
On Wed, 2020-04-01 at 22:14 +0200, Marek Vasut wrote:
On 4/1/20 10:13 PM, Nicolas Saenz Julienne wrote:
On Wed, 2020-04-01 at 20:50 +0200, Marek Vasut wrote:
On 4/1/20 7:30 PM, Nicolas Saenz Julienne wrote:
Hi All,
Hi,
I'm working on enabling the VIA805 XCHI controller found on the new Raspberry Pi 4. The controller sits behind a PCIe bus, which I've already implemented[1] and will submit once the XCHI issues are resolved, as it's worthless otherwise.
The XHCI initialization gets stuck after issuing the fist 'enable slot' command. I've been reviewing the whole init process and comparing it to Linux's for days without finding anything fishy. DMA constraints, which are important on the RPi are mantained, and on top of that, I can confirm DMA trough PCIe works fine as I see two 'port status change' events available in the ring before completly stalling. Also note that, unsurprisingly, the CRR bit in the CRCR register (which marks the running state of the Command Ring state machine) is never set after ringing the relevant doorbell.
I'm clueless at this point, I figure the VIA805 is sensitive to the ordering of some of the operations we perform in u-boot, or worse, the timing. For example, I tried replicanting Linux's behaviour with regard to 'port status change' events, processing them before calling the 'enable slot' command. I also tried to mimic Linux by enabling port-0's power (the USB3 port) before starting the HC. Again, no luck.
I attached the usb/xhci debug output, any ideas on where to look will be apreciated.
Try disabling caches (dcache off ; icache off) and see if it magically starts working. That comes to mind.
Same outcome :(
Hmmm, no idea then, maybe others have some.
I presume PCIe works correctly , right?
I was also responsible for the Linux version of the PCIe driver so I know it fairly well. I also double-checked all pcie-brcmstb's registers have the expected values.
From the USB perspective, I'm both able to map XHCI's registers into memory and get some output out of the event ring, which implies XHCI accessed memory trough the bus. On top of that if something went wrong with PCI there is a register that should point it out, Host System Error (HSE), which so far has been silent.
Overall I'm confident PCIe is fine.
Regards, Nicolas