| PCI bus bridges have standardized Device Tree bindings: |
| |
| PCI Bus Binding to: IEEE Std 1275-1994 |
| http://www.devicetree.org/open-firmware/bindings/pci/pci2_1.pdf |
| |
| And for the interrupt mapping part: |
| |
| Open Firmware Recommended Practice: Interrupt Mapping |
| http://www.devicetree.org/open-firmware/practice/imap/imap0_9d.pdf |
| |
| Additionally to the properties specified in the above standards a host bridge |
| driver implementation may support the following properties: |
| |
| - linux,pci-domain: |
| If present this property assigns a fixed PCI domain number to a host bridge, |
| otherwise an unstable (across boots) unique number will be assigned. |
| It is required to either not set this property at all or set it for all |
| host bridges in the system, otherwise potentially conflicting domain numbers |
| may be assigned to root buses behind different host bridges. The domain |
| number for each host bridge in the system must be unique. |
| - max-link-speed: |
| If present this property specifies PCI gen for link capability. Host |
| drivers could add this as a strategy to avoid unnecessary operation for |
| unsupported link speed, for instance, trying to do training for |
| unsupported link speed, etc. Must be '4' for gen4, '3' for gen3, '2' |
| for gen2, and '1' for gen1. Any other values are invalid. |
| - reset-gpios: |
| If present this property specifies PERST# GPIO. Host drivers can parse the |
| GPIO and apply fundamental reset to endpoints. |
| - supports-clkreq: |
| If present this property specifies that CLKREQ signal routing exists from |
| root port to downstream device and host bridge drivers can do programming |
| which depends on CLKREQ signal existence. For example, programming root port |
| not to advertise ASPM L1 Sub-States support if there is no CLKREQ signal. |
| |
| PCI-PCI Bridge properties |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| PCIe root ports and switch ports may be described explicitly in the device |
| tree, as children of the host bridge node. Even though those devices are |
| discoverable by probing, it might be necessary to describe properties that |
| aren't provided by standard PCIe capabilities. |
| |
| Required properties: |
| |
| - reg: |
| Identifies the PCI-PCI bridge. As defined in the IEEE Std 1275-1994 |
| document, it is a five-cell address encoded as (phys.hi phys.mid |
| phys.lo size.hi size.lo). phys.hi should contain the device's BDF as |
| 0b00000000 bbbbbbbb dddddfff 00000000. The other cells should be zero. |
| |
| The bus number is defined by firmware, through the standard bridge |
| configuration mechanism. If this port is a switch port, then firmware |
| allocates the bus number and writes it into the Secondary Bus Number |
| register of the bridge directly above this port. Otherwise, the bus |
| number of a root port is the first number in the bus-range property, |
| defaulting to zero. |
| |
| If firmware leaves the ARI Forwarding Enable bit set in the bridge |
| above this port, then phys.hi contains the 8-bit function number as |
| 0b00000000 bbbbbbbb ffffffff 00000000. Note that the PCIe specification |
| recommends that firmware only leaves ARI enabled when it knows that the |
| OS is ARI-aware. |
| |
| Optional properties: |
| |
| - external-facing: |
| When present, the port is external-facing. All bridges and endpoints |
| downstream of this port are external to the machine. The OS can, for |
| example, use this information to identify devices that cannot be |
| trusted with relaxed DMA protection, as users could easily attach |
| malicious devices to this port. |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| pcie@10000000 { |
| compatible = "pci-host-ecam-generic"; |
| ... |
| pcie@0008 { |
| /* Root port 00:01.0 is external-facing */ |
| reg = <0x00000800 0 0 0 0>; |
| external-facing; |
| }; |
| }; |