Hi, If this is really off-topic here, I apologize first. But I cannot think a better place to ask this particular question.
I understand that the current PCI subsystem or linux kernel (x86) supports only one message when MSI is enabled even for devices having multiple MSI messages. But why? Is this a limitation solely due to the OS or due to the x86 APIC? I know the current linux kernel (2.6.23) changed MSI message data format a little bit to support other architectures. But some older version (e.g. 2.6.18) defined a specific format for the MSI msg data in a way that 8 bits contain the irq number and the other 8 bits have the interrupt attributes, which is x86 specific. Why does the msg data need to contain the irq number? Here is my hypothetic explanation. The device writes the MSI msg data to the specified MSI msg address. And APIC uses the irq number in the msg data to generate appropriate interrupt, which of course results in an appropriate ISR invoked. A device having multiple MSI messages typically appends some information of which MSI message to the msg data field. For example, if the system (or OS) configures the MSI msg data as 0x5000, a device having 4 MSI messages could write 0x5000, 0x5001, 0x5002, 0x5003 to differentiate the MSI messages. However this cannot work with the APIC due to the way how APIC asserts interrupts as I described above (if my understanding is correct). Hence my answer to the question is this is due to the x86 APIC. For other architectures such as powerpc this is probably not a problem since the interrupt controller is different. Am I correct? TIA. -Shawn. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/