On Mon Oct 21, 2024 at 3:51 PM BST, Andrew Cooper wrote:
> On 21/10/2024 3:06 pm, Roger Pau Monné wrote:
> > On Mon, Oct 21, 2024 at 12:34:37PM +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
> >> On Fri, 2024-10-18 at 10:08 +0200, Roger Pau Monne wrote:
> >>> When using AMD-VI interrupt remapping the vector field in the IO-APIC RTE 
> >>> is
> >>> repurposed to contain part of the offset into the remapping table.  
> >>> Previous to
> >>> 2ca9fbd739b8 Xen had logic so that the offset into the interrupt remapping
> >>> table would match the vector.  Such logic was mandatory for end of 
> >>> interrupt to
> >>> work, since the vector field (even when not containing a vector) is used 
> >>> by the
> >>> IO-APIC to find for which pin the EOI must be performed.
> >>>
> >>> Introduce a table to store the EOI handlers when using interrupt 
> >>> remapping, so
> >>> that the IO-APIC driver can translate pins into EOI handlers without 
> >>> having to
> >>> read the IO-APIC RTE entry.  Note that to simplify the logic such table 
> >>> is used
> >>> unconditionally when interrupt remapping is enabled, even if strictly it 
> >>> would
> >>> only be required for AMD-Vi.
> >>>
> >>> Reported-by: Willi Junga <xenproj...@ymy.be>
> >>> Suggested-by: David Woodhouse <d...@amazon.co.uk>
> >>> Fixes: 2ca9fbd739b8 ('AMD IOMMU: allocate IRTE entries instead of using a 
> >>> static mapping')
> >>> Signed-off-by: Roger Pau Monné <roger....@citrix.com>
> >> Hm, couldn't we just have used the pin#?
> > Yes, but that would require a much bigger change that what's currently
> > presented here, and for backport purposes I think it's better done
> > this way for fixing this specific bug.
> >
> > Changing to use pin# as the IR offset is worthwhile, but IMO needs to
> > be done separated from the bugfix here.
> >
> >> The AMD IOMMU has per-device IRTE, so you *know* you can just use IRTE
> >> indices 0-23 for the I/O APIC pins.
> > Aren't there IO-APICs with more than 24 pins?
>
> Recent Intel SoCs have a single IO-APIC with 120 pins.
>
> ~Andrew

I can't say I understand why though.

In practice you have the legacy ISA IRQs and the 4 legacy PCI INTx. If you have
a weird enough system you might have more than one PCIe bus, but even that fits
more than nicely in 24 "pins". Does ACPI give more than 4 IRQs these days after
an adequate blood sacrifice to the gods of AML?

Cheers,
Alejandro

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