[PATCH v3 3/3] PCI: ARM: add support for generic PCI host controller
Arnd Bergmann
arnd at arndb.de
Wed Feb 19 09:17:56 EST 2014
On Wednesday 19 February 2014 11:07:19 Will Deacon wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 18, 2014 at 07:10:23PM +0000, Will Deacon wrote:
> > On Tue, Feb 18, 2014 at 01:46:44PM +0000, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> > > On Tuesday 18 February 2014 12:20:43 Will Deacon wrote:
> > > > + /* Register our I/O and Memory resources */
> > > > + res_valid = 0;
> > > > + list_for_each_entry(win, &pci->host.windows, list) {
> > > > + struct resource *parent;
> > > > +
> > > > + if (resource_type(win->res) == IORESOURCE_IO) {
> > > > + parent = &ioport_resource;
> > > > + err = pci_ioremap_io(win->offset, win->res->start);
> > >
> > > and consequently pass the pci_addr rather than the offset here. How about
> > > moving the pci_ioremap_io() call into gen_pci_alloc_io_offset()?
>
> I've probably just confused myself, but passing the pci_addr to
> pci_ioremap_io doesn't make sense to me.
I think the confusion is that there are two different things we call
offset here. The calculation of the offset you pass into
pci_ioremap_io() is correct AFAICT now, but it's not what you are
supposed to pass into pci_add_resource_offset() or what we normally
put into pci_host_bridge_window->offset.
> My understanding is that:
>
> cpu = bus + offset
Right. This would be the case for mem_offset.
> In the case of I/O, the offset is really:
>
> offset = (PCI_IO_VIRT_BASE - bus) + window
I can't seem to make sense of this calculation. PCI_IO_VIRT_BASE
is a pointer to the start of the virtual window. You can add offsets
to the pointer, but subtracting a number from it is not a well-defined
operation.
> where window is determined by the simple allocator I wrote.
And your allocator calls it offset, which is what confused me.
> Now, the __io macro takes care of PCI_IO_VIRT_BASE so we don't actually care
> about that when adding the PCI I/O resources, instead we'll just pass:
>
> offset = window - bus
Yes, this would be the io_offset that you pass into pci_add_resource_offset().
> and then pci_ioremap_io will just want the window offset, since that's added
> directly on to PCI_IO_VIRT_BASE for the ioremap_page_range.
Yes.
> If I call pci_ioremap_io(range->pci_addr, ...) then I'm going to trip a BUG_ON
> unless the pci_addr is within IO_SPACE_LIMIT.
range->pci_addr is what you call 'bus' above. Since you want 'window', you
have to pass 'bus'+'offset', or 'range->pci_addr + io_offset'. Normally, one
of the two would be zero, while the other is equal to 'window'.
Arnd
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