The parsing code was bailing on domains greater than UINT16_MAX,
but domain numbers like that are still valid and present on some systems.
One example is Intel VMD (Volume Management Device), which acts somewhat
as a software-managed PCI switch and its upstream linux driver assigns
all downstream devices a PCI domain of 0x10000.
Parsing a BDF like 10000:01:00.0 was failing before. To fix it, increase
the upper limit of domain number to UINT32_MAX. This matches the size of
struct rte_pci_addr->domain (uint32).
Fixes:
af75078fece3 ("first public release")
Cc: stable@dpdk.org
Signed-off-by: Darek Stojaczyk <dariusz.stojaczyk@intel.com>
Acked-by: Gaetan Rivet <grive@u256.net>
errno = 0;
val = strtoul(in, &end, 16);
- if (errno != 0 || end[0] != ':' || val > UINT16_MAX)
+ if (errno != 0 || end[0] != ':' || val > UINT32_MAX)
return -EINVAL;
- dev_addr->domain = (uint16_t)val;
+ dev_addr->domain = (uint32_t)val;
in = end + 1;
in = get_u8_pciaddr_field(in, &dev_addr->bus, ':');
if (in == NULL)