>>>>>> DWordIO (ResourceProducer, MinFixed, MaxFixed, PosDecode, EntireRange,
>>>>>>> 0x00000000, // Granularity
>>>>>>> 0x00000000, // Range Minimum
>>>>>>> 0x0000FFFF, // Range Maximum
>>>>>>> 0x3EFF0000, // Translation Offset
>>>>>>> 0x00010000, // Length
>>>>>>> ,, , TypeStatic)
>>>>>> The above DWordIO resource descriptor doesn't confirm to the ACPI spec.
>>>>>> According to my understanding, ARM/ARM64 has no concept of IO port
>>>>>> address space, so the PCI host bridge will map IO port on PCI side
>>>>>> onto MMIO on host side. In other words, PCI host bridge on ARM64
>>>>>> implement a IO Port->MMIO translation instead of a IO Port->IO Port
>>>>>> translation. If that's true, it should use 'TypeTranslation' instead
>>>>>> of 'TypeStatic'. And kernel ACPI resource parsing interface doesn't
>>>>>> support 'TypeTranslation' yet, so we need to find a solution for it.
>>>>>
>>>>> I think you are right, we need TypeTranslation flag for ARM64 DWordIO
>>>>> descriptors and an extra kernel patch to support it.
>>>> How about the attached to patch to support TypeTranslation?
>>>> It only passes compilation:)
>>>
>>> Based on the further discussion, your draft patch looks good to me.
>>> Lorenzo, do you agree?
>>
>> No, because I still do not understand the difference between ia64 and
>> arm64 (they both drive IO ports cycles through MMIO so the resource
>> descriptors content must be the same or better they must mean the same
>> thing). On top of that, this is something that was heavily debated for DT:
>>
>> http://www.spinics.net/lists/arm-kernel/msg345633.html
>>
>> and I would like to get Arnd and Bjorn opinion on this because we
>> should not "interpret" ACPI specifications, we should understand
>> what they are supposed to describe and write kernel code accordingly.
>>
>> In particular, I would like to understand, for an eg DWordIO descriptor,
>> what Range Minimum, Range Maximum and Translation Offset represent,
>> they can't mean different things depending on the SW parsing them,
>> this totally defeats the purpose.
>
> I have no clue about what those mean in ACPI though.
>
> Generally speaking, each PCI domain is expected to have a (normally 64KB)
> range of CPU addresses that gets translated into PCI I/O space the same
> way that config space and memory space are handled.
> This is true for almost every architecture except for x86, which uses
> different CPU instructions for I/O space compared to the other spaces.
>
>> By the way, ia64 ioremaps the translation_offset (ie new_space()), so
>> basically that's the CPU physical address at which the PCI host bridge
>> map the IO space transactions), I do not think ia64 is any different from
>> arm64 in this respect, if it is please provide an HW description here from
>> the PCI bus perspective here (also an example of ia64 ACPI PCI host bridge
>> tables would help).
>
> The main difference between ia64 and a lot of the other architectures (e.g.
> sparc is different again) is that ia64 defines a logical address range
> in terms of having a small number for each I/O space followed by the
> offset within that space as a 'port number' and uses a mapping function
> that is defined as
>
> static inline void *__ia64_mk_io_addr (unsigned long port)
> {
> struct io_space *space = &io_space[IO_SPACE_NR(port)];
> return (space->mmio_base | IO_SPACE_PORT(port););
> }
> static inline unsigned int inl(unsigned long port)
> {
> return *__ia64_mk_io_addr(port);
> }
>
> Most architectures allow only one I/O port range and put it at a fixed
> virtual address so that inl() simply becomes
>
> static inline u32 inl(unsigned long addr)
> {
> return readl(PCI_IOBASE + addr);
> }
>
> which noticeably reduces code size.
>
> On some architectures (powerpc, arm, arm64), we then get the same simplified
> definition with a fixed virtual address, and use pci_ioremap_io() or
> something like that to to map a physical address range into this virtual
> address window at the correct io_offset;
Hi all,
Thanks for explanation, I found a way to make the ACPI resource
parsing interface arch neutral, it should help to address Lorenzo's
concern. Please refer to the attached patch. (It's still RFC, not tested
yet).
Thanks,
Gerry