PCI-PCI bridge scanning broken on 460EX

Felix Radensky felix at embedded-sol.com
Mon Jan 4 19:59:29 EST 2010


Hi, Ben

Adding Feng Kan from AMCC to CC.

Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote:
> On Mon, 2009-12-28 at 12:51 +0200, Felix Radensky wrote:
>   
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm running linux-2.6.33-rc2 on Canyonlands board. When PLX 6254 
>> transparent PCI-PCI
>> bridge is plugged into PCI slot the kernel simply resets the board 
>> without printing anything
>> to console. Without PLX bridge kernel boots fine.
>>     
>
> Sorry for the late reply...
>   

No need to apologize, I appreciate you help very much.

>   
>> I've tracked down the problem to the following code in pci_scan_bridge() 
>> in drivers/pci/probe.c:
>>
>> if (pcibios_assign_all_busses() || broken)
>>                 /* Temporarily disable forwarding of the
>>                    configuration cycles on all bridges in
>>                    this bus segment to avoid possible
>>                    conflicts in the second pass between two
>>                    bridges programmed with overlapping
>>                    bus ranges. */
>>                 pci_write_config_dword(dev, PCI_PRIMARY_BUS,
>>                                buses & ~0xffffff);
>>
>> If test for broken is removed, kernel boots fine, detects the bridge, but
>> does not detect the device behind the bridge. The same device plugged
>> directly into PCI slot is detected correctly.
>>     
>
> So we would have a similar mismatch between the initial setup and the
> kernel...  However, I don't quite see yet why the kernel trying to fix
> it up breaks things, that will need a bit more debugging here...
>
> Can you give it a quick try with adding something like :
>
>  ppc_pci_add_flags(PPC_PCI_REASSIGN_ALL_BUS);
>
> Near the end of ppc4xx_pci.c ? It looks like another case of reset
> not actually resetting bridges (are we not properly doing a fundamental
> reset ? Stefan what's your take there ?)
>
> The above will cause busses to be re-assigned which is risky because it
> will allow the kernel to assign numbers beyond the limits of what
> ppc4xx_pci.c supports (see my comments in the thread you quotes).
>
> The good thing is that we now have a working fixmap infrastructure, so
> we could/should just move ppc4xx_pci.c to use that, and just always
> re-assign busses.
>
>   
>> To remind you, tests for broken were added by commit 
>> a1c19894b786f10c76ac40e93c6b5d70c9b946d2,
>> and were intended to solve device detection problem behind PCI-E 
>> switches, as discussed in this thread:
>> http://lists.ozlabs.org/pipermail/linuxppc-dev/2008-October/063939.html
>>     
>
>   
>> PCI: Probing PCI hardware
>> pci_bus 0000:00: scanning bus
>> pci 0000:00:06.0: found [3388:0020] class 000604 header type 01
>> pci 0000:00:06.0: supports D1 D2
>> pci 0000:00:06.0: PME# supported from D0 D1 D2 D3hot
>> pci 0000:00:06.0: PME# disabled
>> pci_bus 0000:00: fixups for bus
>> pci 0000:00:06.0: scanning behind bridge, config 000000, pass 0
>> pci 0000:00:06.0: bus configuration invalid, reconfiguring
>>     
>
> Ok so we hit a P2P bridge whose primary, secondary and subordinate bus
> numbers are all 0, which is clearly unconfigured. I think this is the
> root complex bridge
>
>   
>> pci 0000:00:06.0: scanning behind bridge, config 000000, pass 1
>>     
>
> Now this is when the bus should be reconfigured (pass 1). Sadly the code
> doesn't print much debug.
>
> Also from that point, it should renumber things and work... 
>
>   
>> pci_bus 0000:01: scanning bus
>>     
>
> Which it does to some extent. It assigned bus number 1 to it afaik so we
> now start looking below the RC bridge:
>
>   
>> pci 0000:01:06.0: found [3388:0020] class 000604 header type 01
>>     
>
> Hrm... class PCI bridge, vendor 3388 device 0020, is that your PLX ?
> It's not the right vendor ID but maybe that's configurable by our OEM or
> something...
>   

The bridge and its evaluation board were manufactured by HiNT, later 
purchased by PLX.
3388:0020 is HiNT HB6 Universal PCI-PCI bridge in transparent mode.

>   
>> pci 0000:01:06.0: supports D1 D2
>> pci 0000:01:06.0: PME# supported from D0 D1 D2 D3hot
>> pci 0000:01:06.0: PME# disabled
>> pci_bus 0000:01: fixups for bus
>> pci 0000:00:06.0: PCI bridge to [bus 01-ff]
>> pci 0000:00:06.0:   bridge window [io  0x0000-0x0fff]
>> pci 0000:00:06.0:   bridge window [mem 0x00000000-0x000fffff]
>> pci 0000:00:06.0:   bridge window [mem 0x00000000-0x000fffff 64bit pref]
>> pci 0000:01:06.0: scanning behind bridge, config ff0100, pass 0
>>     
>
> Allright, that's where it gets interesting. It tries to scan behind the
> bridge. It gets something it doesn't like. IE, it gets a secondary bus
> number of 1 (what the heck ? I wonder what your firmware does) which
> Linux is not happy about and decides to renumber it.
>   

U-boot has problems with this bridge as well, so I had to completely 
disable PCI
support in u-boot to get linux running.
>   
>> pci 0000:01:06.0: bus configuration invalid, reconfiguring
>>     
>
> Now, that's where Linux should have written 000000 to the register,
> which is what you commented out.
>
>   
>> pci 0000:01:06.0: scanning behind bridge, config ff0100, pass 1
>> pci_bus 0000:01: bus scan returning with max=01
>> pci_bus 0000:00: bus scan returning with max=01
>>     
>
> Because of that commenting out, it doesn't see the config as 000000 and
> thus doesn't re-assign a bus number in pass 1, so from there you can't
> see what's behind the bus.
>
> So we have two things here:
>
>  - It seems like the writing of 000000 to the register in pass 0 is
> causing your crash. Can you verify that ? IE. Can you verify that it's
> indeed crashing on this specific statement:
>
> pci_write_config_dword(dev, PCI_PRIMARY_BUS,
>                                buses & ~0xffffff);
>
> When writing to the bridge, and that this seems to be causing a hard
> reboot of the system ?
>   

Yes, this particular statement causes hard reboot. With original broken 
tests restored
and writing to bridge commented out the system boots. If writing to 
bridge happens
I get hard reset.

> It might be useful to ask AMCC how that is possible in HW, ie what kind
> of signal can be causing that. IE, even if the bridge is causing a PCIe
> error, that should not cause a reboot ... right ?
>   

Feng, can you please comment on this ?
>  - You can test a quick hack workaround which consists of changing:
>
> 	/* Check if setup is sensible at all */
> -	if (!pass &&
> -	if (1 &&
> 	    ((buses & 0xff) != bus->number || ((buses >> 8) & 0xff) <= bus->number)) {
> 		dev_dbg(&dev->dev, "bus configuration invalid, reconfiguring\n");
> 		broken = 1;
> 	}
>
> In -addition- to your commenting out of the broken test. This will cause the
> second pass to go through the re-assign code path despite the fact that you
> have not written 000000 to the bus numbers.
>   

With this change and commented out broken test I still get hard reset.

I didn't try adding ppc_pci_add_flags(PPC_PCI_REASSIGN_ALL_BUS)
If you still want me to try this, please let me know. Should I leave broken
tests enabled in that case ?

Thanks a lot for your help.

Felix.


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