| |
| How To Write Linux PCI Drivers |
| |
| by Martin Mares <mj@ucw.cz> on 07-Feb-2000 |
| updated by Grant Grundler <grundler@parisc-linux.org> on 23-Dec-2006 |
| |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| The world of PCI is vast and full of (mostly unpleasant) surprises. |
| Since each CPU architecture implements different chip-sets and PCI devices |
| have different requirements (erm, "features"), the result is the PCI support |
| in the Linux kernel is not as trivial as one would wish. This short paper |
| tries to introduce all potential driver authors to Linux APIs for |
| PCI device drivers. |
| |
| A more complete resource is the third edition of "Linux Device Drivers" |
| by Jonathan Corbet, Alessandro Rubini, and Greg Kroah-Hartman. |
| LDD3 is available for free (under Creative Commons License) from: |
| |
| http://lwn.net/Kernel/LDD3/ |
| |
| However, keep in mind that all documents are subject to "bit rot". |
| Refer to the source code if things are not working as described here. |
| |
| Please send questions/comments/patches about Linux PCI API to the |
| "Linux PCI" <linux-pci@atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz> mailing list. |
| |
| |
| |
| 0. Structure of PCI drivers |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| PCI drivers "discover" PCI devices in a system via pci_register_driver(). |
| Actually, it's the other way around. When the PCI generic code discovers |
| a new device, the driver with a matching "description" will be notified. |
| Details on this below. |
| |
| pci_register_driver() leaves most of the probing for devices to |
| the PCI layer and supports online insertion/removal of devices [thus |
| supporting hot-pluggable PCI, CardBus, and Express-Card in a single driver]. |
| pci_register_driver() call requires passing in a table of function |
| pointers and thus dictates the high level structure of a driver. |
| |
| Once the driver knows about a PCI device and takes ownership, the |
| driver generally needs to perform the following initialization: |
| |
| Enable the device |
| Request MMIO/IOP resources |
| Set the DMA mask size (for both coherent and streaming DMA) |
| Allocate and initialize shared control data (pci_allocate_coherent()) |
| Access device configuration space (if needed) |
| Register IRQ handler (request_irq()) |
| Initialize non-PCI (i.e. LAN/SCSI/etc parts of the chip) |
| Enable DMA/processing engines |
| |
| When done using the device, and perhaps the module needs to be unloaded, |
| the driver needs to take the follow steps: |
| Disable the device from generating IRQs |
| Release the IRQ (free_irq()) |
| Stop all DMA activity |
| Release DMA buffers (both streaming and coherent) |
| Unregister from other subsystems (e.g. scsi or netdev) |
| Release MMIO/IOP resources |
| Disable the device |
| |
| Most of these topics are covered in the following sections. |
| For the rest look at LDD3 or <linux/pci.h> . |
| |
| If the PCI subsystem is not configured (CONFIG_PCI is not set), most of |
| the PCI functions described below are defined as inline functions either |
| completely empty or just returning an appropriate error codes to avoid |
| lots of ifdefs in the drivers. |
| |
| |
| |
| 1. pci_register_driver() call |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| PCI device drivers call pci_register_driver() during their |
| initialization with a pointer to a structure describing the driver |
| (struct pci_driver): |
| |
| field name Description |
| ---------- ------------------------------------------------------ |
| id_table Pointer to table of device ID's the driver is |
| interested in. Most drivers should export this |
| table using MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(pci,...). |
| |
| probe This probing function gets called (during execution |
| of pci_register_driver() for already existing |
| devices or later if a new device gets inserted) for |
| all PCI devices which match the ID table and are not |
| "owned" by the other drivers yet. This function gets |
| passed a "struct pci_dev *" for each device whose |
| entry in the ID table matches the device. The probe |
| function returns zero when the driver chooses to |
| take "ownership" of the device or an error code |
| (negative number) otherwise. |
| The probe function always gets called from process |
| context, so it can sleep. |
| |
| remove The remove() function gets called whenever a device |
| being handled by this driver is removed (either during |
| deregistration of the driver or when it's manually |
| pulled out of a hot-pluggable slot). |
| The remove function always gets called from process |
| context, so it can sleep. |
| |
| suspend Put device into low power state. |
| suspend_late Put device into low power state. |
| |
| resume_early Wake device from low power state. |
| resume Wake device from low power state. |
| |
| (Please see Documentation/power/pci.txt for descriptions |
| of PCI Power Management and the related functions.) |
| |
| shutdown Hook into reboot_notifier_list (kernel/sys.c). |
| Intended to stop any idling DMA operations. |
| Useful for enabling wake-on-lan (NIC) or changing |
| the power state of a device before reboot. |
| e.g. drivers/net/e100.c. |
| |
| err_handler See Documentation/PCI/pci-error-recovery.txt |
| |
| |
| The ID table is an array of struct pci_device_id entries ending with an |
| all-zero entry. Definitions with static const are generally preferred. |
| |
| Each entry consists of: |
| |
| vendor,device Vendor and device ID to match (or PCI_ANY_ID) |
| |
| subvendor, Subsystem vendor and device ID to match (or PCI_ANY_ID) |
| subdevice, |
| |
| class Device class, subclass, and "interface" to match. |
| See Appendix D of the PCI Local Bus Spec or |
| include/linux/pci_ids.h for a full list of classes. |
| Most drivers do not need to specify class/class_mask |
| as vendor/device is normally sufficient. |
| |
| class_mask limit which sub-fields of the class field are compared. |
| See drivers/scsi/sym53c8xx_2/ for example of usage. |
| |
| driver_data Data private to the driver. |
| Most drivers don't need to use driver_data field. |
| Best practice is to use driver_data as an index |
| into a static list of equivalent device types, |
| instead of using it as a pointer. |
| |
| |
| Most drivers only need PCI_DEVICE() or PCI_DEVICE_CLASS() to set up |
| a pci_device_id table. |
| |
| New PCI IDs may be added to a device driver pci_ids table at runtime |
| as shown below: |
| |
| echo "vendor device subvendor subdevice class class_mask driver_data" > \ |
| /sys/bus/pci/drivers/{driver}/new_id |
| |
| All fields are passed in as hexadecimal values (no leading 0x). |
| The vendor and device fields are mandatory, the others are optional. Users |
| need pass only as many optional fields as necessary: |
| o subvendor and subdevice fields default to PCI_ANY_ID (FFFFFFFF) |
| o class and classmask fields default to 0 |
| o driver_data defaults to 0UL. |
| |
| Note that driver_data must match the value used by any of the pci_device_id |
| entries defined in the driver. This makes the driver_data field mandatory |
| if all the pci_device_id entries have a non-zero driver_data value. |
| |
| Once added, the driver probe routine will be invoked for any unclaimed |
| PCI devices listed in its (newly updated) pci_ids list. |
| |
| When the driver exits, it just calls pci_unregister_driver() and the PCI layer |
| automatically calls the remove hook for all devices handled by the driver. |
| |
| |
| 1.1 "Attributes" for driver functions/data |
| |
| Please mark the initialization and cleanup functions where appropriate |
| (the corresponding macros are defined in <linux/init.h>): |
| |
| __init Initialization code. Thrown away after the driver |
| initializes. |
| __exit Exit code. Ignored for non-modular drivers. |
| |
| Tips on when/where to use the above attributes: |
| o The module_init()/module_exit() functions (and all |
| initialization functions called _only_ from these) |
| should be marked __init/__exit. |
| |
| o Do not mark the struct pci_driver. |
| |
| o Do NOT mark a function if you are not sure which mark to use. |
| Better to not mark the function than mark the function wrong. |
| |
| |
| |
| 2. How to find PCI devices manually |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| PCI drivers should have a really good reason for not using the |
| pci_register_driver() interface to search for PCI devices. |
| The main reason PCI devices are controlled by multiple drivers |
| is because one PCI device implements several different HW services. |
| E.g. combined serial/parallel port/floppy controller. |
| |
| A manual search may be performed using the following constructs: |
| |
| Searching by vendor and device ID: |
| |
| struct pci_dev *dev = NULL; |
| while (dev = pci_get_device(VENDOR_ID, DEVICE_ID, dev)) |
| configure_device(dev); |
| |
| Searching by class ID (iterate in a similar way): |
| |
| pci_get_class(CLASS_ID, dev) |
| |
| Searching by both vendor/device and subsystem vendor/device ID: |
| |
| pci_get_subsys(VENDOR_ID,DEVICE_ID, SUBSYS_VENDOR_ID, SUBSYS_DEVICE_ID, dev). |
| |
| You can use the constant PCI_ANY_ID as a wildcard replacement for |
| VENDOR_ID or DEVICE_ID. This allows searching for any device from a |
| specific vendor, for example. |
| |
| These functions are hotplug-safe. They increment the reference count on |
| the pci_dev that they return. You must eventually (possibly at module unload) |
| decrement the reference count on these devices by calling pci_dev_put(). |
| |
| |
| |
| 3. Device Initialization Steps |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| As noted in the introduction, most PCI drivers need the following steps |
| for device initialization: |
| |
| Enable the device |
| Request MMIO/IOP resources |
| Set the DMA mask size (for both coherent and streaming DMA) |
| Allocate and initialize shared control data (pci_allocate_coherent()) |
| Access device configuration space (if needed) |
| Register IRQ handler (request_irq()) |
| Initialize non-PCI (i.e. LAN/SCSI/etc parts of the chip) |
| Enable DMA/processing engines. |
| |
| The driver can access PCI config space registers at any time. |
| (Well, almost. When running BIST, config space can go away...but |
| that will just result in a PCI Bus Master Abort and config reads |
| will return garbage). |
| |
| |
| 3.1 Enable the PCI device |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Before touching any device registers, the driver needs to enable |
| the PCI device by calling pci_enable_device(). This will: |
| o wake up the device if it was in suspended state, |
| o allocate I/O and memory regions of the device (if BIOS did not), |
| o allocate an IRQ (if BIOS did not). |
| |
| NOTE: pci_enable_device() can fail! Check the return value. |
| |
| [ OS BUG: we don't check resource allocations before enabling those |
| resources. The sequence would make more sense if we called |
| pci_request_resources() before calling pci_enable_device(). |
| Currently, the device drivers can't detect the bug when when two |
| devices have been allocated the same range. This is not a common |
| problem and unlikely to get fixed soon. |
| |
| This has been discussed before but not changed as of 2.6.19: |
| http://lkml.org/lkml/2006/3/2/194 |
| ] |
| |
| pci_set_master() will enable DMA by setting the bus master bit |
| in the PCI_COMMAND register. It also fixes the latency timer value if |
| it's set to something bogus by the BIOS. pci_clear_master() will |
| disable DMA by clearing the bus master bit. |
| |
| If the PCI device can use the PCI Memory-Write-Invalidate transaction, |
| call pci_set_mwi(). This enables the PCI_COMMAND bit for Mem-Wr-Inval |
| and also ensures that the cache line size register is set correctly. |
| Check the return value of pci_set_mwi() as not all architectures |
| or chip-sets may support Memory-Write-Invalidate. Alternatively, |
| if Mem-Wr-Inval would be nice to have but is not required, call |
| pci_try_set_mwi() to have the system do its best effort at enabling |
| Mem-Wr-Inval. |
| |
| |
| 3.2 Request MMIO/IOP resources |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Memory (MMIO), and I/O port addresses should NOT be read directly |
| from the PCI device config space. Use the values in the pci_dev structure |
| as the PCI "bus address" might have been remapped to a "host physical" |
| address by the arch/chip-set specific kernel support. |
| |
| See Documentation/io-mapping.txt for how to access device registers |
| or device memory. |
| |
| The device driver needs to call pci_request_region() to verify |
| no other device is already using the same address resource. |
| Conversely, drivers should call pci_release_region() AFTER |
| calling pci_disable_device(). |
| The idea is to prevent two devices colliding on the same address range. |
| |
| [ See OS BUG comment above. Currently (2.6.19), The driver can only |
| determine MMIO and IO Port resource availability _after_ calling |
| pci_enable_device(). ] |
| |
| Generic flavors of pci_request_region() are request_mem_region() |
| (for MMIO ranges) and request_region() (for IO Port ranges). |
| Use these for address resources that are not described by "normal" PCI |
| BARs. |
| |
| Also see pci_request_selected_regions() below. |
| |
| |
| 3.3 Set the DMA mask size |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| [ If anything below doesn't make sense, please refer to |
| Documentation/DMA-API.txt. This section is just a reminder that |
| drivers need to indicate DMA capabilities of the device and is not |
| an authoritative source for DMA interfaces. ] |
| |
| While all drivers should explicitly indicate the DMA capability |
| (e.g. 32 or 64 bit) of the PCI bus master, devices with more than |
| 32-bit bus master capability for streaming data need the driver |
| to "register" this capability by calling pci_set_dma_mask() with |
| appropriate parameters. In general this allows more efficient DMA |
| on systems where System RAM exists above 4G _physical_ address. |
| |
| Drivers for all PCI-X and PCIe compliant devices must call |
| pci_set_dma_mask() as they are 64-bit DMA devices. |
| |
| Similarly, drivers must also "register" this capability if the device |
| can directly address "consistent memory" in System RAM above 4G physical |
| address by calling pci_set_consistent_dma_mask(). |
| Again, this includes drivers for all PCI-X and PCIe compliant devices. |
| Many 64-bit "PCI" devices (before PCI-X) and some PCI-X devices are |
| 64-bit DMA capable for payload ("streaming") data but not control |
| ("consistent") data. |
| |
| |
| 3.4 Setup shared control data |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Once the DMA masks are set, the driver can allocate "consistent" (a.k.a. shared) |
| memory. See Documentation/DMA-API.txt for a full description of |
| the DMA APIs. This section is just a reminder that it needs to be done |
| before enabling DMA on the device. |
| |
| |
| 3.5 Initialize device registers |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Some drivers will need specific "capability" fields programmed |
| or other "vendor specific" register initialized or reset. |
| E.g. clearing pending interrupts. |
| |
| |
| 3.6 Register IRQ handler |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| While calling request_irq() is the last step described here, |
| this is often just another intermediate step to initialize a device. |
| This step can often be deferred until the device is opened for use. |
| |
| All interrupt handlers for IRQ lines should be registered with IRQF_SHARED |
| and use the devid to map IRQs to devices (remember that all PCI IRQ lines |
| can be shared). |
| |
| request_irq() will associate an interrupt handler and device handle |
| with an interrupt number. Historically interrupt numbers represent |
| IRQ lines which run from the PCI device to the Interrupt controller. |
| With MSI and MSI-X (more below) the interrupt number is a CPU "vector". |
| |
| request_irq() also enables the interrupt. Make sure the device is |
| quiesced and does not have any interrupts pending before registering |
| the interrupt handler. |
| |
| MSI and MSI-X are PCI capabilities. Both are "Message Signaled Interrupts" |
| which deliver interrupts to the CPU via a DMA write to a Local APIC. |
| The fundamental difference between MSI and MSI-X is how multiple |
| "vectors" get allocated. MSI requires contiguous blocks of vectors |
| while MSI-X can allocate several individual ones. |
| |
| MSI capability can be enabled by calling pci_alloc_irq_vectors() with the |
| PCI_IRQ_MSI and/or PCI_IRQ_MSIX flags before calling request_irq(). This |
| causes the PCI support to program CPU vector data into the PCI device |
| capability registers. Many architectures, chip-sets, or BIOSes do NOT |
| support MSI or MSI-X and a call to pci_alloc_irq_vectors with just |
| the PCI_IRQ_MSI and PCI_IRQ_MSIX flags will fail, so try to always |
| specify PCI_IRQ_LEGACY as well. |
| |
| Drivers that have different interrupt handlers for MSI/MSI-X and |
| legacy INTx should chose the right one based on the msi_enabled |
| and msix_enabled flags in the pci_dev structure after calling |
| pci_alloc_irq_vectors. |
| |
| There are (at least) two really good reasons for using MSI: |
| 1) MSI is an exclusive interrupt vector by definition. |
| This means the interrupt handler doesn't have to verify |
| its device caused the interrupt. |
| |
| 2) MSI avoids DMA/IRQ race conditions. DMA to host memory is guaranteed |
| to be visible to the host CPU(s) when the MSI is delivered. This |
| is important for both data coherency and avoiding stale control data. |
| This guarantee allows the driver to omit MMIO reads to flush |
| the DMA stream. |
| |
| See drivers/infiniband/hw/mthca/ or drivers/net/tg3.c for examples |
| of MSI/MSI-X usage. |
| |
| |
| |
| 4. PCI device shutdown |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| When a PCI device driver is being unloaded, most of the following |
| steps need to be performed: |
| |
| Disable the device from generating IRQs |
| Release the IRQ (free_irq()) |
| Stop all DMA activity |
| Release DMA buffers (both streaming and consistent) |
| Unregister from other subsystems (e.g. scsi or netdev) |
| Disable device from responding to MMIO/IO Port addresses |
| Release MMIO/IO Port resource(s) |
| |
| |
| 4.1 Stop IRQs on the device |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| How to do this is chip/device specific. If it's not done, it opens |
| the possibility of a "screaming interrupt" if (and only if) |
| the IRQ is shared with another device. |
| |
| When the shared IRQ handler is "unhooked", the remaining devices |
| using the same IRQ line will still need the IRQ enabled. Thus if the |
| "unhooked" device asserts IRQ line, the system will respond assuming |
| it was one of the remaining devices asserted the IRQ line. Since none |
| of the other devices will handle the IRQ, the system will "hang" until |
| it decides the IRQ isn't going to get handled and masks the IRQ (100,000 |
| iterations later). Once the shared IRQ is masked, the remaining devices |
| will stop functioning properly. Not a nice situation. |
| |
| This is another reason to use MSI or MSI-X if it's available. |
| MSI and MSI-X are defined to be exclusive interrupts and thus |
| are not susceptible to the "screaming interrupt" problem. |
| |
| |
| 4.2 Release the IRQ |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Once the device is quiesced (no more IRQs), one can call free_irq(). |
| This function will return control once any pending IRQs are handled, |
| "unhook" the drivers IRQ handler from that IRQ, and finally release |
| the IRQ if no one else is using it. |
| |
| |
| 4.3 Stop all DMA activity |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| It's extremely important to stop all DMA operations BEFORE attempting |
| to deallocate DMA control data. Failure to do so can result in memory |
| corruption, hangs, and on some chip-sets a hard crash. |
| |
| Stopping DMA after stopping the IRQs can avoid races where the |
| IRQ handler might restart DMA engines. |
| |
| While this step sounds obvious and trivial, several "mature" drivers |
| didn't get this step right in the past. |
| |
| |
| 4.4 Release DMA buffers |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Once DMA is stopped, clean up streaming DMA first. |
| I.e. unmap data buffers and return buffers to "upstream" |
| owners if there is one. |
| |
| Then clean up "consistent" buffers which contain the control data. |
| |
| See Documentation/DMA-API.txt for details on unmapping interfaces. |
| |
| |
| 4.5 Unregister from other subsystems |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Most low level PCI device drivers support some other subsystem |
| like USB, ALSA, SCSI, NetDev, Infiniband, etc. Make sure your |
| driver isn't losing resources from that other subsystem. |
| If this happens, typically the symptom is an Oops (panic) when |
| the subsystem attempts to call into a driver that has been unloaded. |
| |
| |
| 4.6 Disable Device from responding to MMIO/IO Port addresses |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| io_unmap() MMIO or IO Port resources and then call pci_disable_device(). |
| This is the symmetric opposite of pci_enable_device(). |
| Do not access device registers after calling pci_disable_device(). |
| |
| |
| 4.7 Release MMIO/IO Port Resource(s) |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Call pci_release_region() to mark the MMIO or IO Port range as available. |
| Failure to do so usually results in the inability to reload the driver. |
| |
| |
| |
| 5. How to access PCI config space |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| You can use pci_(read|write)_config_(byte|word|dword) to access the config |
| space of a device represented by struct pci_dev *. All these functions return 0 |
| when successful or an error code (PCIBIOS_...) which can be translated to a text |
| string by pcibios_strerror. Most drivers expect that accesses to valid PCI |
| devices don't fail. |
| |
| If you don't have a struct pci_dev available, you can call |
| pci_bus_(read|write)_config_(byte|word|dword) to access a given device |
| and function on that bus. |
| |
| If you access fields in the standard portion of the config header, please |
| use symbolic names of locations and bits declared in <linux/pci.h>. |
| |
| If you need to access Extended PCI Capability registers, just call |
| pci_find_capability() for the particular capability and it will find the |
| corresponding register block for you. |
| |
| |
| |
| 6. Other interesting functions |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| pci_get_domain_bus_and_slot() Find pci_dev corresponding to given domain, |
| bus and slot and number. If the device is |
| found, its reference count is increased. |
| pci_set_power_state() Set PCI Power Management state (0=D0 ... 3=D3) |
| pci_find_capability() Find specified capability in device's capability |
| list. |
| pci_resource_start() Returns bus start address for a given PCI region |
| pci_resource_end() Returns bus end address for a given PCI region |
| pci_resource_len() Returns the byte length of a PCI region |
| pci_set_drvdata() Set private driver data pointer for a pci_dev |
| pci_get_drvdata() Return private driver data pointer for a pci_dev |
| pci_set_mwi() Enable Memory-Write-Invalidate transactions. |
| pci_clear_mwi() Disable Memory-Write-Invalidate transactions. |
| |
| |
| |
| 7. Miscellaneous hints |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| When displaying PCI device names to the user (for example when a driver wants |
| to tell the user what card has it found), please use pci_name(pci_dev). |
| |
| Always refer to the PCI devices by a pointer to the pci_dev structure. |
| All PCI layer functions use this identification and it's the only |
| reasonable one. Don't use bus/slot/function numbers except for very |
| special purposes -- on systems with multiple primary buses their semantics |
| can be pretty complex. |
| |
| Don't try to turn on Fast Back to Back writes in your driver. All devices |
| on the bus need to be capable of doing it, so this is something which needs |
| to be handled by platform and generic code, not individual drivers. |
| |
| |
| |
| 8. Vendor and device identifications |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Do not add new device or vendor IDs to include/linux/pci_ids.h unless they |
| are shared across multiple drivers. You can add private definitions in |
| your driver if they're helpful, or just use plain hex constants. |
| |
| The device IDs are arbitrary hex numbers (vendor controlled) and normally used |
| only in a single location, the pci_device_id table. |
| |
| Please DO submit new vendor/device IDs to http://pci-ids.ucw.cz/. |
| There are mirrors of the pci.ids file at http://pciids.sourceforge.net/ |
| and https://github.com/pciutils/pciids. |
| |
| |
| |
| 9. Obsolete functions |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| There are several functions which you might come across when trying to |
| port an old driver to the new PCI interface. They are no longer present |
| in the kernel as they aren't compatible with hotplug or PCI domains or |
| having sane locking. |
| |
| pci_find_device() Superseded by pci_get_device() |
| pci_find_subsys() Superseded by pci_get_subsys() |
| pci_find_slot() Superseded by pci_get_domain_bus_and_slot() |
| pci_get_slot() Superseded by pci_get_domain_bus_and_slot() |
| |
| |
| The alternative is the traditional PCI device driver that walks PCI |
| device lists. This is still possible but discouraged. |
| |
| |
| |
| 10. MMIO Space and "Write Posting" |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Converting a driver from using I/O Port space to using MMIO space |
| often requires some additional changes. Specifically, "write posting" |
| needs to be handled. Many drivers (e.g. tg3, acenic, sym53c8xx_2) |
| already do this. I/O Port space guarantees write transactions reach the PCI |
| device before the CPU can continue. Writes to MMIO space allow the CPU |
| to continue before the transaction reaches the PCI device. HW weenies |
| call this "Write Posting" because the write completion is "posted" to |
| the CPU before the transaction has reached its destination. |
| |
| Thus, timing sensitive code should add readl() where the CPU is |
| expected to wait before doing other work. The classic "bit banging" |
| sequence works fine for I/O Port space: |
| |
| for (i = 8; --i; val >>= 1) { |
| outb(val & 1, ioport_reg); /* write bit */ |
| udelay(10); |
| } |
| |
| The same sequence for MMIO space should be: |
| |
| for (i = 8; --i; val >>= 1) { |
| writeb(val & 1, mmio_reg); /* write bit */ |
| readb(safe_mmio_reg); /* flush posted write */ |
| udelay(10); |
| } |
| |
| It is important that "safe_mmio_reg" not have any side effects that |
| interferes with the correct operation of the device. |
| |
| Another case to watch out for is when resetting a PCI device. Use PCI |
| Configuration space reads to flush the writel(). This will gracefully |
| handle the PCI master abort on all platforms if the PCI device is |
| expected to not respond to a readl(). Most x86 platforms will allow |
| MMIO reads to master abort (a.k.a. "Soft Fail") and return garbage |
| (e.g. ~0). But many RISC platforms will crash (a.k.a."Hard Fail"). |
| |