[PATCH v6 3/5] PCI/AER: Report fatal errors of RCiEP and EP if link recoverd
Lukas Wunner
lukas at wunner.de
Thu Oct 23 21:48:45 AEDT 2025
On Mon, Oct 20, 2025 at 11:20:58PM +0800, Shuai Xue wrote:
> 2025/10/20 22:24, Lukas Wunner:
> > On Mon, Oct 20, 2025 at 10:17:10PM +0800, Shuai Xue wrote:
> > > > > .slot_reset()
> > > > > => pci_restore_state()
> > > > > => pci_aer_clear_status()
> > > >
> > > > This was added in 2015 by b07461a8e45b. The commit claims that
> > > > the errors are stale and can be ignored. It turns out they cannot.
> > > >
> > > > So maybe pci_restore_state() should print information about the
> > > > errors before clearing them?
> > >
> > > While that could work, we would lose the error severity information at
> >
> > Wait, we've got that saved in pci_cap_saved_state, so we could restore
> > the severity register, report leftover errors, then clear those errors?
>
> You're right that the severity register is also sticky, so we could
> retrieve error severity directly from AER registers.
>
> However, I have concerns about implementing this approach:
[...]
> 3. Architectural consistency: As you noted earlier, "pci_restore_state()
> is only supposed to restore state, as the name implies, and not clear
> errors." Adding error reporting to this function would further violate
> this principle - we'd be making it do even more than just restore state.
>
> Would you prefer I implement this broader change, or shall we proceed
> with the targeted helper function approach for now? The helper function
> solves the immediate problem while keeping the changes focused on the
> AER recovery path.
My opinion is that b07461a8e45b was wrong and that reported errors
should not be silently ignored. What I'd prefer is that if
pci_restore_state() discovers unreported errors, it asks the AER driver
to report them.
We've already got a helper to do that: aer_recover_queue()
It queues up an entry in AER's kfifo and asks AER to report it.
So far the function is only used by GHES. GHES allocates the
aer_regs argument from ghes_estatus_pool using gen_pool_alloc().
Consequently aer_recover_work_func() uses ghes_estatus_pool_region_free()
to free the allocation. That prevents using aer_recover_queue()
for anything else than GHES. It would first be necessary to
refactor aer_recover_queue() + aer_recover_work_func() such that
it can cope with arbitrary allocations (e.g. kmalloc()).
Thanks,
Lukas
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