Re: [RFC PATCH 1/3] PCI: Add standard PCI Config Address macros

From: Pali Rohár
Date: Tue Sep 13 2022 - 17:24:31 EST


On Tuesday 13 September 2022 16:11:43 Bjorn Helgaas wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 11, 2022 at 01:20:22PM +0200, Pali Rohár wrote:
> > Lot of PCI and PCIe controllers are using standard Config Address for PCI
> > Configuration Mechanism #1 (as defined inPCI Local Bus Specification) or
> > its extended version.
> >
> > So introduce new macros PCI_CONF1_ADDRESS() and PCI_CONF1_EXT_ADDRESS() in
> > new include file linux/pci-conf1.h which can be suitable for PCI and PCIe
> > controllers which uses this type of access to PCI config space.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Pali Rohár <pali@xxxxxxxxxx>
> > ---
> > include/linux/pci-conf1.h | 51 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> > 1 file changed, 51 insertions(+)
> > create mode 100644 include/linux/pci-conf1.h
>
> This seems like a nice addition, but it would be nice if we could
> encapsulate it in drivers/pci.
>
> I know it's parallel to the existing include/linux/pci-ecam.h. I wish
> we could encapsulate *that* in drivers/pci, too. For pci-ecam.h, I
> think the only things that prevent that are drivers/acpi/pci_mcfg.c,
> loongarch, and a few arm64 things.

As these macros describe original Intel x86 API, it can be used also in
arch/x86 PCI code.

> pci_mcfg.c arguably would make more sense in drivers/pci; it uses
> acpi_table_parse(), but no other ACPI services.
>
> The arm64 code that uses pci-ecam.h is really generic code that would
> not be in arch/arm64 except for the fact that x86 has really ugly
> legacy x86-specific mmconfig code.

IIRC that legacy x86-specific code is used also on modern AMD processors
which have broken ECAM. AMD supports that extended version of CF8/CFC
with access to PCIe extended config space registers.

> I guess that's a long-winded way of saying that I think maybe we could
> put this in drivers/pci/pci.h even though the parallel ECAM stuff is
> in include/linux/pci-ecam.h.
>
> Bjorn

Well, if you like this change, let me know where to put those new
macros, into which file and in which subdirectory, and I can prepare a
new patch version.

But doing all those arm64, x86, ACPI cleanup is a huge cross-tree work
which I'm really not going to do...