Re: [RFC v2 25/39] pcmcia: add HAS_IOPORT dependencies

From: Bjorn Helgaas
Date: Thu May 05 2022 - 15:39:10 EST


On Thu, May 05, 2022 at 09:45:14AM +0100, Maciej W. Rozycki wrote:
> On Wed, 4 May 2022, Bjorn Helgaas wrote:
>
> > > Well, yes, except I would expect POWER9_CPU (and any higher versions we
> > > eventually get) to clear HAS_IOPORT. Generic configurations (GENERIC_CPU)
> > > would set HAS_IOPORT of course, as would any lower architecture variants
> > > that do or may support port I/O (it's not clear to me if there are any
> > > that do not). Ideally a generic configuration would not issue accesses to
> > > random MMIO locations for port I/O accesses via `inb'/`outb', etc. for
> > > systems that do not support port I/O (which it now does, or at least used
> > > to until recently).
> >
> > It would seem weird to me that a module would build and run on a
> > generic kernel running on POWER9 (with some safe way of handling
> > inb/outb that don't actually work), but not on a kernel built
> > specifically for POWER9_CPU.
>
> Why? If you say configure your Alpha kernel for ALPHA_JENSEN, a pure
> EISA system, then you won't get PCI support nor any PCI drivers offered
> even though a generic Alpha kernel will get them all and still run on a
> Jensen system. I find that no different from our case here.
>
> And if we do ever get TURBOchannel Alpha support, then a generic kernel
> configuration will offer EISA, PCI and TURBOchannel drivers, while you
> won't be offered TURBOchannel drivers for a PCI system and vice versa.
> It would make no sense to me.
>
> Please mind that the main objective for system-specific configurations is
> optimisation, including both size and speed, and a part of the solution is
> discarding stuff that's irrelevant for the respective system. So in our
> case we do want any port I/O code not to be there at all in compiled code
> and consequently any driver that absolutely requires port I/O code to work
> will have to become a useless stub in its compiled form. What would be
> the point then of having it there in the first place except to spread
> confusion?

Good points.