Open
Conversation
Signed-off-by: Alberto Daniel Lange <[email protected]>
midnightveil
approved these changes
Oct 30, 2025
Contributor
midnightveil
left a comment
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Seems fine.
I'll approve; for other reviewers the reason for there being a hardcoded constant is because there is a hardcoded list of all PCI devices up to this number:
Line 16 in 486afd6
Lines 80 to 109 in 486afd6
The other use is
util_libs/libpci/src/virtual_pci.c
Lines 37 to 44 in 486afd6
where it allocates a large array on the stack. That is probably the most questionable part of this.
Indanz
approved these changes
Nov 5, 2025
This file contains hidden or bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment
Add this suggestion to a batch that can be applied as a single commit.This suggestion is invalid because no changes were made to the code.Suggestions cannot be applied while the pull request is closed.Suggestions cannot be applied while viewing a subset of changes.Only one suggestion per line can be applied in a batch.Add this suggestion to a batch that can be applied as a single commit.Applying suggestions on deleted lines is not supported.You must change the existing code in this line in order to create a valid suggestion.Outdated suggestions cannot be applied.This suggestion has been applied or marked resolved.Suggestions cannot be applied from pending reviews.Suggestions cannot be applied on multi-line comments.Suggestions cannot be applied while the pull request is queued to merge.Suggestion cannot be applied right now. Please check back later.
This change increases the constant value to ensure proper PCI device enumeration on Supermicro E300-9D hardware.
With the previous value, both 10 GbE NICs (Intel X557-AT2) fail to be detected during initialization, causing PCI passthrough to break.