From: Jeffrey Hugo quic_jhugo@quicinc.com
[ upstream change 08e61e861a0e47e5e1a3fb78406afd6b0cea6b6d ]
If the allocation of multiple MSI vectors for multi-MSI fails in the core PCI framework, the framework will retry the allocation as a single MSI vector, assuming that meets the min_vecs specified by the requesting driver.
Hyper-V advertises that multi-MSI is supported, but reuses the VECTOR domain to implement that for x86. The VECTOR domain does not support multi-MSI, so the alloc will always fail and fallback to a single MSI allocation.
In short, Hyper-V advertises a capability it does not implement.
Hyper-V can support multi-MSI because it coordinates with the hypervisor to map the MSIs in the IOMMU's interrupt remapper, which is something the VECTOR domain does not have. Therefore the fix is simple - copy what the x86 IOMMU drivers (AMD/Intel-IR) do by removing X86_IRQ_ALLOC_CONTIGUOUS_VECTORS after calling the VECTOR domain's pci_msi_prepare().
Fixes: 4daace0d8ce8 ("PCI: hv: Add paravirtual PCI front-end for Microsoft Hyper-V VMs") Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Hugo quic_jhugo@quicinc.com Reviewed-by: Dexuan Cui decui@microsoft.com Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/1649856981-14649-1-git-send-email-quic_jhugo@quici... Signed-off-by: Wei Liu wei.liu@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Carl Vanderlip quic_carlv@quicinc.com Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman gregkh@linuxfoundation.org --- drivers/pci/controller/pci-hyperv.c | 11 ++++++++++- 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
--- a/drivers/pci/controller/pci-hyperv.c +++ b/drivers/pci/controller/pci-hyperv.c @@ -614,7 +614,16 @@ static void hv_set_msi_entry_from_desc(u static int hv_msi_prepare(struct irq_domain *domain, struct device *dev, int nvec, msi_alloc_info_t *info) { - return pci_msi_prepare(domain, dev, nvec, info); + int ret = pci_msi_prepare(domain, dev, nvec, info); + + /* + * By using the interrupt remapper in the hypervisor IOMMU, contiguous + * CPU vectors is not needed for multi-MSI + */ + if (info->type == X86_IRQ_ALLOC_TYPE_PCI_MSI) + info->flags &= ~X86_IRQ_ALLOC_CONTIGUOUS_VECTORS; + + return ret; }
/**