Re: [PATCH 1/2] dmaengine: ti: k3-udma: Respond TX done if DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT is not requested

From: Péter Ujfalusi
Date: Fri Sep 02 2022 - 10:54:19 EST


Hi Achath,

On 23/08/2022 09:57, Vaishnav Achath wrote:
Hi Peter,

On 22/08/22 18:42, Péter Ujfalusi wrote:


On 22/08/2022 12:15, Vaishnav Achath wrote:
When the DMA consumer driver does not expect the callback for TX done,
There is no need to perform the channel RT byte counter calculations
and estimate the completion but return complete on first attempt itself.
This assumes that the consumer who did not request DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT
has its own mechanism for understanding TX completion, example: MCSPI
EOW interrupt can be used as TX completion signal for a SPI transaction.

The check is in place to make sure that we don't leave stale data in the
DMA fabric.
If you drop the check then it is going to be possible that some TX data
is going to be lost.
Could be one out of 10K transfers or 100K, but if that happens it is not
going to be easy to figure out.
Let's say we go the packet back, but PDMA is still have data to send and
the IP stops transmitting (externally clocked bus, some delay, etc).
Is it going to be OK to disable the channel?

Thanks for the feedback, yes the check is necessary for most of the cases
but there needs to be a way to disable the check for consumers which can
identify the end of transaction using some other internal mechanism/interrupt.

For example the MCSPI controller has an End of Word(EOW) interrupt when the
said number of bytes has been clocked out, in this case the EOW interrupt
being raised guarantees that there is no stale data in DMA fabric.Using
the EOW interrupt to identify the completion of a transaction significantly
improves the transaction speed since we need not now wait for the slower DMA
TX completion calculation.

This commit tries to bypass the check only if the consumer did not request
it by not passing the DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag, in other cases the check
should not be bypassed.

Let me think about over the weekend... Do you have performance numbers for this change?

If we make sure that this is only affecting non cyclic transfers with a in code comment to explain the expectations from the user I think this can be safe.



Signed-off-by: Vaishnav Achath <vaishnav.a@xxxxxx>
---
drivers/dma/ti/k3-udma.c | 5 ++++-
1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/drivers/dma/ti/k3-udma.c b/drivers/dma/ti/k3-udma.c
index 39b330ada200..03d579068453 100644
--- a/drivers/dma/ti/k3-udma.c
+++ b/drivers/dma/ti/k3-udma.c
@@ -263,6 +263,7 @@ struct udma_chan_config {
enum udma_tp_level channel_tpl; /* Channel Throughput Level */
u32 tr_trigger_type;
+ unsigned long tx_flags;
/* PKDMA mapped channel */
int mapped_channel_id;
@@ -1057,7 +1058,7 @@ static bool udma_is_desc_really_done(struct udma_chan *uc, struct udma_desc *d)
/* Only TX towards PDMA is affected */
if (uc->config.ep_type == PSIL_EP_NATIVE ||
- uc->config.dir != DMA_MEM_TO_DEV)
+ uc->config.dir != DMA_MEM_TO_DEV || !(uc->config.tx_flags & DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT))
return true;
peer_bcnt = udma_tchanrt_read(uc, UDMA_CHAN_RT_PEER_BCNT_REG);
@@ -3418,6 +3419,8 @@ udma_prep_slave_sg(struct dma_chan *chan, struct scatterlist *sgl,
if (!burst)
burst = 1;
+ uc->config.tx_flags = tx_flags;
+
if (uc->config.pkt_mode)
d = udma_prep_slave_sg_pkt(uc, sgl, sglen, dir, tx_flags,
context);



--
Péter