Re: [PATCH V5 1/3] ARM64 LPC: Indirect ISA port IO introduced
From: Benjamin Herrenschmidt
Date: Tue Nov 08 2016 - 18:17:57 EST
On Tue, 2016-11-08 at 12:03 +0000, Mark Rutland wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 08, 2016 at 11:47:07AM +0800, zhichang.yuan wrote:
> >
> > For arm64, there is no I/O space as other architectural platforms, such as
> > X86. Most I/O accesses are achieved based on MMIO. But for some arm64 SoCs,
> > such as Hip06, when accessing some legacy ISA devices connected to LPC, those
> > known port addresses are used to control the corresponding target devices, for
> > example, 0x2f8 is for UART, 0xe4 is for ipmi-bt. It is different from the
> > normal MMIO mode in using.
>
> This has nothing to do with arm64. Hardware with this kind of indirect
> bus access could be integrated with a variety of CPU architectures. It
> simply hasn't been, yet.
On some ppc's we also use similar indirect access methods for IOs. We
have a generic infrastructure for re-routing some memory or IO regions
to hooks.
On POWER8, our PCIe doesn't do IO at all, but we have an LPC bus behind
firmware calls ;-) We use that infrastructure to plumb in the LPC bus.
> > To drive these devices, this patch introduces a method named indirect-IO.
> > In this method the in/out pair in arch/arm64/include/asm/io.h will be
> > redefined. When upper layer drivers call in/out with those known legacy port
> > addresses to access the peripherals, the hooking functions corrresponding to
> > those target peripherals will be called. Through this way, those upper layer
> > drivers which depend on in/out can run on Hip06 without any changes.
>
> As above, this has nothing to do with arm64, and as such, should live in
> generic code, exactly as we would do if we had higher-level ISA
> accessor ops.
>
> Regardless, given the multi-instance case, I don't think this is
> sufficient in general (and I think we need higher-level ISA accessors
> to handle the indirection).
Multi-instance with IO is tricky to do generically because archs already
have all sort of hacks to deal with the fact that inb/outb don't require
an explicit ioremap, so an IO resource can take all sort of shape depending
on the arch.
Overall it boils down to applying some kind of per-instance "offset" to
the IO port number though.
> [...]
>
> >
> > diff --git a/arch/arm64/include/asm/extio.h b/arch/arm64/include/asm/extio.h
> > new file mode 100644
> > index 0000000..6ae0787
> > --- /dev/null
> > +++ b/arch/arm64/include/asm/extio.h
>
> >
> > +#ifndef __LINUX_EXTIO_H
> > +#define __LINUX_EXTIO_H
>
> This doesn't match the file naming, __ASM_EXTIO_H would be consistent
> with other arm64 headers.
>
> >
> > +
> > +struct extio_ops {
> > > > + unsigned long start;/* inclusive, sys io addr */
> > > > + unsigned long end;/* inclusive, sys io addr */
>
> Please put whitespace before inline comments.
>
> [...]
>
> >
> > > > +type in##bw(unsigned long addr) \
> > > > +{ \
> > > > > > + if (!arm64_extio_ops || arm64_extio_ops->start > addr || \
> > > > > > + arm64_extio_ops->end < addr) \
> > > > > > + return read##bw(PCI_IOBASE + addr); \
> > > > > > + return arm64_extio_ops->pfin ? \
> > > > > > + arm64_extio_ops->pfin(arm64_extio_ops->devpara, \
> > > > > > + addr, sizeof(type)) : -1; \
> > > > +} \
> > > > + \
> > > > +void out##bw(type value, unsigned long addr) \
> > > > +{ \
> > > > > > + if (!arm64_extio_ops || arm64_extio_ops->start > addr || \
> > > > > > + arm64_extio_ops->end < addr) \
> > > > > > + write##bw(value, PCI_IOBASE + addr); \
> > > > > > + else \
> > > > > > + if (arm64_extio_ops->pfout) \
> > > > + arm64_extio_ops->pfout(arm64_extio_ops->devpara,\
> > > > > > + addr, value, sizeof(type)); \
> > > > +} \
> > > > + \
> > > > +void ins##bw(unsigned long addr, void *buffer, unsigned int count) \
> > > > +{ \
> > > > > > + if (!arm64_extio_ops || arm64_extio_ops->start > addr || \
> > > > > > + arm64_extio_ops->end < addr) \
> > > > > > + reads##bw(PCI_IOBASE + addr, buffer, count); \
> > > > > > + else \
> > > > > > + if (arm64_extio_ops->pfins) \
> > > > + arm64_extio_ops->pfins(arm64_extio_ops->devpara,\
> > > > > > + addr, buffer, sizeof(type), count); \
> > > > +} \
> > > > + \
> > > > +void outs##bw(unsigned long addr, const void *buffer, unsigned int count) \
> > > > +{ \
> > > > > > + if (!arm64_extio_ops || arm64_extio_ops->start > addr || \
> > > > > > + arm64_extio_ops->end < addr) \
> > > > > > + writes##bw(PCI_IOBASE + addr, buffer, count); \
> > > > > > + else \
> > > > > > + if (arm64_extio_ops->pfouts) \
> > > > + arm64_extio_ops->pfouts(arm64_extio_ops->devpara,\
> > > > > > + addr, buffer, sizeof(type), count); \
> > +}
> > +
>
> So all PCI I/O will be slowed down by irrelevant checks when this is
> enabled?
>
> [...]
>
> >
> > +static inline void arm64_set_extops(struct extio_ops *ops)
> > +{
> > > > + if (ops)
> > > > + WRITE_ONCE(arm64_extio_ops, ops);
> > +}
>
> Why WRITE_ONCE()?
>
> Is this not protected/propagated by some synchronisation mechanism?
>
> WRITE_ONCE() is not sufficient to ensure that this is consistently
> observed by readers, and regardless, I don't see READ_ONCE() anywhere in
> this patch.
>
> This looks very suspicious.
>
> Thanks,
> Mark.