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The I/O-APIC generates an MSI cycle with address/data bits taken from its Redirection Table Entry in some combination which used to make sense, but now is just a bunch of bits which get passed through in some seemingly arbitrary order. Instead of making IRQ remapping drivers directly frob the I/OA-PIC RTE, let them just do their job and generate an MSI message. The bit swizzling to turn that MSI message into the I/O-APIC's RTE is the same in all cases, since it's a function of the I/O-APIC hardware. The IRQ remappers have no real need to get involved with that. The only slight caveat is that the I/OAPIC is interpreting some of those fields too, and it does want the 'vector' field to be unique to make EOI work. The AMD IOMMU happens to put its IRTE index in the bits that the I/O-APIC thinks are the vector field, and accommodates this requirement by reserving the first 32 indices for the I/O-APIC. The Intel IOMMU doesn't actually use the bits that the I/O-APIC thinks are the vector field, so it fills in the 'pin' value there instead. [ tglx: Replaced the unreadably macro maze with the cleaned up RTE/msi_msg bitfields and added commentry to explain the mapping magic ] Signed-off-by:David Woodhouse <dwmw@amazon.co.uk> Signed-off-by:
Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20201024213535.443185-22-dwmw2@infradead.org
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