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1 The MSI Driver Guide HOWTO 2 Tom L Nguyen tom.l.nguyen@intel.com 3 10/03/2003 4 Revised Feb 12, 2004 by Martine Silbermann 5 email: Martine.Silbermann@hp.com 6 Revised Jun 25, 2004 by Tom L Nguyen 7 81. About this guide 9 10This guide describes the basics of Message Signaled Interrupts (MSI), 11the advantages of using MSI over traditional interrupt mechanisms, 12and how to enable your driver to use MSI or MSI-X. Also included is 13a Frequently Asked Questions. 14 152. Copyright 2003 Intel Corporation 16 173. What is MSI/MSI-X? 18 19Message Signaled Interrupt (MSI), as described in the PCI Local Bus 20Specification Revision 2.3 or latest, is an optional feature, and a 21required feature for PCI Express devices. MSI enables a device function 22to request service by sending an Inbound Memory Write on its PCI bus to 23the FSB as a Message Signal Interrupt transaction. Because MSI is 24generated in the form of a Memory Write, all transaction conditions, 25such as a Retry, Master-Abort, Target-Abort or normal completion, are 26supported. 27 28A PCI device that supports MSI must also support pin IRQ assertion 29interrupt mechanism to provide backward compatibility for systems that 30do not support MSI. In Systems, which support MSI, the bus driver is 31responsible for initializing the message address and message data of 32the device function's MSI/MSI-X capability structure during device 33initial configuration. 34 35An MSI capable device function indicates MSI support by implementing 36the MSI/MSI-X capability structure in its PCI capability list. The 37device function may implement both the MSI capability structure and 38the MSI-X capability structure; however, the bus driver should not 39enable both. 40 41The MSI capability structure contains Message Control register, 42Message Address register and Message Data register. These registers 43provide the bus driver control over MSI. The Message Control register 44indicates the MSI capability supported by the device. The Message 45Address register specifies the target address and the Message Data 46register specifies the characteristics of the message. To request 47service, the device function writes the content of the Message Data 48register to the target address. The device and its software driver 49are prohibited from writing to these registers. 50 51The MSI-X capability structure is an optional extension to MSI. It 52uses an independent and separate capability structure. There are 53some key advantages to implementing the MSI-X capability structure 54over the MSI capability structure as described below. 55 56 - Support a larger maximum number of vectors per function. 57 58 - Provide the ability for system software to configure 59 each vector with an independent message address and message 60 data, specified by a table that resides in Memory Space. 61 62 - MSI and MSI-X both support per-vector masking. Per-vector 63 masking is an optional extension of MSI but a required 64 feature for MSI-X. Per-vector masking provides the kernel 65 the ability to mask/unmask MSI when servicing its software 66 interrupt service routing handler. If per-vector masking is 67 not supported, then the device driver should provide the 68 hardware/software synchronization to ensure that the device 69 generates MSI when the driver wants it to do so. 70 714. Why use MSI? 72 73As a benefit the simplification of board design, MSI allows board 74designers to remove out of band interrupt routing. MSI is another 75step towards a legacy-free environment. 76 77Due to increasing pressure on chipset and processor packages to 78reduce pin count, the need for interrupt pins is expected to 79diminish over time. Devices, due to pin constraints, may implement 80messages to increase performance. 81 82PCI Express endpoints uses INTx emulation (in-band messages) instead 83of IRQ pin assertion. Using INTx emulation requires interrupt 84sharing among devices connected to the same node (PCI bridge) while 85MSI is unique (non-shared) and does not require BIOS configuration 86support. As a result, the PCI Express technology requires MSI 87support for better interrupt performance. 88 89Using MSI enables the device functions to support two or more 90vectors, which can be configured to target different CPU's to 91increase scalability. 92 935. Configuring a driver to use MSI/MSI-X 94 95By default, the kernel will not enable MSI/MSI-X on all devices that 96support this capability. The CONFIG_PCI_MSI kernel option 97must be selected to enable MSI/MSI-X support. 98 995.1 Including MSI/MSI-X support into the kernel 100 101To allow MSI/MSI-X capable device drivers to selectively enable 102MSI/MSI-X (using pci_enable_msi()/pci_enable_msix() as described 103below), the VECTOR based scheme needs to be enabled by setting 104CONFIG_PCI_MSI during kernel config. 105 106Since the target of the inbound message is the local APIC, providing 107CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC must be enabled as well as CONFIG_PCI_MSI. 108 1095.2 Configuring for MSI support 110 111Due to the non-contiguous fashion in vector assignment of the 112existing Linux kernel, this version does not support multiple 113messages regardless of a device function is capable of supporting 114more than one vector. To enable MSI on a device function's MSI 115capability structure requires a device driver to call the function 116pci_enable_msi() explicitly. 117 1185.2.1 API pci_enable_msi 119 120int pci_enable_msi(struct pci_dev *dev) 121 122With this new API, any existing device driver, which like to have 123MSI enabled on its device function, must call this API to enable MSI 124A successful call will initialize the MSI capability structure 125with ONE vector, regardless of whether a device function is 126capable of supporting multiple messages. This vector replaces the 127pre-assigned dev->irq with a new MSI vector. To avoid the conflict 128of new assigned vector with existing pre-assigned vector requires 129a device driver to call this API before calling request_irq(). 130 1315.2.2 API pci_disable_msi 132 133void pci_disable_msi(struct pci_dev *dev) 134 135This API should always be used to undo the effect of pci_enable_msi() 136when a device driver is unloading. This API restores dev->irq with 137the pre-assigned IOAPIC vector and switches a device's interrupt 138mode to PCI pin-irq assertion/INTx emulation mode. 139 140Note that a device driver should always call free_irq() on MSI vector 141it has done request_irq() on before calling this API. Failure to do 142so results a BUG_ON() and a device will be left with MSI enabled and 143leaks its vector. 144 1455.2.3 MSI mode vs. legacy mode diagram 146 147The below diagram shows the events, which switches the interrupt 148mode on the MSI-capable device function between MSI mode and 149PIN-IRQ assertion mode. 150 151 ------------ pci_enable_msi ------------------------ 152 | | <=============== | | 153 | MSI MODE | | PIN-IRQ ASSERTION MODE | 154 | | ===============> | | 155 ------------ pci_disable_msi ------------------------ 156 157 158Figure 1.0 MSI Mode vs. Legacy Mode 159 160In Figure 1.0, a device operates by default in legacy mode. Legacy 161in this context means PCI pin-irq assertion or PCI-Express INTx 162emulation. A successful MSI request (using pci_enable_msi()) switches 163a device's interrupt mode to MSI mode. A pre-assigned IOAPIC vector 164stored in dev->irq will be saved by the PCI subsystem and a new 165assigned MSI vector will replace dev->irq. 166 167To return back to its default mode, a device driver should always call 168pci_disable_msi() to undo the effect of pci_enable_msi(). Note that a 169device driver should always call free_irq() on MSI vector it has done 170request_irq() on before calling pci_disable_msi(). Failure to do so 171results a BUG_ON() and a device will be left with MSI enabled and 172leaks its vector. Otherwise, the PCI subsystem restores a device's 173dev->irq with a pre-assigned IOAPIC vector and marks released 174MSI vector as unused. 175 176Once being marked as unused, there is no guarantee that the PCI 177subsystem will reserve this MSI vector for a device. Depending on 178the availability of current PCI vector resources and the number of 179MSI/MSI-X requests from other drivers, this MSI may be re-assigned. 180 181For the case where the PCI subsystem re-assigned this MSI vector 182another driver, a request to switching back to MSI mode may result 183in being assigned a different MSI vector or a failure if no more 184vectors are available. 185 1865.3 Configuring for MSI-X support 187 188Due to the ability of the system software to configure each vector of 189the MSI-X capability structure with an independent message address 190and message data, the non-contiguous fashion in vector assignment of 191the existing Linux kernel has no impact on supporting multiple 192messages on an MSI-X capable device functions. To enable MSI-X on 193a device function's MSI-X capability structure requires its device 194driver to call the function pci_enable_msix() explicitly. 195 196The function pci_enable_msix(), once invoked, enables either 197all or nothing, depending on the current availability of PCI vector 198resources. If the PCI vector resources are available for the number 199of vectors requested by a device driver, this function will configure 200the MSI-X table of the MSI-X capability structure of a device with 201requested messages. To emphasize this reason, for example, a device 202may be capable for supporting the maximum of 32 vectors while its 203software driver usually may request 4 vectors. It is recommended 204that the device driver should call this function once during the 205initialization phase of the device driver. 206 207Unlike the function pci_enable_msi(), the function pci_enable_msix() 208does not replace the pre-assigned IOAPIC dev->irq with a new MSI 209vector because the PCI subsystem writes the 1:1 vector-to-entry mapping 210into the field vector of each element contained in a second argument. 211Note that the pre-assigned IO-APIC dev->irq is valid only if the device 212operates in PIN-IRQ assertion mode. In MSI-X mode, any attempt of 213using dev->irq by the device driver to request for interrupt service 214may result unpredictabe behavior. 215 216For each MSI-X vector granted, a device driver is responsible to call 217other functions like request_irq(), enable_irq(), etc. to enable 218this vector with its corresponding interrupt service handler. It is 219a device driver's choice to assign all vectors with the same 220interrupt service handler or each vector with a unique interrupt 221service handler. 222 2235.3.1 Handling MMIO address space of MSI-X Table 224 225The PCI 3.0 specification has implementation notes that MMIO address 226space for a device's MSI-X structure should be isolated so that the 227software system can set different page for controlling accesses to 228the MSI-X structure. The implementation of MSI patch requires the PCI 229subsystem, not a device driver, to maintain full control of the MSI-X 230table/MSI-X PBA and MMIO address space of the MSI-X table/MSI-X PBA. 231A device driver is prohibited from requesting the MMIO address space 232of the MSI-X table/MSI-X PBA. Otherwise, the PCI subsystem will fail 233enabling MSI-X on its hardware device when it calls the function 234pci_enable_msix(). 235 2365.3.2 Handling MSI-X allocation 237 238Determining the number of MSI-X vectors allocated to a function is 239dependent on the number of MSI capable devices and MSI-X capable 240devices populated in the system. The policy of allocating MSI-X 241vectors to a function is defined as the following: 242 243#of MSI-X vectors allocated to a function = (x - y)/z where 244 245x = The number of available PCI vector resources by the time 246 the device driver calls pci_enable_msix(). The PCI vector 247 resources is the sum of the number of unassigned vectors 248 (new) and the number of released vectors when any MSI/MSI-X 249 device driver switches its hardware device back to a legacy 250 mode or is hot-removed. The number of unassigned vectors 251 may exclude some vectors reserved, as defined in parameter 252 NR_HP_RESERVED_VECTORS, for the case where the system is 253 capable of supporting hot-add/hot-remove operations. Users 254 may change the value defined in NR_HR_RESERVED_VECTORS to 255 meet their specific needs. 256 257y = The number of MSI capable devices populated in the system. 258 This policy ensures that each MSI capable device has its 259 vector reserved to avoid the case where some MSI-X capable 260 drivers may attempt to claim all available vector resources. 261 262z = The number of MSI-X capable devices pupulated in the system. 263 This policy ensures that maximum (x - y) is distributed 264 evenly among MSI-X capable devices. 265 266Note that the PCI subsystem scans y and z during a bus enumeration. 267When the PCI subsystem completes configuring MSI/MSI-X capability 268structure of a device as requested by its device driver, y/z is 269decremented accordingly. 270 2715.3.3 Handling MSI-X shortages 272 273For the case where fewer MSI-X vectors are allocated to a function 274than requested, the function pci_enable_msix() will return the 275maximum number of MSI-X vectors available to the caller. A device 276driver may re-send its request with fewer or equal vectors indicated 277in a return. For example, if a device driver requests 5 vectors, but 278the number of available vectors is 3 vectors, a value of 3 will be a 279return as a result of pci_enable_msix() call. A function could be 280designed for its driver to use only 3 MSI-X table entries as 281different combinations as ABC--, A-B-C, A--CB, etc. Note that this 282patch does not support multiple entries with the same vector. Such 283attempt by a device driver to use 5 MSI-X table entries with 3 vectors 284as ABBCC, AABCC, BCCBA, etc will result as a failure by the function 285pci_enable_msix(). Below are the reasons why supporting multiple 286entries with the same vector is an undesirable solution. 287 288 - The PCI subsystem can not determine which entry, which 289 generated the message, to mask/unmask MSI while handling 290 software driver ISR. Attempting to walk through all MSI-X 291 table entries (2048 max) to mask/unmask any match vector 292 is an undesirable solution. 293 294 - Walk through all MSI-X table entries (2048 max) to handle 295 SMP affinity of any match vector is an undesirable solution. 296 2975.3.4 API pci_enable_msix 298 299int pci_enable_msix(struct pci_dev *dev, u32 *entries, int nvec) 300 301This API enables a device driver to request the PCI subsystem 302for enabling MSI-X messages on its hardware device. Depending on 303the availability of PCI vectors resources, the PCI subsystem enables 304either all or nothing. 305 306Argument dev points to the device (pci_dev) structure. 307 308Argument entries is a pointer of unsigned integer type. The number of 309elements is indicated in argument nvec. The content of each element 310will be mapped to the following struct defined in /driver/pci/msi.h. 311 312struct msix_entry { 313 u16 vector; /* kernel uses to write alloc vector */ 314 u16 entry; /* driver uses to specify entry */ 315}; 316 317A device driver is responsible for initializing the field entry of 318each element with unique entry supported by MSI-X table. Otherwise, 319-EINVAL will be returned as a result. A successful return of zero 320indicates the PCI subsystem completes initializing each of requested 321entries of the MSI-X table with message address and message data. 322Last but not least, the PCI subsystem will write the 1:1 323vector-to-entry mapping into the field vector of each element. A 324device driver is responsible of keeping track of allocated MSI-X 325vectors in its internal data structure. 326 327Argument nvec is an integer indicating the number of messages 328requested. 329 330A return of zero indicates that the number of MSI-X vectors is 331successfully allocated. A return of greater than zero indicates 332MSI-X vector shortage. Or a return of less than zero indicates 333a failure. This failure may be a result of duplicate entries 334specified in second argument, or a result of no available vector, 335or a result of failing to initialize MSI-X table entries. 336 3375.3.5 API pci_disable_msix 338 339void pci_disable_msix(struct pci_dev *dev) 340 341This API should always be used to undo the effect of pci_enable_msix() 342when a device driver is unloading. Note that a device driver should 343always call free_irq() on all MSI-X vectors it has done request_irq() 344on before calling this API. Failure to do so results a BUG_ON() and 345a device will be left with MSI-X enabled and leaks its vectors. 346 3475.3.6 MSI-X mode vs. legacy mode diagram 348 349The below diagram shows the events, which switches the interrupt 350mode on the MSI-X capable device function between MSI-X mode and 351PIN-IRQ assertion mode (legacy). 352 353 ------------ pci_enable_msix(,,n) ------------------------ 354 | | <=============== | | 355 | MSI-X MODE | | PIN-IRQ ASSERTION MODE | 356 | | ===============> | | 357 ------------ pci_disable_msix ------------------------ 358 359Figure 2.0 MSI-X Mode vs. Legacy Mode 360 361In Figure 2.0, a device operates by default in legacy mode. A 362successful MSI-X request (using pci_enable_msix()) switches a 363device's interrupt mode to MSI-X mode. A pre-assigned IOAPIC vector 364stored in dev->irq will be saved by the PCI subsystem; however, 365unlike MSI mode, the PCI subsystem will not replace dev->irq with 366assigned MSI-X vector because the PCI subsystem already writes the 1:1 367vector-to-entry mapping into the field vector of each element 368specified in second argument. 369 370To return back to its default mode, a device driver should always call 371pci_disable_msix() to undo the effect of pci_enable_msix(). Note that 372a device driver should always call free_irq() on all MSI-X vectors it 373has done request_irq() on before calling pci_disable_msix(). Failure 374to do so results a BUG_ON() and a device will be left with MSI-X 375enabled and leaks its vectors. Otherwise, the PCI subsystem switches a 376device function's interrupt mode from MSI-X mode to legacy mode and 377marks all allocated MSI-X vectors as unused. 378 379Once being marked as unused, there is no guarantee that the PCI 380subsystem will reserve these MSI-X vectors for a device. Depending on 381the availability of current PCI vector resources and the number of 382MSI/MSI-X requests from other drivers, these MSI-X vectors may be 383re-assigned. 384 385For the case where the PCI subsystem re-assigned these MSI-X vectors 386to other driver, a request to switching back to MSI-X mode may result 387being assigned with another set of MSI-X vectors or a failure if no 388more vectors are available. 389 3905.4 Handling function implementng both MSI and MSI-X capabilities 391 392For the case where a function implements both MSI and MSI-X 393capabilities, the PCI subsystem enables a device to run either in MSI 394mode or MSI-X mode but not both. A device driver determines whether it 395wants MSI or MSI-X enabled on its hardware device. Once a device 396driver requests for MSI, for example, it is prohibited to request for 397MSI-X; in other words, a device driver is not permitted to ping-pong 398between MSI mod MSI-X mode during a run-time. 399 4005.5 Hardware requirements for MSI/MSI-X support 401MSI/MSI-X support requires support from both system hardware and 402individual hardware device functions. 403 4045.5.1 System hardware support 405Since the target of MSI address is the local APIC CPU, enabling 406MSI/MSI-X support in Linux kernel is dependent on whether existing 407system hardware supports local APIC. Users should verify their 408system whether it runs when CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC=y. 409 410In SMP environment, CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC is automatically set; 411however, in UP environment, users must manually set 412CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC. Once CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC=y, setting 413CONFIG_PCI_MSI enables the VECTOR based scheme and 414the option for MSI-capable device drivers to selectively enable 415MSI/MSI-X. 416 417Note that CONFIG_X86_IO_APIC setting is irrelevant because MSI/MSI-X 418vector is allocated new during runtime and MSI/MSI-X support does not 419depend on BIOS support. This key independency enables MSI/MSI-X 420support on future IOxAPIC free platform. 421 4225.5.2 Device hardware support 423The hardware device function supports MSI by indicating the 424MSI/MSI-X capability structure on its PCI capability list. By 425default, this capability structure will not be initialized by 426the kernel to enable MSI during the system boot. In other words, 427the device function is running on its default pin assertion mode. 428Note that in many cases the hardware supporting MSI have bugs, 429which may result in system hang. The software driver of specific 430MSI-capable hardware is responsible for whether calling 431pci_enable_msi or not. A return of zero indicates the kernel 432successfully initializes the MSI/MSI-X capability structure of the 433device funtion. The device function is now running on MSI/MSI-X mode. 434 4355.6 How to tell whether MSI/MSI-X is enabled on device function 436 437At the driver level, a return of zero from the function call of 438pci_enable_msi()/pci_enable_msix() indicates to a device driver that 439its device function is initialized successfully and ready to run in 440MSI/MSI-X mode. 441 442At the user level, users can use command 'cat /proc/interrupts' 443to display the vector allocated for a device and its interrupt 444MSI/MSI-X mode ("PCI MSI"/"PCI MSIX"). Below shows below MSI mode is 445enabled on a SCSI Adaptec 39320D Ultra320. 446 447 CPU0 CPU1 448 0: 324639 0 IO-APIC-edge timer 449 1: 1186 0 IO-APIC-edge i8042 450 2: 0 0 XT-PIC cascade 451 12: 2797 0 IO-APIC-edge i8042 452 14: 6543 0 IO-APIC-edge ide0 453 15: 1 0 IO-APIC-edge ide1 454169: 0 0 IO-APIC-level uhci-hcd 455185: 0 0 IO-APIC-level uhci-hcd 456193: 138 10 PCI MSI aic79xx 457201: 30 0 PCI MSI aic79xx 458225: 30 0 IO-APIC-level aic7xxx 459233: 30 0 IO-APIC-level aic7xxx 460NMI: 0 0 461LOC: 324553 325068 462ERR: 0 463MIS: 0 464 4656. FAQ 466 467Q1. Are there any limitations on using the MSI? 468 469A1. If the PCI device supports MSI and conforms to the 470specification and the platform supports the APIC local bus, 471then using MSI should work. 472 473Q2. Will it work on all the Pentium processors (P3, P4, Xeon, 474AMD processors)? In P3 IPI's are transmitted on the APIC local 475bus and in P4 and Xeon they are transmitted on the system 476bus. Are there any implications with this? 477 478A2. MSI support enables a PCI device sending an inbound 479memory write (0xfeexxxxx as target address) on its PCI bus 480directly to the FSB. Since the message address has a 481redirection hint bit cleared, it should work. 482 483Q3. The target address 0xfeexxxxx will be translated by the 484Host Bridge into an interrupt message. Are there any 485limitations on the chipsets such as Intel 8xx, Intel e7xxx, 486or VIA? 487 488A3. If these chipsets support an inbound memory write with 489target address set as 0xfeexxxxx, as conformed to PCI 490specification 2.3 or latest, then it should work. 491 492Q4. From the driver point of view, if the MSI is lost because 493of the errors occur during inbound memory write, then it may 494wait for ever. Is there a mechanism for it to recover? 495 496A4. Since the target of the transaction is an inbound memory 497write, all transaction termination conditions (Retry, 498Master-Abort, Target-Abort, or normal completion) are 499supported. A device sending an MSI must abide by all the PCI 500rules and conditions regarding that inbound memory write. So, 501if a retry is signaled it must retry, etc... We believe that 502the recommendation for Abort is also a retry (refer to PCI 503specification 2.3 or latest).