On Fri, 2010-07-23 at 10:22 +1000, Stephen Rothwell wrote: > Hi all, > > My Power7 boot test paniced like this: (next-20100722) > > %GQLogic Fibre Channel HBA Driver: 8.03.03-k0 > qla2xxx 0002:01:00.2: enabling device (0144 -> 0146) > qla2xxx 0002:01:00.2: Found an ISP8001, irq 35, iobase 0xd000080080014000 > ------------[ cut here ]------------ > kernel BUG at drivers/pci/msi.c:205! [...] > Call Trace: > [c00000000278b270] [c000000000048d9c] .rtas_setup_msi_irqs+0x1d8/0x254 > (unreliable) > [c00000000278b360] [c00000000002a9cc] .arch_setup_msi_irqs+0x34/0x4c > [c00000000278b3e0] [c0000000002fd3fc] .pci_enable_msix+0x49c/0x4ac [...] > That line number is this: > > BUG_ON(!(entry->msg.address_hi | entry->msg.address_lo | > entry->msg.data)); > > in read_msi_msg_desc(). That BUG_ON was added by commit > 2ca1af9aa3285c6a5f103ed31ad09f7399fc65d7 ("PCI: MSI: Remove unsafe and > unnecessary hardware access") from the pci tree.
I wanted to assert that read_msi_msg_desc() is only used to update MSI/MSI-X descriptors that have already been generated by Linux. It looks like you found an exception. We could make read_msi_msg() fall back to reading from the hardware, but I think that what the pSeries code is trying to do - save an MSI message generated by firmware - is different from what the other callers want. Instead we could add: void save_msi_msg(unsigned int irq) { struct irq_desc *desc = irq_to_desc(irq); struct msi_desc *entry = get_irq_desc_msi(desc); struct msi_msg *msg = &entry->msg; /* ...followed by the old implementation of read_msi_msg_desc() */ } Possibly conditional on something like CONFIG_ARCH_NEEDS_SAVE_MSI_MSG. Ben. -- Ben Hutchings, Senior Software Engineer, Solarflare Communications Not speaking for my employer; that's the marketing department's job. They asked us to note that Solarflare product names are trademarked. _______________________________________________ Linuxppc-dev mailing list Linuxppc-dev@lists.ozlabs.org https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/linuxppc-dev