pci
— generic PCI
bus driver
To compile the PCI bus driver into the kernel, place the following
line in your kernel configuration file:
device pci
To compile in support for Single Root I/O Virtualization
(SR-IOV):
options PCI_IOV
To compile in support for native PCI-express HotPlug:
options PCI_HP
The pci
driver provides support for PCI
devices in the kernel and limited access to PCI devices for userland.
The pci
driver provides a
/dev/pci character device that can be used by
userland programs to read and write PCI configuration registers. Programs
can also use this device to get a list of all PCI devices, or all PCI
devices that match various patterns.
Since the pci
driver provides a write
interface for PCI configuration registers, system administrators should
exercise caution when granting access to the pci
device. If used improperly, this driver can allow userland applications to
crash a machine or cause data loss.
The pci
driver implements the PCI bus in
the kernel. It enumerates any devices on the PCI bus and gives PCI client
drivers the chance to attach to them. It assigns resources to children, when
the BIOS does not. It takes care of routing interrupts when necessary. It
reprobes the unattached PCI children when PCI client drivers are dynamically
loaded at runtime. The pci
driver also includes
support for PCI-PCI bridges, various platform-specific Host-PCI bridges, and
basic support for PCI VGA adapters.
The following ioctl(2) calls are supported by
the pci
driver. They are defined in the header file
<sys/pciio.h>
.
- PCIOCGETCONF
- This ioctl(2) takes a pci_conf_io
structure. It allows the user to retrieve information on all PCI devices
in the system, or on PCI devices matching patterns supplied by the user.
The call may set errno to any value specified in
either copyin(9) or copyout(9). The
pci_conf_io structure consists of a number of
fields:
- pat_buf_len
- The length, in bytes, of the buffer filled with user-supplied
patterns.
- num_patterns
- The number of user-supplied patterns.
- patterns
- Pointer to a buffer filled with user-supplied patterns.
patterns is a pointer to
num_patterns
pci_match_conf structures. The
pci_match_conf structure consists of the
following elements:
- pc_sel
- PCI domain, bus, slot and function.
- pd_name
- PCI device driver name.
- pd_unit
- PCI device driver unit number.
- pc_vendor
- PCI vendor ID.
- pc_device
- PCI device ID.
- pc_class
- PCI device class.
- flags
- The flags describe which of the fields the kernel should match
against. A device must match all specified fields in order to be
returned. The match flags are enumerated in the
pci_getconf_flags structure. Hopefully the
flag values are obvious enough that they do not need to described
in detail.
- match_buf_len
- Length of the matches buffer allocated by the
user to hold the results of the
PCIOCGETCONF
query.
- num_matches
- Number of matches returned by the kernel.
- matches
- Buffer containing matching devices returned by the kernel. The items
in this buffer are of type pci_conf, which
consists of the following items:
- pc_sel
- PCI domain, bus, slot and function.
- pc_hdr
- PCI header type.
- pc_subvendor
- PCI subvendor ID.
- pc_subdevice
- PCI subdevice ID.
- pc_vendor
- PCI vendor ID.
- pc_device
- PCI device ID.
- pc_class
- PCI device class.
- pc_subclass
- PCI device subclass.
- pc_progif
- PCI device programming interface.
- pc_revid
- PCI revision ID.
- pd_name
- Driver name.
- pd_unit
- Driver unit number.
- offset
- The offset is passed in by the user to tell the kernel where it should
start traversing the device list. The value passed out by the kernel
points to the record immediately after the last one returned. The user
may pass the value returned by the kernel in subsequent calls to the
PCIOCGETCONF
ioctl. If the user does not
intend to use the offset, it must be set to zero.
- generation
- PCI configuration generation. This value only needs to be set if the
offset is set. The kernel will compare the current generation number
of its internal device list to the generation passed in by the user to
determine whether its device list has changed since the user last
called the
PCIOCGETCONF
ioctl. If the device
list has changed, a status of
PCI_GETCONF_LIST_CHANGED will be passed
back.
- status
- The status tells the user the disposition of his request for a device
list. The possible status values are:
- PCI_GETCONF_LAST_DEVICE
- This means that there are no more devices in the PCI device list
matching the specified criteria after the ones returned in the
matches buffer.
- PCI_GETCONF_LIST_CHANGED
- This status tells the user that the PCI device list has changed
since his last call to the
PCIOCGETCONF
ioctl and he must reset the offset and
generation to zero to start over at the
beginning of the list.
- PCI_GETCONF_MORE_DEVS
- This tells the user that his buffer was not large enough to hold
all of the remaining devices in the device list that match his
criteria.
- PCI_GETCONF_ERROR
- This indicates a general error while servicing the user's request.
If the pat_buf_len is not equal to
num_patterns times
sizeof
(struct
pci_match_conf), errno will be set to
EINVAL
.
- PCIOCREAD
- This ioctl(2) reads the PCI configuration registers
specified by the passed-in pci_io structure. The
pci_io structure consists of the following fields:
- pi_sel
- A pcisel structure which specifies the domain,
bus, slot and function the user would like to query. If the specific
bus is not found, errno will be set to ENODEV and -1 returned from the
ioctl.
- pi_reg
- The PCI configuration register the user would like to access.
- pi_width
- The width, in bytes, of the data the user would like to read. This
value may be either 1, 2, or 4. 3-byte reads and reads larger than 4
bytes are not supported. If an invalid width is passed, errno will be
set to EINVAL.
- pi_data
- The data returned by the kernel.
- PCIOCWRITE
- This ioctl(2) allows users to write to the PCI specified
in the passed-in pci_io structure. The
pci_io structure is described above. The limitations
on data width described for reading registers, above, also apply to
writing PCI configuration registers.
- PCIOCBARMMAP
- This ioctl(2) command allows userspace processes to
mmap(2) the memory-mapped PCI BAR into its address
space. The input parameters and results are passed in the
pci_bar_mmap structure, which has the following
fields:
- uint64_t pbm_map_base
- Reports the established mapping base to the caller. If
PCIIO_BAR_MMAP_FIXED flag was specified, then
this field must be filled before the call with the desired address for
the mapping.
- uint64_t pbm_map_length
- Reports the mapped length of the BAR, in bytes. Its .Vt uint64_t value
is always multiple of machine pages.
- int64_t pbm_bar_length
- Reports length of the bar as exposed by the device.
- int pbm_bar_off
- Reports offset from the mapped base to the start of the first register
in the bar.
- struct pcisel pbm_sel
- Should be filled before the call. Describes the device to operate
on.
- int pbm_reg
- The BAR index to mmap.
- int pbm_flags
- Flags which augments the operation. See below.
- int pbm_memattr
- The caching attribute for the mapping. Typical values are
VM_MEMATTR_UNCACHEABLE
for control registers
BARs, and VM_MEMATTR_WRITE_COMBINING
for frame
buffers. Regular memory-like BAR should be mapped with
VM_MEMATTR_DEFAULT
attribute.
Currently defined flags are:
- PCIIO_BAR_MMAP_FIXED
- The resulted mappings should be established at the address specified
by the pbm_map_base member, otherwise fail.
- PCIIO_BAR_MMAP_EXCL
- Must be used together with If the specified base contains already
established mappings, the operation fails instead of implicitly
unmapping them.
- PCIIO_BAR_MMAP_RW
- The requested mapping allows both reading and writing. Without the
flag, read-only mapping is established. Note that it is common for the
device registers to have side-effects even on reads.
- PCIIO_BAR_MMAP_ACTIVATE
- (Unimplemented) If the BAR is not activated, activate it in the course
of mapping. Currently attempt to mmap an inactive BAR results in
error.
Tunables can be set at the loader(8) prompt
before booting the kernel, or stored in loader.conf(5).
The current value of these tunables can be examined at runtime via
sysctl(8) nodes of the same name. Unless otherwise
specified, each of these tunables is a boolean that can be enabled by
setting the tunable to a non-zero value.
- hw.pci.clear_bars (Defaults
to 0)
- Ignore any firmware-assigned memory and I/O port resources. This forces
the PCI bus driver to allocate resource ranges for memory and I/O port
resources from scratch.
- hw.pci.clear_buses (Defaults
to 0)
- Ignore any firmware-assigned bus number registers in PCI-PCI bridges. This
forces the PCI bus driver and PCI-PCI bridge driver to allocate bus
numbers for secondary buses behind PCI-PCI bridges.
- hw.pci.clear_pcib (Defaults
to 0)
- Ignore any firmware-assigned memory and I/O port resource windows in
PCI-PCI bridges. This forces the PCI-PCI bridge driver to allocate memory
and I/O port resources for resource windows from scratch.
By default the PCI-PCI bridge driver will allocate windows
that contain the firmware-assigned resources devices behind the bridge.
In addition, the PCI-PCI bridge driver will suballocate from existing
window regions when possible to satisfy a resource request. As a result,
both hw.pci.clear_bars and
hw.pci.clear_pcib must be enabled to fully ignore
firmware-supplied resource assignments.
- hw.pci.default_vgapci_unit
(Defaults to -1)
- By default, the first PCI VGA adapter encountered by the system is assumed
to be the boot display device. This tunable can be set to choose a
specific VGA adapter by specifying the unit number of the associated
vgapciX device.
- hw.pci.do_power_nodriver
(Defaults to 0)
- Place devices into a low power state (D3) when a suitable device driver is
not found. Can be set to one of the following values:
- 3
- Powers down all PCI devices without a device driver.
- 2
- Powers down most devices without a device driver. PCI devices with the
display, memory, and base peripheral device classes are not powered
down.
- 1
- Similar to a setting of 2 except that storage controllers are also not
powered down.
- 0
- All devices are left fully powered.
A PCI device must support power management to be powered down.
Placing a device into a low power state may not reduce power
consumption.
- hw.pci.do_power_resume
(Defaults to 1)
- Place PCI devices into the fully powered state when resuming either the
system or an individual device. Setting this to zero is discouraged as the
system will not attempt to power up non-powered PCI devices after a
suspend.
- hw.pci.do_power_suspend
(Defaults to 1)
- Place PCI devices into a low power state when suspending either the system
or individual devices. Normally the D3 state is used as the low power
state, but firmware may override the desired power state during a system
suspend.
- hw.pci.enable_ari (Defaults
to 1)
- Enable support for PCI-express Alternative RID Interpretation. This is
often used in conjunction with SR-IOV.
- hw.pci.enable_io_modes
(Defaults to 1)
- Enable memory or I/O port decoding in a PCI device's command register if
it has firmware-assigned memory or I/O port resources. The firmware (BIOS)
in some systems does not enable memory or I/O port decoding for some
devices even when it has assigned resources to the device. This enables
decoding for such resources during bus probe.
- hw.pci.enable_msi (Defaults
to 1)
- Enable support for Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI). MSI interrupts can
be disabled by setting this tunable to 0.
- hw.pci.enable_msix (Defaults
to 1)
- Enable support for extended Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI-X). MSI-X
interrupts can be disabled by setting this tunable to 0.
- hw.pci.enable_pcie_hp
(Defaults to 1)
- Enable support for native PCI-express HotPlug.
- hw.pci.honor_msi_blacklist
(Defaults to 1)
- MSI and MSI-X interrupts are disabled for certain chipsets known to have
broken MSI and MSI-X implementations when this tunable is set. It can be
set to zero to permit use of MSI and MSI-X interrupts if the chipset match
is a false positive.
- hw.pci.iov_max_config
(Defaults to 1MB)
- The maximum amount of memory permitted for the configuration parameters
used when creating Virtual Functions via SR-IOV. This tunable can also be
changed at runtime via sysctl(8).
- hw.pci.realloc_bars
(Defaults to 0)
- Attempt to allocate a new resource range during the initial device scan
for any memory or I/O port resources with firmware-assigned ranges that
conflict with another active resource.
- hw.pci.usb_early_takeover
(Defaults to 1 on amd64 and i386)
- Disable legacy device emulation of USB devices during the initial device
scan. Set this tunable to zero to use USB devices via legacy emulation
when using a custom kernel without USB controller drivers.
- hw.pci<D>.<B>.<S>.INT<P>.irq
- These tunables can be used to override the interrupt routing for legacy
PCI INTx interrupts. Unlike other tunables in this list, these do not have
corresponding sysctl nodes. The tunable name includes the address of the
PCI device as well as the pin of the desired INTx IRQ to override:
- <D>
- The domain (or segment) of the PCI device in decimal.
- <B>
- The bus address of the PCI device in decimal.
- <S>
- The slot of the PCI device in decimal.
- <P>
- The interrupt pin of the PCI slot to override. One of
‘
A
’,
‘B
’,
‘C
’, or
‘D
’.
The value of the tunable is the raw IRQ value to use for the
INTx interrupt pin identified by the tunable name. Mapping of IRQ values
to platform interrupt sources is machine dependent.
You can wire the device unit at a given location with
device.hints. Entries of the form
hints.<name>.<unit>.at="pci<B>:<S>:<F>"
or
hints.<name>.<unit>.at="pci<D>:<B>:<S>:<F>"
will force the driver name to probe and attach at unit
unit for any PCI device found to match the
specification, where:
- <D>
- The domain (or segment) of the PCI device in decimal. Defaults to 0 if
unspecified
- <B>
- The bus address of the PCI device in decimal.
- <S>
- The slot of the PCI device in decimal.
- <F>
- The function of the PCI device in decimal.
The code to do the matching requires an exact string match. Do not
specify the angle brackets (< >) in the hints file. Wiring multiple
devices to the same name and
unit produces undefined results.
Given the following lines in
/boot/device.hints:
hint.nvme.3.at="pci6:0:0"
hint.igb.8.at="pci14:0:0"
If there is a
device that supports igb(4) at PCI bus 14 slot 0 function
0, then it will be assigned igb8 for probe and attach. Likewise, if there is
an nvme(4) card at PCI bus 6 slot 0 function 0, then it
will be assigned nvme3 for probe and attach. If another type of card is in
either of these locations, the name and unit of that card will be the
default names and will be unaffected by these hints. If other igb or nvme
cards are located elsewhere, they will be assigned their unit numbers
sequentially, skipping the unit numbers that have 'at' hints.
- /dev/pci
- Character device for the
pci
driver.
The pci
driver (not the kernel's PCI
support code) first appeared in FreeBSD 2.2, and was
written by Stefan Esser and Garrett Wollman. Support for device listing and
matching was re-implemented by Kenneth Merry, and first appeared in
FreeBSD 3.0.
It is not possible for users to specify an accurate offset into
the device list without calling the PCIOCGETCONF
at
least once, since they have no way of knowing the current generation number
otherwise. This probably is not a serious problem, though, since users can
easily narrow their search by specifying a pattern or patterns for the
kernel to match against.