Re: bnx2 fails to compile on parisc because of missingget_dma_ops()

From: FUJITA Tomonori
Date: Thu Jun 17 2010 - 10:50:59 EST


Oops, some typos.

On Thu, 17 Jun 2010 23:05:59 +0900
FUJITA Tomonori <fujita.tomonori@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Thu, 17 Jun 2010 06:30:39 -0700
> "Michael Chan" <mchan@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > James Bottomley wrote:
> >
> > > On Thu, 2010-06-17 at 05:54 -0700, Michael Chan wrote:
> > > > This prefetch improves performance noticeably when the driver is
> > > > handling incoming 64-byte packets at a sustained rate.
> > >
> > > So why not do it unconditionally? The worst that can happen
> > > is that you
> > > pull in a stale cache line which will get cleaned in the
> > > dma_sync, thus
> > > slightly degrading performance on incoherent architectures.
> >
> > The original patch was an unconditional prefetch. There was
> > some discussion that it might not be correct if the DMA wasn't
> > sync'ed yet on some archs. If the concensus is that it is ok to
> > do so, that would be the simplest solution.
>
> As James said, it just adds useless prefetch on incoherent
> architectures. sync_single_for_cpu is called later so we can see the
> correct data. One useless prefetch is unlikely to lead performance
> drop.
>
> You might prefer this v2.
>
> =
> From: FUJITA Tomonori <fujita.tomonori@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Subject: [PATCH v2] bnx2: fix dma_get_ops compilation breakage
>
> This removes dma_get_ops() prefetch optimization in bnx2.
>
> bnx2 uses dma_get_ops() to see if dma_sync_single_for_cpu() is
> noop. bnx2 does prefetch if it's noop.
>
> But dma_get_ops() isn't available on all the architectures (only the
> architectures that uses dma_map_ops struct have it). Using
> dma_get_ops() in drivers leads to compilation breakage on many
> archtectures.

s/archtectures/architectures/

> This patch removes dma_get_ops() and changes bnx2 to do prefetch on
> all the architectures. This adds useless prefetch on incoherent
~~~~~~~~~~
s/incoherent/non-coherent/
(thanks to Alan)

> architectures but this is harmless. It is also unlikely to cause the
> performance drop.
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