by support »
Hello,
The thing you've overlooked is that everything worked fine for you. The bottom line "Created 5 device files" in the log file says that the five device /dev/xillybus_* files have been created. Did you look for them?
Despite what you said, you actually did see the card with lscpi, and that's exactly the entry you pointed at: A Xilinx device with unassigned class (0xff, which means that there's no standard device class for a card doing what Xillybus does). So you describe a correct detection of the device, but you're unhappy with that for whatever reason.
Moreover, the relevant kernel modules were loaded (yet another indication of a proper detection of the PCIe device). The zero "Used by" value in lsmod for one of the modules just indicates that none of the device files was open when issuing that command, which is, once again, correct.
The failure to disable ASPM is normal. It's just the OS saying "I won't disable ASPM because it's not allowed anyhow".
So: Do you see the device files? You definitely should.
Regards,
Eli
Hello,
The thing you've overlooked is that everything worked fine for you. The bottom line "Created 5 device files" in the log file says that the five device /dev/xillybus_* files have been created. Did you look for them?
Despite what you said, you actually [b]did[/b] see the card with lscpi, and that's exactly the entry you pointed at: A Xilinx device with unassigned class (0xff, which means that there's no standard device class for a card doing what Xillybus does). So you describe a correct detection of the device, but you're unhappy with that for whatever reason.
Moreover, the relevant kernel modules were loaded (yet another indication of a proper detection of the PCIe device). The zero "Used by" value in lsmod for one of the modules just indicates that none of the device files was open when issuing that command, which is, once again, correct.
The failure to disable ASPM is normal. It's just the OS saying "I won't disable ASPM because it's not allowed anyhow".
So: Do you see the device files? You definitely should.
Regards,
Eli