Donate to e Foundation | Murena handsets with /e/OS | Own a part of Murena! Learn more

Skip to content
Commit 266eab8f authored by Christophe Lombard's avatar Christophe Lombard Committed by Michael Ellerman
Browse files

cxl: Check periodically the coherent platform function's state



In the PowerVM environment, the PHYP CoherentAccel component manages
the state of the Coherent Accelerator Processor Interface adapter and
virtualizes CAPI resources, handles CAPP, PSL, PSL Slice errors - and
interrupts - and provides a new set of hcalls for the OS APIs to utilize
Accelerator Function Unit (AFU).

During the course of operation, a coherent platform function can
encounter errors. Some possible reason for errors are:
• Hardware recoverable and unrecoverable errors
• Transient and over-threshold correctable errors

PHYP implements its own state model for the coherent platform function.
The state of the AFU is available through a hcall.

The current implementation of the cxl driver, for the PowerVM
environment, checks this state of the AFU only when an action is
requested - open a device, ioctl command, memory map, attach/detach a
process - from an external driver - cxlflash, libcxl. If an error is
detected the cxl driver handles the error according the content of the
Power Architecture Platform Requirements document.

But in case of low-level troubles (or error injection), the PHYP
component may reset the card and change the AFU state. The PHYP
interface doesn't provide any way to be notified when that happens thus
implies that the cxl driver:
• cannot handle immediatly the state change of the AFU.
• cannot notify other drivers (cxlflash, ...)

The purpose of this patch is to wake up the cpu periodically to check
the current state of each AFU and to see if we need to enter an error
recovery path.

Signed-off-by: default avatarChristophe Lombard <clombard@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Acked-by: default avatarIan Munsie <imunsie@au1.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarMichael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
parent 7a0d85d3
Loading
Loading
Loading
Loading
0% Loading or .
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Please register or to comment