}
/* If PCI-E capable, dump PCI-E cap 10, and the AER */
- cap = pci_find_capability(dev, PCI_CAP_ID_EXP);
- if (cap) {
+ if (pci_is_pcie(dev)) {
n += scnprintf(buf+n, len-n, "pci-e cap10:\n");
printk(KERN_WARNING
"EEH: PCI-E capabilities and status follow:\n");
for (i=0; i<=8; i++) {
- eeh_ops->read_config(dn, cap+4*i, 4, &cfg);
+ eeh_ops->read_config(dn, dev->pcie_cap+4*i, 4, &cfg);
n += scnprintf(buf+n, len-n, "%02x:%x\n", 4*i, cfg);
printk(KERN_WARNING "EEH: PCI-E %02x: %08x\n", i, cfg);
}
/* Isolate the PHB and send event */
eeh_pe_state_mark(phb_pe, EEH_PE_ISOLATED);
eeh_serialize_unlock(flags);
- eeh_send_failure_event(phb_pe);
pr_err("EEH: PHB#%x failure detected\n",
phb_pe->phb->global_number);
dump_stack();
+ eeh_send_failure_event(phb_pe);
return 1;
out:
eeh_pe_state_mark(pe, EEH_PE_ISOLATED);
eeh_serialize_unlock(flags);
- eeh_send_failure_event(pe);
-
/* Most EEH events are due to device driver bugs. Having
* a stack trace will help the device-driver authors figure
* out what happened. So print that out.
pe->addr, pe->phb->global_number);
dump_stack();
+ eeh_send_failure_event(pe);
+
return 1;
dn_unlock: