On Mon, Jun 24, 2019 at 2:16 PM Christoph Hellwig <h...@lst.de> wrote: > IFF we want to support it it has to be done at the PCIe layer. But > even that will require actual documentation and support from Intel. > > If Intel still believes this scheme is their magic secret to control > the NVMe market and give themselves and unfair advantage over their > competitors there is not much we can do.
Since the 2016 discussion, more documentation has been published: https://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/datasheets/300-series-chipset-pch-datasheet-vol-2.pdf Chapter 15 is entirely new, and section 15.2 provides a nice clarity improvement of the magic regs in the AHCI BAR, which I have used in these patches to clean up the code and add documentation in the header (see patch 1 in this series, ahci-remap.h). I believe there's room for further improvement in the docs here, but it would be nice to know what you see as the blocking questions or documentation gaps that would prevent us from continuing to develop the fake PCI bridge approach (https://marc.info/?l=linux-pci&m=156015271021614&w=2). We are going to try and push Intel on this via other channels to see if we can get a contact to help us, so it would be useful if I can include a concrete list of what we need. Bearing in mind that we've already been told that the NVMe device config space is inaccessible, and the new docs show exactly how the BIOS enforces such inaccessibility during early boot, the remaining points you mentioned recently were: b) reset handling, including the PCI device removal as the last escalation step c) SR-IOV VFs and their management d) power management Are there other blocking questions you would require answers to? Thanks, Daniel