Hi Alex thanks for reviewing [...]
> > > >>> + * The port size of legacy I/O devices is normally less than > 0x400. > >>> + * Defining the I/O range size as 0x400 here should be sufficient > for > >>> + * all peripherals under one bus. > >>> + */ > >> > >> This comment doesn't make a lot of sense. What is the limit? Is > there a > >> hardware limit? > >> > >> We don't dynamically allocate devices on the lpc bus, so why imply a > >> limit at all? > >> > > > > IIRC from previously asking Zhichang this before, this is the upper > > range we can address devices on the LPC bus. But the value was 0x1000 > then. > > Well, all devices that we want to address are defined by firmware (via > device tree or dsdt). So I'm not quite sure what this arbitrary limit > buys us. Following a previous discussion with Arnd: << We know that the ISA/LPC bus can only have up to 65536 ports, so you can register all of those, or possibly limit it further to 1024 or 4096 ports, whichever matches the bus implementation. >> (https://lkml.org/lkml/2016/11/10/95) We decided to register a fixed IO range for our LPC. About the specific reason for choosing 0x400 I think Zhichang can clarify once he's back (he's OOO now) > [...] > >>> + > >>> + /* whole operation must be atomic */ > >>> + spin_lock_irqsave(&lpcdev->cycle_lock, flags); > >> > >> Ouch. This is going to kill your RT jitter. Is there no better way? > >> > > > > Obviously the bus register driving is non-atomic, so we need some way > to > > lock out. > > > > I think that it is not so critical for low-speed/infrequent-access > bus. > > > > If we were going to use virtual UART in the BMC on the LPC bus then > we > > could consider more. > > Well, it basically means that an arbitrary daemon running in user space > that checks your temperature readings via the ipmi interface could > create a lot of jitter. That could be very critical if you want to use > this hardware for real time critical applications, such as telecom. > > I bet that if you leave it like that and postpone the decision to fix > it > to "later", in 1 or 2 years you will cause someone weeks of debugging > to > track down why their voip gateway loses packets from time to time. Thanks for the heads-up. We'll discuss internally after Chinese holidays to understand if this implementation is compatible with the intended deployment scenarions > > > [...] > >>> +static u64 hisilpc_comm_in(void *devobj, unsigned long pio, size_t > >>> dlen) > >>> +{ > >>> + struct hisilpc_dev *lpcdev = devobj; > >>> + struct lpc_cycle_para iopara; > >>> + u32 rd_data; > >> > >> rd_data needs to be initialized to 0. Otherwise it may contain stale > >> stack contents and corrupt non-32bit dlen returns. > >> > > > > I think so, since we read into this value byte-by-byte. We also seem > to > > return a 32b value but should return 64b value according to the > prototype. > > IIRC LPC (well, PIO) doesn't support bigger requests than 32bit. At > least I can't think of an x86 instruction that would allow bigger > transactions. So there's no need to make it 64bit. However, the > question > is why the prototype is 64bit then. Hm. :) > > Maybe the prototype should be only 32bit. Maybe you're right :) Looking at extio.c we never return a 64b value. I'll double check with Zhichang once he's back... > > > > >>> + unsigned char *newbuf; > >>> + int ret = 0; > >>> + unsigned long ptaddr; > >>> + > >>> + if (!lpcdev || !dlen || dlen > LPC_MAX_DULEN || (dlen & > (dlen > >>> - 1))) > >>> + return -1; > >> > >> Isn't this -EINVAL? > > > > Not sure. This value is returned directly to the inb/outb caller, > which > > would not check this value for error. > > > > It could be argued that the checking is paranoia. If not, we should > > treat the failure as a more severe event. > > Oh, I see. In that case -1 makes a lot of sense since it's the default > read value on x86 for unallocated space. > > This probably deserves a comment (and/or maybe a #define) > > > Alex