On Thu, Oct 20, 2022 at 04:22:02PM +0800, Jianmin Lv wrote:
On LoongArch ACPI based systems, the PCI devices (e.g. sata
controlers and PCI-to-to PCI bridge controlers) existed in
Loongson chipsets output high-level interrupt signal to the
interrupt controller they connected to,
I assume the active high behavior is hardware behavior that is
independent of the fact that you're using ACPI firmware on the
hardware. If so, I would omit "ACPI based".
s/sata/SATA/
s/controlers/controllers/ (twice)
s/PCI-to-to PCI/PCI-to-PCI/
s/existed in/in/
s/they connected/they are connected/
while the IRQs are
active low from the perspective of PCI(in 2.2.6. Interrupt
Pins, "Interrupts on PCI are optional and defined as level
sensitive, asserted low),
I don't think you need this spec reference, since "asserted low" is
the standard thing that happens everywhere. But if you do want it, it
needs to specify which spec it refers to, e.g., "Conventional PCI
r3.0, sec 2.2.6" so it's not confused with the PCIe spec.
The quote from the spec itself should be terminated with a close quote
("), i.e.,
"Interrupts on PCI ... asserted low"
Yes, no mentions for the inverter in ACPI spec, the description aboutwhich means that the interrupt
output of PCI devices plugged into PCI-to-to PCI bridges of
Loongson chipset will be also converted to high-level. So
high level triggered type is required to be passed to
acpi_register_gsi() when creating mappings for PCI devices.
This is the part where I was hoping for a reference to a spec that
talks about how PCI interrupts are inverted. The inverter is the part
that's special here.
I see that ACPI r6.5, sec 5.2.12, mentions LPIC, but it doesn't
mention the inverter. It has a lot more mentions of GIC, but also no
details about an inverter. I suppose that would be in the GIC spec,
which I'm not familiar with.
The point is that one should be able to write this code from a spec,
without having to empirically discover the interrupt polarity. What
spec tells you about using ACTIVE_HIGH here?
s/PCI-to-to PCI/PCI-to-PCI/ againOk, thanks.
Rewrap the log to fill 75 columns like the rest of the history.
Just like GIC is restricted to ARM, and LPIC is restricted to LoongArch, as you mentioned below. So LPIC model will be not used on non-LoongArch systems.Signed-off-by: Jianmin Lv <lvjianmin@xxxxxxxxxxx>
---
drivers/acpi/pci_irq.c | 6 ++++--
1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/acpi/pci_irq.c b/drivers/acpi/pci_irq.c
index 08e15774fb9f..ff30ceca2203 100644
--- a/drivers/acpi/pci_irq.c
+++ b/drivers/acpi/pci_irq.c
@@ -387,13 +387,15 @@ int acpi_pci_irq_enable(struct pci_dev *dev)
u8 pin;
int triggering = ACPI_LEVEL_SENSITIVE;
/*
- * On ARM systems with the GIC interrupt model, level interrupts
+ * On ARM systems with the GIC interrupt model, or LoongArch
+ * systems with the LPIC interrupt model, level interrupts
Is "LoongArch" required in this comment? Might the LPIC model be used
on non-LoongArch systems?
I see it follows the example of "ARM systems". In my opinion, "ARM"Though the definition and constraints for GIC and LPIC are explicitly expressed in ACPI spec, to be clear, repeating the relation here only with short words maybe worthy so that people understand the workaround conveniently without having to referencing ACPI spec, right?
probably should be removed, too, because the code checks only for GIC
or LPIC; it doesn't check for ARM or LoongArch.
If GIC is restricted to ARM and LPIC is restricted to LoongArch,
that's fine, but that constraint should be expressed somewhere else
and doesn't need to be repeated here.
* are always polarity high by specification; PCI legacy
* IRQs lines are inverted before reaching the interrupt
* controller and must therefore be considered active high
* as default.
*/
- int polarity = acpi_irq_model == ACPI_IRQ_MODEL_GIC ?
+ int polarity = acpi_irq_model == ACPI_IRQ_MODEL_GIC ||
+ acpi_irq_model == ACPI_IRQ_MODEL_LPIC ?
ACPI_ACTIVE_HIGH : ACPI_ACTIVE_LOW;
char *link = NULL;
char link_desc[16];
--
2.31.1