[Bug 256264] Devices behind PEX 8664 PCIe Switch not detected since 11.0-RELEASE
- Reply: bugzilla-noreply_a_freebsd.org: "[Bug 256264] Devices behind PEX 8664 PCIe Switch not detected since 11.0-RELEASE"
- Reply: bugzilla-noreply_a_freebsd.org: "[Bug 256264] Devices behind PEX 8664 PCIe Switch not detected since 11.0-RELEASE"
- Reply: bugzilla-noreply_a_freebsd.org: "[Bug 256264] Devices behind PEX 8664 PCIe Switch not detected since 11.0-RELEASE"
- Reply: bugzilla-noreply_a_freebsd.org: "[Bug 256264] Devices behind PEX 8664 PCIe Switch not detected since 11.0-RELEASE"
- Reply: bugzilla-noreply_a_freebsd.org: "[Bug 256264] Devices behind PEX 8664 PCIe Switch not detected since 11.0-RELEASE"
- Reply: bugzilla-noreply_a_freebsd.org: "[Bug 256264] Devices behind PEX 8664 PCIe Switch not detected since 11.0-RELEASE"
- Reply: bugzilla-noreply_a_freebsd.org: "[Bug 256264] Devices behind PEX 8664 PCIe Switch not detected since 11.0-RELEASE"
- Reply: bugzilla-noreply_a_freebsd.org: "[Bug 256264] Devices behind PEX 8664 PCIe Switch not detected since 11.0-RELEASE"
- Reply: bugzilla-noreply_a_freebsd.org: "[Bug 256264] Devices behind PEX 8664 PCIe Switch not detected since 11.0-RELEASE"
- Go to: [ bottom of page ] [ top of archives ] [ this month ]
Date: Sun, 30 May 2021 13:48:29 UTC
https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=256264 Bug ID: 256264 Summary: Devices behind PEX 8664 PCIe Switch not detected since 11.0-RELEASE Product: Base System Version: 13.0-RELEASE Hardware: amd64 OS: Any Status: New Severity: Affects Some People Priority: --- Component: kern Assignee: bugs@FreeBSD.org Reporter: chris@acsi.ca Hello, SUMMARY: I have not been able to upgrade past FreeBSD 10.3 as since versions 11.0 -> 13.0 devices behind my fileserver's PCIe Switch are not detected. The switch itself is detected, which is a PEX 8664 PCIe Switch, link below. -- I'm using a Dell M610x blade server, which has a PEX/Broadcom 8664 Switch in it to provide 2 PCIe slots, which I use to run SAS controllers to a drive array. This arrangement has worked perfectly since the early days of 7/8.0, and I've pretty much ran each version of FreeBSD since then, until 11.0 came out. This is when I could no longer see/detect devices plugged into the PCIe slots. Things were busy, FreeBSD 10.2 worked well, so it was just left this way for years. Now I do need to upgrade software-wise to 13.0, so I've invested some time tracking down what is happening, with the hopes that a knowledgeable person can fix this up. - I have confirmed with 10.3-RELEASE and a 11.0-RELEASE mini-iso boot that the problem starts in 11.0, and I can confirm it's still an issue in 12.0 and 13.0. I also boot into a 10.2-RELEASE because I happen to have that handy. Everything works/detects fine in 10.3 or lower. - These are GENERIC kernels, fresh from the iso/img I boot from, nothing custom. - I currently have a 10.2 (or 10.3) boot and a 13.0 boot ready to swap back and forth to try and isolate / probe info. I'll attach a few lspci dumps after this message. - The card in question is a LSI 2008 Chipset, mps0 - But it's nothing do do with that card/brand/config. I have also installed an Intel X540 Network card in the PCIe slots and find the same issue - There's nothing behind the PEC 8664 in FreeBSD 13.0, and no problems in 10.2. I have also confirmed that 13.0 boots up and detects the mps0 without issue when I use a different system without the PEX 8664 - At some point in my research I came across a similar issue where the developer mentioned that for some reason they were not scanning behind the switch. It was a different chipset and issue, and I don't have that thread handy at the moment, I will post if I come across it again. Ref: https://www.broadcom.com/products/pcie-switches-bridges/pcie-switches/pex8664 I'm rusty, but fairly knowledgeable and useful if you need me to compile something, install patches, etc. I could give SSH access, but sending me a patch to test may be quicker. lspci dumps in the next message. Thanks. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.