device not available because of BAR 0 collisions

Steven A. Falco sfalco at harris.com
Fri Apr 29 03:29:21 EST 2011


On 04/27/2011 03:51 PM, Steven A. Falco wrote:
> On 04/26/2011 07:39 PM, Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote:
>> On Tue, 2011-04-26 at 09:38 -0400, Steven A. Falco wrote:
>>> On 04/25/2011 08:01 PM, Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote:
>>>> On Mon, 2011-04-25 at 16:10 -0400, Steven A. Falco wrote:
>>>>> I'm getting an error message when trying to talk to some custom
>>>>> hardware:
>>>>>
>>>>> dx83xx 0001:43:00.0: device not available because of BAR 0
>>>>> [0xa1000000-0xa1ffffff] collisions

I believe I've gotten to the root cause of this issue.  Turns out the
ASIC is reporting a class code of 0000, in violation of the PCI spec.

As a result, Linux is refusing to set up the ASIC, and so it remains
with the settings made in U-Boot, which are in conflict with the
allocation Linux makes for the bridge the ASIC is connected to.

So Ben, you are absolutely right that there was some left-over
configuration.

My choices appear to be:

1) Fix the ASIC (yeah, right)

2) Force Linux to use the U-Boot settings

3) Hack Linux to set up a device with a bogus class.

I'm not sure why this hardware works in x86 - I guess it is less
fussy.

	Steve

>>>>>
>>>>> I see in setup-res.c that this message comes out when there is no
>>>>> parent for
>>>>> a device resource.
>>>>
>>>>  .../...
>>>>
>>>> It mostly happens in arch/powerpc/kernel/pci-common.c and the generic
>>>> setup-res.c
>>>>
>>>> Try #define DEBUG at the top (before the #includes) of pci-common.c and
>>>> pci_32.c (remove the exiting #undef in the last one) and send us the
>>>> full dmesg log, along with the output of cat /proc/iomem
>>
>> Have you set any specific flags ? IE. Modified the value of
>> ppc_pci_flags from what the 4xx code sets originally ?
> 
> For fun, I just tried changing:
> 
> ppc_pci_set_flags(PPC_PCI_REASSIGN_ALL_RSRC);
> 
> to:
> 
> ppc_pci_set_flags(PPC_PCI_PROBE_ONLY);
> 
> I realize that is the exact opposite of what you were suggesting, but
> please bear with me for a bit.
> 
> I also changed the PCIE 0 ranges from:
> 
> ranges = <0x02000000 0x00000000 0x80000000 0x90000000 0x00000000 0x10000000
>           0x01000000 0x00000000 0x00000000 0xe8010000 0x00000000 0x00010000>;
> 
> ranges = <0x02000000 0x00000000 0x90000000 0x90000000 0x00000000 0x10000000
>           0x01000000 0x00000000 0x00000000 0xe8010000 0x00000000 0x00010000>;
> 
> I changed the ranges not because I wanted a 1:1 map, but because 90000000 is
> what U-Boot chooses when it scans PCIe 1.
> 
> At this point, everything is working.  Here is /proc/iomap:
> 
> 90000000-9fffffff : /plb/pciex at 0c0000000
>   90000000-94ffffff : PCI Bus 0001:41
>     90000000-9001ffff : 0001:41:00.0
>     90100000-94ffffff : PCI Bus 0001:42
>       90100000-92ffffff : PCI Bus 0001:43
>         91000000-91ffffff : 0001:43:00.0  //<--- was missing before
>         92000000-92ffffff : 0001:43:00.0  //<--- was missing before
>       93000000-94ffffff : PCI Bus 0001:44
>         93000000-93ffffff : 0001:44:00.0  //<--- was missing before
>         94000000-94ffffff : 0001:44:00.0  //<--- was missing before
> e0000000-e7ffffff : /plb/pciex at 0a0000000
>   e0000000-e7ffffff : PCI Bus 0000:01
>     e0000000-e00fffff : 0000:01:00.0
>     e0100000-e01fffff : 0000:01:00.0
>     e4000000-e7ffffff : 0000:01:00.0
> ef600200-ef600207 : serial
> ef600300-ef600307 : serial
> ef600600-ef600606 : spi_ppc4xx_of
> ef6c0000-ef6cffff : dwc_otg.0
>   ef6c0000-ef6cffff : dwc_otg
> fc000000-ffffffff : fc000000.nor_flash
> 
> Now I see the bars for the ASICs (flagged above).  I could stop here,
> and declare success, but I don't really like this solution, because it
> requires me to be sure the dts has the same bus addresses that U-Boot
> will choose.  Seems risky.
> 
> Tentative conclusion:  Either I still have something set wrong in my dts
> or there is a bug in the Linux PCI bus mapping code.
> 
> 	Steve
> 
>>
>> It does look to me like some of your device BARs have been setup already
>> by the firmware in a way that conflict with the way you configure your
>> ranges, and the kernel doesn't appear to detect nor try to remap that
>> which would happen if you have the "probe only" flag set.
>>
>> IE. On your c0000000 bus, you have memory at 90000000 CPU space mapped
>> to 80000000 PCI space. However, when probing, the kernel finds:
>>
>> pci 0001:41:00.0: reg 10 32bit mmio: [0x90000000-0x9001ffff]
>>
>> IE. A BAR was already set with a value of 90000000 PCI-side which is out
>> of the bounds you have for your bus.
>>
>> Maybe you really want to configure that second bus to have CPU 90000000
>> mapped to 90000000 PCI-side ? (IE. a 1:1 mapping). That would be
>> something to fix in your "ranges" property.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Ben.
> 
> 


-- 
A: Because it makes the logic of the discussion difficult to follow.
Q: Why shouldn't I top post?
A: No.
Q: Should I top post?


More information about the Linuxppc-dev mailing list