Re: [PATCH 1/2] PCI: fix restoring resized BAR state on resume

From: Christian KÃnig
Date: Tue Jul 03 2018 - 03:07:36 EST


Am 02.07.2018 um 15:49 schrieb Bjorn Helgaas:
On Mon, Jul 02, 2018 at 03:20:59PM +0200, Christian KÃnig wrote:
Am 30.06.2018 um 02:57 schrieb Bjorn Helgaas:
On Thu, Jun 14, 2018 at 02:21:45PM +0200, Christian KÃnig wrote:
Resize BARs after resume to the expected size again.

Signed-off-by: Christian KÃnig <christian.koenig@xxxxxxx>
BugLink: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=199959
CC: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx # v4.15+
I applied both of these to pci/resource for v4.19, thanks! It'd be nice to
have them in v4.18, but since it's not a regression and the problem has
been there since v4.15, I'm not sure I could justify it.
Well it is a regression. The change to enable this in the upstream driver
was added in 4.16, but a good bunch of people also compile our backported
DKMS module.

And now those people are complaining that the driver stopped working after
resume in 4.15 with the DKMS module and with 4.16 with the upstream module.

Alternatively I can disable resizing from the driver from kernels older than
v4.19.
Feel free to help justify including this in v4.18 by providing the
details of the regression and the relevant commits. If this is
something that worked in v4.17, and some commit we merged for
v4.18-rc1 broke it, it would be a slam dunk to include the fix for
v4.18. I took a quick look through the commits we added in v4.18-rc1
but didn't see anything obvious.

Obviously, putting a fix in v4.18 doesn't help the people running
v4.15 or v4.16. The stable backports *will* help with that, and we
already have the tag for that.

The current trajectory we're on is that these are headed for
v4.19-rc1, and soon after they appear there, they will be backported
to the v4.15-v4.18 stable kernels.

Ah! Thanks for the explanation on how fixes flow into stable kernels and you are right it's indeed not a regression in 4.18.

In this case everything is fine and the backports to stable kernels should handle that.

Thanks,
Christian.


Bjorn

---
drivers/pci/pci.c | 28 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 28 insertions(+)

diff --git a/drivers/pci/pci.c b/drivers/pci/pci.c
index bd6f156dc3cf..d4685090378b 100644
--- a/drivers/pci/pci.c
+++ b/drivers/pci/pci.c
@@ -1159,6 +1159,33 @@ static void pci_restore_config_space(struct pci_dev *pdev)
}
}
+static void pci_restore_rebar_state(struct pci_dev *pdev)
+{
+ unsigned int pos, nbars, i;
+ u32 ctrl;
+
+ pos = pci_find_ext_capability(pdev, PCI_EXT_CAP_ID_REBAR);
+ if (!pos)
+ return;
+
+ pci_read_config_dword(pdev, pos + PCI_REBAR_CTRL, &ctrl);
+ nbars = (ctrl & PCI_REBAR_CTRL_NBAR_MASK) >>
+ PCI_REBAR_CTRL_NBAR_SHIFT;
+
+ for (i = 0; i < nbars; i++, pos += 8) {
+ struct resource *res;
+ int bar_idx, size;
+
+ pci_read_config_dword(pdev, pos + PCI_REBAR_CTRL, &ctrl);
+ bar_idx = ctrl & PCI_REBAR_CTRL_BAR_IDX;
+ res = pdev->resource + bar_idx;
+ size = order_base_2((resource_size(res) >> 20) | 1) - 1;
+ ctrl &= ~PCI_REBAR_CTRL_BAR_SIZE;
+ ctrl |= size << 8;
+ pci_write_config_dword(pdev, pos + PCI_REBAR_CTRL, ctrl);
+ }
+}
+
/**
* pci_restore_state - Restore the saved state of a PCI device
* @dev: - PCI device that we're dealing with
@@ -1174,6 +1201,7 @@ void pci_restore_state(struct pci_dev *dev)
pci_restore_pri_state(dev);
pci_restore_ats_state(dev);
pci_restore_vc_state(dev);
+ pci_restore_rebar_state(dev);
pci_cleanup_aer_error_status_regs(dev);
--
2.14.1