NEW_PCIB? pcib1: failed to allocate initial I/O port window:
0x4000-0x4fff
John
jwd at slowblink.com
Sat Jun 11 03:47:26 UTC 2011
----- John Baldwin's Original Message -----
> On Friday, June 10, 2011 11:00:15 am John wrote:
> > ----- John Baldwin's Original Message -----
> > > On Thursday, June 09, 2011 2:11:16 am Andriy Gapon wrote:
> > > > on 09/06/2011 01:30 John said the following:
> > > > > Sorry John, here's the verbose dmesg output with your patch applied.
> > > > >
> > > > > This is at the tail of the console:
> > > > >
> > > > > pcib1: allocated memory range (0xf6000000-0xf6ffffff) for rid 10 of pci0:1:3:0
> > > > > map[14]: type I/O Port, range 32, base 0x4400, size 8, enabled
> > > > > pcib1: failed to allocate initial I/O port window (0x4000-0x4fff,0x1000)
> > > > > map[18]: type Memory, range 32, base 0xf5ff0000, size 12, enabled
> > > > >
> > > > >
> > > > > Output ends with a single 'M', not MCA as earlier.
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Just a wild guess - what happens if you revert r222537 (you might need to revert
> > > > r222804 first)?
> > >
> > > I think he's getting a MCA due to writing to a bad address and getting a
> > > PCI-e target abort equivalent and that the screen output is broken
> > > because the VGA device is what is probably getting hosed by the pcib driver.
> > >
> > > Given that, I doubt the printf changes are related.
> >
> > Just for grins, I decided to completely remove usb from the kernel
> > to see if it might help. Nolonger prints the MCA and/or M, just
> > hangs while printing out the no driver attached messages. Still
> > prints out the failed to allocate messages...
>
> Hmmm. Your case is a bit different. PCI-PCI bridges have to allocate I/O
> space on 4KB boundarys, so the smallest chunk it can allocate for the
> resources behind your bridge is 0x4000-0x4fff which is what keeps failing.
>
> Hmm, it's claiming that brgphy1 has some I/O ports that conflict allocated.
> That makes no sense. brgphy devices have no I/O port resources. I think
> the device_t got reused.
>
> Can you try this perhaps to get started relative to sys/x86/x86/nexus.c:
In the following line, did by chance you want 'child' instead of dev?
bus_child_pnpinfo_str(dev, buf, 1024);
/usr/src.2011-06-10_22.00_EST/sys/x86/x86/nexus.c: In function 'nexus_alloc_resource':
/usr/src.2011-06-10_22.00_EST/sys/x86/x86/nexus.c:403: error: 'dev' undeclared (first use in this function)
/usr/src.2011-06-10_22.00_EST/sys/x86/x86/nexus.c:403: error: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once
/usr/src.2011-06-10_22.00_EST/sys/x86/x86/nexus.c:403: error: for each function it appears in.)
Thanks!
>
> Index: nexus.c
> ===================================================================
> --- nexus.c (revision 222932)
> +++ nexus.c (working copy)
> @@ -388,6 +388,27 @@ nexus_alloc_resource(device_t bus, device_t child,
> if (rm == NULL)
> return (NULL);
>
> + /* XXX: Hack */
> + if (type == SYS_RES_IOPORT && start >= 0x4000 && start <= 0x4ffff) {
> + char *buf;
> +
> + device_printf(bus, "allocating range %#lx-%#lx for child",
> + start, end);
> + if (device_get_nameunit(child) != NULL)
> + printf(" %s", device_get_nameunit(child));
> + printf(" of %s\n", device_get_nameunit(
> + device_get_parent(child)));
> + buf = malloc(1024, M_DEVBUF, M_WAITOK);
> + *buf = '\0';
> + bus_child_pnpinfo_str(dev, buf, 1024);
> + if (*buf != '\0')
> + printf("\t%s\n", buf);
> + *buf = '\0';
> + bus_child_location_str(dev, buf, 1024);
> + if (*buf != '\0')
> + printf("\tat %s\n", buf);
> + free(buf, M_DEVBUF);
> + }
> rv = rman_reserve_resource(rm, start, end, count, flags, child);
> if (rv == 0)
> return 0;
>
>
> --
> John Baldwin
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