Re: [PATCH 05/14] lib: Add I/O map cache implementation

From: Russell King - ARM Linux
Date: Wed Jan 09 2013 - 16:30:23 EST


On Wed, Jan 09, 2013 at 09:43:05PM +0100, Thierry Reding wrote:
> The I/O map cache is used to map large regions of physical memory in
> smaller chunks to avoid running out of vmalloc()/ioremap() space.
>
> Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

We already have a means where we record the mappings which ioremap()
creates. If you look at /proc/vmallocinfo, you'll notice lines such
as:

0xf7b72000-0xf7b74000 8192 e1000_probe+0x291/0xa68 [e1000e] phys=fc025000 ioremap

which gives you the virtual address range, physical address and type
of the mapping. Why do we need a duplicated data structure?

Moreover, you seem to suggest that you want to break up a large
ioremap() mapping into several smaller mappings. Why? The idea
behind ioremap() is that this relationship holds true:

ptr = ioremap(cookie + n, size);

For any 'n' in the range 0 .. size, the location shall be accessible
via ptr + n when using the IO space accessors. If you're going to
break up a mapping into several smaller ones, this no longer holds
true.

If the problem is that you're ioremapping huge address ranges because
you're passing larger-than-required resources to devices, then that's
part of the problem too.
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