Re: PCIe Hotplug: NFG unless I boot with card already inserted.

From: Kristen Carlson Accardi
Date: Tue Oct 16 2007 - 11:52:36 EST


On Tue, 16 Oct 2007 11:21:36 -0400
Mark Lord <lkml@xxxxxx> wrote:

> Mark Lord wrote:
> > I have a Dell notebook with an PCIe ExpressCard slot.
> > I also have a PCIe ExpressCard SATA controller (uses sata_sil24 driver).
> >
> > I would like to be able to hot plug/unplug the controller card at will.
> > But alas, Linux doesn't cope with it *unless* I boot the kernel with
> > the card initially inserted.
> >
> > 1. Booting Linux kernel (latest 2.6.23) without the card inserted
> > means that the card will never be detected, regardless of how many
> > times subsequently the card is inserted/removed/whatever.
> >
> > 2. Booting Linux kernel *with* the card inserted means that it is
> > detected and used, and can be unplugged/replugged as I please,
> > with intervening suspend/resume (RAM or disk) cycles not interfering.
> >
> > 3. Booting Linux kernel without the card inserted, and then doing
> > a suspend-to-disk poweroff, inserting the card, and powering on again,
> > the card's BIOS extension runs as normal. But on resume from the
> > suspend-to-disk, the running kernel again never sees the card,
> > even after removing/reinserting/whatever.
> >
> > 4. All of this leads me to believe that the kernel must be doing some
> > kind of once-only scan of hardware at boot time, and never repeating
> > it afterwards. Loading/unloading all of the PCI/PCIe hotplug stuff
> > has no effect on this, so it must be broken elsewhere.
> >
> > 5. It is not likely to be a BIOS thing, because it still fails on
> > power-on (with card inserted) after a suspend-to-disk, which appears
> > to the BIOS exactly the same as any other power-on.
> >
> > 6. But it's probably a "kernel relies on BIOS data structure read
> > at boot time" issue, based on the observations above.
>
> Actually, I must now take back some of that.
>
> Most of these tests were done a month or two ago.
> With 2.6.23.1 running, I just now redid all of the tests.
>
> Now it seems that pciehp fails to notice a newly inserted card
> only after a suspend/resume cycle with the slot empty.
>
> I can now get it to work again by just doing:
> 1. remove the card, so the slot is empty.
> 2. rmmod pciehp; modprobe pciehp
> 3. insert the card again -- it works!
>
> So we just need to fix an issue or two with suspend/resume (RAM) in pciehp.
>
> Cheers
>

Hi Mark,
So, just to make sure I understand, your reproducer for the failing case is:
1. Boot laptop with no card.
2. Load pciehp
3. Suspend laptop (slot is still empty)
4. Resume laptop (slot is still empty)
5. insert card - card is not detected.

Can you tell me which Dell laptop you have, and also send me the dmesg
output of the failing case after loading pciehp with pciehp_debug=1.

Thanks,
Kristen
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