[RFT PATCH v3 12/27] of/address: Add infrastructure to declare MMIO as non-posted
Hector Martin
marcan at marcan.st
Tue Mar 9 20:23:47 GMT 2021
On 10/03/2021 00.48, Rob Herring wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 8, 2021 at 2:56 PM Arnd Bergmann <arnd at kernel.org> wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, Mar 8, 2021 at 10:14 PM Rob Herring <robh at kernel.org> wrote:
>>> On Mon, Mar 08, 2021 at 09:29:54PM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
>>>> On Mon, Mar 8, 2021 at 4:56 PM Rob Herring <robh at kernel.org> wrote:
>>>
>>> Let's just stick with 'nonposted-mmio', but drop 'posted-mmio'. I'd
>>> rather know if and when we need 'posted-mmio'. It does need to be added
>>> to the DT spec[1] and schema[2] though (GH PRs are fine for both).
>>
>> I think the reason for having "posted-mmio" is that you cannot properly
>> define the PCI host controller nodes on the M1 without that: Since
>> nonposted-mmio applies to all child nodes, this would mean the PCI
>> memory space gets declared as nonposted by the DT, but the hardware
>> requires it to be mapped as posted.
>
> I don't think so. PCI devices wouldn't use any of the code paths in
> this patch. They would map their memory space with plain ioremap()
> which is posted.
My main concern here is that this creates an inconsistency in the device
tree representation that only works because PCI drivers happen not to
use these code paths. Logically, having "nonposted-mmio" above the PCI
controller would imply that it applies to that bus too. Sure, it doesn't
matter for Linux since it is ignored, but this creates an implicit
exception that PCI buses always use posted modes.
Then if a device comes along that due to some twisted fabric logic needs
nonposted nGnRnE mappings for PCIe (even though the actual PCIe ops will
end up posted at the bus anyway)... how do we represent that? Declare
that another "nonposted-mmio" on the PCIe bus means "no, really, use
nonposted mmio for this"?
--
Hector Martin (marcan at marcan.st)
Public Key: https://mrcn.st/pub
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