This will usually be an issue because of permissions.  However, it could
also be caused by OOM.  In either case, errno will contain the
underlying cause.  It is safe to re-init the system here, so allow the
application to take corrective action and reinit.

Signed-off-by: Aaron Conole <acon...@redhat.com>
---
 lib/librte_eal/linuxapp/eal/eal.c | 8 ++++++--
 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/lib/librte_eal/linuxapp/eal/eal.c 
b/lib/librte_eal/linuxapp/eal/eal.c
index 46bbaa7..c9f8c11 100644
--- a/lib/librte_eal/linuxapp/eal/eal.c
+++ b/lib/librte_eal/linuxapp/eal/eal.c
@@ -832,8 +832,12 @@ rte_eal_init(int argc, char **argv)
                return -1;
        }
 
-       if (rte_eal_pci_init() < 0)
-               rte_panic("Cannot init PCI\n");
+       if (rte_eal_pci_init() < 0) {
+               RTE_LOG(ERR, EAL, "Cannot init PCI\n");
+               rte_errno = EUNATCH;
+               rte_atomic32_clear(&run_once);
+               return -1;
+       }
 
 #ifdef VFIO_PRESENT
        if (rte_eal_vfio_setup() < 0)
-- 
2.9.3

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