FDDI: defxx: Bail out gracefully with unassigned PCI resource for CSR
Recent versions of the PCI Express specification have deprecated support for I/O transactions and actually some PCIe host bridges, such as Power Systems Host Bridge 4 (PHB4), do not implement them. For those systems the PCI BARs that request a mapping in the I/O space have the length recorded in the corresponding PCI resource set to zero, which makes it unassigned: # lspci -s 0031:02:04.0 -v 0031:02:04.0 FDDI network controller: Digital Equipment Corporation PCI-to-PDQ Interface Chip [PFI] FDDI (DEFPA) (rev 02) Subsystem: Digital Equipment Corporation FDDIcontroller/PCI (DEFPA) Flags: bus master, medium devsel, latency 136, IRQ 57, NUMA node 8 Memory at 620c080020000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=128] I/O ports at <unassigned> [disabled] Memory at 620c080030000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=64K] Capabilities: [50] Power Management version 2 Kernel driver in use: defxx Kernel modules: defxx # Regardless the driver goes ahead and requests it (here observed with a Raptor Talos II POWER9 system), resulting in an odd /proc/ioport entry: # cat /proc/ioports 00000000-ffffffffffffffff : 0031:02:04.0 # Furthermore, the system gets confused as the driver actually continues and pokes at those locations, causing a flood of messages being output to the system console by the underlying system firmware, like: defxx: v1.11 2014/07/01 Lawrence V. Stefani and others defxx 0031:02:04.0: enabling device (0140 -> 0142) LPC[000]: Got SYNC no-response error. Error address reg: 0xd0010000 IPMI: dropping non severe PEL event LPC[000]: Got SYNC no-response error. Error address reg: 0xd0010014 IPMI: dropping non severe PEL event LPC[000]: Got SYNC no-response error. Error address reg: 0xd0010014 IPMI: dropping non severe PEL event and so on and so on (possibly intermixed actually, as there's no locking between the kernel and the firmware in console port access with this particular system, but cleaned up above for clarity), and once some 10k of such pairs of the latter two messages have been produced an interace eventually shows up in a useless state: 0031:02:04.0: DEFPA at I/O addr = 0x0, IRQ = 57, Hardware addr = 00-00-00-00-00-00 This was not expected to happen as resource handling was added to the driver a while ago, because it was not known at that time that a PCI system would be possible that cannot assign port I/O resources, and oddly enough `request_region' does not fail, which would have caught it. Correct the problem then by checking for the length of zero for the CSR resource and bail out gracefully refusing to register an interface if that turns out to be the case, producing messages like: defxx: v1.11 2014/07/01 Lawrence V. Stefani and others 0031:02:04.0: Cannot use I/O, no address set, aborting 0031:02:04.0: Recompile driver with "CONFIG_DEFXX_MMIO=y" Keep the original check for the EISA MMIO resource as implemented, because in that case the length is hardwired to 0x400 as a consequence of how the compare/mask address decoding works in the ESIC chip and it is only the base address that is set to zero if MMIO has been disabled for the adapter in EISA configuration, which in turn could be a valid bus address in a legacy-free system implementing PCI, especially for port I/O. Where the EISA MMIO resource has been disabled for the adapter in EISA configuration this arrangement keeps producing messages like: eisa 00:05: EISA: slot 5: DEC3002 detected defxx: v1.11 2014/07/01 Lawrence V. Stefani and others 00:05: Cannot use MMIO, no address set, aborting 00:05: Recompile driver with "CONFIG_DEFXX_MMIO=n" 00:05: Or run ECU and set adapter's MMIO location with the last two lines now swapped for easier handling in the driver. There is no need to check for and catch the case of a port I/O resource not having been assigned for EISA as the adapter uses the slot-specific I/O space, which gets assigned by how EISA has been specified and maps directly to the particular slot an option card has been placed in. And the EISA variant of the adapter has additional registers that are only accessible via the port I/O space anyway. While at it factor out the error message calls into helpers and fix an argument order bug with the `pr_err' call now in `dfx_register_res_err'. Signed-off-by: Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@orcam.me.uk> Fixes: 4d0438e5 ("defxx: Clean up DEFEA resource management") Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # v3.19+ Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
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