This patch adds the description about legacy I/O port free driver into
Documentation/pci.txt.
Signed-off-by: Kenji Kaneshige <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Grant Grundler <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Hidetoshi Seto <[email protected]>
---
Documentation/pci.txt | 70 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 files changed, 70 insertions(+)
Index: linux-2.6.19-rc6/Documentation/pci.txt
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.19-rc6.orig/Documentation/pci.txt
+++ linux-2.6.19-rc6/Documentation/pci.txt
@@ -287,3 +287,73 @@
pci_find_device() Superseded by pci_get_device()
pci_find_subsys() Superseded by pci_get_subsys()
pci_find_slot() Superseded by pci_get_slot()
+
+
+10. Legacy I/O port free driver
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Large servers may not be able to provide I/O port resources to all PCI
+devices. I/O Port space is only 64KB on Intel Architecture[1] and is
+likely also fragmented since the I/O base register of PCI-to-PCI
+bridge will usually be aligned to a 4KB boundary[2]. On such systems,
+pci_enable_device() and pci_request_regions() will fail when
+attempting to enable I/O Port regions that don't have I/O Port
+resources assigned.
+
+Fortunately, many PCI devices which request I/O Port resources also
+provide access to the same registers via MMIO BARs. These devices can
+be handled without using I/O port space and the drivers typically
+offer a CONFIG_ option to only use MMIO regions
+(e.g. CONFIG_TULIP_MMIO). PCI devices typically provide I/O port
+interface for legacy OSs and will work when I/O port resources are not
+assigned. The "PCI Local Bus Specification Revision 3.0" discusses
+this on p.44, "IMPLEMENTATION NOTE".
+
+If your PCI device driver doesn't need I/O port resources assigned to
+I/O Port BARs, you should use pci_enable_device_bars() instead of
+pci_enable_device() in order not to enable I/O port regions for the
+corresponding devices. In addition, you should use
+pci_request_selected_regions()/pci_release_selected_regions() instead
+of pci_request_regions()/pci_release_regions() in order not to
+request/release I/O port regions for the corresponding devices.
+
+[1] Some systems support 64KB I/O port space per PCI segment.
+[2] Some PCI-to-PCI bridges support optional 1KB aligned I/O base.
+
+
+11. 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. Most drivers (e.g. tg3, acenic, sym53c8xx_2)
+already do. I/O Port space guarantees write transactions reach the PCI
+device before the CPU can continue. Writes to MMIO space allow to CPU
+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 it's 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 (aka "Soft Fail") and return garbage
+(e.g. ~0). But many RISC platforms will crash (aka "Hard Fail").
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