table of contents
| PCI(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | PCI(9) | 
NAME¶
pci, pci_alloc_msi,
  pci_alloc_msix,
  pci_disable_busmaster,
  pci_disable_io,
  pci_enable_busmaster,
  pci_enable_io, pci_find_bsf,
  pci_find_cap, pci_find_dbsf,
  pci_find_device,
  pci_find_extcap,
  pci_find_htcap,
  pci_find_pcie_root_port,
  pci_get_id,
  pci_get_max_payload,
  pci_get_max_read_req,
  pci_get_powerstate,
  pci_get_vpd_ident,
  pci_get_vpd_readonly,
  pci_iov_attach,
  pci_iov_detach, pci_msi_count,
  pci_msix_count,
  pci_msix_pba_bar,
  pci_msix_table_bar,
  pci_pending_msix,
  pci_read_config,
  pci_release_msi,
  pci_remap_msix,
  pci_restore_state,
  pci_save_state,
  pci_set_max_read_req,
  pci_set_powerstate,
  pci_write_config,
  pcie_adjust_config,
  pcie_read_config,
  pcie_write_config —
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/bus.h>
#include <dev/pci/pcireg.h>
#include <dev/pci/pcivar.h>
int
  
  pci_alloc_msi(device_t
    dev, int
  *count);
int
  
  pci_alloc_msix(device_t
    dev, int
  *count);
int
  
  pci_disable_busmaster(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_disable_io(device_t
    dev, int
  space);
int
  
  pci_enable_busmaster(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_enable_io(device_t
    dev, int
  space);
device_t
  
  pci_find_bsf(uint8_t
    bus, uint8_t slot,
    uint8_t func);
int
  
  pci_find_cap(device_t
    dev, int
    capability, int
    *capreg);
device_t
  
  pci_find_dbsf(uint32_t
    domain, uint8_t
    bus, uint8_t slot,
    uint8_t func);
device_t
  
  pci_find_device(uint16_t
    vendor, uint16_t
    device);
int
  
  pci_find_extcap(device_t
    dev, int
    capability, int
    *capreg);
int
  
  pci_find_htcap(device_t
    dev, int
    capability, int
    *capreg);
device_t
  
  pci_find_pcie_root_port(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_get_id(device_t
    dev, enum pci_id_type
    type, uintptr_t
    *id);
int
  
  pci_get_max_payload(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_get_max_read_req(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_get_powerstate(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_get_vpd_ident(device_t
    dev, const char
    **identptr);
int
  
  pci_get_vpd_readonly(device_t
    dev, const char
    *kw, const char
    **vptr);
int
  
  pci_msi_count(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_msix_count(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_msix_pba_bar(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_msix_table_bar(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_pending_msix(device_t
    dev, u_int
  index);
uint32_t
  
  pci_read_config(device_t
    dev, int reg,
    int width);
int
  
  pci_release_msi(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_remap_msix(device_t
    dev, int count,
    const u_int
  *vectors);
void
  
  pci_restore_state(device_t
    dev);
void
  
  pci_save_state(device_t
    dev);
int
  
  pci_set_max_read_req(device_t
    dev, int size);
int
  
  pci_set_powerstate(device_t
    dev, int
  state);
void
  
  pci_write_config(device_t
    dev, int reg,
    uint32_t val,
    int width);
uint32_t
  
  pcie_adjust_config(device_t dev,
    int reg, uint32_t mask,
    uint32_t val, int width);
uint32_t
  
  pcie_read_config(device_t
    dev, int reg,
    int width);
void
  
  pcie_write_config(device_t
    dev, int reg,
    uint32_t val,
    int width);
#include
    <dev/pci/pci_iov.h>
int
  
  pci_iov_attach(device_t
    dev, nvlist_t
    *pf_schema, nvlist_t
    *vf_schema);
int
  
  pci_iov_detach(device_t
    dev);
DESCRIPTION¶
Thepci set of functions are used for managing PCI
  devices. The functions are split into several groups: raw configuration
  access, locating devices, device information, device configuration, and
  message signaled interrupts.
Raw Configuration Access¶
Thepci_read_config() function is used to read data from
  the PCI configuration space of the device dev, at offset
  reg, with width specifying the
  size of the access.
The pci_write_config() function is used to
    write the value val to the PCI configuration space of
    the device dev, at offset reg,
    with width specifying the size of the access.
The pcie_adjust_config() function is used
    to modify the value of a register in the PCI-express capability register set
    of device dev. The offset reg
    specifies a relative offset in the register set with
    width specifying the size of the access. The new value
    of the register is computed by modifying bits set in
    mask to the value in val. Any
    bits not specified in mask are preserved. The previous
    value of the register is returned.
The pcie_read_config() function is used to
    read the value of a register in the PCI-express capability register set of
    device dev. The offset reg
    specifies a relative offset in the register set with
    width specifying the size of the access.
The pcie_write_config() function is used
    to write the value val to a register in the
    PCI-express capability register set of device dev. The
    offset reg specifies a relative offset in the register
    set with width specifying the size of the access.
NOTE: Device drivers should only use these
    functions for functionality that is not available via another
    pci() function.
Locating Devices¶
Thepci_find_bsf() function looks up the
  device_t of a PCI device, given its
  bus, slot, and
  func. The slot number actually
  refers to the number of the device on the bus, which does not necessarily
  indicate its geographic location in terms of a physical slot. Note that in
  case the system has multiple PCI domains, the
  pci_find_bsf() function only searches the first one.
  Actually, it is equivalent to:
pci_find_dbsf(0, bus, slot, func);
The pci_find_dbsf() function looks up the
    device_t of a PCI device, given its
    domain, bus,
    slot, and func. The
    slot number actually refers to the number of the
    device on the bus, which does not necessarily indicate its geographic
    location in terms of a physical slot.
The pci_find_device() function looks up
    the device_t of a PCI device, given its
    vendor and device IDs. Note that
    there can be multiple matches for this search; this function only returns
    the first matching device.
Device Information¶
Thepci_find_cap() function is used to locate the first
  instance of a PCI capability register set for the device
  dev. The capability to locate is specified by ID via
  capability. Constant macros of the form
  PCIY_xxx for standard capability IDs are defined in
  <dev/pci/pcireg.h>. If the
  capability is found, then *capreg is set to the offset
  in configuration space of the capability register set, and
  pci_find_cap() returns zero. If the capability is not
  found or the device does not support capabilities,
  pci_find_cap() returns an error.
The pci_find_extcap() function is used to
    locate the first instance of a PCI-express extended capability register set
    for the device dev. The extended capability to locate
    is specified by ID via capability. Constant macros of
    the form PCIZ_xxx for standard extended capability
    IDs are defined in
    <dev/pci/pcireg.h>. If the
    extended capability is found, then *capreg is set to
    the offset in configuration space of the extended capability register set,
    and pci_find_extcap() returns zero. If the extended
    capability is not found or the device is not a PCI-express device,
    pci_find_extcap() returns an error.
The pci_find_htcap() function is used to
    locate the first instance of a HyperTransport capability register set for
    the device dev. The capability to locate is specified
    by type via capability. Constant macros of the form
    PCIM_HTCAP_xxx for standard HyperTransport
    capability types are defined in
    <dev/pci/pcireg.h>. If the
    capability is found, then *capreg is set to the offset
    in configuration space of the capability register set, and
    pci_find_htcap() returns zero. If the capability is
    not found or the device is not a HyperTransport device,
    pci_find_htcap() returns an error.
The pci_find_pcie_root_port() function
    walks up the PCI device hierarchy to locate the PCI-express root port
    upstream of dev. If a root port is not found,
    pci_find_pcie_root_port() returns
    NULL.
The pci_get_id() function is used to read
    an identifier from a device. The type flag is used to
    specify which identifier to read. The following flags are supported:
PCI_ID_RID- Read the routing identifier for the device.
 PCI_ID_MSI- Read the MSI routing ID. This is needed by some interrupt controllers to route MSI and MSI-X interrupts.
 
The pci_get_vpd_ident() function is used
    to fetch a device's Vital Product Data (VPD) identifier string. If the
    device dev supports VPD and provides an identifier
    string, then *identptr is set to point at a read-only,
    null-terminated copy of the identifier string, and
    pci_get_vpd_ident() returns zero. If the device does
    not support VPD or does not provide an identifier string, then
    pci_get_vpd_ident() returns an error.
The pci_get_vpd_readonly() function is
    used to fetch the value of a single VPD read-only keyword for the device
    dev. The keyword to fetch is identified by the two
    character string kw. If the device supports VPD and
    provides a read-only value for the requested keyword, then
    *vptr is set to point at a read-only, null-terminated
    copy of the value, and pci_get_vpd_readonly()
    returns zero. If the device does not support VPD or does not provide the
    requested keyword, then pci_get_vpd_readonly()
    returns an error.
Device Configuration¶
Thepci_enable_busmaster() function enables PCI bus
  mastering for the device dev, by setting the
  PCIM_CMD_BUSMASTEREN bit in the
  PCIR_COMMAND register. The
  pci_disable_busmaster() function clears this bit.
The pci_enable_io() function enables
    memory or I/O port address decoding for the device
    dev, by setting the
    PCIM_CMD_MEMEN or
    PCIM_CMD_PORTEN bit in the
    PCIR_COMMAND register appropriately. The
    pci_disable_io() function clears the appropriate
    bit. The space argument specifies which resource is
    affected; this can be either SYS_RES_MEMORY or
    SYS_RES_IOPORT as appropriate. Device drivers should
    generally not use these routines directly. The PCI bus will enable decoding
    automatically when a SYS_RES_MEMORY or
    SYS_RES_IOPORT resource is activated via
    bus_alloc_resource(9) or
    bus_activate_resource(9).
The pci_get_max_payload() function returns
    the current maximum TLP payload size in bytes for a PCI-express device. If
    the dev device is not a PCI-express device,
    pci_get_max_payload() returns zero.
The pci_get_max_read_req() function
    returns the current maximum read request size in bytes for a PCI-express
    device. If the dev device is not a PCI-express device,
    pci_get_max_read_req() returns zero.
The pci_set_max_read_req() sets the
    PCI-express maximum read request size for dev. The
    requested size may be adjusted, and
    pci_set_max_read_req() returns the actual size set
    in bytes. If the dev device is not a PCI-express
    device, pci_set_max_read_req() returns zero.
The pci_get_powerstate() function returns
    the current power state of the device dev. If the
    device does not support power management capabilities, then the default
    state of PCI_POWERSTATE_D0 is returned. The
    following power states are defined by PCI:
PCI_POWERSTATE_D0- State in which device is on and running. It is receiving full power from the system and delivering full functionality to the user.
 PCI_POWERSTATE_D1- Class-specific low-power state in which device context may or may not be lost. Busses in this state cannot do anything to the bus, to force devices to lose context.
 PCI_POWERSTATE_D2- Class-specific low-power state in which device context may or may not be
      lost. Attains greater power savings than
      
PCI_POWERSTATE_D1. Busses in this state can cause devices to lose some context. Devices must be prepared for the bus to be in this state or higher. PCI_POWERSTATE_D3- State in which the device is off and not running. Device context is lost, and power from the device can be removed.
 PCI_POWERSTATE_UNKNOWN- State of the device is unknown.
 
The pci_set_powerstate() function is used
    to transition the device dev to the PCI power state
    state. If the device does not support power management
    capabilities or it does not support the specific power state
    state, then the function will fail with
    EOPNOTSUPP.
The pci_iov_attach() function is used to
    advertise that the given device (and associated device driver) supports PCI
    Single-Root I/O Virtualization (SR-IOV). A driver that supports SR-IOV must
    implement the PCI_IOV_INIT(9),
    PCI_IOV_ADD_VF(9) and PCI_IOV_UNINIT(9)
    methods. This function should be called during the
    DEVICE_ATTACH(9) method. If this function returns an
    error, it is recommended that the device driver still successfully attaches,
    but runs with SR-IOV disabled. The pf_schema and
    vf_schema parameters are used to define what
    device-specific configuration parameters the device driver accepts when
    SR-IOV is enabled for the Physical Function (PF) and for individual Virtual
    Functions (VFs) respectively. See pci_iov_schema(9) for
    details on how to construct the schema. If either the
    pf_schema or vf_schema is
    invalid or specifies parameter names that conflict with parameter names that
    are already in use, pci_iov_attach() will return an
    error and SR-IOV will not be available on the PF device. If a driver does
    not accept configuration parameters for either the PF device or the VF
    devices, the driver must pass an empty schema for that device. The SR-IOV
    infrastructure takes ownership of the pf_schema and
    vf_schema and is responsible for freeing them. The
    driver must never free the schemas itself.
The pci_iov_detach() function is used to
    advise the SR-IOV infrastructure that the driver for the given device is
    attempting to detach and that all SR-IOV resources for the device must be
    released. This function must be called during the
    DEVICE_DETACH(9) method if
    pci_iov_attach() was successfully called on the
    device and pci_iov_detach() has not subsequently
    been called on the device and returned no error. If this function returns an
    error, the DEVICE_DETACH(9) method must fail and return an
    error, as detaching the PF driver while VF devices are active would cause
    system instability. This function is safe to call and will always succeed if
    pci_iov_attach() previously failed with an error on
    the given device, or if pci_iov_attach() was never
    called on the device.
The pci_save_state() and
    pci_restore_state() functions can be used by a
    device driver to save and restore standard PCI config registers. The
    pci_save_state() function must be invoked while the
    device has valid state before pci_restore_state()
    can be used. If the device is not in the fully-powered state
    (PCI_POWERSTATE_D0) when
    pci_restore_state() is invoked, then the device will
    be transitioned to PCI_POWERSTATE_D0 before any
    config registers are restored.
Message Signaled Interrupts¶
Message Signaled Interrupts (MSI) and Enhanced Message Signaled Interrupts (MSI-X) are PCI capabilities that provide an alternate method for PCI devices to signal interrupts. The legacy INTx interrupt is available to PCI devices as aSYS_RES_IRQ resource with a resource ID of zero. MSI
  and MSI-X interrupts are available to PCI devices as one or more
  SYS_RES_IRQ resources with resource IDs greater than
  zero. A driver must ask the PCI bus to allocate MSI or MSI-X interrupts using
  pci_alloc_msi() or
  pci_alloc_msix() before it can use MSI or MSI-X
  SYS_RES_IRQ resources. A driver is not allowed to use
  the legacy INTx SYS_RES_IRQ resource if MSI or MSI-X
  interrupts have been allocated, and attempts to allocate MSI or MSI-X
  interrupts will fail if the driver is currently using the legacy INTx
  SYS_RES_IRQ resource. A driver is only allowed to use
  either MSI or MSI-X, but not both.
The pci_msi_count() function returns the
    maximum number of MSI messages supported by the device
    dev. If the device does not support MSI, then
    pci_msi_count() returns zero.
The pci_alloc_msi() function attempts to
    allocate *count MSI messages for the device
    dev. The pci_alloc_msi()
    function may allocate fewer messages than requested for various reasons
    including requests for more messages than the device
    dev supports, or if the system has a shortage of
    available MSI messages. On success, *count is set to
    the number of messages allocated and pci_alloc_msi()
    returns zero. The SYS_RES_IRQ resources for the
    allocated messages will be available at consecutive resource IDs beginning
    with one. If pci_alloc_msi() is not able to allocate
    any messages, it returns an error. Note that MSI only supports message
    counts that are powers of two; requests to allocate a non-power of two count
    of messages will fail.
The pci_release_msi() function is used to
    release any allocated MSI or MSI-X messages back to the system. If any MSI
    or MSI-X SYS_RES_IRQ resources are allocated by the
    driver or have a configured interrupt handler, this function will fail with
    EBUSY. The pci_release_msi()
    function returns zero on success and an error on failure.
The pci_msix_count() function returns the
    maximum number of MSI-X messages supported by the device
    dev. If the device does not support MSI-X, then
    pci_msix_count() returns zero.
The pci_msix_pba_bar() function returns
    the offset in configuration space of the Base Address Register (BAR)
    containing the MSI-X Pending Bit Array (PBA) for device
    dev. The returned value can be used as the resource ID
    with bus_alloc_resource(9) and
    bus_release_resource(9) to allocate the BAR. If the device
    does not support MSI-X, then pci_msix_pba_bar()
    returns -1.
The pci_msix_table_bar() function returns
    the offset in configuration space of the BAR containing the MSI-X vector
    table for device dev. The returned value can be used
    as the resource ID with bus_alloc_resource(9) and
    bus_release_resource(9) to allocate the BAR. If the device
    does not support MSI-X, then pci_msix_table_bar()
    returns -1.
The pci_alloc_msix() function attempts to
    allocate *count MSI-X messages for the device
    dev. The pci_alloc_msix()
    function may allocate fewer messages than requested for various reasons
    including requests for more messages than the device
    dev supports, or if the system has a shortage of
    available MSI-X messages. On success, *count is set to
    the number of messages allocated and
    pci_alloc_msix() returns zero. For MSI-X messages,
    the resource ID for each SYS_RES_IRQ resource
    identifies the index in the MSI-X table of the corresponding message. A
    resource ID of one maps to the first index of the MSI-X table; a resource ID
    two identifies the second index in the table, etc. The
    pci_alloc_msix() function assigns the
    *count messages allocated to the first
    *count table indices. If
    pci_alloc_msix() is not able to allocate any
    messages, it returns an error. Unlike MSI, MSI-X does not require message
    counts that are powers of two.
The BARs containing the MSI-X vector table and PBA must be
    allocated via bus_alloc_resource(9) before calling
    pci_alloc_msix() and must not be released until
    after calling pci_release_msi(). Note that the
    vector table and PBA may be stored in the same BAR or in different BARs.
The pci_pending_msix() function examines
    the dev device's PBA to determine the pending status
    of the MSI-X message at table index index. If the
    indicated message is pending, this function returns a non-zero value;
    otherwise, it returns zero. Passing an invalid index
    to this function will result in undefined behavior.
As mentioned in the description of
    pci_alloc_msix(), MSI-X messages are initially
    assigned to the first N table entries. A driver may use a different
    distribution of available messages to table entries via the
    pci_remap_msix() function. Note that this function
    must be called after a successful call to
    pci_alloc_msix() but before any of the
    SYS_RES_IRQ resources are allocated. The
    pci_remap_msix() function returns zero on success,
    or an error on failure.
The vectors array should contain
    count message vectors. The array maps directly to the
    MSI-X table in that the first entry in the array specifies the message used
    for the first entry in the MSI-X table, the second entry in the array
    corresponds to the second entry in the MSI-X table, etc. The vector value in
    each array index can either be zero to indicate that no message should be
    assigned to the corresponding MSI-X table entry, or it can be a number from
    one to N (where N is the count returned from the previous call to
    pci_alloc_msix()) to indicate which of the allocated
    messages should be assigned to the corresponding MSI-X table entry.
If pci_remap_msix() succeeds, each MSI-X
    table entry with a non-zero vector will have an associated
    SYS_RES_IRQ resource whose resource ID corresponds
    to the table index as described above for
    pci_alloc_msix(). MSI-X table entries that with a
    vector of zero will not have an associated
    SYS_RES_IRQ resource. Additionally, if any of the
    original messages allocated by pci_alloc_msix() are
    not used in the new distribution of messages in the MSI-X table, they will
    be released automatically. Note that if a driver wishes to use fewer
    messages than were allocated by pci_alloc_msix(),
    the driver must use a single, contiguous range of messages beginning with
    one in the new distribution. The pci_remap_msix()
    function will fail if this condition is not met.
IMPLEMENTATION NOTES¶
The pci_addr_t type varies according to the size of the PCI bus address space on the target architecture.SEE ALSO¶
pci(4), pciconf(8), bus_alloc_resource(9), bus_dma(9), bus_release_resource(9), bus_setup_intr(9), bus_teardown_intr(9), devclass(9), device(9), driver(9), rman(9)NewBus, FreeBSD Developers' Handbook, http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/developers-handbook/.
Shanley and Anderson, PCI System Architecture, Addison-Wesley, 2nd Edition, ISBN 0-201-30974-2.
AUTHORS¶
This manual page was written by Bruce M Simpson <bms@FreeBSD.org> and John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>.BUGS¶
The kernel PCI code has a number of references to “slot numbers”. These do not refer to the geographic location of PCI devices, but to the device number assigned by the combination of the PCI IDSEL mechanism and the platform firmware. This should be taken note of when working with the kernel PCI code.The PCI bus driver should allocate the MSI-X vector table and PBA internally as necessary rather than requiring the caller to do so.
| June 24, 2016 | Linux 4.9.0-9-amd64 |