Commits
Mika Westerberg committed ad854fa3c8d
PCI: Blacklist power management of Gigabyte X299 DESIGNARE EX PCIe ports [ Upstream commit 85b0cae89d5266e6a7abb2e83c6f716326fc494c ] Gigabyte X299 DESIGNARE EX motherboard has one PCIe root port that is connected to an Alpine Ridge Thunderbolt controller. This port has slot implemented bit set in the config space but other than that it is not hotplug capable in the sense we are expecting in Linux (it has dev->is_hotplug_bridge set to 0): 00:1c.4 PCI bridge: Intel Corporation 200 Series PCH PCI Express Root Port #5 Bus: primary=00, secondary=05, subordinate=46, sec-latency=0 Memory behind bridge: 78000000-8fffffff [size=384M] Prefetchable memory behind bridge: 00003800f8000000-00003800ffffffff [size=128M] ... Capabilities: [40] Express (v2) Root Port (Slot+), MSI 00 ... SltCap: AttnBtn- PwrCtrl- MRL- AttnInd- PwrInd- HotPlug- Surprise- Slot #8, PowerLimit 25.000W; Interlock- NoCompl+ SltCtl: Enable: AttnBtn- PwrFlt- MRL- PresDet- CmdCplt- HPIrq- LinkChg- Control: AttnInd Unknown, PwrInd Unknown, Power- Interlock- SltSta: Status: AttnBtn- PowerFlt- MRL- CmdCplt- PresDet- Interlock- Changed: MRL- PresDet+ LinkState+ This system is using ACPI based hotplug to notify the OS that it needs to rescan the PCI bus (ACPI hotplug). If there is nothing connected in any of the Thunderbolt ports the root port will not have any runtime PM active children and is thus automatically runtime suspended pretty soon after boot by PCI PM core. Now, when a device is connected the BIOS SMI handler responsible for enumerating newly added devices is not able to find anything because the port is in D3. Prevent this from happening by blacklisting PCI power management of this particular Gigabyte system. Link: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=202031 Reported-by: Kedar A Dongre <kedar.a.dongre@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Mika Westerberg <mika.westerberg@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Bjorn Helgaas <bhelgaas@google.com> Reviewed-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <sashal@kernel.org>