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Niklas Schnelle authored
Now that the zbus can be created without being scanned we can go one step further and make registering a device to a zbus independent from scanning it. This way the zbus handling becomes much more natural in that functions can be registered on the zbus to be scanned later more closely resembling the handling of both real PCI hardware and other virtual PCI busses like Hyper-V's virtual PCI bus (see for example drivers/pci/controller/pci-hyperv.c:create_root_hv_pci_bus()). Having zbus registration separate from scanning allows us to return fully initialized but still disabled zdevs from zpci_create_device() which can then be configured just as we would configure a zdev from standby (minus the SCLP Configure already done by the platform). There is still the exception that a PCI function with non-zero devfn can be plugged before its PCI bus, which depends on the function with zero devfn, is created. In this case the zdev returend from zpci_create_device() is still missing its bus, hotplug slot, and resources which need to be created later but at least it doesn't wait in the enabled state and can otherwise be treated as initialized. With this we also separate the initial PCI scan using CLP List PCI Functions into two phases. In the CLP loop's callback we only register each function with a virtual zbus creating the latter as needed. Then, after we have built this virtual PCI topology based on our list of zbusses, we can make use of the common code functionality to scan each complete zbus as a separate child bus. Reviewed-by: Matthew Rosato <mjrosato@linux.ibm.com> Acked-by: Pierre Morel <pmorel@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Niklas Schnelle <schnelle@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com>
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