diff mbox

[v2] PCI: tegra: Do not allocate MSI target memory

Message ID 20171214135620.13564-1-thierry.reding@gmail.com (mailing list archive)
State New, archived
Delegated to: Bjorn Helgaas
Headers show

Commit Message

Thierry Reding Dec. 14, 2017, 1:56 p.m. UTC
From: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>

The PCI host bridge found on Tegra SoCs doesn't require the MSI target
address to be backed by physical system memory. Writes are intercepted
within the controller and never make it to the memory pointed to.

Since no actual system memory is required, remove the allocation of a
single page and hardcode the MSI target address with a special address
on a per-SoC basis. Ideally this would be an address to an MMIO memory
region (such as where the controller's register are located). However,
those addresses don't work reliably across all Tegra generations. The
only set of addresses that work consistently are those that point to
external memory.

This is not ideal, since those addresses could technically be used for
DMA and hence be confusing. However, the first page of external memory
is unlikely to be used and special enough to avoid confusion.

Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
---
Changes in v2:
- use physical base address of system memory as MSI target address

Vidya, Manikanta,

I've tested this on all of Tegra20, Tegra30, Tegra124, Tegra210 and
Tegra186, so I'm confident that this is finally a good set of addresses.
However, it'd be good to get confirmation from you since we had
conflicting test results the last time around.

Thanks,
Thierry

 drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c | 41 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------
 1 file changed, 35 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)

Comments

Vidya Sagar Dec. 14, 2017, 5:56 p.m. UTC | #1
On Thursday 14 December 2017 07:26 PM, Thierry Reding wrote:
> From: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
>
> The PCI host bridge found on Tegra SoCs doesn't require the MSI target
> address to be backed by physical system memory. Writes are intercepted
> within the controller and never make it to the memory pointed to.
>
> Since no actual system memory is required, remove the allocation of a
> single page and hardcode the MSI target address with a special address
> on a per-SoC basis. Ideally this would be an address to an MMIO memory
> region (such as where the controller's register are located). However,
> those addresses don't work reliably across all Tegra generations. The
> only set of addresses that work consistently are those that point to
> external memory.
>
> This is not ideal, since those addresses could technically be used for
> DMA and hence be confusing. However, the first page of external memory
> is unlikely to be used and special enough to avoid confusion.
>
> Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
> ---
> Changes in v2:
> - use physical base address of system memory as MSI target address
>
> Vidya, Manikanta,
>
> I've tested this on all of Tegra20, Tegra30, Tegra124, Tegra210 and
> Tegra186, so I'm confident that this is finally a good set of addresses.
> However, it'd be good to get confirmation from you since we had
> conflicting test results the last time around.
>
> Thanks,
> Thierry
>
>   drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c | 41 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------
>   1 file changed, 35 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c b/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c
> index ee193767f77b..f2214ca1ad17 100644
> --- a/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c
> +++ b/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c
> @@ -236,7 +236,6 @@ struct tegra_msi {
>   	struct msi_controller chip;
>   	DECLARE_BITMAP(used, INT_PCI_MSI_NR);
>   	struct irq_domain *domain;
> -	unsigned long pages;
>   	struct mutex lock;
>   	u64 phys;
>   	int irq;
> @@ -246,6 +245,7 @@ struct tegra_msi {
>   struct tegra_pcie_soc {
>   	unsigned int num_ports;
>   	unsigned int msi_base_shift;
> +	u64 msi_target;
>   	u32 pads_pll_ctl;
>   	u32 tx_ref_sel;
>   	u32 pads_refclk_cfg0;
> @@ -1576,9 +1576,35 @@ static int tegra_pcie_enable_msi(struct tegra_pcie *pcie)
>   		goto err;
>   	}
>   
> -	/* setup AFI/FPCI range */
> -	msi->pages = __get_free_pages(GFP_KERNEL, 0);
> -	msi->phys = virt_to_phys((void *)msi->pages);
> +	/*
> +	 * The PCI host bridge on Tegra contains some logic that intercepts
> +	 * MSI writes, which means that the MSI target address doesn't have
> +	 * to point to actual physical memory. Rather than allocating one 4
> +	 * KiB page of system memory that's never used, we can simply pick
> +	 * an arbitrary address within a reserved area in the FPCI address
> +	 * map.
> +	 *
> +	 * Note that MSI writes are never committed to memory, so it doesn't
> +	 * really matter which address we pick. However, since the address
> +	 * may show up at some point and potentially confuse users, the best
> +	 * solution would be to pick an address that is obviously not within
> +	 * system memory. The FPCI address map contains a range that cannot
> +	 * be accessed by any Tegra CPU, but unfortunately that excludes the
> +	 * usage for 32-bit MSI capable devices.
> +	 *
> +	 * A good choice that supports both 32-bit and 64-bit MSI would be to
> +	 * pick a memory address within the PCI MMIO region that is currently
> +	 * not used for configuration space, downstream I/O, prefetchable or
> +	 * non prefetchable memory. However, it seems like not all chips will
> +	 * be able to intercept MSI writes to those addresses.
> +	 *
> +	 * The only reliable addresses that seem to work point to external
> +	 * memory. Pick the physical base address of system memory as the MSI
> +	 * target address. This is slightly less than ideal because it could
> +	 * technically, though unlikely, be used for DMA. However, since the
> +	 * MSI writes will be intercepted, this should be of little concern.
> +	 */
> +	msi->phys = soc->msi_target;
>   
>   	afi_writel(pcie, msi->phys >> soc->msi_base_shift, AFI_MSI_FPCI_BAR_ST);
>   	afi_writel(pcie, msi->phys, AFI_MSI_AXI_BAR_ST);
> @@ -1630,8 +1656,6 @@ static int tegra_pcie_disable_msi(struct tegra_pcie *pcie)
>   	afi_writel(pcie, 0, AFI_MSI_EN_VEC6);
>   	afi_writel(pcie, 0, AFI_MSI_EN_VEC7);
>   
> -	free_pages(msi->pages, 0);
> -
>   	if (msi->irq > 0)
>   		free_irq(msi->irq, pcie);
>   
> @@ -2140,6 +2164,7 @@ static void tegra_pcie_enable_ports(struct tegra_pcie *pcie)
>   static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra20_pcie = {
>   	.num_ports = 2,
>   	.msi_base_shift = 0,
> +	.msi_target = 0x00000000,
>   	.pads_pll_ctl = PADS_PLL_CTL_TEGRA20,
>   	.tx_ref_sel = PADS_PLL_CTL_TXCLKREF_DIV10,
>   	.pads_refclk_cfg0 = 0xfa5cfa5c,
> @@ -2155,6 +2180,7 @@ static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra20_pcie = {
>   static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra30_pcie = {
>   	.num_ports = 3,
>   	.msi_base_shift = 8,
> +	.msi_target = 0x80000000,
>   	.pads_pll_ctl = PADS_PLL_CTL_TEGRA30,
>   	.tx_ref_sel = PADS_PLL_CTL_TXCLKREF_BUF_EN,
>   	.pads_refclk_cfg0 = 0xfa5cfa5c,
> @@ -2171,6 +2197,7 @@ static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra30_pcie = {
>   static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra124_pcie = {
>   	.num_ports = 2,
>   	.msi_base_shift = 8,
> +	.msi_target = 0x80000000,
>   	.pads_pll_ctl = PADS_PLL_CTL_TEGRA30,
>   	.tx_ref_sel = PADS_PLL_CTL_TXCLKREF_BUF_EN,
>   	.pads_refclk_cfg0 = 0x44ac44ac,
> @@ -2186,6 +2213,7 @@ static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra124_pcie = {
>   static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra210_pcie = {
>   	.num_ports = 2,
>   	.msi_base_shift = 8,
> +	.msi_target = 0x80000000,
>   	.pads_pll_ctl = PADS_PLL_CTL_TEGRA30,
>   	.tx_ref_sel = PADS_PLL_CTL_TXCLKREF_BUF_EN,
>   	.pads_refclk_cfg0 = 0x90b890b8,
> @@ -2201,6 +2229,7 @@ static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra210_pcie = {
>   static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra186_pcie = {
>   	.num_ports = 3,
>   	.msi_base_shift = 8,
> +	.msi_target = 0x80000000,
When SMMU is enabled for PCIe, I think the IOVA region used is 
0x8000_0000 ~ 0xFFF0_0000
Wouldn't that be an issue then?
>   	.pads_pll_ctl = PADS_PLL_CTL_TEGRA30,
>   	.tx_ref_sel = PADS_PLL_CTL_TXCLKREF_BUF_EN,
>   	.pads_refclk_cfg0 = 0x80b880b8,
diff mbox

Patch

diff --git a/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c b/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c
index ee193767f77b..f2214ca1ad17 100644
--- a/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c
+++ b/drivers/pci/host/pci-tegra.c
@@ -236,7 +236,6 @@  struct tegra_msi {
 	struct msi_controller chip;
 	DECLARE_BITMAP(used, INT_PCI_MSI_NR);
 	struct irq_domain *domain;
-	unsigned long pages;
 	struct mutex lock;
 	u64 phys;
 	int irq;
@@ -246,6 +245,7 @@  struct tegra_msi {
 struct tegra_pcie_soc {
 	unsigned int num_ports;
 	unsigned int msi_base_shift;
+	u64 msi_target;
 	u32 pads_pll_ctl;
 	u32 tx_ref_sel;
 	u32 pads_refclk_cfg0;
@@ -1576,9 +1576,35 @@  static int tegra_pcie_enable_msi(struct tegra_pcie *pcie)
 		goto err;
 	}
 
-	/* setup AFI/FPCI range */
-	msi->pages = __get_free_pages(GFP_KERNEL, 0);
-	msi->phys = virt_to_phys((void *)msi->pages);
+	/*
+	 * The PCI host bridge on Tegra contains some logic that intercepts
+	 * MSI writes, which means that the MSI target address doesn't have
+	 * to point to actual physical memory. Rather than allocating one 4
+	 * KiB page of system memory that's never used, we can simply pick
+	 * an arbitrary address within a reserved area in the FPCI address
+	 * map.
+	 *
+	 * Note that MSI writes are never committed to memory, so it doesn't
+	 * really matter which address we pick. However, since the address
+	 * may show up at some point and potentially confuse users, the best
+	 * solution would be to pick an address that is obviously not within
+	 * system memory. The FPCI address map contains a range that cannot
+	 * be accessed by any Tegra CPU, but unfortunately that excludes the
+	 * usage for 32-bit MSI capable devices.
+	 *
+	 * A good choice that supports both 32-bit and 64-bit MSI would be to
+	 * pick a memory address within the PCI MMIO region that is currently
+	 * not used for configuration space, downstream I/O, prefetchable or
+	 * non prefetchable memory. However, it seems like not all chips will
+	 * be able to intercept MSI writes to those addresses.
+	 *
+	 * The only reliable addresses that seem to work point to external
+	 * memory. Pick the physical base address of system memory as the MSI
+	 * target address. This is slightly less than ideal because it could
+	 * technically, though unlikely, be used for DMA. However, since the
+	 * MSI writes will be intercepted, this should be of little concern.
+	 */
+	msi->phys = soc->msi_target;
 
 	afi_writel(pcie, msi->phys >> soc->msi_base_shift, AFI_MSI_FPCI_BAR_ST);
 	afi_writel(pcie, msi->phys, AFI_MSI_AXI_BAR_ST);
@@ -1630,8 +1656,6 @@  static int tegra_pcie_disable_msi(struct tegra_pcie *pcie)
 	afi_writel(pcie, 0, AFI_MSI_EN_VEC6);
 	afi_writel(pcie, 0, AFI_MSI_EN_VEC7);
 
-	free_pages(msi->pages, 0);
-
 	if (msi->irq > 0)
 		free_irq(msi->irq, pcie);
 
@@ -2140,6 +2164,7 @@  static void tegra_pcie_enable_ports(struct tegra_pcie *pcie)
 static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra20_pcie = {
 	.num_ports = 2,
 	.msi_base_shift = 0,
+	.msi_target = 0x00000000,
 	.pads_pll_ctl = PADS_PLL_CTL_TEGRA20,
 	.tx_ref_sel = PADS_PLL_CTL_TXCLKREF_DIV10,
 	.pads_refclk_cfg0 = 0xfa5cfa5c,
@@ -2155,6 +2180,7 @@  static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra20_pcie = {
 static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra30_pcie = {
 	.num_ports = 3,
 	.msi_base_shift = 8,
+	.msi_target = 0x80000000,
 	.pads_pll_ctl = PADS_PLL_CTL_TEGRA30,
 	.tx_ref_sel = PADS_PLL_CTL_TXCLKREF_BUF_EN,
 	.pads_refclk_cfg0 = 0xfa5cfa5c,
@@ -2171,6 +2197,7 @@  static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra30_pcie = {
 static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra124_pcie = {
 	.num_ports = 2,
 	.msi_base_shift = 8,
+	.msi_target = 0x80000000,
 	.pads_pll_ctl = PADS_PLL_CTL_TEGRA30,
 	.tx_ref_sel = PADS_PLL_CTL_TXCLKREF_BUF_EN,
 	.pads_refclk_cfg0 = 0x44ac44ac,
@@ -2186,6 +2213,7 @@  static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra124_pcie = {
 static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra210_pcie = {
 	.num_ports = 2,
 	.msi_base_shift = 8,
+	.msi_target = 0x80000000,
 	.pads_pll_ctl = PADS_PLL_CTL_TEGRA30,
 	.tx_ref_sel = PADS_PLL_CTL_TXCLKREF_BUF_EN,
 	.pads_refclk_cfg0 = 0x90b890b8,
@@ -2201,6 +2229,7 @@  static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra210_pcie = {
 static const struct tegra_pcie_soc tegra186_pcie = {
 	.num_ports = 3,
 	.msi_base_shift = 8,
+	.msi_target = 0x80000000,
 	.pads_pll_ctl = PADS_PLL_CTL_TEGRA30,
 	.tx_ref_sel = PADS_PLL_CTL_TXCLKREF_BUF_EN,
 	.pads_refclk_cfg0 = 0x80b880b8,