Re: [PATCH 02/11] PCI: Try to allocate mem64 above 4G at first
From: Yinghai Lu
Date: Mon Jun 04 2012 - 22:37:08 EST
On Sun, Jun 3, 2012 at 6:05 PM, Bjorn Helgaas <bhelgaas@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 1, 2012 at 4:30 PM, Yinghai Lu <yinghai@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> On Tue, May 29, 2012 at 1:50 PM, H. Peter Anvin <hpa@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>
>>> The bus-side address space should not be more than 32 bits no matter
>>> what. As Bjorn indicates, you seem to be mixing up bus and cpu
>>> addresses all over the place.
>>
>> please check update patches that is using converted pci bus address
>> for boundary checking.
>
> What problem does this fix? There's significant risk that this
> allocation change will make us trip over something, so it must fix
> something to make it worth considering.
If we do not enable that, we would not find the problem.
On one my test setup that _CRS does state 64bit resource range,
but when I clear some device resource manually and let kernel allocate
high, just then find out those devices does not work with drivers.
It turns out _CRS have more big range than what the chipset setting states.
with fixing in BIOS, allocate high is working now on that platform.
>
> Steve's problem doesn't count because that's a "pci=nocrs" case that
> will always require special handling.
but pci=nocrs is still supported, even some systems does not work with
pci=use_crs
> A general solution is not
> possible without a BIOS change (to describe >4GB apertures) or a
> native host bridge driver (to discover >4GB apertures from the
> hardware). These patches only make Steve's machine work by accident
> -- they make us put the video device above 4GB, and we're just lucky
> that the host bridge claims that region.
Some bios looks enabling the non-stated range default to legacy chain.
Some bios does not do that. only stated range count.
So with pci=nocrs we still have some chance to get allocate high working.
>
> One possibility is some sort of boot-time option to force a PCI device
> to a specified address. That would be useful for debugging as well as
> for Steve's machine.
yeah, how about
pci=alloc_high
and default to disabled ?
Thanks
Yinghai
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