Re: [PATCH] PCI: add quirk for 3ware 9650SE controller

From: Jiri Kosina
Date: Wed Jun 04 2014 - 04:00:13 EST


On Tue, 3 Jun 2014, Bjorn Helgaas wrote:

> >>> > Attached is dmesg output leading to timeouts (that are cured by my
> >>> > original patch in this thread) and lspci.
> >>>
> >>> I opened https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64141 for this
> >>> issue and attached your dmesg log and lspci output.
> >>>
> >>> > Please let me know if there is anything else I could do, or if you are
> >>> > going to proceed with my patch adding the quirk.
> >>>
> >>> Your quirk keeps us from disabling MSIs on the device during
> >>> enumeration. But even if the BIOS left MSIs enabled, there's nothing
> >>> to field the MSI until after the driver claims the device. So I don't
> >>> believe this has to be done as a quirk. It should work just as well
> >>> to do something in the driver when it claims the device.
> >>>
> >>> I guess another way to say this is that I don't think we understand
> >>> what the real problem is, and if we just add a quirk to work around
> >>> it, we might miss the chance to fix the real problem, and we may never
> >>> be able to remove the special-case code we're adding in the generic
> >>> path.
> >>>
> >>> I know you said you tried doing something in the driver, and it didn't
> >>> work. I don't know exactly what you tried, but twa_probe() looks
> >>> strange to me. The other drivers I looked at do all their PCI
> >>> initialization before the scsi_host_alloc() / scsi_add_host() /
> >>> scsi_scan_host() stuff. But twa_probe() has PCI stuff scattered
> >>> around between those three SCSI calls. In particular, it does the MSI
> >>> setup way down near the end, after scsi_add_host(), which seems like
> >>> just the sort of thing that could explain this problem.
> >>
> >> What I tried was patch below, but it didn't have any observable effect --
> >> the commands sent to the controller would still time out the same way.
> >>
> >> Debugging this is not really straightforward for me unfortunately, as I
> >> don't own the system myself.
> >>
> >> I agree that we don't fully understand what is happening, but the quirk
> >> was the only way I have been able to come up with to make the device
> >> functioning again (apart from reverting d5dea7d95).
> >>
> >> Any other ideas are welcome.
> >
> > This patch looks like a good start, but there's a whole lot of other
> > PCI-related initialization that I would suggest moving as well --
> > pci_request_regions(), ioremap(), pci_set_drvdata(), pci_enable_msi,
> > request_irq(), etc. I would do this myself, but there are some pieces
> > that don't look completely trivial, e.g., things like
> > TW_DISABLE_INTERRUPTS() and twa_reset_sequence() don't look like
> > they're SCSI-specific, but they are currently implemented using
> > tw_dev, which looks like it's allocated by scsi_host_alloc().
> > Untangling all this looks like more work than I want to sign up to.
> >
> > But I really don't want to put the quirk in because it's just a quick
> > hack that apparently just covers up bugs in the driver, and it will be
> > an annoyance in the PCI core forever.
>
> Just FYI, I reassigned
> https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64141 from PCI to SCSI,
> since I don't think there's a PCI core problem here. I don't know if
> SCSI pay attention to bugzilla at all; I'm just mentioning it here in
> case anybody still cares about this problem and was hoping that I was
> going to do something.

I am adding to CC Ales Novak, who has been handling this bug on our side
lately.

>
> Bjorn
>
> >> ---
> >> drivers/scsi/3w-9xxx.c | 10 +++++-----
> >> 1 files changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)
> >>
> >> diff --git a/drivers/scsi/3w-9xxx.c b/drivers/scsi/3w-9xxx.c
> >> index ba754c3..bad7faf 100644
> >> --- a/drivers/scsi/3w-9xxx.c
> >> +++ b/drivers/scsi/3w-9xxx.c
> >> @@ -2055,6 +2055,11 @@ static int __devinit twa_probe(struct pci_dev *pdev, const struct pci_device_id
> >> goto out_disable_device;
> >> }
> >>
> >> + /* Try to enable MSI */
> >> + if (use_msi && (pdev->device != PCI_DEVICE_ID_3WARE_9000) &&
> >> + !pci_enable_msi(pdev))
> >> + set_bit(TW_USING_MSI, &tw_dev->flags);
> >> +
> >> host = scsi_host_alloc(&driver_template, sizeof(TW_Device_Extension));
> >> if (!host) {
> >> TW_PRINTK(host, TW_DRIVER, 0x24, "Failed to allocate memory for device extension");
> >> @@ -2134,11 +2139,6 @@ static int __devinit twa_probe(struct pci_dev *pdev, const struct pci_device_id
> >> le32_to_cpu(*(int *)twa_get_param(tw_dev, 2, TW_INFORMATION_TABLE,
> >> TW_PARAM_PORTCOUNT, TW_PARAM_PORTCOUNT_LENGTH)));
> >>
> >> - /* Try to enable MSI */
> >> - if (use_msi && (pdev->device != PCI_DEVICE_ID_3WARE_9000) &&
> >> - !pci_enable_msi(pdev))
> >> - set_bit(TW_USING_MSI, &tw_dev->flags);
> >> -
> >> /* Now setup the interrupt handler */
> >> retval = request_irq(pdev->irq, twa_interrupt, IRQF_SHARED, "3w-9xxx", tw_dev);
> >> if (retval) {
> >>
> >>
> >> --
> >> Jiri Kosina
> >> SUSE Labs
>

--
Jiri Kosina
SUSE Labs
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