Date: Sat, 02 Jan 2021 09:20:20 -0800 From: Neel Chauhan <neel@neelc.org> To: Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.com> Cc: Mark Johnston <markj@freebsd.org>, freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org, ambrisko@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Debugging a WIP PCI/ACPI patch: Bad tailq NEXT(0xffffffff81cde660->tqh_last) != NULL Message-ID: <7cda3be6594d5ad5bdc69019f72b03d3@neelc.org> In-Reply-To: <4f3f6a02a452f766063ae2acb060dc64@neelc.org> References: <44528336fa9168966d121bf771e1e229@neelc.org> <X%2ByzpNIclmFYgbr7@raichu> <3c9ff844e527daacd04c51f48836b57d@neelc.org> <dbcc0e54eeb0080620ee4fb6d14845fc@neelc.org> <e73228a75b8f05c83214c62ed7e1ba68@neelc.org> <X%2B3tfbxHGdiW1Kvt@raichu> <20201231200744.GA95383@ambrisko.com> <4f3f6a02a452f766063ae2acb060dc64@neelc.org>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Just to ping you in case you may have missed my reply (I understand, New Years Day). Is there a reason why "b = pci_get_bus(dev);" return 0 even when the bus number is shifted (as it is on Linux)? -Neel On 2020-12-31 21:49, Neel Chauhan wrote: > Hi Doug, > > Thank you so much for this information. > > On 2020-12-31 12:07, Doug Ambrisko wrote: >> FYI, looks like this needs to be ported over from Linux: >> static char __iomem *vmd_cfg_addr(struct vmd_dev *vmd, struct pci_bus >> *bus, >> unsigned int devfn, int reg, int >> len) >> { >> char __iomem *addr = vmd->cfgbar + >> ((bus->number - vmd->busn_start) << 20) + >> (devfn << 12) + reg; >> >> to >> vmd_read_config >> offset = (b << 20) + (s << 15) + (f << 12) + reg; >> >> vmd_write_config(device_t dev, u_int b, u_int s, u_int f, u_int reg, >> offset = (b << 20) + (s << 15) + (f << 12) + reg; >> >> ie. >> offset = ((b - sc->vmd_bus_start) << 20) + (s << 15) + (f << 12) + >> reg; >> >> vmd_bus_start should be added to the softc as a uint8_t type and needs >> to >> be set via attach. We need range checks to make sure >> vmd_write_config/vmd_read_config doesn't read something out of range >> since it has been reduced. > > One thing I noticed is that the "b" variable (which corresponds to the > Linux bus->number) is 0 (thanks to printf). This should be the bus > number if we want to attach. > > If I use: "b = pci_get_bus(dev);" in the attach, b is still 0. > > And that leads to a kernel panic. > >> Not sure what the shadow registers do. These both seem to be new >> Intel >> features and Intel doc's have been minimal. Looks like Intel is doing >> a sparse map now on newer devices. > > I guess Linux is our best hope. Unless the new Intel docs is the Linux > kernel source. > >> I'm concerned about the Linux comment of: >> * Certain VMD devices may have a root port configuration >> option which >> * limits the bus range to between 0-127, 128-255, or 224-255 >> >> since I don't see anything to limit it between 0-127 only starting >> at 0, 128 or 224, Maybe there is max of 128 busses overall? > > I could be wrong, but I guess that's a typo. > >> I don't have this type of HW to test things. > > I can use my hardware for testing. In the worse case scenario, I can > donate an entry-level 11th Gen/TigerLake system if I have the funds > and/or can get a tax credit. > >> Doug A. > > -Neel > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list > https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers > To unsubscribe, send any mail to > "freebsd-hackers-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?7cda3be6594d5ad5bdc69019f72b03d3>