Re: [PATCH V3 1/3] vfio, platform: add support for ACPI while detecting the reset driver
From: Arnd Bergmann
Date: Tue Mar 29 2016 - 07:26:34 EST
On Tuesday 29 March 2016 06:59:15 okaya@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> On 2016-03-29 05:25, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> > On Monday 28 March 2016 09:35:22 Sinan Kaya wrote:
> >> The code is using the compatible DT string to associate a reset driver
> >> with
> >> the actual device itself. The compatible string does not exist on ACPI
> >> based systems. HID is the unique identifier for a device driver
> >> instead.
> >> The change allows a driver to register with DT compatible string or
> >> ACPI
> >> HID and then match the object with one of these conditions.
> >>
> >> Rules for loading the reset driver are as follow:
> >> - ACPI HID needs match for ACPI systems
> >> - DT compat needs to match for OF systems
> >>
> >> Tested-by: Eric Auger <eric.auger@xxxxxxxxxx> (device tree only)
> >> Tested-by: Shanker Donthineni <shankerd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> (ACPI only)
> >> Signed-off-by: Sinan Kaya <okaya@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> >>
> >
> >
> > This really feels wrong for two reasons:
> >
> > * device assignment of non-PCI devices is really special and doesn't
> > seem to make sense on general purpose servers that would be the
> > target
> > for ACPI normally
>
>
> Why is it special? Acpi is not equal to pci. Platform devices are first
> class devices too. Especially, _cls was introduced for this reason.
It still feels like a hack. The normal design for a server is to have
all internal devices show up on the PCI host bridge, next to the PCIe
ports, to have a simple way to manage any device, both internal and
off-chip. Putting a device on random MMIO registers outside of the
discoverable buses and have the firmware work around the lack of
discoverability will always be inferior.
> >
> > * If there is indeed a requirement for ACPI to handle something like
> > this,
> > it should be part of the ACPI spec, with a well-defined method of
> > handling
> > reset, rather than having to add a device specific hack for each
> > device separately.
> >
>
> I see. Normally, this is done by calling _rst method. AFAIK, Linux
> doesnât support _rst. I can check its presence and call it if it is
> there.
Yes, that sounds reasonable: In patch 2 where you check for the
presence of the reset method, just keep the existing logic for
DT based systems, and use _rst on ACPI based systems instead,
then you can drop both patches 1 and 3.
Arnd