Re: a question on DMA and remapping

From: Andrew Morton
Date: Thu Nov 17 2011 - 18:47:31 EST


On Fri, 18 Nov 2011 00:30:59 +0100
Alessandro Rubini <ru@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Hello.
> This goes to the maintainers of x86::asm/dma-mapping.h and lib/swiotlb.c,
> with Cc: to involved people.
>
> I have an Intel evaluation board with the ST IO-Hub called STA2X11 and
> I'm working to port the STA2X11 drivers to mainstream. The code is
> currently on sourceforge. Since the device is based on a PCI-Amba
> bridge, all DMA addresses are different from CPU addresses, even for
> normal PCI devices, like EHCI.
>
> Unfortunately, the current patch is changing 3 inlines to external
> functions. They are dma_capable, phys_to_dma, dma_to_phys -- which
> actually are only used in swiotlb.c .
>
> I thought about the following two approaches towards a clean port:
>
> - using dma_supported(), which relies on dev->dma_ops->dma_supported
> and adding phys_to_dma and dma_to_phys to the dma operations. In
> the new fields, the default NULL may be used to select the current
> behaviour in an inline function.

Sounds OK. swiotlb.c isn't exactly super-fast code anyway.

> - copying lib/swiotlb.c to my own file, which will be almost
> identical to the existing one but for a few lines.

Don't do that ;)

> The former approach will have some tiny overhead on all users, besides
> messing with dma_capable and dma_allowed, possibly introducing bugs in
> some corner cases (but the current situation is quite messy, may I
> say...)
>
> The latter approach means code duplication, which is bad. Although
> maybe over time I may be able to shrink the current swiotlb.c to a
> much smaller snippet. I tend to prefer this one, but I'm not sure if
> it's acceptable.
>
> Any feedback is welcome. Thanks in advance.

Generalising the existing code to cover more cases isn't a bad thing to
do. Others might be able to use it, and they surely won't be able to
use any cloned-and-owned swiotlb.c.

Please do carefully docment the new interfaces so others can understand
why they exist and can use them successfully.

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