On 12/2/2025 4:20 AM, Niklas Schnelle wrote:
On Mon, 2025-12-01 at 14:08 -0800, Farhan Ali wrote:
The current reset process saves the device's config space state before reset and restores it afterward. However, errors may occur unexpectedly, and the device may become inaccessible or the config space itself may be corrupted. This results in saving corrupted values that get written back to the device during state restoration.
With a reset we want to recover/restore the device into a functional state. So avoid saving the state of the config space when the device config space is inaccessible/corrupted.
Signed-off-by: Farhan Ali alifm@linux.ibm.com
I think the commit message needs more focus. Specifically I think the main point is the case that Lukas mentioned in the following quote from the cover letter of his "PCI: Universal error recoverability of devices" series:
"However errors may occur unexpectedly and it may then be impossible to save Config Space because the device may be inaccessible (e.g. DPC) or Config Space may be corrupted. So it must be saved ahead of time."
I agree, I can add this bit verbatim to the commit message.
That case will inevitably happen when state save / reset happens while a PCI device is in the error state on a platform like s390, POWER, or with DPC where Config Space will be inaccessible.
Moreover, I'd like to stress that this is an issue independent from the rest of your series. As we've seen in your experiments this can be triggered today when a vfio-pci user process blocks recovery, e.g. by not handling the eventfd, and then the user tries to mitigate the situation by performing a reset through sysfs, which then saves the 0xff bytes from inaccessible config space which may subsequently kill the device on restore.
drivers/pci/pci.c | 7 +++++++ 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+)
diff --git a/drivers/pci/pci.c b/drivers/pci/pci.c index 608d64900fee..28c6b9e7f526 100644 --- a/drivers/pci/pci.c +++ b/drivers/pci/pci.c @@ -5105,6 +5105,7 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(pci_dev_unlock); static void pci_dev_save_and_disable(struct pci_dev *dev) {
- u32 val; const struct pci_error_handlers *err_handler = dev->driver ? dev->driver->err_handler : NULL;
@@ -5125,6 +5126,12 @@ static void pci_dev_save_and_disable(struct pci_dev *dev) */ pci_set_power_state(dev, PCI_D0);
- pci_read_config_dword(dev, PCI_COMMAND, &val);
- if (PCI_POSSIBLE_ERROR(val)) {
pci_warn(dev, "Device config space inaccessible\n");return;- }
Can you explain your reasoning for not using pci_channel_offline() here? This was suggested by Lukas in a previous iteration (link below) and I would tend to prefer that as well.
AFAICT the error_state flag (checked in pci_channel_offline()) is set by error recovery code, when we get an error. I think using pci_channel_offline() creates a small window where the device may have already gone into an error state and thus the config space is inaccessible, but the error recovery code might not have set the flag. This can happen for example if we try to reset a device (with an ioctl like VFIO_DEVICE_PCI_HOT_RESET), and an error happens while we are in this function, in the middle of handling the reset.
I think reading directly from the config space, might be better indicator of device's state?
Thanks
Farhan
pci_save_state(dev); /* * Disable the device by clearing the Command register, except for