===================================================================
@@ -36,6 +36,8 @@
#define PCIECDR 0x000020
#define PCIEMSR 0x000028
#define PCIEINTXR 0x000400
+#define PCIEPHYSR 0x0007f0
+#define PHYRDY 1
#define PCIEMSITXR 0x000840
/* Transfer control */
@@ -527,6 +529,20 @@ static void phy_write_reg(struct rcar_pc
phy_wait_for_ack(pcie);
}
+static int rcar_pcie_wait_for_phyrdy(struct rcar_pcie *pcie)
+{
+ unsigned int timeout = 10;
+
+ while (timeout--) {
+ if (rcar_pci_read_reg(pcie, PCIEPHYSR) & PHYRDY)
+ return 0;
+
+ msleep(5);
+ }
+
+ return -ETIMEDOUT;
+}
+
static int rcar_pcie_wait_for_dl(struct rcar_pcie *pcie)
{
unsigned int timeout = 10;
@@ -551,6 +567,10 @@ static int rcar_pcie_hw_init(struct rcar
/* Set mode */
rcar_pci_write_reg(pcie, 1, PCIEMSR);
+ err = rcar_pcie_wait_for_phyrdy(pcie);
+ if (err)
+ return err;
+
/*
* Initial header for port config space is type 1, set the device
* class to match. Hardware takes care of propagating the IDSETR
In all the R-Car gen1/2/3 manuals, we are instructed to poll PCIEPHYSR for PHYRDY=1 at an early stage of the PCIEC initialization -- while the driver only does this on R-Car H1 (polling a PHY specific register). Add the PHYRDY polling to rcar_pcie_hw_init(). Note that without the special PHY driver on the R-Car V3H the PCIEC initialization just freezes the kernel -- adding the PHYRDY polling allows the init code to exit gracefully on timeout (PHY starts powered down after reset on this SoC). Signed-off-by: Sergei Shtylyov <sergei.shtylyov@cogentembedded.com> --- drivers/pci/host/pcie-rcar.c | 20 ++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 20 insertions(+)