This adds checks to see if the nvme pci device was removed. The check
reads the status register for the value of -1, which it should never be
unless the device is no longer present.
If a user performs a surprise removal on an nvme device, the driver will
be notified either by the pci driver remove callback if the platform's
slot is capable of this event, or via reading the device BAR status
register, which will indicate controller failure and trigger a reset.
Either way, the device is not present so all outstanding commands would
timeout. This will not send queue deletion commands to a drive that
isn't present and fail after ioremap, significantly speeding up surprise
removal; previously this took over 2 minutes per IO queue pair created,
but this will complete removing the device within a few seconds.
Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Wilcox <matthew.r.wilcox@intel.com>
irq_set_affinity_hint(vector, NULL);
free_irq(vector, nvmeq);
- /* Don't tell the adapter to delete the admin queue */
- if (qid) {
+ /* Don't tell the adapter to delete the admin queue.
+ * Don't tell a removed adapter to delete IO queues. */
+ if (qid && readl(&dev->bar->csts) != -1) {
adapter_delete_sq(dev, qid);
adapter_delete_cq(dev, qid);
}
dev->bar = ioremap(pci_resource_start(pdev, 0), 8192);
if (!dev->bar)
goto disable;
-
+ if (readl(&dev->bar->csts) == -1) {
+ result = -ENODEV;
+ goto unmap;
+ }
dev->db_stride = 1 << NVME_CAP_STRIDE(readq(&dev->bar->cap));
dev->dbs = ((void __iomem *)dev->bar) + 4096;
return 0;
+ unmap:
+ iounmap(dev->bar);
+ dev->bar = NULL;
disable:
pci_release_regions(pdev);
disable_pci: