Re: For the problem when using swiotlb

From: Catalin Marinas
Date: Fri Nov 21 2014 - 12:51:47 EST


On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 05:04:28PM +0000, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> On Friday 21 November 2014 16:57:09 Catalin Marinas wrote:
> > There is a scenario where smaller mask would work on arm64. For example
> > Juno, you can have 2GB of RAM in the 32-bit phys range (starting at
> > 0x80000000). A device with 31-bit mask and a dma_pfn_offset of
> > 0x80000000 would still work (there isn't any but just as an example). So
> > the check in dma_alloc_coherent() would be something like:
> >
> > phys_to_dma(top of ZONE_DMA) - dma_pfn_offset <= coherent_dma_mask
> >
> > (or assuming RAM starts at 0 and ignoring dma_pfn_offset for now)
> >
> > If the condition above fails, dma_alloc_coherent() would no longer fall
> > back to swiotlb but issue a dev_warn() and return NULL.
>
> Ah, that looks like it should work on all architectures, very nice.
> How about checking this condition, and then printing a small warning
> (dev_warn, not WARN_ON) and setting the dma_mask pointer to NULL?

I would not add the above ZONE_DMA check to of_dma_configure(). For
example on arm64, we may not support a small coherent_dma_mask but the
same value for dma_mask could be fine via swiotlb bouncing (or IOMMU).
However, that's an arch-specific decision. Maybe after the above setting
of dev->coherent_dma_mask in of_dma_configure(), we could add:

if (!dma_supported(dev, dev->coherent_dma_mask))
dev->dma_mask = NULL;

The arch dma_supported() can check the swiotlb bouncing or ZONE_DMA
limits.

Strangely, we don't have a coherent_dma_supported() but we can defer
such check to dma_alloc_coherent() and that's where we would check the
top of ZONE_DMA.

--
Catalin
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