Re: [PATCH] bus: fsl-mc: Add ACPI support for fsl-mc

From: Robin Murphy
Date: Tue Feb 18 2020 - 10:15:28 EST


On 18/02/2020 2:46 pm, Lorenzo Pieralisi wrote:
On Tue, Feb 18, 2020 at 12:48:39PM +0000, Pankaj Bansal (OSS) wrote:

[...]

In DT case, we create the domain DOMAIN_BUS_FSL_MC_MSI for MC bus and
it's children.
And then when MC child device is created, we search the "msi-parent"
property from the MC
DT node and get the ITS associated with MC bus. Then we search
DOMAIN_BUS_FSL_MC_MSI
on that ITS. Once we find the domain, we can call msi_domain_alloc_irqs for
that domain.

This is exactly what we tried to do initially with ACPI. But the searching
DOMAIN_BUS_FSL_MC_MSI
associated to an ITS, is something that is part of drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c.
(similar to DOMAIN_BUS_PLATFORM_MSI and DOMAIN_BUS_PCI_MSI)

Can you have a look at mbigen driver (drivers/irqchip/irq-mbigen.c) to see if
it helps you?

mbigen is an irq converter to convert device's wired interrupts into MSI
(connecting to ITS), which will alloc a bunch of MSIs from ITS platform MSI
domain at the setup.

Unfortunately this is not the same case as ours. As I see Hisilicon IORT table
Is using single id mapping with named components.

https://github.com/tianocore/edk2-platforms/blob/master/Silicon/Hisilicon/Hi1616/D05AcpiTables/D05Iort.asl#L300

while we are not:

https://source.codeaurora.org/external/qoriq/qoriq-components/edk2-platforms/tree/Platform/NXP/LX2160aRdbPkg/AcpiTables/Iort.aslc?h=LX2160_UEFI_ACPI_EAR1#n290

This is because as I said, we are trying to represent a bus in IORT
via named components and not individual devices connected to that bus.

I had a thorough look into this and strictly speaking there is no
*mapping* requirement at all, all you need to know is what ITS the FSL
MC bus is mapping MSIs to. Which brings me to the next question (which
is orthogonal to how to model FSL MC in IORT, that has to be discussed
but I want to have a full picture in mind first).

When you probe the FSL MC as a platform device, the ACPI core,
through IORT (if you add the 1:1 mapping as an array of single
mappings) already link the platform device to ITS platform
device MSI domain (acpi_configure_pmsi_domain()).

The associated fwnode is the *same* (IIUC) as for the
DOMAIN_BUS_FSL_MC_MSI and ITS DOMAIN_BUS_NEXUS, so in practice
you don't need IORT code to retrieve the DOMAIN_BUS_FSL_MC_MSI
domain, the fwnode is the same as the one in the FSL MC platform
device IRQ domain->fwnode pointer and you can use it to
retrieve the DOMAIN_BUS_FSL_MC_MSI domain through it.

Is my reading correct ?

Overall, DOMAIN_BUS_FSL_MC_MSI is just an MSI layer to override the
provide the MSI domain ->prepare hook (ie to stash the MC device id), no
more (ie its_fsl_mc_msi_prepare()).

That's it for the MSI layer - I need to figure out whether we *want* to
extend IORT (and/or ACPI) to defined bindings for "additional busses",
what I write above is a summary of my understanding, I have not made my
mind up yet.

I'm really not sure we'd need to go near any bindings - the IORT spec *can* reasonably describe "giant black box of DPAA2 stuff" as a single named component, and that's arguably the most accurate abstraction already, even when it comes to the namespace device. This isn't a bus in any traditional sense, it's a set of accelerator components with an interface to dynamically configure them into custom pipelines, and the expected use-case seems to be for userspace to freely reconfigure whatever virtual network adapters it wants at any given time. Thus I don't see that it's logical or even practical for firmware itself to be involved beyond describing "here's your toolbox", and in particular, basing any decisions on the particular way that DPAA2 has been shoehorned into the Linux driver model would almost certainly be a step in the wrong direction.

IMO the scope of this issue belongs entirely within the implementation(s) of Linux's own abstraction layers.

Robin.

As for the IOMMU code, it seems like the only thing needed i
extending named components configuration to child devices,
hierarchically.

As Marc already mentioned, IOMMU and IRQ code must be separate for
future postings but first we need to find a suitable answer to
the problem at hand.

Lorenzo