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4345998ae9
At present all emulated sandbox pci devices must be present in the device tree in order to be used. The real world pci uclass driver supports pci device driver matching, and we should add such support on sandbox too. Signed-off-by: Bin Meng <bmeng.cn@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
163 lines
5.6 KiB
Text
163 lines
5.6 KiB
Text
PCI with Driver Model
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=====================
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How busses are scanned
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----------------------
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Any config read will end up at pci_read_config(). This uses
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uclass_get_device_by_seq() to get the PCI bus for a particular bus number.
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Bus number 0 will need to be requested first, and the alias in the device
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tree file will point to the correct device:
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aliases {
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pci0 = &pci;
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};
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pci: pci-controller {
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compatible = "sandbox,pci";
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...
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};
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If there is no alias the devices will be numbered sequentially in the device
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tree.
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The call to uclass_get_device() will cause the PCI bus to be probed.
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This does a scan of the bus to locate available devices. These devices are
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bound to their appropriate driver if available. If there is no driver, then
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they are bound to a generic PCI driver which does nothing.
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After probing a bus, the available devices will appear in the device tree
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under that bus.
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Note that this is all done on a lazy basis, as needed, so until something is
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touched on PCI (eg: a call to pci_find_devices()) it will not be probed.
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PCI devices can appear in the flattened device tree. If they do this serves to
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specify the driver to use for the device. In this case they will be bound at
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first. Each PCI device node must have a compatible string list as well as a
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<reg> property, as defined by the IEEE Std 1275-1994 PCI bus binding document
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v2.1. Note we must describe PCI devices with the same bus hierarchy as the
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hardware, otherwise driver model cannot detect the correct parent/children
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relationship during PCI bus enumeration thus PCI devices won't be bound to
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their drivers accordingly. A working example like below:
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pci {
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#address-cells = <3>;
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#size-cells = <2>;
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compatible = "pci-x86";
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u-boot,dm-pre-reloc;
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ranges = <0x02000000 0x0 0x40000000 0x40000000 0 0x80000000
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0x42000000 0x0 0xc0000000 0xc0000000 0 0x20000000
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0x01000000 0x0 0x2000 0x2000 0 0xe000>;
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pcie@17,0 {
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#address-cells = <3>;
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#size-cells = <2>;
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compatible = "pci-bridge";
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u-boot,dm-pre-reloc;
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reg = <0x0000b800 0x0 0x0 0x0 0x0>;
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topcliff@0,0 {
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#address-cells = <3>;
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#size-cells = <2>;
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compatible = "pci-bridge";
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u-boot,dm-pre-reloc;
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reg = <0x00010000 0x0 0x0 0x0 0x0>;
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pciuart0: uart@a,1 {
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compatible = "pci8086,8811.00",
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"pci8086,8811",
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"pciclass,070002",
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"pciclass,0700",
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"x86-uart";
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u-boot,dm-pre-reloc;
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reg = <0x00025100 0x0 0x0 0x0 0x0
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0x01025110 0x0 0x0 0x0 0x0>;
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......
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};
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......
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};
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};
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......
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};
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In this example, the root PCI bus node is the "/pci" which matches "pci-x86"
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driver. It has a subnode "pcie@17,0" with driver "pci-bridge". "pcie@17,0"
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also has subnode "topcliff@0,0" which is a "pci-bridge" too. Under that bridge,
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a PCI UART device "uart@a,1" is described. This exactly reflects the hardware
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bus hierarchy: on the root PCI bus, there is a PCIe root port which connects
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to a downstream device Topcliff chipset. Inside Topcliff chipset, it has a
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PCIe-to-PCI bridge and all the chipset integrated devices like the PCI UART
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device are on the PCI bus. Like other devices in the device tree, if we want
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to bind PCI devices before relocation, "u-boot,dm-pre-reloc" must be declared
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in each of these nodes.
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If PCI devices are not listed in the device tree, U_BOOT_PCI_DEVICE can be used
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to specify the driver to use for the device. The device tree takes precedence
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over U_BOOT_PCI_DEVICE. Plese note with U_BOOT_PCI_DEVICE, only drivers with
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DM_FLAG_PRE_RELOC will be bound before relocation. If neither device tree nor
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U_BOOT_PCI_DEVICE is provided, the built-in driver (either pci_bridge_drv or
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pci_generic_drv) will be used.
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Sandbox
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-------
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With sandbox we need a device emulator for each device on the bus since there
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is no real PCI bus. This works by looking in the device tree node for a
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driver. For example:
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pci@1f,0 {
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compatible = "pci-generic";
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reg = <0xf800 0 0 0 0>;
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emul@1f,0 {
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compatible = "sandbox,swap-case";
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};
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};
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This means that there is a 'sandbox,swap-case' driver at that bus position.
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Note that the first cell in the 'reg' value is the bus/device/function. See
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PCI_BDF() for the encoding (it is also specified in the IEEE Std 1275-1994
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PCI bus binding document, v2.1)
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When this bus is scanned we will end up with something like this:
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`- * pci-controller @ 05c660c8, 0
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`- pci@1f,0 @ 05c661c8, 63488
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`- emul@1f,0 @ 05c662c8
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When accesses go to the pci@1f,0 device they are forwarded to its child, the
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emulator.
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The sandbox PCI drivers also support dynamic driver binding, allowing device
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driver to declare the driver binding information via U_BOOT_PCI_DEVICE(),
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eliminating the need to provide any device tree node under the host controller
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node. It is required a "sandbox,dev-info" property must be provided in the
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host controller node for this functionality to work.
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pci1: pci-controller1 {
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compatible = "sandbox,pci";
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...
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sandbox,dev-info = <0x08 0x00 0x1234 0x5678
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0x0c 0x00 0x1234 0x5678>;
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};
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The "sandbox,dev-info" property specifies all dynamic PCI devices on this bus.
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Each dynamic PCI device is encoded as 4 cells a group. The first and second
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cells are PCI device number and function number respectively. The third and
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fourth cells are PCI vendor ID and device ID respectively.
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When this bus is scanned we will end up with something like this:
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pci [ + ] pci_sandbo |-- pci-controller1
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pci_emul [ ] sandbox_sw | |-- sandbox_swap_case_emul
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pci_emul [ ] sandbox_sw | `-- sandbox_swap_case_emul
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Note the difference from the statically declared device nodes is that the
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device is directly attached to the host controller, instead of via a container
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device like pci@1f,0.
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