Re: [PATCH 0/3] add dynamic PCI device of_node creation for overlay

From: Andy Shevchenko
Date: Mon May 09 2022 - 13:00:51 EST


On Mon, May 09, 2022 at 06:09:17PM +0200, Clément Léger wrote:
> Le Mon, 9 May 2022 10:56:36 -0500,
> Frank Rowand <frowand.list@xxxxxxxxx> a écrit :

...

> > On the surface, it appears that your need might be well met by having
> > a base devicetree that describes all of the pcie nodes, but with each
> > node having a status of "disabled" so that they will not be used.
> > Have a devicetree overlay describing the pcie card (as you proposed),
> > where the overlay also includes a status of "ok" for the pcie node.
> > Applying the overlay, with a method of redirecting the target to a
> > specific pcie node would change the status of the pcie node to enable
> > its use. (You have already proposed a patch to modify
> > of_overlay_fdt_apply() to allow a modified target, so not a new
> > concept from me.) My suggestion is to apply the overlay devicetree
> > to the base devicetree before the combined FDT devicetree is passed
> > to the kernel at boot. The overlay apply could be done by several
> > different entities. It could be before the bootloader executes, it
> > could be done by the bootloader, it could be done by a shim between
> > the bootloader and the kernel. This method avoids all of the issues
> > of applying an overlay to a running system that I find problematic.
> > It is also a method used by the U-boot bootloader, as an example.
>
> Ok, that is actually possible on a system that is given a device-tree
> by the bootloader. But on a system that is desrcibed using ACPI (such
> as the x86), this is much more difficult (at least to my knowledge)...
> We want this feature to be easy to use for the end user. Adding such
> configuration which also differs between various architecture is
> clearly not so easy to setup.
>
> Moreover, since the PCI is meant to be "Plug and Play", such
> configuration would completely break that. If the user switches the
> PCIe card from one slot to another, the bootloader configuration will
> need to be modified. This seems a big no way for me (and for the user).

The main problem here is that Linux does not support hotplugging for the
devices behind non-hotpluggable buses. You need to develop something to
say that the device tree (in terms of hardware) can morph at run-time
transparently to the user. I think the closest one is what FPGA does,
or at least should do.

> > The other big issue is mixing ACPI and devicetree on a single system.
> > Historically, the Linux devicetree community has not been receptive
> > to the ides of that mixture. Your example might be a specific case
> > where the two can be isolated from each other, or maybe not. (For
> > disclosure, I am essentially ACPI ignorant.) I suspect that mixing
> > ACPI and devicetree is a recipe for disaster in the general case.
>
> Agreed, on that fact, it did raised some eyebrows, and it was for that
> specific concern that initially, I proposed the fwnode solution.
> Honestly, the fwnode conversion represent a lot of work (hundreds of
> lines easily) + requires a conversion of all the subsystem that are not
> fwnode ready (spoiler: almost all of them are not ready).

In either case you need to provide a format that would be suitable for
DT-based as well as ACPI-based platforms.

--
With Best Regards,
Andy Shevchenko