[OpenWrt-Devel] [PATCH 1/4] PCI: add DT bindings for Cortina Gemini PCI Host Bridge

Linus Walleij linus.walleij at linaro.org
Sun Feb 5 09:56:43 EST 2017


On Wed, Feb 1, 2017 at 12:19 PM, Arnd Bergmann <arnd at arndb.de> wrote:
> On Saturday, January 28, 2017 9:48:36 PM CET Linus Walleij wrote:
>> +       interrupt-map-mask = <0xff00 0 0 7>;
>> +       interrupt-map = <0x4800 0 0 1 &pci_intc 0>, /* Slot 9 */
>> +                       <0x4900 0 0 2 &pci_intc 1>,
>> +                       <0x4a00 0 0 3 &pci_intc 2>,
>> +                       <0x4b00 0 0 4 &pci_intc 3>,
>> +                       <0x5000 0 0 1 &pci_intc 0>, /* Slot 10 */
>> +                       <0x5100 0 0 2 &pci_intc 1>,
>> +                       <0x5200 0 0 3 &pci_intc 2>,
>> +                       <0x5300 0 0 4 &pci_intc 3>,
>> +                       <0x5800 0 0 1 &pci_intc 0>, /* Slot 11 */
>> +                       <0x5900 0 0 2 &pci_intc 1>,
>> +                       <0x5a00 0 0 3 &pci_intc 2>,
>> +                       <0x5b00 0 0 4 &pci_intc 3>,
>> +                       <0x6000 0 0 1 &pci_intc 0>, /* Slot 12 */
>> +                       <0x6100 0 0 2 &pci_intc 1>,
>> +                       <0x6200 0 0 3 &pci_intc 2>,
>> +                       <0x6300 0 0 4 &pci_intc 3>;
>>
>
> The mapping looks wrong here, we normally don't list interrupts per function
> so the mask should be 0xf800.

Yup it works that way too, and indeed the USB hub on function
2 was requesting the right pin and everything.

> Note that the interrupt map is board specific, so this should probably
> go in the board.dts file rather than platform.dtsi.

OK moving it down there.

> For this particular board, the interrupt lines appear to have been badly
> configured so all slots use the same interrupt 0 for IntA. IIRC This also
> means you can probably use <0 0 0 7> as the mask and just specify each of
> the four interrupts once. A properly wired board would swizzle the
> interrupts so that each slot has a different IRQ for its IntA line.

They are swizzled, I just have very bad hardware docs. (Only
code.) It turns out when I'm browsing through old board support
code that there is a comment followed by a piece of code like this:

/*
 *      No swizzle on SL2312
 */
static u8 __init sl2312_pci_swizzle(struct pci_dev *dev, u8 *pinp)
{
        return PCI_SLOT(dev->devfn);
}

/*
 * map the specified device/slot/pin to an IRQ.  This works out such
 * that slot 9 pin 1 is INT0, pin 2 is INT1, and slot 10 pin 1 is INT1.
 */
static int __init sl2312_pci_map_irq(struct pci_dev *dev, u8 slot, u8 pin)
{
        int intnr = ((slot  + (pin - 1)) & 3) + 4;  /* the IRQ number
of PCI bridge */

        printk("%s : slot = %d  pin = %d \n",__func__,slot,pin);
    switch (slot)
    {
        case 12:
                if (pin==1)
                {
                        intnr = 3;
                    }
                    else
                    {
                        intnr = 0;
                    }
#ifdef CONFIG_DUAL_PCI
                    return IRQ_PCI_INTD;
#endif
            break;
        case 11:
                    intnr = (2 + (pin - 1)) & 3;
#ifdef CONFIG_DUAL_PCI
                    return IRQ_PCI_INTC;
#endif
            break;
        case 10:
                    intnr = (1 + (pin - 1)) & 3;
#ifdef CONFIG_DUAL_PCI
                    return IRQ_PCI_INTB;
#endif
            break;
        case  9:
                    intnr = (pin - 1) & 3;
            break;
    }
//      if (slot == 10)
//              intnr = (1 + (pin - 1)) & 3;
//      else if (slot == 9)
//              intnr = (pin - 1) & 3;
        return (IRQ_PCI_INTA + intnr);
}

If I understand correctly they say that the IRQs are not swizzled
on the PCI bridge side but on the IRQ handler side.

So if I put it in the device tree like so:

+                         interrupt-map =
+                               <0x4800 0 0 1 &pci_intc 0>, /* Slot 9 */
+                               <0x4800 0 0 2 &pci_intc 1>,
+                               <0x4800 0 0 3 &pci_intc 2>,
+                               <0x4800 0 0 4 &pci_intc 3>,
+                               <0x5000 0 0 1 &pci_intc 1>, /* Slot 10 */
+                               <0x5000 0 0 2 &pci_intc 2>,
+                               <0x5000 0 0 3 &pci_intc 3>,
+                               <0x5000 0 0 4 &pci_intc 0>,
+                               <0x5800 0 0 1 &pci_intc 2>, /* Slot 11 */
+                               <0x5800 0 0 2 &pci_intc 3>,
+                               <0x5800 0 0 3 &pci_intc 0>,
+                               <0x5800 0 0 4 &pci_intc 1>,
+                               <0x6000 0 0 1 &pci_intc 3>, /* Slot 12 */
+                               <0x6000 0 0 2 &pci_intc 0>,
+                               <0x6000 0 0 3 &pci_intc 1>,
+                               <0x6000 0 0 4 &pci_intc 2>;

So the IRQs on the right side are swizzled instead
of the pins being swizzled.

...but that looks a bit insane.

Isn't that exactly the same thing just exposed in some
inverse way?

I'll try to get the RALink MiniPCI I have ín the slot going and
see if it works the same with just good old vanilla
swizzling.

Yours,
Linus Walleij
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