Re: [PATCH v2 1/1] PCI: Fix BAR resizing when VF BARs are assigned
From: Alex Williamson
Date: Mon Mar 17 2025 - 18:39:19 EST
On Mon, 17 Mar 2025 19:18:03 +0100
Michał Winiarski <michal.winiarski@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 14, 2025 at 08:56:49AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote:
> > On Fri, 7 Mar 2025 16:03:49 +0200
> > Ilpo Järvinen <ilpo.jarvinen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > > __resource_resize_store() attempts to release all resources of the
> > > device before attempting the resize. The loop, however, only covers
> > > standard BARs (< PCI_STD_NUM_BARS). If a device has VF BARs that are
> > > assigned, pci_reassign_bridge_resources() finds the bridge window still
> > > has some assigned child resources and returns -NOENT which makes
> > > pci_resize_resource() to detect an error and abort the resize.
> > >
> > > Change the release loop to cover all resources up to VF BARs which
> > > allows the resize operation to release the bridge windows and attempt
> > > to assigned them again with the different size.
> > >
> > > As __resource_resize_store() checks first that no driver is bound to
> > > the PCI device before resizing is allowed, SR-IOV cannot be enabled
> > > during resize so it is safe to release also the IOV resources.
> >
> > Is this true? pci-pf-stub doesn't teardown SR-IOV on release, which I
> > understand is done intentionally. Thanks,
>
> Is that really intentional?
> PCI warns when that scenario occurs:
> https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v6.13.7/source/drivers/pci/iov.c#L936
Yep, it warns. It doesn't prevent it from happening though.
> I thought that the usecase is binding pci-pf-stub, creating VFs, and
> letting the driver be.
> But unbinding after creating VFs? What's the goal of that?
> Perhaps we're just missing .remove() in pci-pf-stub?
I guess I don't actually know that leaving SR-IOV enabled was
intentional, maybe it was an oversight. The original commit only
mentions the case of a device that requires nothing but this shim as
the PF driver. A pci_warn() isn't much disincentive, the system might
already have taints. If it's something that we really want to show as
broken, it'd probably need to be a WARN_ON. Thanks,
Alex