Bjorn Helgaas | 39a212a | 2018-06-26 17:45:34 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | ACPI considerations for PCI host bridges |
| 2 | |
| 3 | The general rule is that the ACPI namespace should describe everything the |
| 4 | OS might use unless there's another way for the OS to find it [1, 2]. |
| 5 | |
| 6 | For example, there's no standard hardware mechanism for enumerating PCI |
| 7 | host bridges, so the ACPI namespace must describe each host bridge, the |
| 8 | method for accessing PCI config space below it, the address space windows |
| 9 | the host bridge forwards to PCI (using _CRS), and the routing of legacy |
| 10 | INTx interrupts (using _PRT). |
| 11 | |
| 12 | PCI devices, which are below the host bridge, generally do not need to be |
| 13 | described via ACPI. The OS can discover them via the standard PCI |
| 14 | enumeration mechanism, using config accesses to discover and identify |
| 15 | devices and read and size their BARs. However, ACPI may describe PCI |
| 16 | devices if it provides power management or hotplug functionality for them |
| 17 | or if the device has INTx interrupts connected by platform interrupt |
| 18 | controllers and a _PRT is needed to describe those connections. |
| 19 | |
| 20 | ACPI resource description is done via _CRS objects of devices in the ACPI |
| 21 | namespace [2]. The _CRS is like a generalized PCI BAR: the OS can read |
| 22 | _CRS and figure out what resource is being consumed even if it doesn't have |
| 23 | a driver for the device [3]. That's important because it means an old OS |
| 24 | can work correctly even on a system with new devices unknown to the OS. |
| 25 | The new devices might not do anything, but the OS can at least make sure no |
| 26 | resources conflict with them. |
| 27 | |
| 28 | Static tables like MCFG, HPET, ECDT, etc., are *not* mechanisms for |
| 29 | reserving address space. The static tables are for things the OS needs to |
| 30 | know early in boot, before it can parse the ACPI namespace. If a new table |
| 31 | is defined, an old OS needs to operate correctly even though it ignores the |
| 32 | table. _CRS allows that because it is generic and understood by the old |
| 33 | OS; a static table does not. |
| 34 | |
| 35 | If the OS is expected to manage a non-discoverable device described via |
| 36 | ACPI, that device will have a specific _HID/_CID that tells the OS what |
| 37 | driver to bind to it, and the _CRS tells the OS and the driver where the |
| 38 | device's registers are. |
| 39 | |
| 40 | PCI host bridges are PNP0A03 or PNP0A08 devices. Their _CRS should |
| 41 | describe all the address space they consume. This includes all the windows |
| 42 | they forward down to the PCI bus, as well as registers of the host bridge |
| 43 | itself that are not forwarded to PCI. The host bridge registers include |
| 44 | things like secondary/subordinate bus registers that determine the bus |
| 45 | range below the bridge, window registers that describe the apertures, etc. |
| 46 | These are all device-specific, non-architected things, so the only way a |
| 47 | PNP0A03/PNP0A08 driver can manage them is via _PRS/_CRS/_SRS, which contain |
| 48 | the device-specific details. The host bridge registers also include ECAM |
| 49 | space, since it is consumed by the host bridge. |
| 50 | |
| 51 | ACPI defines a Consumer/Producer bit to distinguish the bridge registers |
| 52 | ("Consumer") from the bridge apertures ("Producer") [4, 5], but early |
| 53 | BIOSes didn't use that bit correctly. The result is that the current ACPI |
| 54 | spec defines Consumer/Producer only for the Extended Address Space |
| 55 | descriptors; the bit should be ignored in the older QWord/DWord/Word |
| 56 | Address Space descriptors. Consequently, OSes have to assume all |
| 57 | QWord/DWord/Word descriptors are windows. |
| 58 | |
| 59 | Prior to the addition of Extended Address Space descriptors, the failure of |
| 60 | Consumer/Producer meant there was no way to describe bridge registers in |
| 61 | the PNP0A03/PNP0A08 device itself. The workaround was to describe the |
| 62 | bridge registers (including ECAM space) in PNP0C02 catch-all devices [6]. |
| 63 | With the exception of ECAM, the bridge register space is device-specific |
| 64 | anyway, so the generic PNP0A03/PNP0A08 driver (pci_root.c) has no need to |
| 65 | know about it. |
| 66 | |
| 67 | New architectures should be able to use "Consumer" Extended Address Space |
| 68 | descriptors in the PNP0A03 device for bridge registers, including ECAM, |
| 69 | although a strict interpretation of [6] might prohibit this. Old x86 and |
| 70 | ia64 kernels assume all address space descriptors, including "Consumer" |
| 71 | Extended Address Space ones, are windows, so it would not be safe to |
| 72 | describe bridge registers this way on those architectures. |
| 73 | |
| 74 | PNP0C02 "motherboard" devices are basically a catch-all. There's no |
| 75 | programming model for them other than "don't use these resources for |
| 76 | anything else." So a PNP0C02 _CRS should claim any address space that is |
| 77 | (1) not claimed by _CRS under any other device object in the ACPI namespace |
| 78 | and (2) should not be assigned by the OS to something else. |
| 79 | |
| 80 | The PCIe spec requires the Enhanced Configuration Access Method (ECAM) |
| 81 | unless there's a standard firmware interface for config access, e.g., the |
| 82 | ia64 SAL interface [7]. A host bridge consumes ECAM memory address space |
| 83 | and converts memory accesses into PCI configuration accesses. The spec |
| 84 | defines the ECAM address space layout and functionality; only the base of |
| 85 | the address space is device-specific. An ACPI OS learns the base address |
| 86 | from either the static MCFG table or a _CBA method in the PNP0A03 device. |
| 87 | |
| 88 | The MCFG table must describe the ECAM space of non-hot pluggable host |
| 89 | bridges [8]. Since MCFG is a static table and can't be updated by hotplug, |
| 90 | a _CBA method in the PNP0A03 device describes the ECAM space of a |
| 91 | hot-pluggable host bridge [9]. Note that for both MCFG and _CBA, the base |
| 92 | address always corresponds to bus 0, even if the bus range below the bridge |
| 93 | (which is reported via _CRS) doesn't start at 0. |
| 94 | |
| 95 | |
| 96 | [1] ACPI 6.2, sec 6.1: |
| 97 | For any device that is on a non-enumerable type of bus (for example, an |
| 98 | ISA bus), OSPM enumerates the devices' identifier(s) and the ACPI |
| 99 | system firmware must supply an _HID object ... for each device to |
| 100 | enable OSPM to do that. |
| 101 | |
| 102 | [2] ACPI 6.2, sec 3.7: |
| 103 | The OS enumerates motherboard devices simply by reading through the |
| 104 | ACPI Namespace looking for devices with hardware IDs. |
| 105 | |
| 106 | Each device enumerated by ACPI includes ACPI-defined objects in the |
| 107 | ACPI Namespace that report the hardware resources the device could |
| 108 | occupy [_PRS], an object that reports the resources that are currently |
| 109 | used by the device [_CRS], and objects for configuring those resources |
| 110 | [_SRS]. The information is used by the Plug and Play OS (OSPM) to |
| 111 | configure the devices. |
| 112 | |
| 113 | [3] ACPI 6.2, sec 6.2: |
| 114 | OSPM uses device configuration objects to configure hardware resources |
| 115 | for devices enumerated via ACPI. Device configuration objects provide |
| 116 | information about current and possible resource requirements, the |
| 117 | relationship between shared resources, and methods for configuring |
| 118 | hardware resources. |
| 119 | |
| 120 | When OSPM enumerates a device, it calls _PRS to determine the resource |
| 121 | requirements of the device. It may also call _CRS to find the current |
| 122 | resource settings for the device. Using this information, the Plug and |
| 123 | Play system determines what resources the device should consume and |
| 124 | sets those resources by calling the device’s _SRS control method. |
| 125 | |
| 126 | In ACPI, devices can consume resources (for example, legacy keyboards), |
| 127 | provide resources (for example, a proprietary PCI bridge), or do both. |
| 128 | Unless otherwise specified, resources for a device are assumed to be |
| 129 | taken from the nearest matching resource above the device in the device |
| 130 | hierarchy. |
| 131 | |
| 132 | [4] ACPI 6.2, sec 6.4.3.5.1, 2, 3, 4: |
| 133 | QWord/DWord/Word Address Space Descriptor (.1, .2, .3) |
| 134 | General Flags: Bit [0] Ignored |
| 135 | |
| 136 | Extended Address Space Descriptor (.4) |
| 137 | General Flags: Bit [0] Consumer/Producer: |
| 138 | 1–This device consumes this resource |
| 139 | 0–This device produces and consumes this resource |
| 140 | |
| 141 | [5] ACPI 6.2, sec 19.6.43: |
| 142 | ResourceUsage specifies whether the Memory range is consumed by |
| 143 | this device (ResourceConsumer) or passed on to child devices |
| 144 | (ResourceProducer). If nothing is specified, then |
| 145 | ResourceConsumer is assumed. |
| 146 | |
| 147 | [6] PCI Firmware 3.2, sec 4.1.2: |
| 148 | If the operating system does not natively comprehend reserving the |
| 149 | MMCFG region, the MMCFG region must be reserved by firmware. The |
| 150 | address range reported in the MCFG table or by _CBA method (see Section |
| 151 | 4.1.3) must be reserved by declaring a motherboard resource. For most |
| 152 | systems, the motherboard resource would appear at the root of the ACPI |
| 153 | namespace (under \_SB) in a node with a _HID of EISAID (PNP0C02), and |
| 154 | the resources in this case should not be claimed in the root PCI bus’s |
| 155 | _CRS. The resources can optionally be returned in Int15 E820 or |
| 156 | EFIGetMemoryMap as reserved memory but must always be reported through |
| 157 | ACPI as a motherboard resource. |
| 158 | |
| 159 | [7] PCI Express 4.0, sec 7.2.2: |
| 160 | For systems that are PC-compatible, or that do not implement a |
| 161 | processor-architecture-specific firmware interface standard that allows |
| 162 | access to the Configuration Space, the ECAM is required as defined in |
| 163 | this section. |
| 164 | |
| 165 | [8] PCI Firmware 3.2, sec 4.1.2: |
| 166 | The MCFG table is an ACPI table that is used to communicate the base |
| 167 | addresses corresponding to the non-hot removable PCI Segment Groups |
| 168 | range within a PCI Segment Group available to the operating system at |
| 169 | boot. This is required for the PC-compatible systems. |
| 170 | |
| 171 | The MCFG table is only used to communicate the base addresses |
| 172 | corresponding to the PCI Segment Groups available to the system at |
| 173 | boot. |
| 174 | |
| 175 | [9] PCI Firmware 3.2, sec 4.1.3: |
| 176 | The _CBA (Memory mapped Configuration Base Address) control method is |
| 177 | an optional ACPI object that returns the 64-bit memory mapped |
| 178 | configuration base address for the hot plug capable host bridge. The |
| 179 | base address returned by _CBA is processor-relative address. The _CBA |
| 180 | control method evaluates to an Integer. |
| 181 | |
| 182 | This control method appears under a host bridge object. When the _CBA |
| 183 | method appears under an active host bridge object, the operating system |
| 184 | evaluates this structure to identify the memory mapped configuration |
| 185 | base address corresponding to the PCI Segment Group for the bus number |
| 186 | range specified in _CRS method. An ACPI name space object that contains |
| 187 | the _CBA method must also contain a corresponding _SEG method. |