From: Nicolas Lavocat <nicolas.lavocat@fr.thalesgroup.com>
Cc: linuxppc-dev <linuxppc-dev@ozlabs.org>
Subject: Re: freeze when reading a PCI bridge register
Date: Wed, 22 Apr 2009 16:56:35 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <49EF3023.1090007@fr.thalesgroup.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <49EF0D74.9000005@fr.thalesgroup.com>
Tests done...
-I use ioremap for the mapping of the memory, so it should be uncacheable
-I inserted a eieio() before the read and there is no change. In=20
addition, I use outbe_32 and inbe_32, which make a sync or isync ... And=20
these functions are used for the serial port and perfectly work
about boot traces, there is nothing to see... system freezes just when=20
the register "pci1_cfg_addr_register" has to be read:
traces
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
[snip]
<- unflatten_device_tree()
get_real_base: looking for abac-bridge :
OF: ** translation for device /abac@20000000 **
OF: bus is default (na=3D1, ns=3D1) on /
OF: translating address: 20000000
OF: reached root node
get_real_base: base address of ABAC : 20000000
console [udbg0] enabled
setup_arch: bootmem
reading PCI vendorID and deviceID
pci1_cfg_addr =3D 0xfdfe1098, pci1_cfg_data =3D 0xfdfe1f00
writing in pci1_cfg_data_register
reading pci1_cfg_addr_register
-------------------------------------------------------------
freeze, nothing after that...
so writing seems to be ok but reading freezes...
thank you again for your suggestions ^^
If somebody has another idea...
best regards,
Nicolas Lavocat
Nicolas Lavocat a =E9crit :
> Thank you for your advices! I try it as soon as possible! (the board=20
> is not often available...)
>
> Nicolas Lavocat
>
> Gabriel Paubert a =E9crit :
>> On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 10:04:29AM +0200, Nicolas Lavocat wrote:
>> =20
>>> Hi everybody!
>>>
>>> I' am trying to configure a PCI bridge on a private board, with a =20
>>> powerpc . In a first time, I tried to get informations about PCI =20
>>> devices, in order to be sure that my read and write methods work=20
>>> ( using 2 configuration registers, like on an x86 architecture.) .=20
>>> 2 configuration registers are used, for example we write an=20
>>> encoded address (it is a request to a PCI device) in the first and=20
>>> the answer of the PCI device can be read in the second register (it=20
>>> is a configuration cycle)
>>> Firstly, I did it by JTAG: it works. Then, under uboot, it is ok.
>>> =20
>>
>> JTAG is probably a completely different hardware path, so it
>> does not really count. uboot testing is ok.
>> =20
>>> For example, the code used under u-boot:
>>>
>>> volatile u32* addr;
>>> u32 vendor_device_ID;
>>>
>>> puts("PCI1 reading PCI VENDOR and DEVICE ID\n");
>>> addr=3DCFG_ADDR_PCI1;
>>> *addr=3D0x80007800;
>>>
>>> addr=3D CFG_DATA_PCI1;
>>> vendor_device_ID=3D *addr;
>>> printf("PCI1: PCI1_VENDOR_DEVICE_ID=3D %08x \n" ,vendor_device_ID);
>>> =20
>>
>> 2 possibilities:
>> - your I/O is not marked uncacheable (should be with ioremap)
>> - the PPC is reordering and issuing the read before the write,
>> you should use accessors. A simple test is inserting
>> an asm volatile("eieio") before the read.
>>
>> About your other mails, please avoid HTML mail.
>>
>> Gabriel
>> _______________________________________________
>> Linuxppc-dev mailing list
>> Linuxppc-dev@ozlabs.org
>> https://ozlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxppc-dev
>>
>> =20
> _______________________________________________
> Linuxppc-dev mailing list
> Linuxppc-dev@ozlabs.org
> https://ozlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxppc-dev
>
prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-04-22 14:56 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2009-04-22 8:04 freeze when reading a PCI bridge register Nicolas Lavocat
2009-04-22 8:30 ` Liu Dave-R63238
2009-04-22 8:31 ` Nicolas Lavocat
2009-04-22 8:33 ` Liu Dave-R63238
2009-04-22 9:10 ` Nicolas Lavocat
2009-04-22 9:21 ` tiejun.chen
2009-04-22 9:26 ` Nicolas Lavocat
2009-04-22 9:45 ` tiejun.chen
2009-04-22 11:03 ` Gabriel Paubert
2009-04-22 12:28 ` Nicolas Lavocat
2009-04-22 14:56 ` Nicolas Lavocat [this message]
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