On 1/22/26 14:02, Markus Armbruster wrote:
Cédric Le Goater <[email protected]> writes:

On 1/20/26 11:36, Markus Armbruster wrote:
Cc: QOM/qdev maintainers
Cédric Le Goater <[email protected]> writes:

Hello,

On 1/19/26 15:25, Markus Armbruster wrote:
Cédric Le Goater <[email protected]> writes:

On 1/15/26 20:47, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote:
Hi,
Cc'ing Markus.
On 12/1/26 09:30, Kane Chen via qemu development wrote:
From: Kane-Chen-AS <[email protected]>

Currently, the Aspeed I2C controller uses a static naming convention
for its buses (e.g., "aspeed.i2c.bus.0"). This approach leads to
object name conflicts in machine models that incorporate multiple I2C
controllers, such as an Aspeed SoC paired with an external IO expander
or a co-processor like the AST1700.

Is this a side-effect of Problem 4: 'The /machine/unattached/ orphanage'
described here?
https://lore.kernel.org/qemu-devel/[email protected]/

No, but ...

This problem isn't specific to I2C nor Aspeed.

... yes, indeed.  Details below.

See the discussion here :

     
https://lore.kernel.org/qemu-devel/[email protected]/

The Aspeed SoC has 3*16 I2C buses attached on 3 different I2C
controllers plus the I2C/I3C buses. We need to find a way to
distinguish these groups at the QEMU machine level to be able
to add devices on the right bus when using the command line.

Suggestions welcome !

Please show me how to start a QEMU with the 48 I2C mentioned above,
complete with output of "info qtree".

Clone

    https://github.com/legoater/qemu/commits/aspeed-11.0

Download

    
https://github.com/AspeedTech-BMC/openbmc/releases/download/v09.08/ast2700-default-obmc.tar.gz

And run :

    qemu-system-aarch64 -M ast2700a1-evb -m 8G -smp 4 -net 
nic,macaddr=,netdev=net0 -netdev user,id=net0,hostfwd=::2207-:22 -drive 
file=path/to/ast2700-default/image-bmc,format=raw,if=mtd -nographic -serial 
mon:stdio -snapshot

Today, to attach an I2C device on one of the Aspeed SoC I2C buses :

    -device tmp105,bus=aspeed.i2c.bus.1,address=0x4d,id=tmp-test

The Aspeed SoC I2C bus names follow the "aspeed.i2c.bus.X" format.
This is the model typename. The 2 new IO expander models attached
to the Aspeed SoC have an extra 16 I2C buses each. These buses use
an "ioexpX.Y" name, as proposed in the aspeed-next branch.

Attaching a device to one of the IO expanders I2C buses would be :

    -device tmp105,bus=ioexp0.1,address=0x4d,id=tmp-test

See the qtree below.

Thank you!

Thank you for taking the time of analyzing the code and history.

Machine ast2700a1-evb has QOM objects

     /machine/soc/i2c/ (aspeed.i2c-ast2700)
       /bus[N] (aspeed.i2c.bus)    for N in 0..15
         /aspeed.i2c.bus.N (i2c-bus)

in both master and aspeed-11.0.

Yes, that doesn't change because I would prefer not to break the current
user interface. The "i2c.X" bus name would have been a better choice.
I didn't anticipated that 10y ago when I proposed this model.

We make mistakes, we learn :)

Object aspeed.i2c-ast2700 is a sysbus device that contains 16
aspeed.i2c.bus objects as children bus[N] for N in 0..15.  Each object
has a property "bus-id" with value N.

Object aspeed.i2c.bus is a sysbus device that contains an i2c-bus object
as child aspeed.i2c.bus.N.

Aside: why parent TYPE_SYS_BUS_DEVICE, and not TYPE_DEVICE?  It doesn't
actually plug into a sysbus...

The AspeedI2CBus model has a couple of MRs and an IRQ. I guess that's why.

Sysbus was a questionable idea from the start.

Qdev was built around the design assumption "each device plugs into a
bus provided by a device".  This isn't not how real hardware works, but
simplifications can be useful.  However, this one broke down right away:
most onboard devices and many other devices don't plug into a
recognizable bus.  To make the assumption work, Paul Brook invented the
catch all "system bus".  Various infrastructure was then tied to the
system bus over time, because it needed to be tied to something, system
bus is something, therefore it needed to be tied to the system bus.

The design assumption is long gone.  We still create system bus devices
just to be able to use infrastructure.  Blerch.

End of digression.

Object i2c-bus is a qbus.

In master, object aspeed.i2c.bus computes the child name by appending .N
to its own type name TYPE_ASPEED_I2C_BUS.

In aspeed-11.0, it takes it from its property "bus-name".  The property
is set by its QOM parent aspeed.i2c-ast2700, and computed by appending
.N to the value of its property "bus-label".  It defaults the property
to TYPE_ASPEED_I2C_BUS.

Since nothing sets this property in this case, we get the same child
name.

aspeed-11.0 additionally has QOM objects

     /machine/soc/ioexp[M] (aspeed.ast1700)    for M in 0..1
         /ioexp-i2c[0] (aspeed.i2c-ast2700)
           /bus[N] (aspeed.i2c.bus)    for N in 0..15
             /ioexpM.N (i2c-bus)

Object aspeed.ast1700 is a sysbus device that contains an
aspeed.i2c-ast2700 as child "ioexp-i2c[0]".  It has a property
"board-idx" with value M.

Aside: we only ever create one aspeed.i2c-ast2700 child.  Why [0]?

Right. We can drop [*] in aspeed_ast1700_instance_init() - PATCH 15.

Aside^2: I tried to strangle the "[*]" feature in the crib, but failed.
Has been a minor thorn in my side ever since.

aspeed.ast1700 set its child's (aspeed.i2c-ast2700) property "bus-label"
to "ioexpM".  This makes the child set the grandchild's (aspeed.i2c.bus)
property "bus-name" to "ioexpM.N", which makes the grandchild name the
great-grandchild (i2c-bus) "ioexpM.N".

This naming business is complicated, and I had a hard time ferreting it
out.  As far as I can tell, it's all in service of -device bus=...

yes.

That's why I regret not letting QEMU taking care of the naming with :

    s->bus = i2c_init_bus(dev, NULL);

This would break the user interface though. This is still an option.

Since the devices providing these i2c buses have no qdev ID, these buses
would then be named i2c.N, where N counts up from 0.  I think.  See "Bus
names are defined as follows" below.

Good enough?

Good enough to avoid the bus naming conflict, not good enough
to easily identify a bus in the machine topology and it's also
breaking the user interface ... too many cons to be a good
choice.


Let's examine how that works.

We want to be able to plug i2c devices into any of these 48 i2c buses
with -device / device_add.  To do that, we need to select a bus with the
"bus" argument.

In a world saner than the one we live in, the value of "bus" would be a
QOM path or qdev ID, where qdev ID is shorthand for the QOM path
/machine/peripheral/ID.

Nonsense.

"QOM path or qdev ID" is how the @id argument of device_del and
device_sync_config work.  A qdev ID resolves to a qdev.  Here, we need
to resolve to a qbus.

Instead, "QOM path or qbus ID".  Except the concept "qbus ID" does not
exist.  All we have is qbus names, which aren't unique (we screwed that
up).

For instance, the first i2c bus could then be selected with absolute QOM
path "/machine/soc/i2c/bus[0]" or partial QOM paths "soc/i2c/bus[0]" or
"i2c/bus[0]".  Partial QOM paths are a convenience feature that is
virtually unknown (and possibly ill-advised): you can omit leading path
components as long as there's no ambiguity.

However, in the world we live in, the value of bus is not a QOM path,
it's a path in the qtree.  Why?  qdev and -device / device_add predate
QOM.

If the path starts with "/", it's anchored at the main system bus.

Else, it's anchored at a bus whose name is the first path component.  If
there's more than one such bus, we pick the first one we find.  This is
a misfeature.

Remaining path components, if any, pick a path in the qtree from that
anchor towards leaves.  Note that the child of a qbus is always a qdev,
and the child of a qdev always a qbus.

This must ultimately resolve to a qbus of the appropriate type.

Picking a qdev child of a qbus works like this:

* If a child with a (user-specified) qdev ID equal to the path component
   exists, pick it.  Since qdev IDs are unique, there can only be one.

* Else, if children whose QOM type name equals the path component
   exists, pick the first one.

* Else, if children whose qdev alias equals the path component exists,
   pick the first one.

Picking the first one is again a misfeature.

Picking a qbus child is simpler: we pick the first child whose bus name
equals the path component.

Bus names are defined as follows:

* Whatever creates the bus may set its name.

* Else, if the qbus's parent qdev has an ID, the bus name is ID.N, where
   N counts up from 0 within that qdev.

* Else, the bus name is TYPE.N, where TYPE is the parent qdev's QOM type
   name, and N counts up from 0 within that bus class.

The qbus's QOM type name, of course.

The only case where this is actually works is picking the N-th bus child
provided by a qdev with an ID: use bus=ID.N (a partial tree path of just
one component).  Anything else is unfit for purpose, except in special
cases, e.g. when the machine can have just one device of a certain type.

This mess is harmless for user-created devices: just specify the ID.
It's awful for onboard devices, which cannot have an ID.

This is a qdev design flaw.  It's not specific to I2C or Aspeed, as
Philippe suspected.

To illustrate it further, let's have a look at the qtree of machine
ast2700a1-evb.  Output of "info qtree" in master:

     bus: main-system-bus
       type System
       [...]
       dev: aspeed.i2c.bus, id ""    for N in 0..15
         [...]
         bus: aspeed.i2c.bus.N
           type i2c-bus
           [...]
In aspeed-11.0, we additionally have

       dev: aspeed.i2c.bus, id ""    for M in 0..1, N in 0..15
         [...]
         bus: ioexpM.N
           type i2c-bus
           [...]

The i2c-buses all have unique names: aspeed.i2c-bus.N and ioexpM.N.  We
can point to any of them with a partial qtree path of just one
component: bus=NAME where NAME is one of these unique names works, and
there is no ambiguity.

The buses have unique names only because device code takes pains to make
them configurable by parent devices, and the parent devices cooperate to
configure them so the resulting bus names are unique.

This is a lot of complexity to work around this qdev design flaw for
just one special instance.

Can we instead remedy the design flaw once and for all?

Here't the obvious stupid idea: give -device / device_add the means to
pick a bus by QOM path.

Thoughts?

Could we support both methods ? I mean looking up the bus by the
qtree name and by the QOM path ?

We can't just change "bus".  Management applications and human users
rely on it.

Except we might be able to break aspects that aren't actually used in
anger.  Is anyone using '/' in qtree paths in anger?  I sure hope nobody
does, because that way is madness.  But it's hard to be reasonably sure.

Could we add a prefix to the bus name argument to signify a change of
namespace for the lookup ? like 'qom:' or 'machine:' ?

Thanks !

C.

If we can break '/' in the value of "bus", we could overload "bus": make
it a QOM path or a qbus ID, similar to how device_del's @id is a QOM
path or a qdev ID.  We'd have to define "qbus ID".

Instead, we could perhaps add an argument "parent" to specify the QOM
parent object, mutually exclusive with "bus".  For devices that plug
into a certain kind of bus, the parent object must be an instance of
that bus.

Thanks,

C.

You're welcome!



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