The recent commit
63a72284b159 ("powerpc/pci: Assign fixed PHB number
based on device-tree properties"), added code to read a 64-bit property
from the device tree, and if not found read a 32-bit property (reg).
There was a bug in the 32-bit case, on big endian machines, due to the
use of the 64-bit value to read the 32-bit property. The cast of &prop
means we end up writing to the high 32-bit of prop, leaving the low
32-bits containing whatever junk was on the stack.
If that junk value was non-zero, and < MAX_PHBS, we would end up using
it as the PHB id. This results in users seeing what appear to be random
PHB ids.
Fix it by reading into a u32 property and then assigning that to the
u64 value, letting the CPU do the correct conversions for us.
Fixes:
63a72284b159 ("powerpc/pci: Assign fixed PHB number based on device-tree properties")
Signed-off-by: Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
static int get_phb_number(struct device_node *dn)
{
int ret, phb_id = -1;
+ u32 prop_32;
u64 prop;
/*
* reading "ibm,opal-phbid", only present in OPAL environment.
*/
ret = of_property_read_u64(dn, "ibm,opal-phbid", &prop);
- if (ret)
- ret = of_property_read_u32_index(dn, "reg", 1, (u32 *)&prop);
+ if (ret) {
+ ret = of_property_read_u32_index(dn, "reg", 1, &prop_32);
+ prop = prop_32;
+ }
if (!ret)
phb_id = (int)(prop & (MAX_PHBS - 1));