Re: [PATCH v2 0/4] Address error and recovery for AER and DPC

From: poza
Date: Wed Jan 03 2018 - 01:14:39 EST


On 2018-01-03 00:32, Bjorn Helgaas wrote:
On Fri, Dec 29, 2017 at 12:54:15PM +0530, Oza Pawandeep wrote:
This patch set brings in support for DPC and AER to co-exist and not to
race for recovery.

The current implementation of AER and error message broadcasting to the
EP driver is tightly coupled and limited to AER service driver.
It is important to factor out broadcasting and other link handling
callbacks. So that not only when AER gets triggered, but also when DPC get
triggered, or both get triggered simultaneously (for e.g. ERR_FATAL),
callbacks are handled appropriately.
having modularized the code, the race between AER and DPC is handled
gracefully.
for e.g. when DPC is active and kicked in, AER should not attempt to do
recovery, because DPC takes care of it.

High-level question:

We have some convoluted code in negotiate_os_control() and
aer_service_init() that (I think) essentially disables AER unless the
platform firmware grants us permission to use it.

The last implementation note in PCIe r3.1, sec 6.2.10 says

DPC may be controlled in some configurations by platform firmware
and in other configurations by the operating system. DPC
functionality is strongly linked with the functionality in Advanced
Error Reporting. To avoid conflicts over whether platform firmware
or the operating system have control of DPC, it is recommended that
platform firmware and operating systems always link the control of
DPC to the control of Advanced Error Reporting.

I read that as suggesting that we should enable DPC support in Linux
if and only if we also enable AER. But I don't see anything in DPC
that looks like that. Should there be something there? Should DPC be
restructured so it's enabled and handled inside the AER driver instead
of being a separate driver?

Bjorn

The whole idea of factoring out error handing and plug it back to DPC is to
enable DPC is participate synchronously in pcie_port_service_driver hooks.

AER and DPC both being port service driver, it makes more sense, for DPC to be able
to do with those callbacks as much as AER is able to do with those callbacks currently.
but those callbacks are tightly coupled with AER driver.

that way DPC and AER can act independently in their own space, by gaining more control.
and if needed, both can synchronize the callbacks.

Regards,
Oza.