[RFC v2 01/39] Kconfig: introduce HAS_IOPORT option and select it as necessary

Niklas Schnelle schnelle at linux.ibm.com
Fri May 6 22:55:52 AEST 2022


On Fri, 2022-05-06 at 13:27 +0100, Maciej W. Rozycki wrote:
> On Fri, 6 May 2022, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> 
> > >  If this is PCI/PCIe indeed, then an I/O access is just a different bit
> > > pattern put on the bus/in the TLP in the address phase.  So what is there
> > > inherent to the s390 architecture that prevents that different bit pattern
> > > from being used?
> > 
> > The hardware design for PCI on s390 is very different from any other
> > architecture, and more abstract. Rather than implementing MMIO register
> > access as pointer dereference, this is a separate CPU instruction that
> > takes a device/bar plus offset as arguments rather than a pointer, and
> > Linux encodes this back into a fake __iomem token.
> 
>  OK, that seems to me like a reasonable and quite a clean design (on the 
> hardware side).
> 
>  So what happens if the instruction is given an I/O rather than memory BAR 
> as the relevant argument?  Is the address space indicator bit (bit #0) 
> simply ignored or what?

See my answer to Arnd for some more background but there simply isn't a
way to formulate an I/O access. In the old style PCI instructions the
BAR number and the function handle are put in a register before the
access. BAR number 15 is used to access config space. If there is no
BAR for that number the instruction fails with a non-zero CC.

> 
> > >  But that has nothing to do with the presence or absence of any specific
> > > processor instructions.  It's just a limitation of bus glue.  So I guess
> > > it's just that all PCI/PCIe glue logic implementations for s390 have such
> > > a limitation, right?
> > 
> > There are separate instructions for PCI memory and config space, but
> > no instructions for I/O space, or for non-PCI MMIO that it could be mapped
> > into.
> 
>  The PCI configuration space was retrofitted into x86 systems (and is 
> accessed in an awkward manner with them), but with a new design such a 
> clean approach is most welcome IMHO.  Thank you for your explanation.
> 
>   Maciej

Well our design is a retrofit too considering s390x is a direct
decendent of IBM System/360 which one could argue to have been the
first ISA. But yes as PCI support was only added with PCIe and with a
machine level hypervisor already in place we do get shielded a lot from
the gritty details.



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